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A:The Bible never describes Cain as black. However, white supremists have identified the 'mark of Cain' (Genesis 4:15) as referring to him as black. Yet the same white supremists accept the biblical Flood story as literally true, meaning that modern black people would have to be descended from Noah, not from Cain.
There are a couple different genealogies given for the descendants of Cain. These appear in Genesis (4:16-23; 5:21-29). One reason for this may be that those recording the genealogy did not want to have heros such as Enoch and Noah to be known descendants of the first murder, Cain; so they instead made them descendants of Cain's brother, Seth (Adam and Eve's third son). The most reliable genealogy seems to go: Adam Cain Enoch Irad Mehujael Methusael Lamech Noah There are a couple different genealogies given for the descendants of Cain. These appear in Genesis (4:16-23; 5:21-29). One reason for this may be that those recording the genealogy did not want to have heros such as Enoch and Noah to be known descendants of the first murder, Cain; so they instead made them descendants of Cain's brother, Seth (Adam and Eve's third son). The most reliable genealogy seems to go: Adam Cain Enoch Irad Mehujael Methusael Lamech Noah The above seems to be incorrect, according to Genesis 5:17-29 the Enoch and Lamech, descendants of Seth were different from the Enoch and Lamech descendants of Cain.
No they are not the same person.You're confusing Noah (of the ark) with Jonah, the man associated with the whale ("great fish" - Jonah 1:17).
No it is not the same person.
Yes, according to the Bible at: Genesis 5:28+29Additional information:It should be noted that the Lamech of Genesis 4:18-24 is NOT the same man as the Lamech of Genesis 5:25-29. The first Lamech was a descendent of Cain. The second was a descendent of Seth; the son of Methuselah and father of Noah.
nothing
Cain's eldest son is recorded in Genesis 4:17 as Enoch (not the same Enoch that God later took from the earth).
Methuselah. He lived for 969 years. He died in the same year of the great flood of Noah's time.
In the Bible (and in the Torah) Enoch (the ancestor of Noah, not the son of Cain) and Elijah the prophet are specifically called out as being "taken" by God as opposed to dying. (The Koran may have the same tradition; I don't really know one way or the other.)
Grendel's ancestor was the biblical figure Cain, who was cursed by God for murdering his brother Abel. According to the legend in the epic poem Beowulf, Grendel is depicted as a descendant of Cain, marked by the same curse and doomed to roam the earth as a monster.
No, Stella and noah are really close, they even used to go to the same school
They ate grains the same as the animals.