I'll keep it short and sweet I was reading a book on the old west and it was talking about legends and it had some Mormon legends and this one is a
doosy. Here is the following story
Apostle David W. Patten described an encounter he had with Cain in 1835:
As I was riding along the road on my mule I suddenly noticed a very strange person walking beside me. . . . His head was about even with my shoulders
as I sat in my saddle. He wore no clothing, but was covered with hair. His skin was very dark. I asked him where he dwelt and he replied that he had
no home, that he was a wanderer in the earth and traveled to and fro. He said he was a very miserable creature, . . . and his mission was to destroy
the souls of men.
Just thought I'd share this strange story with everyone I even looked it up to see if it was real quite a few Mormon sites discussing it!
East of Eden, in the land of Nod, there is the city Enoch. It's inhabitants in that vile, desert place... THE SASQUATCH!
Isn't bigfoot portrayed as less than intelligence enough to build cities, let alone anything needed for city making? Even the stories that involve
grays, the bigfoot is like a servant.
The question does suggest the interesting possibility that the story of Cain & Abel is an allegory for evolution’s game of dominance between
Homosapien and Neanderthal.
All the indian tribes spoke of big foot, that he was a spirit, from early man, thats why you can't catch it. they said usually the people that see
this spirit are troubled souls
edit on 23-2-2022 by ladybug121 because: wrote the wrong word
Many think it was Cain's great great grandson Lamech who killed him and it was in Gen 4.
Lamech was blind and his son Tubal-Cain would go hunting with him and help him aim. They supposedly killed him when they saw (many say his mark was a
horn) in bushes.
Another thing is, only the line of Seth survived the flood. So it couldn't be any of Cain's decedents.
edit on 23-2-2022 by BernnieJGato because: (no reason given)
No, the Biblical story of Cain is an allegory of some Semitic tribes that tattoos their faces, usually smiths, they are the low castes of their
culture but harming them is frowned upon, that's what the myth of Cain refers to, he is a man of that low caste, has a mark and his descendants works
with metals and makes weapons.
Pretty sure the story of Cain and Able is all about teaching morals…Many mythical stories from ancient antiquity played a similar role in shaping
the conduct of a society…
Anyway…I don’t think God would Punish Cain by turning him into Chewbacca, and forcing him to roam the Earth for all eternity…
Plus, it’s not much of a punishment (from our perspectives) if he’s aloud to devour men’s souls whenever he pleases…
Craziest theory I’ve ever heard…and I’ve heard a Lot!