Page:Scofield Reference Bible Notes 1917.djvu/23



Verse 21
coats of skins Coats of skins: Type of "Christ, made unto us righteousness"-- a divinely provided garment that the first sinners might be made fit for God's presence. See Righteousness, garment Genesis 3:21; Revelation 19:8.

Verse 23
Therefore the Lord God The Second Dispensation: Conscience. By disobedience man came to a personal and experimental knowledge of good and evil--of good as obedience, of evil as disobedience to the known will of God. Through that knowledge conscience awoke. Expelled from Eden and placed under the second, or ADAMIC COVENANT, man was responsible to do all known good, to abstain from all known evil, and to approach God through sacrifice. The result of this second testing of man is stated in Genesis 6:5 and the dispensation ended in the judgment of the Flood. Apparently "the east of the garden" Genesis 3:24 where were the cherubims and the flame, remained the place of worship through this second dispensation. See for the other six dispensations: INNOCENCE  (See Scofield "Genesis 1:28") HUMAN GOVERNMENT  (See Scofield "Genesis 8:21") PROMISE  (See Scofield "Genesis 12:1") LAW  (See Scofield "Exodus 19:8") GRACE  (See Scofield "John 1:17") KINGDOM  (See Scofield "Ephesians 1:10")

Verse 24
Cherubims See note,  (See Scofield "Ezekiel 1:5") =CHAPTER 4=

Verse 1
Cain Cain ("acquisition") is a type of the mere man of the earth. His religion was destitute of any adequate sense of sin, or need of atonement. This religious type is described in 2Pe 2. Seven things are said of him:
 * (1) he worships in self-will
 * (2) is angry with God
 * (3) refuses to bring a sin offering
 * (4) murders his brother
 * (5) lies to God
 * (6) becomes a vagabond
 * (7) is, nevertheless, the object of the divine solicitude.

Verse 2
Abel Abel ("exhalation," or, "that which ascends") is a type of the spiritual man. His sacrifice, in which atoning blood was shed Hebrews 9:22 was therefore at once his confession of sin and the expression of his faith in the interposition of a substitute Hebrews 11:4

Verse 4
Abel Abel ("exhalation," or, "that which ascends") is a type of the spiritual man. His sacrifice, in which atoning blood was shed Hebrews 9:22 was therefore at once his confession of sin and the expression of his faith in the interposition of a substitute Hebrews 11:4. flock Type of Christ, the Lamb of God, the most constant type of the suffering Messiah--"the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world" John 1:29. A lamb fitly symbolizes the unresisting innocency and harmlessness of the Lord Jesus Isaiah 53:7; Luke 23:9; Matthew 26:53,54. This type is brought into prominence by contrast with Cain's bloodless offering of the fruit of his own works, and proclaims, in the very infancy of the race, the primal truth that "without shedding of blood is no remission" ; Hebrews 9:22; 11:4.