NIV, Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible CBSB_Digital Sampler | Page 15

Genesis 4:3  | 13 The wom­an said, “The ser­pent de­ceived me,  i and I ate.” 14  So the L ord God said to the ser­ pent, “Be­cause you have done this, “Cursed  j are you above all livestock and all wild animals! You will crawl on your belly and you will eat dust  k all the days of your life. 15 And I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring  a   l and hers;  m he will crush  b your head,  n and you will strike his heel.” 16  To 3:13 i  2Co 11:3; 1Ti 2:14 3:14 j  Dt 28:15- 20 k  Isa 65:25; Mic 7:17 3:15 l  Jn 8:44; Ac 13:10; 1Jn 3:8 m  Isa 7:14; Mt 1:23; Rev 12:17 n  Ro 16:20; Heb 2:14 3:16 o  1Co 11:3; Eph 5:22 3:17 p  Ge 5:29; Ro 8:20-22 q  Job 5:7; 14:1; Ecc 2:23 3:18 r  Ps 104:14 the wom­an he said, “I will make your pains in childbearing very severe; with painful labor you will give birth to children. Your desire will be for your husband, and he will rule over you.  o ” 17   To Adam he said, “Be­cause you lis­ tened to your wife and ate fruit from the tree a ­ bout ­which I com­mand­ed you, ‘You must not eat from it,’ “Cursed  p is the ground because of you; through painful toil you will eat food from it all the days of your life.  q 18 It will produce thorns and thistles for you, and you will eat the plants of the field.  r 19 By the sweat of your brow you will eat your food  s until you return to the ground, since from it you were taken; for dust you are and to dust you will return.”  t 20  Adam  c ­ named his wife Eve,  d be­cause she ­would be­come the moth­er of all the liv­ing. 21  The L ord God made gar­ments of skin for Adam and his wife and c ­ lothed them. 22  And the L ord God said, “The man has now be­come like one of us, know­ing good and evil. He must not be al­lowed to ­reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life  u and eat, and live for­ev­er.” 23  So the L ord God ban­ished him from the Gar­den of Eden  v to work the g ­ round  w from w ­ hich he had been tak­en. 24  Af­ter he ­drove the man out, he ­placed on the east side  e of the Gar­den of Eden cher­u­bim  x and a flam­ing ­sword  y flash­ing back and ­forth to ­guard the way to the tree of life.  z Cain and Abel Adam  c made love to his wife Eve, and she be­came preg­nant and gave b ­ irth to Cain.  f She said, “With the help of the L ord I have b ­ rought ­forth  g a man.” 2   Lat­er she gave b ­ irth to his broth­er Abel.  a Now Abel kept ­flocks, and Cain ­worked the soil. 3  In the ­course of time Cain ­brought some of the f ­ ruits of the soil as an of­fer­ing 4 3:19 s  2Th 3:10 t  Ge 2:7; Ps 90:3; 104:29; Ecc 12:7 3:22 u  Rev 22:14 3:23 v  Ge 2:8 w  Ge 4:2 3:24 x  Ex 25:18- 22 y  Ps 104:4 z  Ge 2:9 4:2 a  Lk 11:51 3:14  God said to the serpent, “ . . . Cursed are you.”  The Egyp- tian Pyramid Texts were designed to aid the pharaohs of the Old Kingdom on their journey to the afterlife. Among the over 700 utterances are several dozen spells and curses on snakes that may impede the king’s progress. These utterances contain phrases that are reminiscent of the curse on the serpent in ch. 3. crawl on your belly. This statement is paralleled by frequent spells in the Egyptian Pyramid Texts that call on snakes to lie down, fall down, get down, or crawl away. Another spell says that he should “go with your face on the path.” These suggest that when God tells the serpent that he will crawl on his bel