What does Genesis 4:21 teach us about music?
Having finished reading the Bible yesterday, I began reading it again today and read Genesis 1-4. Genesis 4:21 is the earliest recorded instance of human musical activity on the earth:
Genesis 4:21 And his brother’s name was Jubal: he was the father of all such as handle the harp and organ.
What truths does this verse teach us about music?
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In determining what a passage teaches, it is often helpful to determine what a passage does not teach. Genesis 4:21 does not teach any of the following:
1. God created the music of Jubal
2. God accepted any of the music of Jubal
3. Jubal invented the harp and the organ (he may have invented them, but the Hebrew verb rendered as “handle” in this verse does not mean to invent)
4. Jubal was the first human being to produce music
5. Jubal was trying to produce music to please God
6. Genesis 4:21 is a record of people singing and playing musical instruments at the same time
… that people have been making music for a very long time.
… that people have been teaching music to other people for a long time.
(There is no “organ” in Gen 4:21… the עוּגָב is almost certainly some kind of flute, and the כִּנּוֹר only resembles what we know as a “harp.” Closer to a lyre.)
The reference to music here is consistent with a number of truths we know from other passages (e.g., that humans are creative as those made in God’s image, that we’re supposed to do creative things, etc.).
That’s about it.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
[Aaron Blumer]The verse reveals that Jubal and others were playing two classes of instruments: stringed and wind.… that people have been making music for a very long time.
… that people have been teaching music to other people for a long time.
(There is no “organ” in Gen 4:21… the עוּגָב is almost certainly some kind of flute, and the כִּנּוֹר only resembles what we know as a “harp.” Closer to a lyre.)
The reference to music here is consistent with a number of truths we know from other passages (e.g., that humans are creative as those made in God’s image, that we’re supposed to do creative things, etc.).
That’s about it.
It’s interesting that this is the only recorded reference to human musical activities prior to the Flood.
Another thing to note is that the earliest mention (from a chronological standpoint) of percussion instruments is not until the time of Job in Job 21:12. I wonder why the Spirit revealed the info in Genesis 4:21 to us about the use of stringed and wind instruments prior to the Flood but He did not reveal anything to us about the use of any percussion instruments prior to the Flood.
[RajeshG]Perhaps the use of percussion was so common that the creation of something else then became noteworthy. After all, you don’t even need an instrument for percussion. A person can strike one’s hands against another body part and have percussion.I wonder why the Spirit revealed the info in Genesis 4:21 to us about the use of stringed and wind instruments prior to the Flood but He did not reveal anything to us about the use of any percussion instruments prior to the Flood.
Also no brass, no reeds, no whatever class bagpipes are in.
Little can be inferred from silence in this case, but it may be that
- The lyre and flute (or whatever exactly they were) had just been invented, while brass and percussion were already commonplace and not noteworthy
- The opposite: brass, percussion etc. had not been invented yet.
- Or some mix of the above. Brass is more difficult to invent and construct than a simple drum, so it seems likely to me that the latter would have taken Adam about 35 seconds to invent, once he got interested in the idea.
(Edit: Kevin I think we were writing at the same time, didn’t see your post.)
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
[Kevin Miller]People can whistle to make sounds similar to some of the sounds that flutes and other similar instruments make.Perhaps the use of percussion was so common that the creation of something else then became noteworthy. After all, you don’t even need an instrument for percussion. A person can strike one’s hands against another body part and have percussion.
For whatever it may be worth, I do not think that Genesis 4:21 is a record of the creation of the instruments mentioned in those passages.
Just as Genesis 4:21 speaks only of stringed instruments and wind instruments but not percussion instruments, so the references to music in Revelation only mention stringed instruments and wind instruments in heaven but not percussion instruments. Is this a significant parallel or not?
[RajeshG]Just as Genesis 4:21 speaks only of stringed instruments and wind instruments but not percussion instruments, so the references to music in Revelation only mention stringed instruments and wind instruments in heaven but not percussion instruments. Is this a significant parallel or not?
I think the only way we can draw a parallel is if the lack of mention in Genesis 4:21 actually told us anything about percussion. As we’ve already discussed, the lack of a mention does not tell us whether percussion already existed and the lack certainly doesn’t tell us whether God approves or disapproves of percussion. In Revelation 5:8, Revelation 14:2, and Revelation 15:2 we have harps mentioned, but no other stringed instruments. Wind instruments are treated the same as percussion in those passages in that they are ignored. The lack of a mention does not tell us anything about the existence of other instruments in heaven or about God’s approval/disapproval. There are verses about trumpets being sounded, but they are used in a proclamation manner, rather than being played in musical sense. The verses about trumpets also do not mention stringed instruments or percussion.
I just don’t see how we can draw a significant parallel from a lack of a mention, when the lack of a mention doesn’t tell us anything specific.
You are correct that the references to music in Revelation do not specifically mention the use of trumpets on those occasions; yet, unlike percussion instruments, which are not mentioned at all in Revelation, trumpets are mentioned in several places.
We already know that God approves of the use of percussion instruments from many other passages so I’m not suggesting that we are to infer anything about their disapproval by the lack of mention in Revelation.
[RajeshG]I never said that YOU inferred that. You simply wondered why they weren’t mentioned, and then you asked if there was a parallel with the lack of mention in Revelation. Specifically, you asked if there is a “significant” parallel. Why bother wondering? Seriously. What’s the point? Are there any possible inferences that really CAN be made from the lack of a mention? I noted two possible things that didn’t seem logical to infer, that of non-existence and that of God’s disapproval. Again, I didn’t say YOU were inferring those things. I just mentioned those two things as things that couldn’t be inferred. I don’t think anything can realistically be inferred from the lack of a mention. Do you?We already know that God approves of the use of percussion instruments from many other passages so I’m not suggesting that we are to infer anything about their disapproval by the lack of mention in Revelation.
[Kevin Miller]Pondering the theological implications of the lack of mention of something in one or more passages is an important and highly controversial subject. To profit fully from what God has revealed, we have to consider thoroughly why God has said what He has said and also what He has chosen not to say.I never said that YOU inferred that. You simply wondered why they weren’t mentioned, and then you asked if there was a parallel with the lack of mention in Revelation. Specifically, you asked if there is a “significant” parallel. Why bother wondering? Seriously. What’s the point? Are there any possible inferences that really CAN be made from the lack of a mention? I noted two possible things that didn’t seem logical to infer, that of non-existence and that of God’s disapproval. Again, I didn’t say YOU were inferring those things. I just mentioned those two things as things that couldn’t be inferred. I don’t think anything can realistically be inferred from the lack of a mention. Do you?
It’s not about “theological implications.” It’s about clear thinking. Whether the form of communication is a letter to a friend, an email, a speech, a novel, an essay, the U.S. Constitution or inspired Scripture, you can usually infer little or nothing from silence.
I say “usually,” because there are situations where a pattern of including a term or phrase or topic has a long history and in a similar context it’s absence is conspicuous. Still, there are always many ways to explain a silence and this is why any one explanation is “very low probability” on its own. If you pull in lots of other evidence, it’s possible to make a case for one explanation or another. But then you’re no longer drawing an inference from silence, you’re explaining a silence using nonsilence (additional evidence)… in which case you might as well just unclutter your argument by using the additional evidence by itself and ignoring the silence.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
Context, context, context.
God told people to be fruitful and multiply and have dominion over the earth.
People sinned.
God said He’d put enmity between the offspring of the woman and the offspring of the serpent.
Cain kills Abel.
Genesis 4 and 5 give us two genealogies, one for Cain, and one for Seth.
The seventh in Cain’s genealogy is Lamech, a boorish and vengeful character; the seventh in Seth’s genealogy is Enoch, who walked with God.
I get the sense (though we can’t establish for certain) that Cain’s line was generally ungodly, and Seth’s line was generally godly.
So it’s ironic that the advances in “civilization” are all mentioned in Cain’s line: city-building, music, metallurgy.
What I infer is something like common grace: God gifts even wicked men to build cultures. But the common-grace gifts are not to be thought more valuable than walking with God.
It’s hard to learn anything about music as such from this passage; in fact, it seems you have to bring a pre-understanding of music to make sense of why music is mentioned here at all. I admit that I bring the preunderstanding that the ability to make music is a pre-moral good and a gift from God.
Michael Osborne
Philadelphia, PA
[M. Osborne]It’s ironic that this is an argument from silence based on the lack of mention of these things in Seth’s line. See Aaron’s comment immediately preceding yours.So it’s ironic that the advances in “civilization” are all mentioned in Cain’s line: city-building, music, metallurgy.
What I infer is something like common grace: God gifts even wicked men to build cultures. But the common-grace gifts are not to be thought more valuable than walking with God.
It’s hard to learn anything about music as such from this passage; in fact, it seems you have to bring a pre-understanding of music to make sense of why music is mentioned here at all. I admit that I bring the preunderstanding that the ability to make music is a pre-moral good and a gift from God.
Ramesh. I’m not seeing any argument from silence there. You are maybe unclear on the definition?
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
[Aaron Blumer]Implying that the lack of mention in Seth’s line of references to music, etc. is proof that they did not have music is an argument from silence.Ramesh. I’m not seeing any argument from silence there. You are maybe unclear on the definition?
Michael’s implying that the mention of certain things in the line of Cain is proof that those things originated with Cain’s line is an unprovable assumption.
Forgive me for quoting myself:
…the advances in “civilization” are all mentioned in Cain’s line…
What I infer is something like common grace: God gifts even wicked men to build cultures.
For me, I’ll do my best to make my arguments, implications, and inferences explicit, and I’ll even try to tag my inferences with phrases like “What I infer is…” (as above).
Rajesh, please do your best to interact with what’s written, so that
“God gifts even wicked men to build cultures” isn’t turned into “Seth’s line didn’t have music”
or “Cain’s line originated [advances in civilization].”
I didn’t say it; I didn’t imply it; I don’t think I was unclear about it, either.
Michael Osborne
Philadelphia, PA
[M. Osborne]Michael,Forgive me for quoting myself:
…the advances in “civilization” are all mentioned in Cain’s line…
What I infer is something like common grace: God gifts even wicked men to build cultures.
I disagree. I believe that you do imply that such advances were not in Seth’s line when you say, “The advances in “civilization” are all mentioned in Cain’s line.” Your use of the word “all,” in my opinion, is an observation that argues that the corresponding lack of mention/silence about such advances in Seth’s line has significance. You may not have intended to imply that, but I see your comparing the two lines and then using the word “all” to do that very thing.
Rajesh, it’s pretty futile to insist that someone means something different from what they’re saying… when someone tries to make up both sides of a conversation, he’s really only talking to himself.
As for “the advances in ‘civilization’ are all mentioned in Cain’s line”… this is simply a statement of fact. It’s what’s in the text. Noting that something is said of A but is not said of B is not an argument from silence. It’s contrast.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
[Aaron Blumer]Yes, it is a statement of contrast, but the importance/significance that is at least implicitly being placed on the contrast is one that I disagree with.Rajesh, it’s pretty futile to insist that someone means something different from what they’re saying… when someone tries to make up both sides of a conversation, he’s really only talking to himself.
As for “the advances in ‘civilization’ are all mentioned in Cain’s line”… this is simply a statement of fact. It’s what’s in the text. Noting that something is said of A but is not said of B is not an argument from silence. It’s contrast.
The NT illumines our understanding of who Cain was in a way that we would never have known from just the OT record of his life:
1 John 3:12 Not as Cain, who was of that wicked one, and slew his brother. And wherefore slew he him? Because his own works were evil, and his brother’s righteous.
Because Cain was of the devil, our understanding of his wickedness and the wickedness of his descendants must account for this crucial revelation that God has given us. What relevance does this information have for our understanding of Genesis 4:21?
[RajeshG]The NT illumines our understanding of who Cain was in a way that we would never have known from just the OT record of his life:
1 John 3:12 Not as Cain, who was of that wicked one, and slew his brother. And wherefore slew he him? Because his own works were evil, and his brother’s righteous.
Because Cain was of the devil, our understanding of his wickedness and the wickedness of his descendants must account for this crucial revelation that God has given us. What relevance does this information have for our understanding of Genesis 4:21?
[Dave White]No, you are not getting warm.Am I getting warm?
[RajeshG]Because Cain was of the devil, our understanding of his wickedness and the wickedness of his descendants must account for this crucial revelation that God has given us. What relevance does this information have for our understanding of Genesis 4:21?
What do you mean by “crucial”?
[Joe Whalen]Anytime the Spirit illumines our understanding explicitly in the NT of a previous event that is also recorded in Scripture, we know that He is giving us vital information that He wants us to know about that previous event. As I said earlier, had the Spirit not given us the information that He did in 1 John 3:12, we would have no knowledge that Cain murdered his brother Abel because Cain was of the devil. Consequently, we cannot rightly interpret what we have in the OT about Cain and his descendants apart from accounting for the additional information that the Spirit has given us in the NT.What do you mean by “crucial”?
Okay.
[RajeshG]Anytime the Spirit illumines our understanding explicitly in the NT of a previous event that is also recorded in Scripture, we know that He is giving us vital information that He wants us to know about that previous event. As I said earlier, had the Spirit not given us the information that He did in 1 John 3:12, we would have no knowledge that Cain murdered his brother Abel because Cain was of the devil. Consequently, we cannot rightly interpret what we have in the OT about Cain and his descendants apart from accounting for the additional information that the Spirit has given us in the NT.
I’m not sure what Cain being “of the devil” has to do with the information in Genesis 4:21. Yes, Jubal was a descendent of Cain, but is being “of the devil” something that is passed on genetically, such that all of Cain’s physical descendants would then be classified as “of the devil”?
It seems to me that being “of the devil” has to do with committing particular works of evil. Cain’s work of evil was murder. In John 8:44, Jesus tells the Pharisees, “Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it.” In these verses, the works of evil are described as following the lusts of the devil, was was a murderer and liar from the beginning.
Genesis 4:21 doesn’t list any works of evil from Jubal. It just says that he is the father of those who play instruments. In what way, if any, would Jubal be “of the devil”?
[Kevin Miller]In the verse that you cited about the devil, we read that Jesus revealed that the devil was “a murderer from the beginning” (John 8:44). Whom did he murder at the beginning and how did he do it?I’m not sure what Cain being “of the devil” has to do with the information in Genesis 4:21. Yes, Jubal was a descendent of Cain, but is being “of the devil” something that is passed on genetically, such that all of Cain’s physical descendants would then be classified as “of the devil”?
It seems to me that being “of the devil” has to do with committing particular works of evil. Cain’s work of evil was murder. In John 8:44, Jesus tells the Pharisees, “Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it.” In these verses, the works of evil are described as following the lusts of the devil, was was a murderer and liar from the beginning.
Genesis 4:21 doesn’t list any works of evil from Jubal. It just says that he is the father of those who play instruments. In what way, if any, would Jubal be “of the devil”?
[RajeshG]Would being a motivating force behind a murder count as being a murderer?In the verse that you cited about the devil, we read that Jesus revealed that the devil was “a murderer from the beginning” (John 8:44). Whom did he murder at the beginning and how did he do it?
[Kevin Miller]Yes. God/Nathan said that David murdered Uriah (2 Sam. 12:9), but he was not the one who actually killed him. Similarly, Herod killed John, but he was not the one who actually beheaded him.Would being a motivating force behind a murder count as being a murderer?
God promised that there would be enmity between the serpent’s seed and the woman’s seed and that ultimately the woman’s seed would crush the head of the serpent’s seed (Gen. 3:15).
Cain was of the devil (1 John 3:12), and the devil influenced/energized him to kill Abel (cf. John 8:44, where the devil is said to be a murderer from the beginning). Cain is the first human being who was so influenced of the devil to attack the woman’s seed. Cain was the first human in the line of the serpent’s seed.
Lamech, a descendant of Cain, was a polygamist (Gen. 4:19) and a double murderer who boasted of his murders (Gen. 4:23-24). As such, he represents an intensifying of the wickedness of Cain.
Lamech was the father of Jubal; Jubal thus was born in the household of a very wicked man who was in the line of the serpent’s seed. Based on what we know of Cain and Lamech, we do not have any reason to think that Jubal would have been significantly different from them.
Based on what we know of Cain and Lamech, we do not have any reason to think that Jubal would have been significantly different from them.
There’s….an awful lot of personal speculation here.
"Our task today is to tell people — who no longer know what sin is...no longer see themselves as sinners, and no longer have room for these categories — that Christ died for sins of which they do not think they’re guilty." - David Wells
@Ramesh…
Just like Manasseh was evil, Amon was evil, and Josiah… Hmmm.
You could claim that if we had no information about Josiah “we would have no reason to think he was much different from” Manasseh and Amon. But this is not sound reasoning.
See argument from silence, above.
Without information, it’s true we have no reason to think A. We also have no reason to think anything else.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
[Aaron Blumer]Aaron, please note that my name is Rajesh, not Ramesh.@Ramesh…
Just like Manasseh was evil, Amon was evil, and Josiah… Hmmm.
You could claim that if we had no information about Josiah “we would have no reason to think he was much different from” Manasseh and Amon. But this is not sound reasoning.
See argument from silence, above.
Without information, it’s true we have no reason to think A. We also have no reason to think anything else.
There are major difference that you are not accounting for: Cain went out from the presence of the Lord and established his own city and line, etc. We have no indication that there was any true knowledge of God among any of his descendants. We also have explicit biblical statement that “he was of the devil.”
Josiah, on the other hand, was born and grew up among a people where there were those who were still godly and had knowledge of the true God even though his father was a wicked man. Moreover, his grandfather, Manasseh, truly repented late in his life and sought God fervently.
We have no such information about any of the forefathers of Jubal: from Cain to his grandfather Methusael to his father Lamech.
As wicked as they were, we never have the Bible telling us that Manasseh and Amon were of the devil.
These are key differences that you are not accounting for in the comparison that you are making.
[RajeshG]I was looking at I John 3. Verse 8 tells us, “He that committeth sin is of the devil.” Since Adam and Eve committed the first sin, wouldn’t they be the first people who were “of the devil”?Cain was of the devil (1 John 3:12), and the devil influenced/energized him to kill Abel (cf. John 8:44, where the devil is said to be a murderer from the beginning). Cain is the first human being who was so influenced of the devil to attack the woman’s seed. Cain was the first human in the line of the serpent’s seed.
Rajesh (sorry about my previous typo… it’s especially frequent when I’m using my phone!)
You’re making way too much of “of the devil.” Some additional info to factor in…
- We’re all of the devil until we’re transferred to the Lordship of Jesus Christ Col. 1:13, 2 Cor. 4.4
- Many are more closely linked with the Evil One’s agenda than others: John 8:44
- It does not follow that descendants of someone who is “of the devil” in some special sense must also be “of the devil” in that sense.
In my example above, Josiah is the grandson of Manasseh who may well have practiced some form of child sacrifice (there’s some disagreement as to what that very brief statement about him means).
But this is, once again, mostly a matter of sound reasoning, not theology. People/things do not necessarily have characteristic X because they came from someone/some group with characteristic X. Article on genetic fallacy is somewhat helpful.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
The issue here, it seems to me, is a hermeneutic that reads later revelation back into earlier revelation. While it is true that sometimes additional revelation gives us greater insight into an earlier passage, it is not true that we should read a late NT phrase back into the text of Genesis 4-5 as some form of a decoder key. What exactly does John saying that Cain is “of the devil” tell us about him that Genesis 4 does not? Moses is pretty clear on the nature and source of Cain’s wickedness. And, as has already been pointed out, whatever is said of Cain is not necessarily applied to Jubal.
[pvawter]Really? If you did not have 1 John 3:12, you would not be able to assert definitively that demonic influence/energizing played a role in Cain’s murdering Abel. Moses does not provide any indication of supernatural influence on Cain that influenced him for evil.The issue here, it seems to me, is a hermeneutic that reads later revelation back into earlier revelation. While it is true that sometimes additional revelation gives us greater insight into an earlier passage, it is not true that we should read a late NT phrase back into the text of Genesis 4-5 as some form of a decoder key. What exactly does John saying that Cain is “of the devil” tell us about him that Genesis 4 does not? Moses is pretty clear on the nature and source of Cain’s wickedness. And, as has already been pointed out, whatever is said of Cain is not necessarily applied to Jubal.
[RajeshG]Really? If you did not have 1 John 3:12, you would not be able to assert definitively that demonic influence/energizing played a role in Cain’s murdering Abel. Moses does not provide any indication of supernatural influence on Cain that influenced him for evil.
Of course you can. Genesis 4 cannot be separated from Genesis 3 both because it follows immediately in context and because Moses uses linguistic and thematic keys to tie the passages together.
Gen. 3:15 includes the promise of that woman’s seed crushing the serpent’s head, and Eve refers to it when she names Cain. Clearly she expected her firstborn to conquer the serpent, setting the stage for a great spiritual battle.
Then in 4:7 Yahweh pointed Cain back to the consequences of the fall when he used the same words for desire and rule that he used in the curse of his mother in 3:17.
These are not obscure references but clear connections that Moses intended his readers to get. They demonstrate that Cain’s murder of Abel was more than a mere fit of rage but the next round in Satan’s war to dethrone God. Not only do we not need John to tell us that Satan was involved, we have every reason to believe that John was picking up on the cues Moses left when he said Cain was of the devil.
[Aaron Blumer]We are not talking about a characteristic of a group as if it were something internal to that group. We are talking about supernatural evil influence on human beings in the line of a man who blatantly rejected personal divine ministry to him and was specifically cursed by God (Gen. 4:11).Rajesh (sorry about my previous typo… it’s especially frequent when I’m using my phone!)
You’re making way too much of “of the devil.” Some additional info to factor in…
- We’re all of the devil until we’re transferred to the Lordship of Jesus Christ Col. 1:13, 2 Cor. 4.4
- Many are more closely linked with the Evil One’s agenda than others: John 8:44
- It does not follow that descendants of someone who is “of the devil” in some special sense must also be “of the devil” in that sense.
In my example above, Josiah is the grandson of Manasseh who may well have practiced some form of child sacrifice (there’s some disagreement as to what that very brief statement about him means).
But this is, once again, mostly a matter of sound reasoning, not theology. People/things do not necessarily have characteristic X because they came from someone/some group with characteristic X. Article on genetic fallacy is somewhat helpful.
As I pointed out earlier, Josiah had people around him who knew the true God and influenced him to know and seek the true God. We do not have any evidence that any of the people in Cain’s line ever knew the true God.
Moreover, flowing out of Genesis 3 and the God-ordained conflict between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent, we have two distinct lines of people in Genesis 4 and 5. The evil line of Cain, for whom we have no evidence that any of them escaped demonic influence on them. The godly line of Seth in which we know with certainty that there were those who knew the true God (Enoch, Noah).
I believe that arguing based on considerations concerning the “genetic fallacy” that we have to be agnostic about the spiritual state of everyone in Cain’s line other than Cain and Lamech is faulty reasoning when it comes to matters of supernatural influences on human beings. Unless we have explicit evidence of divine deliverance being provided to them, we are to hold that they, like Cain, were evil people who were in bondage to the evil one.
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