Genesis 4:11
Context4:11 So now, you are banished 1 from the ground, which has opened its mouth to receive your brother’s blood from your hand.
Nehemiah 4:5
Context4:5 Do not cover their iniquity, and do not wipe out their sin from before them. For they have bitterly offended 2 the builders! 3
Isaiah 26:21
Context26:21 For look, the Lord is coming out of the place where he lives, 4
to punish the sin of those who live on the earth.
The earth will display the blood shed on it;
it will no longer cover up its slain. 5
Ezekiel 24:7
Context24:7 For her blood was in it;
she poured it on an exposed rock;
she did not pour it on the ground to cover it up with dust.
[4:11] 1 tn Heb “cursed are you from the ground.” As in Gen 3:14, the word “cursed,” a passive participle from אָרָר (’arar), either means “punished” or “banished,” depending on how one interprets the following preposition. If the preposition is taken as indicating source, then the idea is “cursed (i.e., punished) are you from [i.e., “through the agency of”] the ground” (see v. 12a). If the preposition is taken as separative, then the idea is “cursed and banished from the ground.” In this case the ground rejects Cain’s efforts in such a way that he is banished from the ground and forced to become a fugitive out in the earth (see vv. 12b, 14).
[4:5] 2 tn The Hiphil stem of כָּעַס (ka’as) may mean: (1) “to provoke to anger”; (2) “to bitterly offend”; or (3) “to grieve” (BDB 495 s.v. Hiph.; HALOT 491 s.v. כעס hif). The Hebrew lexicons suggest that “bitterly offend” is the most appropriate nuance here.
[4:5] 3 tn Heb “before the builders.” The preposition נֶגֶד (neged, “before”) here connotes “in the sight of” or “in the view of” (BDB 617 s.v. 1.a; HALOT 666 s.v. 1.a).
[26:21] 4 tn Heb “out of his place” (so KJV, ASV).
[26:21] 5 sn This implies that rampant bloodshed is one of the reasons for divine judgment. See the note at 24:5.