All Our Yesterdays
"To the last
syllable of recorded time, and all our yesterdays. . ." (Macbeth V.v.)
A series of brief articles
dealing with Human Pre-existence
by Arthur & Rosalind Eedle.
11. The Blood of Abel
It really
is surprising what can be found using lexicons, concordances, and interlinear
texts of the Scriptures. I don't want to keep moaning about the work of
translators, who have worked tirelessly to bring us the Word of God, but
sometimes I just wish they could have put a few more gems from the original in
the margin!
Here is
one. Genesis
The Hebrew
word here for blood is DMY, pronounced D'MAY, the plural of
DM. This is authenticated from my Analytical Hebrew Lexicon. Why should the
Lord have used the plural? "The voice of
your brother's bloods."
Although a
painstaking exercise, I decided to search the Hebrew of all the references to
blood in the O.T., just to find whether there were any others in the plural
number. I found 18, which is a very small fraction of the total.
Most of
them have this flavour about them, (Psalm 5:6) "The Lord
abhors the man of bloods and deceit."
However,
there are a few references of similar vein to that in Genesis 4.
2 Samuel
2 Kings
Finally, 1
Chronicles 28:3 "God said to me, [David] 'You shall not build a
house to my name, because you are a man of battles, and have shed
bloods.'"
Looking at
these verses we can draw a conclusion. The Lord spoke about the blood of Naboth
in the plural, as well as the bloods of his sons. Normally we might expect the
singular to be used of one man, and plural of more than one, but it
was not so. Likewise, the plural was used of Abel, and Abner. The reason is
locked up in the laws of the Old Testament, where land occupied a prominent
place in legislation. The patrimony owned by a family had to remain within that
family, unless sold by members of the family. It was an offence for anyone
illegally to occupy another's territorial possessions.
But there
is more to it than that. When Cain slew Abel, "the voice of his brother's
bloods cried out." Why plural? Simply because he had been prevented from
bringing them into the world. There were beings in the spirit world waiting
their turn to come down and be part of Abel's family, and they had been cut off.
Therefore they cried out for vengeance to the One who was Judge of all. The
same would have been true in the families of Naboth, and Abner, and those other
men slain under the kingship of David.
This
meaning was given in the margin of the Companion Bible at Genesis 4:10, which
alerted me to the idea, and the possibility that pre-existence was hidden
within the text, and I've wanted to share it in this series.