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Curse and mark of Cain

The curse of Cain and the mark of Cain are phrases that originated in the story of Cain and Abel in the Book of Genesis. In the stories, if someone harmed Cain, the damage would come back sevenfold. Some interpretations view this as a physical mark, whereas other interpretations see the "mark" as a sign, and not as a physical mark on Cain himself. The King James Version of the Bible reads "set a mark upon Cain".

Cain, 1896, by Henri Vidal, Jardin des Tuileries, Paris

Origins edit

There is no clear consensus as to what Cain's mark was.[1] The word translated as "mark" in Genesis 4:15 is א֔וֹת‎ ('ōṯ), which could mean a sign, omen, warning, remembrance, motion, gesture, agreement, miracle, wonder, or, most commonly, a letter. In the Torah, the same word is used to describe the stars as signs or omens (Genesis 1:14), the rainbow as the sign of God's promise never again to destroy his creation with a flood (Genesis 9:12), circumcision as a token of God's covenant with Abraham (Genesis 17:11), and the miracles performed by Moses before the Pharaoh (Exodus 4:8,9,17,28; 7:3; 8:23; 10:1,2).

Curse of Cain edit

 
Glasgow Botanic Gardens. Kibble Palace. Edwin Roscoe MullinsCain or My Punishment is Greater than I can Bear (Genesis 4:13), about 1899.

The narrative of the curse of Cain is found in the text of Genesis 4:11–16. The curse was the result of Cain murdering his brother, Abel, and lying about the murder to God.[2] When Cain spilled his brother's blood, the earth became cursed as soon as the blood hit the ground. In a sense, the earth was left "drinking Abel's blood".[3] Genesis 4:12 gives a two-part sentencing for Cain's curse. The first concerns the earth that was cursed by Abel's blood.[4] Should Cain attempt to farm the land, the earth would not yield produce for him. This may imply why he went on to build cities,[5] namely the City of Enoch. The second part of the curse marks Cain as a fugitive (Hebrew: נע) and a wanderer (Hebrew: נד). The combination making up this Hebrew phrase נע ונד‎, "fugitive and wanderer," is unique in the Hebrew Bible. Modern interpretations of the Hebrew verse 12 suggest that Cain went on to live a nomadic lifestyle and that he was also excluded from the family unit.[6] In the Septuagint, the emphasis on Cain's curse is dramatically increased by the combination of the Greek participles στένων καὶ τρέμων ("groaning and shaking upon the earth").[7] Syriac Christianity[8] interprets the Greek version to mean that Cain experienced a real physical affliction[9] that would enable others to know who he was when they saw him. Philo interprets the Greek verse 12 as an allegory for Cain's fear of being soulless. The Samaritan Pentateuch and the Targums translate the same verse to mean that Cain feared being "an exile and an unstable man".[10]

Mark of Cain edit

The Hebrew word for mark ('Oth, אות‎) could mean a sign, an omen, a warning, or a remembrance.[11] The mark of Cain is God's promise to offer Cain divine protection from premature death with the stated purpose of preventing anyone from killing him. It is not known what the mark was, but it is assumed that the mark was visible.[12] Some have speculated that the mark was a Hebrew or Sumerian letter placed on either the face or the arm.[13] The Septuagint translates the mark as a "sign". Thus, it is speculated that the mark served as a sign to others not to commit the same offense.[14][15]

Judaism edit

Abba Arika ("Rav") said that God gave Cain a dog, making him an example for murderers. Abba Jose ben Hanan said that God made a horn grow out of Cain. R. Hanin said that God made Cain an example to penitents (Gen. Rab. 22:12).[14]

Rashi comments on Genesis 4:15 by saying that the mark was one of the Hebrew letters of the Tetragrammaton: "He engraved a letter of His [God's] Name onto his [Cain's] forehead."[16]

In Kabbalah, the Zohar states that the mark of Cain was one of the twenty-two Hebrew letters of the Torah, although the Zohar's native Aramaic does not actually tell us which of the letters it was. Some commentators, such as Rabbi Michael Berg in his English commentary on the Zohar, suggest that the mark of Cain was the letter vav.[17]

Christianity edit

According to author Ruth Mellinkoff, commentators' interpretations of the nature of the "mark" depended on their views regarding the status of Cain, as either being given additional time to repent or as being further shamed.[18]

American Protestant racial beliefs on the mark of Cain edit

At some point after the start of the slave trade in the United States, many[citation needed] Protestant denominations began teaching the belief that the mark of Cain was a dark skin tone in an attempt to justify their actions, although early descriptions of Romani as "descendants of Cain" written by Franciscan friar Symon Semeonis suggest that this belief had existed for some time. Protestant preachers wrote exegetical analyses of the curse, with the assumption that it was dark skin.[19]

Baptist segregation edit

The split between the Northern and Southern Baptist organizations arose over doctrinal issues pertaining to slavery and the education of slaves. At the time of the split, the Southern Baptist group used the curse of Cain as a justification for slavery. Some 19th- and 20th-century Baptist ministers in the Southern United States taught the belief that there were two separate heavens; one for Black people, and one for White people.[20] Southern Baptists either taught or practiced various forms of racial segregation well into the mid-20th century, though members of all races were accepted at worship services.[a] In 1995, the Southern Baptist Convention officially denounced racism and apologized for its past defense of slavery.[22]

The curse of Cain was used to support a ban on ordaining Black people to most Protestant clergies until the 1960s in both the United States and Europe.[citation needed] However, the majority of Christian churches in the world, including the Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox churches, Anglican churches, and Oriental Orthodox churches, did not recognize the racist interpretations and did not participate in the religious movement to exclude Black people from ministry.

One exception was that certain Catholic dioceses in the Southern United States independently adopted a policy of not permitting Black people to oversee, administer sacraments to, nor accept confessions from White parishioners.[citation needed] The justification for this policy was not excused by supposing a "curse of Cain" doctrine, but rather was justified by the widely held perception among southern clergy and congregations that it would offend too many White paritioners if slaves or their descendants had any authority over White people – the race of their former masters and still their presumptive superiors.[citation needed] This was neither approved by a Pope nor derived from any papal teaching.[21]

Curse of Ham edit

The Curse of Cain was often conflated with the Curse of Ham. According to the Bible, Ham discovered his father Noah drunk and naked in his tent, but instead of honoring his father by covering his nakedness, he ran and told his brothers about it. Because of this, Noah cursed Ham's son, Canaan, by saying that he was to be "a servant of servants" (Genesis 9:20–27). One interpretation of this passage states that Ham married a descendant of Cain. While there is no indication in the Bible of Ham's wife descending from Cain, this interpretation was used to justify slavery and it was particularly popular in North America during the Atlantic slave trade due to interpretations identifying Ham as the progenitor of the people of Africa.[23][24]

Latter-day Saint movement edit

Mormonism began during the height of Protestant acceptance of the curse of Cain doctrine in North America, as well as the even more popular curse of Ham doctrine. Like many North Americans,[23][24] Mormons of the 19th century commonly assumed that Black Africans had Cain's "mark" of black skin,[25] and Ham's curse to be servants of servants.[26] Joseph Smith and Brigham Young both taught that Black people were cursed descendants of Cain, and used it to justify slavery.[27]: 125  In the Pearl of Great Price, considered scripture to most Mormons, Enoch talks about shunning the descendants of Cain and that they had black skin:[28] "And Enoch also beheld the residue of the people which were the sons of Adam; and they were a mixture of all the seed of Adam save it was the seed of Cain, for the seed of Cain were black, and had not place among them." (Moses 7:22) Church president Brigham Young stated, "What is the mark? You will see it on the countenance of every African you ever did see...."[29][30]

As related by Abraham O. Smoot after his death, apostle David W. Patten said he encountered a Black man in Paris, Tennessee, who said that he was Cain. The account states that Cain had earnestly sought death but was denied it, and that his mission was to destroy the souls of men.[31][32]: 85  The recollection of Patten's story is quoted in apostle Spencer W. Kimball's The Miracle of Forgiveness.

Although not explicitly stated in Latter-day Saint scripture, at least one publication of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) still teaches that Ham's wife was a descendant of Cain. The "Guide to the Scriptures," published as an explanatory companion to the scriptures, states "Ham's wife, Egyptus, was a descendant of Cain; the sons of their daughter Egyptus settled in Egypt".[33]

Priesthood ban edit

There is evidence that Joseph Smith did not consider the ban on Black men to the priesthood to be relevant in modern times, since he himself (and other church leaders close to him) ordained Black men into it,[34] notably Elijah Abel and Walker Lewis.

After the death of Joseph Smith, Brigham Young (the second President of the Church) accepted the idea that people of African ancestry were generally under the curse of Cain, and in 1852, he stated that people of Black African descent were not eligible to hold the church's priesthood.[35] Young taught that in the war in heaven, both Cain and Abel were leaders. The spirits of Black people fought under Cain and were assigned to be Cain's descendants. Those that fought under Abel were assigned to be Abel's descendants. Cain hoped that by killing his brother, the spirits that were under him would have an advantage over the spirits under Abel. However, God cursed Cain and his descendants not to have the priesthood until all of Abel's descendants had the priesthood. The spirits of Black people understood this and stood with Cain and accepted the punishment.[36][37]

The ban on the priesthood affected Black members differently than it did in other churches because the LDS Church has a lay priesthood in which virtually all worthy male members become priesthood holders.

Several of Young's successors defended the priesthood ban as being a result of the curse of Cain, though some disagreed. Sterling M. McMurrin reported that, in 1954, church president David O. McKay said: "There is not now, and there never has been a doctrine in this church that the negroes are under a divine curse. There is no doctrine in the church of any kind pertaining to the negro. We believe that we have a scriptural precedent for withholding the priesthood from the negro. It is a practice, not a doctrine, and the practice someday will be changed. And that's all there is to it."[38]

In 1978, LDS Church president Spencer W. Kimball reported receiving a revelation from God allowing all worthy male members of the church to receive the priesthood without regard to race or color.[39][40] Although the church had previously been criticized for its policy during the civil rights movement, the change seems to have been prompted by problems facing mixed-race converts in Brazil.[41]

Many Black church members think that giving an apology would be a "detriment" to church work and a catalyst for further racial misunderstanding. African-American church member Bryan E. Powell says: "There is no pleasure in old news, and this news is old." Gladys Newkirk agrees, stating: "I've never experienced any problems in this church. I don't need an apology [...] We're the result of an apology."[42] Many Black Mormons say that they are willing to look beyond the former teachings and cleave to the doctrines of the church, in part because of its powerful, detailed teachings on life after death.[43]

The LDS Church has issued an official statement about past practices and theories regarding skin color, stating: "[t]oday, the Church disavows the theories advanced in the past that black skin is a sign of divine disfavor or curse, [...] Church leaders today unequivocally condemn all racism, past and present, in any form."[44]

Civil rights edit

When Utah was considering slavery, Brigham Young told the Utah Territorial Legislature that the curse of Cain required slavery. He argued that until all of the descendants of Abel have access to the priesthood, all of the descendants of Cain should remain in servitude.[45]: 28  He argued that because they did not have the right to govern the affairs of the Church due to the priesthood ban, they also should not have the right to govern the affairs of the state, including the right to vote.[45]: 47  He warned that if they made the children of Cain equal to them, they would be cursed.[45]: 48  He also argued that if someone married a descendant of Cain, that they would also have the same curse.[45]: 48  The church has since repudiated all of these teachings.[46]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "Slaves were accepted for membership in the same manner as whites. After expressing a desire to join a church, one was required to relate his or her religious experience. If the congregation was favorably impressed by one's testimony, the applicant was accepted into the fellowship and was baptized. When black church members moved from one community to another, they were given letters of dismissal which they might place with another Baptist church.
    Black church members worshiped in the sanctuary with whites, participated in the service of Holy Communion, and contributed to help support the various programs of the denomination. Still blacks and females in antebellum Baptist churches held a membership status subordinate to that of adult white males, since that group alone determined denominational policies and procedures.[21]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Thursby, Jacqueline S. (2013). "A Slave Tale: Closing an Anathema". NAAAS Conference Proceedings. National Association of African American Studies. ProQuest 1498460617.
  2. ^ Byron 2011, p. 93.
  3. ^ Byron 2011, p. 95: Genesis 4:11
  4. ^ Byron 2011, p. 97: Kugel, 163
  5. ^ Byron 2011, p. 97: Wenham, 108
  6. ^ Byron 2011, p. 97.
  7. ^ Byron 2011, p. 98: Brayford, 254
  8. ^ Byron 2011, p. 100.
  9. ^ Byron 2011, p. 98: See footnote 14
  10. ^ Byron 2011, pp. 98–100.
  11. ^ BDB, Francis Brown; Samuel Rolles Driver; Charles Augustus Briggs (1996). The Brown Driver Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon: with an appendix containing the Biblical Aramaic; coded with the numbering system from "Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible" (7. print. 1997 ed.). Peabody: Hendrickson. p. 16f. ISBN 9781565632066.
  12. ^ Byron 2011, p. 119: Mellinkoff, 1942, p.210; Moberley, 2007, p.11-28
  13. ^ Byron 2011, p. 120: (Tg. Ps.-J. Gen 4:15, Pirqe R. El. 21)
  14. ^ a b Byron 2011, p. 120: Gen. Rab. 22:12
  15. ^ Byron 2011, p. 106.
  16. ^ "Genesis – Chapter 4 (Parshah Bereishit) – Tanakh Online – Torah – Bible". Chabad.org. Retrieved 2012-09-21.
  17. ^ "Bereshit A: Chapter 48". Zohar.com. Retrieved 2020-09-01.]
  18. ^ Mellinkoff, Ruth (1981). The Mark of Cain. University of California Press. p. 13. ISBN 9780520906372.
  19. ^ Priest, Josiah Slavery as it Relates to the Negro or African Race (1843)
  20. ^ . Ebony. April 1956. Archived from the original on 2005-03-11.
  21. ^ a b Miller, Randall M.; Smith, John David (1988). Dictionary of Afro-American Slavery. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. p. 78. ISBN 0-313-23814-6 – via Internet Archive (archive.org).
  22. ^ Kunnerth, Jeff (21 June 1995). . Orlando Sentinel. Orlando, FL. Archived from the original on 2 September 2014. Retrieved 27 April 2012.
  23. ^ a b Benjamin Braude, "The Sons of Noah and the Construction of Ethnic and Geographical Identities in the Medieval and Early Modern Periods", William and Mary Quarterly LIV (January 1997): 103–42. See also William McKee Evans, "From the Land of Canaan to the Land of Guinea: The Strange Odyssey of the Sons of Ham", American Historical Review 85 (February 1980): 15–43. JSTOR 1853423.
  24. ^ a b John N. Swift and Gigen Mammoser, "Out of the Realm of Superstition: Chesnutt's 'Dave's Neckliss' and the Curse of Ham", American Literary Realism, vol. 42 no. 1, Fall 2009, 3
  25. ^ Brigham Young's Speech on Slavery, Blacks, and the Priesthood, Feb 5, 1852. Reprint by Utah Lighthouse Ministry
  26. ^ Smith, Joseph (1836). Latter Day Saints' Messenger and Advocate/Volume 2/Number 7/Letter to Oliver Cowdery from Joseph Smith, Jr. (Apr. 1836) . p. 290 – via Wikisource.
  27. ^ Reeve, W. Paul (2015). Religion of a Different Color: Race and the Mormon Struggle for Whiteness. New York, New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-975407-6.
  28. ^ Kidd, Colin (2006). The Forging of Races: Race and Scripture in the Protestant Atlantic World, 1600–2000. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521793247.
  29. ^ Collier, Fred C. (1987). The Teachings of President Brigham Young Vol. 3 1852–1854. Salt Lake City: Collier Publishing Co. p. 42. ISBN 9780934964012.
  30. ^ Watt, George D. "Brigham Young, 1852 February 5" (5 Feb 1852). Historian's Office reports of speeches, 1845–1885, ID: CR 100 317, p. 2. Salt Lake City: LDS Church History Library.
  31. ^ Wilson 1904
  32. ^ Whiting 2003
  33. ^ "Guide to the Scriptures – Ham".
  34. ^ "Black History Timeline". BlackLDS.org. Retrieved 17 January 2013.
  35. ^ Wilford Woodruff, Diary of Wilford Woodruff, January 16, 1852. "[A]ny man having one drop of the seed of [Cain] … in him cannot hold the priesthood and if no other Prophet ever spake it before I will say it now in the name of Jesus Christ".
  36. ^ Bush, Lester E. Jr.; Mauss, Armand L., eds. (1984). Neither White Nor Black: Mormon Scholars Confront the Race Issue in a Universal Church. Salt Lake City, Utah: Signature Books. ISBN 0-941214-22-2. Cain, in murdering Abel, had "deprived his brother of the privilege of pursuing his journey through life, and of extending his kingdom by multiplying upon the earth." Cain had reportedly hoped thereby to gain an advantage over Abel—the number of one's posterity somehow being important in the overall scheme of things. Brigham Young further explained that those who were to have been Abel's descendants had already been assigned to his lineage, and if they were ever to come "into the world in the regular way, they would have to come through him." In order that Cain's posterity not gain an advantage the Lord denied them the priesthood until such time as "the class of spirits presided over by Abel should have the privilege of coming into the world." Those spirits formerly under Cain's leadership were reportedly aware of the implications of this decision, yet "still looked up to him, and rather than forsake him they were willing to bear his burdens and share the penalty imposed upon him."
  37. ^ Dialogue (PDF). Dialogue Foundation. 2001. p. 253.
  38. ^ Sterling M. McMurrin affidavit, March 6, 1979. See David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism by Greg Prince and William Robert Wright, p.[page needed]. Quoted by Genesis Group 2011-07-13 at the Wayback Machine
  39. ^ . churchofjesuschrist.org. Archived from the original on 2004-08-28. Retrieved 2012-09-21.
  40. ^ Official Declaration 2 (LDS standard works); see also: Official Declaration 2
  41. ^ Bushman, Richard (2008). Mormonism: a very short introduction. Oxford University Press. pp. 111–12. ISBN 978-0-19-531030-6.
  42. ^ Broadway, Bill (1998-05-30). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 2009-04-18. Retrieved 2009-10-29.
  43. ^ Ramirez, Margaret (2005-07-26). "Mormon past steeped in racism: Some black members want church to denounce racist doctrines". Chicago Tribune.
  44. ^ "Race and the Priesthood", churchofjesuschrist.org, LDS Church
  45. ^ a b c d Young, Brigham (1987), Collier, Fred C. (ed.), The Teachings of President Brigham Young: Vol. 3 1852–1854, Salt Lake City, Utah: Colliers Publishing Company, ISBN 0934964017, OCLC 18192348
  46. ^ "Race and the Priesthood".

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Bringhurst, Newell (1981). Saints, Slaves, and Blacks: The changing place of Black people within Mormonism. Greenwood Press. ISBN 9780313227523.
  • Bush, Lester E. Jr.; Armand Mauss (1984). . Signature Books. ISBN 0-941214-22-2. Archived from the original on 2005-11-22.
  • Nottingham, Theodore J. (1998). The Curse of Cain: The Untold Story of John Wilkes Booth. Sovereign Publications. ISBN 1-58006-021-8.
  • Schwartz, Regina M. (1997). The Curse of Cain: The Violent Legacy of Monotheism. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-74199-0.
  • University of Michigan (1971). White Attitudes toward Black People. Institute for Social Research of the University of Michigan. ASIN B000TA1IZW.
  • Wood, Peter H. (1996). Black Majority: Negroes in Colonial South Carolina from 1670 Through the Stono Rebellion. W. W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-31482-0.

External links edit

  • Catholic Encyclopedia entry on Cain
  • Biblical racism

curse, mark, cain, mark, cain, redirects, here, other, uses, mark, cain, disambiguation, curse, cain, mark, cain, phrases, that, originated, story, cain, abel, book, genesis, stories, someone, harmed, cain, damage, would, come, back, sevenfold, some, interpret. Mark of Cain redirects here For other uses see Mark of Cain disambiguation The curse of Cain and the mark of Cain are phrases that originated in the story of Cain and Abel in the Book of Genesis In the stories if someone harmed Cain the damage would come back sevenfold Some interpretations view this as a physical mark whereas other interpretations see the mark as a sign and not as a physical mark on Cain himself The King James Version of the Bible reads set a mark upon Cain Cain 1896 by Henri Vidal Jardin des Tuileries Paris Contents 1 Origins 2 Curse of Cain 3 Mark of Cain 3 1 Judaism 3 2 Christianity 3 3 American Protestant racial beliefs on the mark of Cain 3 3 1 Baptist segregation 3 3 2 Curse of Ham 3 4 Latter day Saint movement 3 4 1 Priesthood ban 3 4 2 Civil rights 4 See also 5 Footnotes 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksOrigins editMain article Cain and Abel There is no clear consensus as to what Cain s mark was 1 The word translated as mark in Genesis 4 15 is א ו ת ōṯ which could mean a sign omen warning remembrance motion gesture agreement miracle wonder or most commonly a letter In the Torah the same word is used to describe the stars as signs or omens Genesis 1 14 the rainbow as the sign of God s promise never again to destroy his creation with a flood Genesis 9 12 circumcision as a token of God s covenant with Abraham Genesis 17 11 and the miracles performed by Moses before the Pharaoh Exodus 4 8 9 17 28 7 3 8 23 10 1 2 Curse of Cain edit nbsp Glasgow Botanic Gardens Kibble Palace Edwin Roscoe Mullins Cain or My Punishment is Greater than I can Bear Genesis 4 13 about 1899 The narrative of the curse of Cain is found in the text of Genesis 4 11 16 The curse was the result of Cain murdering his brother Abel and lying about the murder to God 2 When Cain spilled his brother s blood the earth became cursed as soon as the blood hit the ground In a sense the earth was left drinking Abel s blood 3 Genesis 4 12 gives a two part sentencing for Cain s curse The first concerns the earth that was cursed by Abel s blood 4 Should Cain attempt to farm the land the earth would not yield produce for him This may imply why he went on to build cities 5 namely the City of Enoch The second part of the curse marks Cain as a fugitive Hebrew נע and a wanderer Hebrew נד The combination making up this Hebrew phrase נע ונד fugitive and wanderer is unique in the Hebrew Bible Modern interpretations of the Hebrew verse 12 suggest that Cain went on to live a nomadic lifestyle and that he was also excluded from the family unit 6 In the Septuagint the emphasis on Cain s curse is dramatically increased by the combination of the Greek participles stenwn kaὶ tremwn groaning and shaking upon the earth 7 Syriac Christianity 8 interprets the Greek version to mean that Cain experienced a real physical affliction 9 that would enable others to know who he was when they saw him Philo interprets the Greek verse 12 as an allegory for Cain s fear of being soulless The Samaritan Pentateuch and the Targums translate the same verse to mean that Cain feared being an exile and an unstable man 10 Mark of Cain editThe Hebrew word for mark Oth אות could mean a sign an omen a warning or a remembrance 11 The mark of Cain is God s promise to offer Cain divine protection from premature death with the stated purpose of preventing anyone from killing him It is not known what the mark was but it is assumed that the mark was visible 12 Some have speculated that the mark was a Hebrew or Sumerian letter placed on either the face or the arm 13 The Septuagint translates the mark as a sign Thus it is speculated that the mark served as a sign to others not to commit the same offense 14 15 Judaism edit Abba Arika Rav said that God gave Cain a dog making him an example for murderers Abba Jose ben Hanan said that God made a horn grow out of Cain R Hanin said that God made Cain an example to penitents Gen Rab 22 12 14 Rashi comments on Genesis 4 15 by saying that the mark was one of the Hebrew letters of the Tetragrammaton He engraved a letter of His God s Name onto his Cain s forehead 16 In Kabbalah the Zohar states that the mark of Cain was one of the twenty two Hebrew letters of the Torah although the Zohar s native Aramaic does not actually tell us which of the letters it was Some commentators such as Rabbi Michael Berg in his English commentary on the Zohar suggest that the mark of Cain was the letter vav 17 Christianity edit According to author Ruth Mellinkoff commentators interpretations of the nature of the mark depended on their views regarding the status of Cain as either being given additional time to repent or as being further shamed 18 American Protestant racial beliefs on the mark of Cain edit At some point after the start of the slave trade in the United States many citation needed Protestant denominations began teaching the belief that the mark of Cain was a dark skin tone in an attempt to justify their actions although early descriptions of Romani as descendants of Cain written by Franciscan friar Symon Semeonis suggest that this belief had existed for some time Protestant preachers wrote exegetical analyses of the curse with the assumption that it was dark skin 19 Baptist segregation edit The split between the Northern and Southern Baptist organizations arose over doctrinal issues pertaining to slavery and the education of slaves At the time of the split the Southern Baptist group used the curse of Cain as a justification for slavery Some 19th and 20th century Baptist ministers in the Southern United States taught the belief that there were two separate heavens one for Black people and one for White people 20 Southern Baptists either taught or practiced various forms of racial segregation well into the mid 20th century though members of all races were accepted at worship services a In 1995 the Southern Baptist Convention officially denounced racism and apologized for its past defense of slavery 22 The curse of Cain was used to support a ban on ordaining Black people to most Protestant clergies until the 1960s in both the United States and Europe citation needed However the majority of Christian churches in the world including the Catholic Church Eastern Orthodox churches Anglican churches and Oriental Orthodox churches did not recognize the racist interpretations and did not participate in the religious movement to exclude Black people from ministry One exception was that certain Catholic dioceses in the Southern United States independently adopted a policy of not permitting Black people to oversee administer sacraments to nor accept confessions from White parishioners citation needed The justification for this policy was not excused by supposing a curse of Cain doctrine but rather was justified by the widely held perception among southern clergy and congregations that it would offend too many White paritioners if slaves or their descendants had any authority over White people the race of their former masters and still their presumptive superiors citation needed This was neither approved by a Pope nor derived from any papal teaching 21 Curse of Ham edit Further information Curse of Ham Racism and slavery The Curse of Cain was often conflated with the Curse of Ham According to the Bible Ham discovered his father Noah drunk and naked in his tent but instead of honoring his father by covering his nakedness he ran and told his brothers about it Because of this Noah cursed Ham s son Canaan by saying that he was to be a servant of servants Genesis 9 20 27 One interpretation of this passage states that Ham married a descendant of Cain While there is no indication in the Bible of Ham s wife descending from Cain this interpretation was used to justify slavery and it was particularly popular in North America during the Atlantic slave trade due to interpretations identifying Ham as the progenitor of the people of Africa 23 24 Latter day Saint movement edit Main article Curses of Cain and Ham and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints See also Black people and Mormonism Mormonism began during the height of Protestant acceptance of the curse of Cain doctrine in North America as well as the even more popular curse of Ham doctrine Like many North Americans 23 24 Mormons of the 19th century commonly assumed that Black Africans had Cain s mark of black skin 25 and Ham s curse to be servants of servants 26 Joseph Smith and Brigham Young both taught that Black people were cursed descendants of Cain and used it to justify slavery 27 125 In the Pearl of Great Price considered scripture to most Mormons Enoch talks about shunning the descendants of Cain and that they had black skin 28 And Enoch also beheld the residue of the people which were the sons of Adam and they were a mixture of all the seed of Adam save it was the seed of Cain for the seed of Cain were black and had not place among them Moses 7 22 Church president Brigham Young stated What is the mark You will see it on the countenance of every African you ever did see 29 30 As related by Abraham O Smoot after his death apostle David W Patten said he encountered a Black man in Paris Tennessee who said that he was Cain The account states that Cain had earnestly sought death but was denied it and that his mission was to destroy the souls of men 31 32 85 The recollection of Patten s story is quoted in apostle Spencer W Kimball s The Miracle of Forgiveness Although not explicitly stated in Latter day Saint scripture at least one publication of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church still teaches that Ham s wife was a descendant of Cain The Guide to the Scriptures published as an explanatory companion to the scriptures states Ham s wife Egyptus was a descendant of Cain the sons of their daughter Egyptus settled in Egypt 33 Priesthood ban edit Main article Black people and Mormon priesthood There is evidence that Joseph Smith did not consider the ban on Black men to the priesthood to be relevant in modern times since he himself and other church leaders close to him ordained Black men into it 34 notably Elijah Abel and Walker Lewis After the death of Joseph Smith Brigham Young the second President of the Church accepted the idea that people of African ancestry were generally under the curse of Cain and in 1852 he stated that people of Black African descent were not eligible to hold the church s priesthood 35 Young taught that in the war in heaven both Cain and Abel were leaders The spirits of Black people fought under Cain and were assigned to be Cain s descendants Those that fought under Abel were assigned to be Abel s descendants Cain hoped that by killing his brother the spirits that were under him would have an advantage over the spirits under Abel However God cursed Cain and his descendants not to have the priesthood until all of Abel s descendants had the priesthood The spirits of Black people understood this and stood with Cain and accepted the punishment 36 37 The ban on the priesthood affected Black members differently than it did in other churches because the LDS Church has a lay priesthood in which virtually all worthy male members become priesthood holders Several of Young s successors defended the priesthood ban as being a result of the curse of Cain though some disagreed Sterling M McMurrin reported that in 1954 church president David O McKay said There is not now and there never has been a doctrine in this church that the negroes are under a divine curse There is no doctrine in the church of any kind pertaining to the negro We believe that we have a scriptural precedent for withholding the priesthood from the negro It is a practice not a doctrine and the practice someday will be changed And that s all there is to it 38 In 1978 LDS Church president Spencer W Kimball reported receiving a revelation from God allowing all worthy male members of the church to receive the priesthood without regard to race or color 39 40 Although the church had previously been criticized for its policy during the civil rights movement the change seems to have been prompted by problems facing mixed race converts in Brazil 41 Many Black church members think that giving an apology would be a detriment to church work and a catalyst for further racial misunderstanding African American church member Bryan E Powell says There is no pleasure in old news and this news is old Gladys Newkirk agrees stating I ve never experienced any problems in this church I don t need an apology We re the result of an apology 42 Many Black Mormons say that they are willing to look beyond the former teachings and cleave to the doctrines of the church in part because of its powerful detailed teachings on life after death 43 The LDS Church has issued an official statement about past practices and theories regarding skin color stating t oday the Church disavows the theories advanced in the past that black skin is a sign of divine disfavor or curse Church leaders today unequivocally condemn all racism past and present in any form 44 Civil rights edit See also Mormonism and slavery and Civil rights and Mormonism When Utah was considering slavery Brigham Young told the Utah Territorial Legislature that the curse of Cain required slavery He argued that until all of the descendants of Abel have access to the priesthood all of the descendants of Cain should remain in servitude 45 28 He argued that because they did not have the right to govern the affairs of the Church due to the priesthood ban they also should not have the right to govern the affairs of the state including the right to vote 45 47 He warned that if they made the children of Cain equal to them they would be cursed 45 48 He also argued that if someone married a descendant of Cain that they would also have the same curse 45 48 The church has since repudiated all of these teachings 46 See also editAshwatthama Badge of shame Cain tradition Castration Curse of Ham Mark of the beast Pre Adamite Serpent seedFootnotes edit Slaves were accepted for membership in the same manner as whites After expressing a desire to join a church one was required to relate his or her religious experience If the congregation was favorably impressed by one s testimony the applicant was accepted into the fellowship and was baptized When black church members moved from one community to another they were given letters of dismissal which they might place with another Baptist church Black church members worshiped in the sanctuary with whites participated in the service of Holy Communion and contributed to help support the various programs of the denomination Still blacks and females in antebellum Baptist churches held a membership status subordinate to that of adult white males since that group alone determined denominational policies and procedures 21 References editCitations edit Thursby Jacqueline S 2013 A Slave Tale Closing an Anathema NAAAS Conference Proceedings National Association of African American Studies ProQuest 1498460617 Byron 2011 p 93 Byron 2011 p 95 Genesis 4 11 Byron 2011 p 97 Kugel 163 Byron 2011 p 97 Wenham 108 Byron 2011 p 97 Byron 2011 p 98 Brayford 254 Byron 2011 p 100 Byron 2011 p 98 See footnote 14 Byron 2011 pp 98 100 BDB Francis Brown Samuel Rolles Driver Charles Augustus Briggs 1996 The Brown Driver Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon with an appendix containing the Biblical Aramaic coded with the numbering system from Strong s Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible 7 print 1997 ed Peabody Hendrickson p 16f ISBN 9781565632066 Byron 2011 p 119 Mellinkoff 1942 p 210 Moberley 2007 p 11 28 Byron 2011 p 120 Tg Ps J Gen 4 15 Pirqe R El 21 a b Byron 2011 p 120 Gen Rab 22 12 Byron 2011 p 106 Genesis Chapter 4 Parshah Bereishit Tanakh Online Torah Bible Chabad org Retrieved 2012 09 21 Bereshit A Chapter 48 Zohar com Retrieved 2020 09 01 Mellinkoff Ruth 1981 The Mark of Cain University of California Press p 13 ISBN 9780520906372 Priest Josiah Slavery as it Relates to the Negro or African Race 1843 Land of the Till Murder Ebony April 1956 Archived from the original on 2005 03 11 a b Miller Randall M Smith John David 1988 Dictionary of Afro American Slavery Westport CT Greenwood Press p 78 ISBN 0 313 23814 6 via Internet Archive archive org Kunnerth Jeff 21 June 1995 Baptists renounce racist past Orlando Sentinel Orlando FL Archived from the original on 2 September 2014 Retrieved 27 April 2012 a b Benjamin Braude The Sons of Noah and the Construction of Ethnic and Geographical Identities in the Medieval and Early Modern Periods William and Mary Quarterly LIV January 1997 103 42 See also William McKee Evans From the Land of Canaan to the Land of Guinea The Strange Odyssey of the Sons of Ham American Historical Review 85 February 1980 15 43 JSTOR 1853423 a b John N Swift and Gigen Mammoser Out of the Realm of Superstition Chesnutt s Dave s Neckliss and the Curse of Ham American Literary Realism vol 42 no 1 Fall 2009 3 Brigham Young s Speech on Slavery Blacks and the Priesthood Feb 5 1852 Reprint by Utah Lighthouse Ministry Smith Joseph 1836 Latter Day Saints Messenger and Advocate Volume 2 Number 7 Letter to Oliver Cowdery from Joseph Smith Jr Apr 1836 p 290 via Wikisource Reeve W Paul 2015 Religion of a Different Color Race and the Mormon Struggle for Whiteness New York New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 975407 6 Kidd Colin 2006 The Forging of Races Race and Scripture in the Protestant Atlantic World 1600 2000 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521793247 Collier Fred C 1987 The Teachings of President Brigham Young Vol 3 1852 1854 Salt Lake City Collier Publishing Co p 42 ISBN 9780934964012 Watt George D Brigham Young 1852 February 5 5 Feb 1852 Historian s Office reports of speeches 1845 1885 ID CR 100 317 p 2 Salt Lake City LDS Church History Library Wilson 1904 Whiting 2003 Guide to the Scriptures Ham Black History Timeline BlackLDS org Retrieved 17 January 2013 Wilford Woodruff Diary of Wilford Woodruff January 16 1852 A ny man having one drop of the seed of Cain in him cannot hold the priesthood and if no other Prophet ever spake it before I will say it now in the name of Jesus Christ Bush Lester E Jr Mauss Armand L eds 1984 Neither White Nor Black Mormon Scholars Confront the Race Issue in a Universal Church Salt Lake City Utah Signature Books ISBN 0 941214 22 2 Cain in murdering Abel had deprived his brother of the privilege of pursuing his journey through life and of extending his kingdom by multiplying upon the earth Cain had reportedly hoped thereby to gain an advantage over Abel the number of one s posterity somehow being important in the overall scheme of things Brigham Young further explained that those who were to have been Abel s descendants had already been assigned to his lineage and if they were ever to come into the world in the regular way they would have to come through him In order that Cain s posterity not gain an advantage the Lord denied them the priesthood until such time as the class of spirits presided over by Abel should have the privilege of coming into the world Those spirits formerly under Cain s leadership were reportedly aware of the implications of this decision yet still looked up to him and rather than forsake him they were willing to bear his burdens and share the penalty imposed upon him Dialogue PDF Dialogue Foundation 2001 p 253 Sterling M McMurrin affidavit March 6 1979 See David O McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism by Greg Prince and William Robert Wright p page needed Quoted by Genesis Group Archived 2011 07 13 at the Wayback Machine Spencer W Kimball Significant Events churchofjesuschrist org Archived from the original on 2004 08 28 Retrieved 2012 09 21 Official Declaration 2 LDS standard works see also Official Declaration 2 Bushman Richard 2008 Mormonism a very short introduction Oxford University Press pp 111 12 ISBN 978 0 19 531030 6 Broadway Bill 1998 05 30 Black Mormons Resist Apology Talk The Washington Post Archived from the original on 2009 04 18 Retrieved 2009 10 29 Ramirez Margaret 2005 07 26 Mormon past steeped in racism Some black members want church to denounce racist doctrines Chicago Tribune Race and the Priesthood churchofjesuschrist org LDS Church a b c d Young Brigham 1987 Collier Fred C ed The Teachings of President Brigham Young Vol 3 1852 1854 Salt Lake City Utah Colliers Publishing Company ISBN 0934964017 OCLC 18192348 Race and the Priesthood Sources edit Byron John 2011 Cain and Abel in text and tradition Jewish and Christian interpretations of the first sibling rivalry Leiden Brill Publishers p 93 ISBN 978 9004192522 Goldenberg David M 2003 The Curse of Cain The curse of Ham race and slavery in early Judaism Christianity and Islam 2nd printing ed Princeton u a Princeton University Press ISBN 069111465X Whiting Linda Shelley 2003 David W Patten Apostle and Martyr Springville UT Cedar Fort ISBN 1 55517 682 8 OCLC 51293310 Wilson Lycurgus A 1904 1900 Life of David W Patten The first Apostolic martyr Deseret News LCCN 44013747 OCLC 4922706 Further reading editBringhurst Newell 1981 Saints Slaves and Blacks The changing place of Black people within Mormonism Greenwood Press ISBN 9780313227523 Bush Lester E Jr Armand Mauss 1984 Neither White Nor Black Mormon Scholars Confront the Race Issue in a Universal Church Signature Books ISBN 0 941214 22 2 Archived from the original on 2005 11 22 Nottingham Theodore J 1998 The Curse of Cain The Untold Story of John Wilkes Booth Sovereign Publications ISBN 1 58006 021 8 Schwartz Regina M 1997 The Curse of Cain The Violent Legacy of Monotheism University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 74199 0 University of Michigan 1971 White Attitudes toward Black People Institute for Social Research of the University of Michigan ASIN B000TA1IZW Wood Peter H 1996 Black Majority Negroes in Colonial South Carolina from 1670 Through the Stono Rebellion W W Norton ISBN 0 393 31482 0 External links editCatholic Encyclopedia entry on Cain Encarta article that discusses race and religion in 1969 Biblical racism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Curse and mark of Cain amp oldid 1193764066, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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