Cooper
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- Jan 31, 2020
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No. the Bible says:
Cain went to Nod, mentions a wife, a son, named Enoch, and Cain builded a city.
Yes you did. Scripture didn't.
You have rewritten Scripture with your interpretation.
Read what the Scripture SAYS in Context.
What was THEN was THEN...
You are trying to ADD what you learned WAS LATER...applied BEFORE it happened.
Stay IN Context...
Nothing whatsoever Revealed Adam's clan had been outside of the Land of Eden.
Eden was what Cain knew and saw.
Cain only knew he was being driven out to a Land where he would not be present with the LORD.
Self-explationary.
Cain's Knowledge:
A Fugitive- aka Justice not Served for Killing his brother.
A Vagabond- aka a wanderer
History- Hebrew word for "wander" is Nod.
"Come to pass"....NOT that he steps out of Eden into The Land of Nod....and there ARE people there going to KILL him because he killed his brother...as you try to impress.
I guessing The population was FEW...like um, only four people had been mentioned when Cain went to Nod...
(Adam, Eve, Cain and Dead Abel)
Acknowledging the Facts:
The only People Cain knew of was, Adam, Eve, Cain himself, and Dead Abel...
With a wild guess...I think Cain expected Adams family to Increase, and Maybe...just maybe Adams family would be told of Cains Existance, and him being Sent to Wander in The Land of Nod....
Any one of Adam's Famly...as Cain said: "come to pass", which is a passing of time...might find Cain and taken Vengeance on him.
Well God Didn't say no one would ever kill Cain for killing his brother Abel...only that whomever...as Time "come to pass" any person intent on killing Cain For his brothers death...would Receive 7x The Vengeance .
So still at a point...nothing you have shown in Scripture, verifies what You claimed.
You have increased the population long before Scripture does.
Ya, I'm going to stick with Scripture.
Glory to God,
Taken
Biblical history begins with Adam and Eve in 4892 B. C. However people were living in Jericho in 10,000 B. C.
4892 B.C.Adam & Eve (D:Heb/70/Sam)(B:Heb/Sam Genesis 5:3)
4762 B.C. Seth born (D:Heb/70/Sam)(B:Heb/Sam Genesis 5:6) .
4657 B.C. Enosh born (D:Heb/70/Sam)(B:Heb/Sam Genesis 5:9) .
4567 B.C. Cainan (alt. Kenan) born (D:Heb/70/Sam)(B:Heb/Sam Genesis 5:12) .
4497 B.C. Mahalalel born (D:Heb/70/Sam)(B:Heb/Sam Genesis 5:15) .
4432 B.C. Jared born (D:Heb/70)(B:Heb/70 Genesis 5:18) .
4270 B.C. Enoch born (D:Heb/70/Sam)(B:Heb/Sam Genesis 5:21) .
4205 B.C. Methuselah born (D:Heb/70)(B:Heb/70 Genesis 5:25) .
4018 B.C. Lamech born (D:Heb)(B:Heb Genesis 5:28) .
3962 B.C. Adam dies. (Genesis 5:4) .
Jericho First Settlement
Jericho started as a popular camping ground for the hunter-gathers of the Natufian culture dating to 10000 BCE. It wasn’t until the cold and drought caused by the last Ice Age, or Younger Dryas, came to an end around 9600 BCE that year-round habitation and permanent settlements began in the area. Tell es-Sultan (Sultan’s Hill), 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) north of modern-day Jericho, became the earliest permanent settlement. It was a Pre-Pottery Neolithic (New Stone Age) settlement. It is situated on the Ein as-Sultan spring (later called Elisha’s Spring) supplying it with water. By about 9400 BCE the settlement grew to include more than 70 homes. These circular dwellings measured 5 meters (16 feet) in diameter and were built with clay and straw.
ARCHAEOLOGICAL EVIDENCE REVEALS THAT JERICHO, BY 8000 BCE, WAS SURROUNDED BY A STONE WALL 3.6 METERS HIGH & 1.8 METERS WIDE.
The Wall of Jericho
Archaeological evidence reveals that by 8000 BCE, the site grew to 40,000 square meters (430,000 square feet) and was surrounded by a stone wall 3.6 meters (11.8 feet) high and 1.8 meters (5.9 feet) wide at the base. Inside the wall was a stone tower 8.5 meters (28 feet) high and 9 meters (30 feet) wide at the base. The tower had an internal staircase with 22 steps. The only older towers than this one have been found at Tell Qaramel in Syria. (Think of the manpower needed to build the stone wall. Stonehenge as well. The mind boggles.)
It is thought that the wall was used to protect the settlement from flood waters. The tower was used for ceremonial purposes. This suggests that there was a social organization happening in the town. Some scholars believe that the tower was used to motivate people into taking part in the communal lifestyle. Estimates vary on the population with a low of 300 to a high of 3000. At this time the inhabitants domesticated wheat, barley and legumes. It is highly probable that irrigation had been invented to provide enough land for the cultivation of these crops. They supplemented their diet by hunting wild animals.
The Second Settlement
After a few centuries, the first settlement was abandoned. Around 7000 BCE, a second settlement was established by an invading people that absorbed the original inhabitants into their culture. It too was a Pre-Pottery Neolithic settlement. This new settlement expanded the range of domesticated plants. There is evidence for the possible domestication of sheep at this time. Buildings were rectilinear structures made of mudbricks. Each building consisted of several rooms situated around a central courtyard. The rooms had terrazzo floors made of lime and the courtyard had a floor made of clay. Other advancements include flints in the shape of arrowheads, sickle blades, burins (used as chisels), scrapers, and axes. Also found were grindstones, hammerstones, and axes made of greenstone. Dishes and bowls were carved from soft limestone. The greatest distinction of this culture was that they kept the heads of deceased relatives by plastering the skulls and painting the features of the person on it. These skulls were kept in the home and the rest of the body was buried. This settlement lasted until about 6000 BCE. There is then little evidence of occupation at Jericho for at least 1000 years.
Bronze Age & The Fall of Jericho
(This is when Adam and Eve were living, plus goodness only knows how many more millions.) "I guessing The population was FEW...like um, only four people had been mentioned when Cain went to Nod... (Adam, Eve, Cain and Dead Abel)" Taken
After this, new settlements were established in Jericho periodically. These settlements were still Neolithic, but there is evidence that they were producing pottery. It became a walled town again at the end of the 4th millennium BCE. Evidence shows that the walls have been rebuilt many times. The largest of these settlements was constructed in 2600 BCE by the Amorites. About 2300 BCE, there was once more a break in the occupation of the site. It was taken over by the Canaanites in 1900 BCE and reached its greatest prominence between 1700 BCE and 1550 BCE. This was due to the rise of aristocrats that utilized chariots called the Maryannu in the Mitannite state to the north. Their rise caused a greater urbanization in the surrounding area, including Jericho. By this time, there were two walls around the city in a double enclosure made of mud brick. The outside wall rested on top of a stone base. Though they were impressive in size, they were not stable. Bronze Age Jericho fell in the 16th century around 1573 BCE when it was violently destroyed by an earthquake. Charred wood found at the site suggests that the remains of the city were burned. Buried food supplies also suggest that it was not captured following a siege. It remained unoccupied until the late 10th century or early 9th century BCE when it was rebuilt.
The Israelites Capture Jericho
According to the Bible, at around 1,400 BCE, Jericho was the first city attacked by the Israelites after they crossed the Jordan River and entered Canaan. The Wall of Jericho was destroyed when the Israelites walked around it for seven days carrying the Ark of the Covenant. On the seventh day, Joshua commanded his people to blow their trumpets made of rams’ horns and shout at the walls until they finally fell down.
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