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In the Old Testament, God accepts Abel's offering but rejects Cain's:

Now Abel kept flocks, and Cain worked the soil. In the course of time Cain brought some of the fruits of the soil as an offering to the Lord. And Abel also brought an offering—fat portions from some of the firstborn of his flock. The Lord looked with favor on Abel and his offering, but on Cain and his offering he did not look with favor. So Cain was very angry, and his face was downcast.

(Genesis 4:2-5)

Why does God do this?

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    Similar question on Christianity.SE: christianity.stackexchange.com/questions/16223/… And Biblical Hermeneutics.SE: hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/questions/16905/…
    – femtoRgon
    Commented Jun 19, 2015 at 18:57
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    The first case of someone looking with disdain at hipster/hippie vegans :)
    – DVK
    Commented Jun 30, 2015 at 5:05
  • I don't have good citations, so comment instead of an answer: but possibly the nutritious value of a ram is higher than that of a couple of fruits? Non-mythologically, this is pretty widely acceptable differentiation for anthropology.
    – DVK
    Commented Jun 30, 2015 at 5:10

4 Answers 4

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There still remains much controversy on this question. In fact, there are books written devoted to just this narrative. It's frankly impossible to answer, however, I've outlined some of the theories.

On the surface, god prefers blood sacrifices. Surely we must have, at least at some layer, some etiological myth that explains why the ancient Hebrews used lambs, bulls, and birds for sacrifices instead of more mundane objects like vegetables.

Others have noted that it may preserve a tradition of backlash against the introduction of agriculture in the region. Abel's offerings would be the offerings of a semi-nomadic shepherd, while Cain's is indicative of a farmer.

Some like Frazer thinks this is a fertility narrative, and God's rejection has nothing to do with the original story except to serve as a device for moving the narrative. The real story is the slaughter of Abel, whose blood "fertilizes" the earth. This is apparent in the Greek translation (which actually may precede the current, Masoretic text of the Old Testament, or at least is a translation of an earlier Hebrew text), which has Cain and Abel in a field, and—in both Greek and Hebrew—the earth "opened her mouth to receive [Abel's] blood," which offers evidence of fertilizing the field. As Hooke notes, the Mark of Cain is symbolic of a larger plan of Yahweh's, that this was meant to happen, probably so not as to condemn all farmers.

Hooke also points out some Near Eastern parallels, though they're rather tenuous. One is the Babylonian New Year Festival, in which after slaughtering a lamb, two priests smear blood on the walls of a shrine, "after which they are obliged to flee into the...desert until the Festival is over, because they are defiled by their ritual act." Instead of a lamb, though, the ancient Hebrews may have sacrificed a human, though this again seems far-fetched to me.

The ancient commentators, writing long afterward, would not have thought of this. Indeed, most, like Philo or Didymus or even Hellenistic Jewish writings, state or imply that Cain's offerings were rejected because Cain himself was evil, and thus warranted rejection.

Some starting points for further research:

J. D. Frazer 1918. Folklore in the Old Testament: Studies in Comparative Religion, Legend, and Law. MacMillan & Co.

S. H. Hooke 1939. "Cain and Abel," in Folklore vol. 50 no. 1 pp. 58–65.

G. D. Hornblower 1944. "Cain and Abel: The Choice of Kind of Sacrifice," in Man vol. 44 pp. 45–46.

E. A. Speiser 1964. Genesis: Introduction, Translation, and Notes. Anchor Bible Commentary. Doubleday.

D. Bergant 1992. The Collegeville Bible Commentary: Old Testament. Liturgical Press.

J. Byron 2011. *Cain and Abel in Text and Tradition: Jewish and Christian Interpretations of the First Sibling Rivalry." Brill.

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    +1 +1 +1 +1 +1!!!! I'm curious: according to your profile, this is your first Stack Exchange site. How did you find out about the site?
    – user62
    Commented Jun 19, 2015 at 18:51
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    Funnily enough, I had a programming-related question for StackOverflow, which I've known about for years but never really utilized. I just happened to see that there were "Stacks" for this kind of stuff, saw Mythology, and here I am.
    – cmw
    Commented Jun 19, 2015 at 20:31
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    It may also have been an reflection of his attitude - Abel is generally accepted to have given his best, while Cain's attitude would seem to be more of a "God will just have to like it" kind of thing. A running motif throughout the Bible is that God wants you to serve because you WANT to, not because you have to.
    – Omegacron
    Commented Jun 19, 2015 at 21:00
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    Unfortunately, the evidence for that interpretation is just not there in the text that survives.
    – cmw
    Commented Jun 19, 2015 at 21:12
  • How about simply the idea that even single animal is precious, whereas some portion of a crop isn't? Until recently meat and animals were relatively expensive. Giving them up was a hardship, especially "fat portions". So our modern ideas of what's valuable has changed, so it's harder to understand the story in context. Commented Jun 19, 2015 at 21:54
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I don't have enough reputation to comment on @C.M. Weimer's answer, so in lieu of that I will expand upon something he said and add a point of my own in the hopes that it's good enough to qualify as a new answer.

To quote Mr. Weimer:

Others have noted that it may preserve a tradition of backlash against the introduction of agriculture in the region. Abel's offerings would be the offerings of a semi-nomadic shepherd, while Cain's is indicative of a farmer.

This is what I've always believed. I was first exposed to this idea in a physical anthropology class in my freshman year, but I didn't register it until reading Ishmael by Daniel Quinn. Abel represents pastoralism and Cain is what Quinn calls totalitarian agriculture. Note that after being forced to wander, Cain went on to produce children like Enoch and Tubal-Cain who created astronomy, writing, architecture and metalworking. In this way, all of the traditions and practices we would commonly associate with civilization result from agriculture and ultimately from Cain. I think we can see parallels of the theme that conflict involving brothers leads to the beginning of civilization in the Proto-Indo-European divine hero twins * manu- (man) and * yemo- (twin) cf. Lat. Gemini, Skr. Yama. Like Romulus and Remus, Cain and Abel, or Ymir in Germanic myths - who was vivisected to constitute the world, the two brothers come to some critical moment and on the death of the twin the survivor (the elder brother) - or his progeny - goes on to found advanced societies.

Finally, I'd like to suggest an uncommon and somewhat apologist reading of the text in Genesis 4 whereby Cain is obeying God by killing Abel because the act essentially amounts to a sacrifice. The Lord looked favorably on Abel for his offering but unfavorably on Cain for his own. The Lord then tells Cain 'Do not just be angry. Do what is right (make an appropriate offering) and you(r sacrifice) will be accepted.' In Cain going on to sacrifice his brother, the 'sweetest of his bounty', I would argue we are seeing an early iteration of later stories, for example Abraham being asked to sacrifice his son, whereby the Lord is only satiated with the blood of his servants' beloveds. Looked at this way, Cain is the first killer but not the first murderer, and a conflicted character whose adherence to duty drives his hand.

Cheers!

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    You should check out T. P. Wiseman's Remus, in which he just demolishes the idea of the "twins" based off Ymir (who doesn't actually have a twin) and Remus, whom he argues was made up centuries after Romulus, and isn't a survival of any PIE myth at all. Also, it wouldn't matter anyway, as Cain and Abel are not from a PIE mythical tradition.
    – cmw
    Commented Oct 24, 2015 at 8:23
  • As for Cain and Abel not being a PIE myth, I'm not sure that's quite as damning to the idea as it might appear to be. The Titanomachy echoes the war in Heaven in Semitic and Sumerian myth, so one can reasonably contend there is a 'Near Eastern-Pontic' (my word) mytheme shared by disparate traditions. Forgoing Ymir as unsupportive, and even conceding Remus as a later innovation, we can see a similar diffusion of the mytheme 'conflict involving brothers after which elder brother survives and begins civilization'. Commented Oct 24, 2015 at 9:50
  • @C. M. Warner In researching this answer I came across that title and author and have the book queued for delivery at my local library branch. Commented Oct 24, 2015 at 9:53
  • I'm not saying the idea is wrong, but it doesn't need to reference the PIE stuff for it.
    – cmw
    Commented Nov 22, 2021 at 13:18
  • @cmw - honestly, I think Travis should double down on the PIE connection: we know animal sacrifice was the proper ritual sacrifice in PIE culture from archeology, so if this myth derives from the PIE Divine Twins, then a vegetable sacrifice would be "wrong" and an animal sacrifice would be "right," which is consistent with the narrative. There's likely a bunch of PIE influence in the early Bible, given the flood narrative, the xenia example in the story of Lot, the Divine Twins of Cain and Able, etc.
    – codeMonkey
    Commented Jul 31, 2023 at 16:24
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It's not about fruits vs animals. If Abel worked the soil, his offering would have been favored. The key is that Abel gave the best of him - the firstborn. Cain did not.

Say, you are a father and you have two children. You love them both and know too well. You've seen them grow. One gives you the best of his. You will surely know that it's his best, because you've seen them so much, you know what they consider precious and what they don't like. Another gives you something he doesn't like. It's still okay because you love him, but if he pretends like it's his best, you won't be pleased, not because you don't love him, but because he's lying. The Cain and Abel case is similar to this.

Offering and the one who gives offering are not separated. If the offerer is defiled, the offering is defiled too. If the offerer is sanctified, the offering is too. Everything of you have impacts on the offering.

On Leviticus, God instructs how you make various offerings on various situation:

When you offer fine flours as a gift to God (Lev 2): It must be 'fine' flours and it's not easy to grind fine flours especially in the old times. He also has to pour oil on it. And again, it's not easy to extract oil in the old times. If the offerer is with a thankful heart, he will do it with a joy and it won't be a chore to him.

And sin offering via animal sacrifices (Lev 4): the sacrificer puts his hands on the animal, and kills the animal by himself. It signifies that even though he should be dead because of his sin, but the animal is killed on behalf of him and his sin. He repents while doing so and it's accepted. If not, it's not an offering but a slaughter.

These knowledge are expressed throughout the whole Bible.

Also, the New Testament mentions Abel. Heb 11:4 says, 'By faith Abel offered unto God a more excellent sacrifice.' And there are all kinds of faith in the same chapter: faith on God's very existence, his goodness, his joy, his love, his righteousness, his faithfulness, his vision, and his power.

It may look fuzzy, but it's really about having a personal relationship with God. God is not an object. If you have a healthy relationship with Father or Mother, how you are going to express your thankfulness to them? How about when you feel sorry? How about to your Husband or Wife? With God, you are having a relationship with the original one. God is our original as he created man in his image.

I recently became a father by myself, and now I understand this matter better. I thank God for all the blessing.

May god bless all of you, especially in need. Amen.

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    I'm really sorry, but the purpose of this site is to analyse texts (like the bible) from an academic and literary perspective. While your answer did a good job placing the story into a broader religious/theological perspective, that is not what this site is for. May I recommend that you try participating in Stack Exchange's Jewish, Christian, or Muslim communities?
    – user62
    Commented Jun 20, 2015 at 1:35
  • @Christofian Though you are correct that this is a religious explanation, it does give a handle though to the myths around of sacrifice. Human sacrifices were very common, animals replaced humans as being able to bleed, so died instead of humans on the altars as late as the myth of Iphigenia. So the question reverts to why were the gods so bloodthirsty . that is a mythical line connecte to psychology, imo: the need to be worthy? the need to be safe? (take this instead of me) etc. In this sense God does not consider inanimate produce a proper replacement for self.
    – anna v
    Commented Jun 20, 2015 at 8:08
  • @annav I'm confused. What in the world do human sacrifice and Iphigenia have to do with this answer? Did this comment get posted in the wrong place?
    – femtoRgon
    Commented Jun 25, 2015 at 17:35
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    @femtoRgon you are correct. It is the conversation with Christofian in my answer. Any way he saw it since the name alerts,
    – anna v
    Commented Jun 25, 2015 at 18:30
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Why are sacrifices made? In the myth of Iphigenia's sacrifice it was supposed to be in order that Artemis was appeased and winds would be a good tail wind for the fleet that was gathered for the Troy war.

So one reason for sacrifice is to appease the elements personified into gods by giving up something as precious as a live much valued human.

Iphigenia was replaced by a deer in a less blood thirsty version. An animal bleeds , and thus it can be a stand in for a human body.

Other reasons for offering sacrifices were in order that the fields would prosper, generally for prosperity.

Produce is inanimate and does not bleed. So in the Cain and Abel narrative considered as a myth the produce is a poor substitute for a human, it is not alive.

It probably reflects the values the cultures set in order , for whoever felt the need to sacrifice , not my life but, "another human stand in" (slaves and captured enemies) , "an animal", "produce" in diminishing importance. A sociological and psychological issue. Always in my opinion.

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    May I encourage you to cite reputable sources (e.g. not wikipedia)? Doing so makes it easy to know if your answer is right, and also provides starting points to users who would like to learn more about the topic.
    – user62
    Commented Jun 20, 2015 at 14:32
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    @Christofian I suppose the Iphigenia myth is well known so did not look around for a link. The rest is my opinion as I state. It is unfortunate that you and maybe others consider wikipedia unreliable for mythology. I have found it fairly good for physics ( my field) at least with non controversial subjects (most of physics). Mythology I remember from my student years and am interested in reading about it., and am sometimes moved to say my opinion/interpretation. If this is against the rules, then I won't.
    – anna v
    Commented Jun 20, 2015 at 15:03
  • There is also a type of honoring of the gods called libations, in which olive oil, milk, wine, honey, or even water is poured out. There's no blood there, and yet it was still acceptable.
    – cmw
    Commented Jun 20, 2015 at 17:14