Monday, May 5, 2025

Cain’s Wife—The Super Obvious Answer!

Cain’s Wife—The Super Obvious Answer!

Bodie Hodge, M.Sc., B.Sc., PEI

Biblical Authority Ministries, May 5, 2025 (Donate)

In the world-famous Scopes Trial in Dayton, Tennessee, the non-Christian lawyer (Clarence Darrow) posed the question “where did Cain get his wife?” to a Christian lawyer who had taken the stand (William Jennings Bryan) to defend Christianity.

Bryan, was stumped by the question and had no answer.[1] With the world tuning into this famous trial, it sent shockwaves throughout America and the world. For years now, this same question is posed to Christians constantly and many Christians still falter trying to give an answer.

Image from Presentation Library

Is it a hard question to answer? Not really—when you stand on the authority of God’s Word.

Cain’s wife was one of his sisters or possibly a close female relative, such as a niece—still a descendant of Adam and Eve. Regardless, brothers and sisters originally had to marry. All humans descend from the original couple, Adam and Eve—not some mythological alleged first wife (e.g., the Lilith myth) or some arbitrary alleged space alien or a uniquely different human race.

Early human history involved close-relative marriages, which were necessary and not morally wrong at that time—and is the obvious and logical answer.

1. Biblical Foundation

According to Genesis 4, after Cain killed Abel, he was marked and sent away. God says in verse 17, “Cain knew his wife, and she conceived.” However, the Bible does not mention where she came from. Genesis 5:4 clarifies that Adam “had other sons and daughters.” According to Josephus about 2,000 years, the Jewish legend was that Adam and Eve had 33 sons and 23 daughters.[2] Furthermore, when Cain sinned and murdered his brother, he was fearful of those who might take retaliation against him (Genesis 4:14). This is why a mark was put on him in the first place.

But this further shows that Adam and Eve had other children and there were plenty of descendants already accumulating. So, Cain had many siblings—both brothers and sisters—though most are unnamed in Scripture. He likely had many nieces and nephews by this time as well.

2. Be Fruitful And Multiply

Adam and Eve lived for centuries (Adam lived 930 years), and they had many children over that time. With such long lifespans and many offspring, the population could have grown quickly—though we can’t be certain. Nevertheless, there were plenty of descendants around for Cain to have married.

Cain goes to the land of Nod and builds a city. Some thought that there were other people in the land of Nod and Cain took a wife from those people—but this is a mistake. Nod means “land of wandering”. Thus, it was an unpopulated area. And a close analysis of the text shows no hints that Cain found a wife there but that she was already with him. 

Then Cain went out from the presence of the LORD and dwelt in the land of Nod on the east of Eden. And Cain knew his wife, and she conceived and bore Enoch. And he built a city, and called the name of the city after the name of his son — Enoch. (Genesis 4:16-17, NKJV)

3. Minimal Genetic Problems

Bear in mind that marrying close relatives was not a problem early in history because the human gene pool was still relatively pure. Genetic mutations that cause problems in close-relative marriages today had not accumulated yet. Thus, it was both biologically safe and necessary at that point for siblings to marry to fulfill God’s command to “be fruitful and multiply.” God had not forbidden it yet—that did not occur until the time of Moses.

Prior to Moses, Abraham married his half-sister Sarah (Genesis 20:12). Moses’ father married his aunt Jochebed (Exodus 6:20; Numbers 26:59).

Image from Presentation Library

4. Moral And Legal

The ban on marrying close relatives came with (Leviticus 18) as passed down through Moses. God gave this law in part because it became necessary due to the buildup of harmful mutations. Before that time, it was not considered immoral because there was no divine command against it. Our modern understanding of genetics helps us understand a subtlety of this law.

This is why modern legal systems all over the world rarely allow close intermarriage. They are influenced by biblical law.

5. Challenging Skepticism

One should reject claims that Cain’s wife was from another alleged race of people or a separate “human” group. We should also affirm that all people are descended from Adam and Eve, based on Genesis and New Testament passages like Acts 17:26 ("From one man he made all nations").

Adam is the first man (1 Corinthians 15:45-47) and Eve is the mother of all the living (Genesis 3:20). The faulty myth of Lilith being Adam’s first wife is simply that—a myth. There were no space alien races that had daughters that married Cain and Cain did not marry any human-animal hybrid or any human-angel hybrid (again another myth). 

6. The Hebrew

The Hebrew word for wife use for Cain’s “wife” is also very revealing. It is the Hebrew word for woman, that we translate as “wife”.

And Cain knew his wife (אִשָּׁה‎ ‘ishshah), and she conceived and bore Enoch. And he built a city, and called the name of the city after the name of his son — Enoch. (Genesis 4:17, NKJV)

It is in biblical Hebrew, “ishshah”. This name for woman was given when Adam first met his woman who was directly created from his bone and flesh (a task all too easy for God!). Adam said:

And Adam said: “This is now bone of my bones And flesh of my flesh; She shall be called Woman (ishshah), Because she was taken out of Man (ish/iysh).” (Genesis 2:23, NKJV)

Woman literally means that she was taken out of “man” or comes from “man”, who is Adam! This shows that a Hebrew speaker should automatically have recognized that Cain’s “wife” or “woman/ishshah” is a descendant of Adam/man by the very name she is called.

7. Island Isolates

Close marriages are often seen in isolates. This is when remote tribes had inhabited an area void of others or get trapped on an isolated island. The descendants are all related and close intermarriage occurred with these initial seed populations. Thus, from an anthropological perspective, close marriage is the obvious answer in small isolated groups mimicking the initial couple and their early descendants after Creation.

Sometimes, of course, it does cause genetic detriments. Starting with a pure line—as in the case of Adam and Eve—it takes longer to accumulate, unlike more modern isolate examples which can take precious few generations of inbreeding.

By the time of Moses, which is well after the population bottlenecks at the Flood and Babel, close intermarriage may have been a strong and growing genetic issue. After all, the ages of those in Moses’ day, was far less than the patriarchs just before him and those preceding the Flood. So, clearly there were genetic defects that were beginning to reign—which is expected in a sin-cursed and broken world since Genesis 3.

Conclusion

Marrying close relatives was not a problem originally and this was entirely encouraged. It was necessary for human multiplication—which was God’s command. It was not genetically dangerous at the time, and not considered morally wrong until God’s later commands. Thus, incest became a sin because God deemed it so for the times since Moses with the giving of the Law.

In short, the simple and obvious answer is that Cain married a sister—it’s possible it was a niece, but either way he a married a descendant of Adam and Eve and the human race is still purely the human race—which means we are all sinners sin need of a Savior.

 



[1] The World’s Most Famous Court Trial, Word-for-word report form 1925, Second Reprint Edition, 1990, Bryan College, Dayton, Tennessee, p. 302.

[2] Flavius Josephus, The Antiquity of the Jews, “Concerning the Posterity of Adam, and the Ten Generations From Him to the Deluge”, Translated by William Wiston, A.M. Auburn and Buffalo, John E. Beardsley, 1895.

Cain’s Wife—The Super Obvious Answer!

Cain’s Wife—The Super Obvious Answer! Bodie Hodge, M.Sc., B.Sc., PEI Biblical Authority Ministries, May 5, 2025 ( Donate ) In the worl...