Chapter I The crystal sea, God commands Adam, expelled from Eden
1 On the third day, God planted the garden in the east of the earth, on the
border of the world eastward, beyond which, towards the sun−rising, one finds
nothing but water, that encompasses the whole world, and reaches to the borders
of heaven.
2 And to the north of the garden there is a sea of water, clear and pure to the
taste, unlike anything else; so that, through the clearness thereof, one may
look into the depths of the earth.
3 And when a man washes himself in it, he becomes clean of the cleanness
thereof, and white of its whiteness−− even if he were dark.
4 And God created that sea of his own good pleasure, for He knew what would come
of the man He would make; so that after he had left the garden, on account of
his transgression, men should be born in the earth. Among them are righteous
ones who will die, whose souls God would raise at the last day; when all of them
will return to their flesh, bathe in the water of that sea, and repent of their
sins. 5 But when God made Adam go out of the garden, He did not place him on the
border of it northward. This was so that he and Eve would not be able to go near
to the sea of water where they could wash themselves in it, be cleansed from
their sins, erase the transgression they had committed, and be no longer
reminded of it in the thought of their punishment.
6 As to the southern side of the garden, God did not want Adam to live there
either; because, when the wind blew from the north, it would bring him, on that
southern side, the delicious smell of the trees of the garden.
7 Wherefore God did not put Adam there. This was so that he would not be able to
smell the sweet smell of those trees, forget his transgression, and find
consolation for what he had done by taking delight in the smell of the trees and
yet not be cleansed from his transgression.
8 Again, also, because God is merciful and of great pity, and governs all things
in a way that He alone knows−− He made our father Adam live in the western
border of the garden, because on that side the earth is very broad.
9 And God commanded him to live there in a cave in a rock −− the Cave of
Treasures below the garden.
Chapter II Adam and Eve faint when they leave the Garden.
1 But when our father Adam, and Eve, went out of the garden, they walked the
ground on their feet, not knowing they were walking.
2 And when they came to the opening of the gate of the garden, and saw the broad
earth spread before them, covered with stones large and small, and with sand,
they feared and trembled, and fell on their faces, from the fear that came over
them; and they were as dead.
3 Because −− whereas until this time they had been in the garden land,
beautifully planted with all manner of trees −− they now saw themselves, in a
strange land, which they knew not, and had never seen.
4 And because, when they were in the garden they were filled with the grace of a
bright nature, and they had not hearts turned toward earthly things.
5 Therefore God had pity on them; and when He saw them fallen before the gate of
the garden, He sent HIS Word to our father, Adam and Eve, and raised them from
their fallen state.
Chapter III Concerning the promise of the great five and a half days.
1 God said to Adam, "I have ordained on this earth days and years, and you and
your descendants shall live and walk in them, until the days and years are
fulfilled; when I shall send the Word that created you, and against which you
have transgressed, the Word that made you come out of the garden, and that
raised you when you were fallen.
2 Yes, the Word that will again save you when the five and a half days are
fulfilled."
3 But when Adam heard these words from God, and of the great five and a half
days, he did not understand the meaning of them.
4 For Adam was thinking there would be only five and a half days for him until
the end of the world.
5 And Adam cried, and prayed to God to explain it to him.
6 Then God in his mercy for Adam who was made after HIS own image and likeness,
explained to him, that these were 5,000 and 500 years; and how One would then
come and save him and his descendants.
7 But before that, God had made this covenant with our father, Adam, in the same
terms, before he came out of the garden, when he was by the tree where Eve took
of the fruit and gave it to him to eat.
8 Because, when our father Adam came out of the garden, he passed by that tree,
and saw how God had changed the appearance of it into another form, and how it
shriveled.
9 And as Adam went to it he feared, trembled and fell down; but God in HIS mercy
lifted him up, and then made this covenant with him.
10 And again, when Adam was by the gate of the garden, and saw the cherub with a
sword of flashing fire in his hand, and the cherub grew angry and frowned at
him, both Adam and Eve became afraid of him, and thought he meant to put them to
death. So they fell on their faces, trembled with fear.
11 But he had pity on them, and showed them mercy; and turning from them went up
to heaven, and prayed to the Lord, and said; −−
12 "Lord, You sent me to watch at the gate of the garden, with a sword of fire.
13 But when Your servants, Adam and Eve, saw me, they fell on their faces, and
were as dead. O my Lord, what shall we do to Your servants?"
14 Then God had pity on them, and showed them mercy, and sent HIS Angel to keep
the garden.
15 And the Word of the Lord came to Adam and Eve, and raised them up.
16 And the Lord said to Adam, "I told you that at the end of the five and a half
days, I will send my Word and save you.
17 Strengthen your heart, therefore, and stay in the Cave of Treasures, of which
I have before spoken to you."
18 And when Adam heard this Word from God, he was comforted with that which God
had told him. For He had told him how He would save him.
Chapter IV Adam mourns over the changed conditions
1 But Adam and Eve cried for having come out of the garden, their first home.
2 And indeed, when Adam looked at his flesh, that was altered, he cried
bitterly, he and Eve, over what they had done. And they walked and went gently
down into the Cave of Treasures.
3 And as they came to it, Adam cried over himself and said to Eve, "Look at this
cave that is to be our prison in this world, and a place of punishment!
4 What is it compared with the garden? What is its narrowness compared with the
space of the other?
5 What is this rock, by the side of those groves? What is the gloom of this
cavern, compared with the light of the garden?
6 What is this overhanging ledge of rock to shelter us, compared with the mercy
of the Lord that overshadowed us?
7 What is the soil of this cave compared with the garden land? This earth,
strewed with stones; and that, planted with delicious fruit trees?"
8 And Adam said to Eve, "Look at your eyes, and at mine, which before beheld
angels praising in heaven; and they too, without ceasing.
9 But now we do not see as we did; our eyes have become of flesh; they cannot
see like they used to see before."
10 Adam said again to Eve, "What is our body today, compared to what it was in
former days, when we lived in the garden?"
11 After this, Adam did not want to enter the cave, under the overhanging rock;
nor would he ever want to enter it.
12 But he bowed to God's orders; and said to himself, "Unless I enter the cave,
I shall again be a transgressor."
Chapter V Eve makes a noble and emotional intercession
1 Then Adam and Eve entered the cave, and stood praying, in their own tongue,
unknown to us, but which they knew well.
2 And as they prayed, Adam raised his eyes and saw the rock and the roof of the
cave that covered him overhead. This prevented him from seeing either heaven or
God's creatures. So he cried and beat his chest hard, until he dropped, and was
as dead.
3 And Eve sat crying; for she believed he was dead.
4 Then she got up, spread her hands toward God, appealing to Him for mercy and
pity, and said, "O God, forgive me my sin, the sin which I committed, and don't
remember it against me.
5 For I alone caused Your servant to fall from the garden into this condemned
land; from light into this darkness; and from the house of joy into this prison.
6 O God, look at this Your servant fallen in this manner, and bring him back to
life, that he may cry and repent of his transgression which he committed through
me.
7 Don't take away his soul right now; but let him live that he may stand after
the measure of his repentance, and do Your will, as before his death.
8 But if You do not bring him back to life, then, O God, take away my own soul,
that I be like him, and leave me not in this dungeon, one and alone; for I could
not stand alone in this world, but with him only.
9 For You, O God, caused him to fall asleep, and took a bone from his side, and
restored the flesh in the place of it, by Your divine power.
10 And You took me, the bone, and make me a woman, bright like him, with heart,
reason, and speech; and in flesh, like to his own; and You made me after the
likeness of his looks, by Your mercy and power.
11 O Lord, I and he are one, and You, O God, are our Creator, You are He who
made us both in one day.
12 Therefore, O God, give him life, that he may be with me in this strange land,
while we live in it on account of our transgression.
13 But if You will not give him life, then take me, even me, like him; that we
both may die the same day."
14 And Eve cried bitterly, and fell on our father Adam; from her great sorrow.
Chapter VI God's reprimand to Adam and Eve in which he points out how and why
they sinned.
1 But God looked at them; for they had killed themselves through great grief.
2 But He decided to raise them and comfort them.
3 He, therefore, sent HIS Word to them; that they should stand and be raised
immediately.
4 And the Lord said to Adam and Eve, "You transgressed of your own free will,
until you came out of the garden in which I had placed you.
5 Of your own free will have you transgressed through your desire for divinity,
greatness, and an exalted state, such as I have; so that I deprived you of the
bright nature in which you then were, and I made you come out of the garden to
this land, rough and full of trouble.
6 If only you had not transgressed My commandment and had kept My law, and had
not eaten of the fruit of the tree which I told you not to come near! And there
were fruit trees in the garden better than that one.
7 But the wicked Satan did not keep his faith and had no good intent towards Me,
that although I had created him, he considered Me to be useless, and sought the
Godhead for himself; for this I hurled him down from heaven so that he could not
remain in his first estate −− it was he who made the tree appear pleasant in
your eyes, until you ate of it, by believing his words.
8 Thus have you transgressed My commandment, and therefore I have brought on you
all these sorrows.
9 For I am God the Creator, who, when I created My creatures, did not intend to
destroy them. But after they had sorely roused My anger, I punished them with
grievous plagues, until they repent.
10 But, if on the contrary, they still continue hardened in their transgression,
they shall be under a curse forever."
Chapter VII The beasts are appeased.
1 When Adam and Eve heard these words from God, they cried and sobbed yet more;
but they strengthened their hearts in God, because they now felt that the Lord
was to them like a father and a mother; and for this very reason, they cried
before Him, and sought mercy from Him.
2 Then God had pity on them, and said: "O Adam, I have made My covenant with
you, and I will not turn from it; neither will I let you return to the garden,
until My covenant of the great five and a half days is fulfilled."
3 Then Adam said to God, "O Lord, You created us, and made us fit to be in the
garden; and before I transgressed, You made all beasts come to me, that I should
name them.
4 Your grace was then on me; and I named every one according to Your mind; and
you made them all subject to me.
5 But now, O Lord God, that I have transgressed Your commandment, all beasts
will rise against me and will devour me, and Eve Your handmaid; and will cut off
our life from the face of the earth.
6 I therefore beg you, O God, that since You have made us come out of the
garden, and have made us be in a strange land, You will not let the beasts hurt
us."
7 When the Lord heard these words from Adam, He had pity on him, and felt that
he had truly said that the beasts of the field would rise and devour him and
Eve, because He, the Lord, was angry with the two of them on account of their
transgressions.
8 Then God commanded the beasts, and the birds, and all that moves on the earth,
to come to Adam and to be familiar with him, and not to trouble him and Eve; nor
yet any of the good and righteous among their offspring.
9 Then all the beasts paid homage to Adam, according to the commandment of God;
except the serpent, against which God was angry. It did not come to Adam, with
the beasts.
Chapter VIII The "Bright Nature" of man is taken away.
1 Then Adam cried and said, "O God, when we lived in the garden, and our hearts
were lifted up, we saw the angels that sang praises in heaven, but now we can't
see like we used to; no, when we entered the cave, all creation became hidden
from us."
2 Then God the Lord said to Adam, "When you were under subjection to Me, you had
a bright nature within you, and for that reason could you see things far away.
But after your transgression your bright nature was withdrawn from you; and it
was not left to you to see things far away, but only near at hand; after the
ability of the flesh; for it is brutish."
3 When Adam and Eve had heard these words from God, they went their way;
praising and worshipping Him with a sorrowful heart.
4 And God ceased to commune with them.
Chapter IX Water from the Tree of Life. Adam and Eve near drowning.
1 Then Adam and Eve came out of the Cave of Treasures, and went near to the
garden gate, and there they stood to look at it, and cried for having come away
from it.
2 And Adam and Eve went from before the gate of the garden to the southern side
of it, and found there the water that watered the garden, from the root of the
Tree of Life, and that split itself from there into four rivers over the earth.
3 Then they came and went near to that water, and looked at it; and saw that it
was the water that came forth from under the root of the Tree of Life in the
garden.
4 And Adam cried and wailed, and beat his chest, for being severed from the
garden; and said to Eve: −−
5 "Why have you brought on me, on yourself, and on our descendants, so many of
these plagues and punishments?"
6 And Eve said to him, "What is it you have seen that has caused you to cry and
to speak to me in this manner?"
7 And he said to Eve, "Do you not see this water that was with us in the garden,
that watered the trees of the garden, and flowed out from there?
8 And we, when we were in the garden, did not care about it; but since we came
to this strange land, we love it, and turn it to use for our body."
9 But when Eve heard these words from him, she cried; and from the soreness of
their crying, they fell into that water; and would have put an end to themselves
in it, so as never again to return and behold the creation; for when they looked
at the work of creation, they felt they must put an end to themselves.
Chapter X Their bodies need water after they leave the garden.
1 Then God, merciful and gracious, looked at them thus lying in the water, and
close to death, and sent an angel, who brought them out of the water, and laid
them on the seashore as dead.
2 Then the angel went up to God, was welcome, and said, "O God, Your creatures
have breathed their last." 3 Then God sent HIS Word to Adam and Eve, who raised
them from their death.
4 And Adam said, after he was raised, "O God, while we were in the garden we did
not require, or care for this water; but since we came to this land we cannot do
without it."
5 Then God said to Adam, "While you were under My command and were a bright
angel, you knew not this water.
6 But now that you have transgressed My commandment, you can not do without
water, wherein to wash your body and make it grow; for it is now like that of
beasts, and is in want of water."
7 When Adam and Eve heard these words from God, they cried a bitter cry; and
Adam entreated God to let him return into the garden, and look at it a second
time.
8 But God said to Adam, "I have made you a promise; when that promise is
fulfilled, I will bring you back into the garden, you and your righteous
descendants."
9 And God ceased to commune with Adam.
Chapter XI A recollection of the glorious days in the Garden.
1 Then Adam and Eve felt themselves burning with thirst, and heat, and sorrow.
2 And Adam said to Eve, "We shall not drink of this water, even if we were to
die. O Eve, when this water comes into our inner parts, it will increase our
punishments and that of our descendants."
3 Both Adam and Eve then went away from the water, and drank none of it at all;
but came and entered the Cave of Treasures.
4 But when in it Adam could not see Eve; he only heard the noise she made.
Neither could she see Adam, but heard the noise he made.
5 Then Adam cried, in deep affliction, and beat his chest; and he got up and
said to Eve, "Where are you?" 6 And she said to him, "Look, I am standing in
this darkness."
7 He then said to her, "Remember the bright nature in which we lived, when we
lived in the garden!
8 O Eve! Remember the glory that rested on us in the garden. O Eve! Remember the
trees that overshadowed us in the garden while we moved among them.
9 O Eve! Remember that while we were in the garden, we knew neither night nor
day. Think of the Tree of Life, from below which flowed the water, and that shed
lustre over us! Remember, O Eve, the garden land, and the brightness thereof!
10 Think, oh think of that garden in which was no darkness, while we lived in
it.
11 Whereas no sooner did we come into this Cave of Treasures than darkness
surrounded us all around; until we can no longer see each other; and all the
pleasure of this life has come to an end."
Chapter XII How darkness came between Adam and Eve.
1 Then Adam beat his chest, he and Eve, and they mourned the whole night until
the crack of dawn, and they sighed over the length of the night in Miyazia.
2 And Adam beat himself, and threw himself on the ground in the cave, from
bitter grief, and because of the darkness, and lay there as dead.
3 But Eve heard the noise he made in falling on the ground. And she felt about
for him with her hands, and found him like a corpse.
4 Then she was afraid, speechless, and remained by him.
5 But the merciful Lord looked on the death of Adam, and on Eve's silence from
fear of the darkness. 6 And the Word of God came to Adam and raised him from his
death, and opened Eve's mouth that she might speak.
7 Then Adam stood up in the cave and said, "O God, why has light departed from
us, and darkness covered us? Why did you leave us in this long darkness? Why do
you plague us like this?
8 And this darkness, O Lord, where was it before it covered us? It is because of
this that we cannot see each other.
9 For so long as we were in the garden, we neither saw nor even knew what
darkness is. I was not hidden from Eve, neither was she hidden from me, until
now that she cannot see me; and no darkness came over us to separate us from
each other.
10 But she and I were both in one bright light. I saw her and she saw me. Yet
now since we came into this cave, darkness has covered us, and separated us from
each other, so that I do not see her, and she does not see me.
11 O Lord, will You then plague us with this darkness?"
Chapter XIII The fall of Adam. Why night and day were created.
1 Then when God, who is merciful and full of pity, heard Adam's voice, He said
to him: −−
2 "O Adam, so long as the good angel was obedient to Me, a bright light rested
on him and on his hosts.
3 But when he transgressed My commandment, I deprived him of that bright nature,
and he became dark.
4 And when he was in the heavens, in the realms of light, he knew nothing of
darkness.
5 But he transgressed, and I made him fall from the heaven onto the earth; and
it was this darkness that came over him.
6 And on you, O Adam, while in My garden and obedient to Me, did that bright
light rest also.
7 But when I heard of your transgression, I deprived you of that bright light.
Yet, of My mercy, I did not turn you into darkness, but I made you your body of
flesh, over which I spread this skin, in order that it may bear cold and heat.
8 If I had let My wrath fall heavily on you, I should have destroyed you; and
had I turned you into darkness, it would have been as if I had killed you.
9 But in My mercy, I have made you as you are; when you transgressed My
commandment, O Adam, I drove you from the garden, and made you come forth into
this land; and commanded you to live in this cave; and darkness covered you, as
it did over him who transgressed My commandment.
10 Thus, O Adam, has this night deceived you. It is not to last forever; but is
only of twelve hours; when it is over, daylight will return.
11 Sigh not, therefore, neither be moved; and say not in your heart that this
darkness is long and drags on wearily; and say not in your heart that I plague
you with it.
12 Strengthen your heart, and be not afraid. This darkness is not a punishment.
But, O Adam, I have made the day, and have placed the sun in it to give light;
in order that you and your children should do your work.
13 For I knew you would sin and transgress, and come out into this land. Yet I
wouldn't force you, nor be heard over you, nor shut up; nor doom you through
your fall; nor through your coming out from light into darkness; nor yet through
your coming from the garden into this land.
14 For I made you of the light; and I willed to bring out children of light from
you and like to you.
15 But you did not keep My commandment one day; until I had finished the
creation and blessed everything in it.
16 Then, concerning the tree, I commanded you not to eat of it. Yet I knew that
Satan, who deceived himself, would also deceive you.
17 So I made known to you by means of the tree, not to come near him. And I told
you not to eat of the fruit thereof, nor to taste of it, nor yet to sit under
it, nor to yield to it.
18 Had I not been and spoken to you, O Adam, concerning the tree, and had I left
you without a commandment, and you had sinned −− it would have been an offence
on My part, for not having given you any order; you would turn around and blame
Me for it.
19 But I commanded you, and warned you, and you fell. So that My creatures
cannot blame Me; but the blame rests on them alone.
20 And, O Adam, I have made the day so that you and your descendants can work
and toil in it. And I have made the night for them to rest in it from their
work; and for the beasts of the field to go forth by night and look for their
food.
21 But little of darkness now remains, O Adam, and daylight will soon appear."
Chapter XIV The earliest prophesy of the coming of Christ.
1 Then Adam said to God: "O Lord, take You my soul, and let me not see this
gloom any more; or remove me to some place where there is no darkness."
2 But God the Lord said to Adam, "Indeed I say to you, this darkness will pass
from you, every day I have determined for you, until the fulfillment of My
covenant; when I will save you and bring you back again into the garden, into
the house of light you long for, in which there is no darkness*. I will bring
you to it −− in the kingdom of heaven."
3 Again said God to Adam, "All this misery that you have been made to take on
yourself because of your transgression, will not free you from the hand of
Satan, and will not save you.
4 But I will. When I shall come down from heaven, and shall become flesh of your
descendants, and take on Myself the infirmity from which you suffer, then the
darkness that covered you in this cave shall cover Me in the grave, when I am in
the flesh of your descendants.
5 And I, who am without years, shall be subject to the reckoning of years, of
times, of months, and of days, and I shall be reckoned as one of the sons of
men, in order to save you."
6 And God ceased to commune with Adam. * Reference: John 12:46
Chapter XV Adam and Eve grieve over the suffering of God to save them from their
sins.
1 Then Adam and Eve cried and sorrowed by reason of God's word to them, that
they should not return to the garden until the fulfillment of the days decreed
on them; but mostly because God had told them that He should suffer for their
salvation.
Chapter XVI The first sunrise. Adam and Eve think it is a fire coming to burn
them.
1 After this, Adam and Eve continued to stand in the cave, praying and crying,
until the morning dawned on them.
2 And when they saw the light returned to them, they retrained from fear, and
strengthened their hearts.
3 Then Adam began to come out of the cave. And when he came to the mouth of it,
and stood and turned his face towards the east, and saw the sunrise in glowing
rays, and felt the heat thereof on his body, he was afraid of it, and thought in
his heart that this flame came forth to plague him.
4 He then cried and beat his chest, then he fell on the ground on his face and
made his request, saying: −− 5 "O Lord, plague me not, neither consume me, nor
yet take away my life from the earth."
6 For he thought the sun was God.
7 Because while he was in the garden and heard the voice of God and the sound He
made in the garden, and feared Him, Adam never saw the brilliant light of the
sun, neither did its flaming heat touch his body.
8 Therefore he was afraid of the sun when flaming rays of it reached him. He
thought God meant to plague him therewith all the days He had decreed for him.
9 For Adam also said in his thoughts, as God did not plague us with darkness,
behold, He has caused this sun to rise and to plague us with burning heat.
10 But while he was thinking like this in his heart, the Word of God came to him
and said: −−
11 "O Adam, get up on your feet. This sun is not God; but it has been created to
give light by day, of which I spoke to you in the cave saying, 'that the dawn
would come, and there would be light by day.'
12 But I am God who comforted you in the night." 13 And God ceased to commune
with Adam.
Chapter XVII The Chapter of the Serpent.
1 The Adam and Eve came out at the mouth of the cave, and went towards the
garden.
2 But as they went near it, before the western gate, from which Satan came when
he deceived Adam and Eve, they found the serpent that became Satan coming at the
gate, and sorrowfully licking the dust, and wiggling on its breast on the
ground, by reason of the curse that fell on it from God.
3 And whereas before the serpent was the most exalted of all beasts, now it was
changed and become slippery, and the meanest of them all, and it crept on its
breast and went on its belly.
4 And whereas it was the fairest of all beasts, it had been changed, and was
become the ugliest of them all. Instead of feeding on the best food, now it
turned to eat the dust. Instead of living, as before, in the best places, now it
lived in the dust.
5 And, whereas it had been the most beautiful of all beasts, all of which stood
dumb at its beauty, it was now abhorred of them.
6 And, again, whereas it lived in one beautiful home, to which all other animals
came from elsewhere; and where it drank, they drank also of the same; now, after
it had become venomous, by reason of God's curse, all beasts fled from its home,
and would not drink of the water it drank; but fled from it.
Chapter XVIII The mortal combat with the serpent.
1 When the accursed serpent saw Adam and Eve, it swelled its head, stood on its
tail, and with eyes blood− red, acted like it would kill them.
2 It made straight for Eve, and ran after her; while Adam standing by, cried
because he had no stick in his hand with which to hit the serpent, and did not
know how to put it to death. 3 But with a heart burning for Eve, Adam approached
the serpent, and held it by the tail; when it turned towards him and said to
him: −−
4 "O Adam, because of you and of Eve, I am slippery, and go on my belly." Then
with its great strength, it threw down Adam and Eve and squeezed them, and tried
to kill them.
5 But God sent an angel who threw the serpent away from them, and raised them
up.
6 Then the Word of God came to the serpent, and said to it, "The first time I
made you slick, and made you to go on your belly; but I did not deprive you of
speech.
7 This time, however, you will be mute, and you and your race will speak no
more; because, the first time My creatures were ruined because of you, and this
time you tried to kill them."
8 Then the serpent was struck mute, and was no longer able to speak.
9 And a wind blew down from heaven by the command of God and carried away the
serpent from Adam and Eve, and threw it on the seashore where it landed in
India.
Chapter XIX Beasts made subject to Adam.
1 But Adam and Eve cried before God. And Adam said to Him: −−
2 "O Lord, when I was in the cave, I said this to you, my Lord, the beasts of
the field would rise and devour me, and cut off my life from the earth."
3 Then Adam, because of what had happened to him, beat his chest and fell on the
ground like a corpse. Then the Word of God came to him, who raised him, and said
to him,
4 "O Adam, not one of these beasts will be able to hurt you; because I have made
the beasts and other moving things come to you in the cave. I did not let the
serpent come with them because it might have risen against you and made you
tremble; and the fear of it should fall into your hearts.
5 For I knew that the accursed one is wicked; therefore I would not let it come
near you with the other beasts. 6 But now strengthen your heart and fear not. I
am with you to the end of the days I have determined on you."
Chapter XX Adam wishes to protect Eve.
1 Then Adam cried and said, "O God, take us away to some other place, where the
serpent can not come near us again, and rise against us. For fear that it might
find Your handmaid Eve alone and kill her; for its eyes are hideous and evil."
2 But God said to Adam and Eve, "From now on, don't be afraid, I will not let it
come near you; I have driven it away from you, from this mountain; neither will
I leave in it the ability to hurt you."
3 Then Adam and Eve worshipped before God and gave Him thanks, and praised Him
for having delivered them from death.
Chapter XXI Adam and Eve attempt suicide.
1 Then Adam and Eve went in search of the garden.
2 And the heat beat like a flame on their faces; and they sweated from the heat,
and cried before the Lord. 3 But the place where they cried was close to a high
mountain, facing the western gate of the garden.
4 Then Adam threw himself down from the top of that mountain; his face was torn
and his flesh was ripped; he lost a lot of blood and was close to death.
5 Meanwhile Eve remained standing on the mountain crying over him, thus lying.
6 And she said, "I don't wish to live after him; for all that he did to himself
was through me."
7 Then she threw herself after him; and was torn and ripped by stones; and
remained lying as dead.
8 But the merciful God, who looks over HIS creatures, looked at Adam and Eve as
they lay dead, and He sent HIS Word to them, and raised them.
9 And said to Adam, "O Adam, all this misery which you have brought on yourself,
will have no affect against My rule, neither will it alter the covenant of the
5,500 years."
Chapter XXII Adam in a gracious mood.
1 Then Adam said to God, "I dry up in the heat, I am faint from walking, and I
don't want to be in this world. And I don't know when You will take me out of it
to rest."
2 Then the Lord God said to him, "O Adam, it cannot be now, not until you have
ended your days. Then shall I bring you out of this miserable land."
3 And Adam said to God, "While I was in the garden I knew neither heat, nor
languor, neither moving about, nor trembling, nor fear; but now since I came to
this land, all this affliction has come over me.
4 Then God said to Adam, "So long as you were keeping My commandment, My light
and My grace rested on you. But when you transgressed My commandment, sorrow and
misery came to you in this land."
5 And Adam cried and said, "O Lord, do not cut me off for this, neither punish
me with heavy plagues, nor yet repay me according to my sin; for we, of our own
will, transgressed Your commandment, and ignored Your law, and tried to become
gods like you, when Satan the enemy deceived us."
6 Then God said again to Adam, "Because you have endured fear and trembling in
this land, languor and suffering, treading and walking about, going on this
mountain, and dying from it, I will take all this on Myself in order to save
you."
Chapter XXIII Adam and Eve strengthen themselves and make the first altar ever
built.
1 Then Adam cried more and said, "O God, have mercy on me, so far as to take on
yourself, that which I will do."
2 But God withdrew HIS Word from Adam and Eve.
3 Then Adam and Eve stood on their feet; and Adam said to Eve, "Strengthen
yourself, and I also will strengthen myself." And she strengthened herself, as
Adam told her.
4 Then Adam and Eve took stones and placed them in the shape of an altar; and
they took leaves from the trees outside the garden, with which they wiped, from
the face of the rock, the blood they had spilled.
5 But that which had dropped on the sand, they took together with the dust with
which it was mingled and offered it on the altar as an offering to God.
6 Then Adam and Eve stood under the Altar and cried, thus praying to God,
"Forgive us our trespass* and our sin, and look at us with Thine eye of mercy.
For when we were in the garden our praises and our hymns went up before you
without ceasing.
7 But when we came into this strange land, pure praise was not longer ours, nor
righteous prayer, nor understanding hearts, nor sweet thoughts, nor just
counsels, nor long discernment, nor upright feelings, neither is our bright
nature left us. But our body is changed from the likeness in which it was at
first, when we were created.
8 Yet now look at our blood which is offered on these stones, and accept it at
our hands, like the praise we used to sing to you at first, when in the garden."
9 And Adam began to make more requests of God. * ORIGINAL OF THE LORD'S PRAYER
SAID TO BE USED ABOUT 150 YEARS BEFORE OUR LORD: Our Father, Who art in Heaven,
be gracious unto us, O Lord our God, hallowed be Your Name, and let the
remembrance of Thee be glorified Heaven above and upon earth here below. Let
Your kingdom reign over us now and forever. The Holy Men of old said remit and
forgive unto all men whatsoever they have done unto me. And lead us not into
temptation, but deliver us from the evil thing; for Thine is the kingdom and
Thou shalt reign in glory forever and forevermore, AMEN.
Chapter XXIV A vivid prophecy of the life and death of Christ.
1 Then the merciful God, good and lover of men, looked at Adam and Eve, and at
their blood, which they had held up as an offering to Him; without an order from
Him for so doing. But He wondered at them; and accepted their offerings.
2 And God sent from HIS presence a bright fire, that consumed their offering. 3
He smelled the sweet savor of their offering, and showed them mercy.
4 Then came the Word of God to Adam, and said to him, "O Adam, as you have shed
your blood, so will I shed My own blood when I become flesh of your descendants;
and as you died, O Adam, so also will I die. And as you built an altar, so also
will I make for you an altar of the earth; and as you offered your blood on it,
so also will I offer My blood on an altar on the earth.
5 And as you sued for forgiveness through that blood, so also will I make My
blood forgiveness of sins, and erase transgressions in it.
6 And now, behold, I have accepted your offering, O Adam, but the days of the
covenant in which I have bound you are not fulfilled. When they are fulfilled,
then will I bring you back into the garden.
7 Now, therefore, strengthen your heart; and when sorrow comes over you, make Me
an offering, and I will be favorable to you."
Chapter XXV God represented as merciful and loving. The establishing of worship.
1 But God knew that Adam believed he should frequently kill himself and make an
offering to Him of his blood.
2 Therefore He said to him, "O Adam, don't ever kill yourself like this again,
by throwing yourself down from that mountain."
3 But Adam said to God, "I was thinking to put an end to myself at once, for
having transgressed Your commandments, and for my having come out of the
beautiful garden; and for the bright light of which You have deprived me; and
for the praises which poured forth from my mouth without ceasing, and for the
light that covered me.
4 Yet of Your goodness, O God, do not get rid of me altogether; but be favorable
to me every time I die, and bring me to life.
5 And thereby it will be made known that You are a merciful God, who does not
want anyone to perish; who loves not that one should fall; and who does not
condemn any one cruelly, badly, and by whole destruction."
6 Then Adam remained silent.
7 And the Word of God came to him, and blessed him, and comforted him, and
covenanted with him, that He would save him at the end of the days determined
for him.
8 This, then, was the first offering Adam made to God; and so it became his
custom to do.
Chapter XXVI A beautiful prophecy of eternal life and joy (v. 15). The fall of
night.
1 Then Adam took Eve, and they began to return to the Cave of Treasures where
they lived. But when they got closer to it and saw it from a distance, heavy
sorrow fell on Adam and Eve when they looked at it.
2 Then Adam said to Eve, "When we were on the mountain we were comforted by the
Word of God that conversed with us; and the light that came from the east shown
over us.
3 But now the Word of God is hidden from us; and the light that shown over us is
so changed as to disappear, and let darkness and sorrow come over us.
4 And we are forced to enter this cave which is like a prison, in which darkness
covers us, so that we are separated from each other; and you can not see me,
neither can I see you."
5 When Adam had said these words, they cried and spread their hands before God;
for they were full of sorrow.
6 And they prayed to God to bring the sun to them, to shine on them, so that
darkness would not return to them, and that they wouldn't have to go under this
covering of rock. And they wished to die rather than see the darkness.
7 Then God looked at Adam and Eve and at their great sorrow, and at all they had
done with a fervent heart, on account of all the trouble they were in, instead
of their former well−being, and on account of all the misery that came over them
in a strange land.
8 Therefore God was not angry with them; nor impatient with them; but he was
patient and forbearing towards them, as towards the children He had created.
9 Then came the Word of God to Adam, and said to him, "Adam, as for the sun, if
I were to take it and bring it to you, days, hours, years and months would all
stop, and the covenant I have made with you, would never be fulfilled.
10 But then you would be deserted and stuck in a perpetual plague, and you would
never be saved.
11 Yes, rather, bear long and calm your soul while you live night and day; until
the fulfillment of the days, and the time of My covenant is come.
12 Then shall I come and save you, O Adam, for I do not wish that you be
afflicted.
13 And when I look at all the good things in which you lived, and why you came
out of them, then would I willingly show you mercy.
14 But I cannot alter the covenant that has gone out of My mouth; otherwise I
would have brought you back into the garden.
15 When, however, the covenant is fulfilled, then shall I show you and your
descendants mercy, and bring you into a land of gladness, where there is neither
sorrow nor suffering; but abiding joy and gladness, and light that never fails,
and praises that never cease; and a beautiful garden that shall never pass
away."
16 And God said again to Adam, "Be patient and enter the cave, for the darkness,
of which you were afraid, shall only be twelve hours long; and when ended, light
shall come up."
17 Then when Adam heard these words from God, he and Eve worshipped before Him,
and their hearts were comforted. They returned into the cave after their custom,
while tears flowed from their eyes, sorrow and wailing came from their hearts,
and they wished their soul would leave their body.
18 And Adam and Eve stood praying until the darkness of night came over them,
and Adam was hid from Eve, and she from him.
19 And they remained standing in prayer.
Chapter XXVII The second tempting of Adam and Eve. The devil takes on the form
of a beguiling light.
1 When Satan, the hater of all good, saw how they continued in prayer, and how
God communed with them, and comforted them, and how He had accepted their
offering −− Satan made an apparition.
2 He began with transforming his hosts; in his hands was a flashing fire, and
they were in a great light.
3 He then placed his throne near the mouth of the cave because he could not
enter into it by reason of their prayers. And he shed light into the cave, until
the cave glistened over Adam and Eve; while his hosts began to sing praises.
4 And Satan did this, in order that when Adam saw the light, he should think
within himself that it was a heavenly light, and that Satan's hosts were angels;
and that God had sent them to watch at the cave, and to give him light in the
darkness.
5 So that when Adam came out of the cave and saw them, and Adam and Eve bowed to
Satan, then he would overcome Adam thereby, and a second time humble him before
God.
6 When, therefore, Adam and Eve saw the light, fancying it was real, they
strengthened their hearts; yet, as they were trembling, Adam said to Eve: −−
7 "Look at that great light, and at those many songs of praise, and at that host
standing outside who won't come into our cave. Why don't they tell us what they
want, where they are from, what the meaning of this light is, what those praises
are, why they have been sent to this place, and why they won't come in?
8 If they were from God, they would come into the cave with us, and would tell
us why they were sent."
9 Then Adam stood up and prayed to God with a burning heart, and said: −−
10 "O Lord, is there in the world another god besides You, who created angels
and filled them with light, and sent them to keep us, who would come with them?
11 But, look, we see these hosts that stand at the mouth of the cave; they are
in a great light; they sing loud praises. If they are of some other god than
You, tell me; and if they are sent by you, inform me of the reason for which You
have sent them."
12 No sooner had Adam said this, than an angel from God appeared to him in the
cave, who said to him, "O Adam, fear not. This is Satan and his hosts; he wishes
to deceive you as he deceived you at first. For the first time, he was hidden in
the serpent; but this time he is come to you in the likeness of an angel of
light; in order that, when you worshipped him, he might enslave you, in the very
presence of God."
13 Then the angel went from Adam and seized Satan at the opening of the cave,
and stripped him of the pretense he had assumed, and brought him in his own
hideous form to Adam and Eve; who were afraid of him when they saw him.
14 And the angel said to Adam, "This hideous form has been his ever since God
made him fall from heaven. He could not have come near you in it; he therefore
transformed himself into an angel of light."
15 Then the angel drove away Satan and his hosts from Adam and Eve, and said to
them, "Fear not; God who created you, will strengthen you."
16 And the angel left them.
17 But Adam and Eve remained standing in the cave; no consolation came to them;
they divided in their thoughts.
18 And when it was morning they prayed; and then went out to seek the garden.
For their hearts were towards it, and they could get no consolation for having
left it.
Chapter XXVIII The Devil pretends to lead Adam and Eve to the water to bathe.
1 But when the crafty Satan saw them, that they were going to the garden, he
gathered together his host, and came in appearance on a cloud, intent on
deceiving them.
2 But when Adam and Eve saw him thus in a vision, they thought they were angels
of God come to comfort them about having left the garden, or to bring them back
again into it.
3 And Adam spread his hands before God, beseeching Him to make him understand
what they were.
4 Then Satan, the hater of all good, said to Adam, "O Adam, I am an angel of the
great God; and, behold the hosts that surround me.
5 God has sent us to take you and bring you to the border of the garden
northwards; to the shore of the clear sea, and bathe you and Eve in it, and
raise you to your former gladness, that you return again to the garden."
6 These words sank into the heart of Adam and Eve.
7 Yet God withheld HIS Word from Adam, and did not make him understand at once,
but waited to see his strength; whether he would be overcome as Eve was when in
the garden, or whether he would prevail.
8 Then Satan called to Adam and Eve, and said, "Behold, we go to the sea of
water," and they began to go.
9 And Adam and Eve followed them at some little distance.
10 But when they came to the mountain to the north of the garden, a very high
mountain, without any steps to the top of it, the Devil drew near to Adam and
Eve, and made them go up to the top in reality, and not in a vision; wishing, as
he did, to throw them down and kill them, and to wipe off their name from the
earth; so that this earth should remain to him and his hosts alone.
Chapter XXIX God tells Adam of the Devil's purpose
1 But when the merciful God saw that Satan wished to kill Adam with his many
tricks, and saw that Adam was meek and without guile, God spoke to Satan in a
loud voice, and cursed him.
2 Then he and his hosts fled, and Adam and Eve remained standing on the top of
the mountain, from there they saw below them the wide world, high above which
they were. But they saw none of the host which time after time were by them.
3 They cried, both Adam and Eve, before God, and begged for forgiveness of Him.
4 Then came the Word from God to Adam, and said to him, "Know you and understand
concerning this Satan, that he seeks to deceive you and your descendants after
you."
5 And Adam cried before the Lord God, and begged and prayed to Him to give him
something from the garden, as a token to him, wherein to be comforted.
6 And God considered Adam's thought, and sent the angel Michael as far as the
sea that reaches India, to take from there golden rods and bring them to Adam.
7 This did God in HIS wisdom in order that these golden rods, being with Adam in
the cave, should shine forth with light in the night around him, and put an end
to his fear of the darkness.
8 Then the angel Michael went down by God's order, took golden rods, as God had
commanded him, and brought them to God.
Chapter XXX Adam receives the first worldly goods.
1 After these things, God commanded the angel Gabriel to go down to the garden,
and say to the cherub who kept it, "Behold, God has commanded me to come into
the garden, and to take from it sweet smelling incense, and give it to Adam."
2 Then the angel Gabriel went down by God's order to the garden, and told the
cherub as God had commanded him.
3 The cherub then said, "Well." And Gabriel went in and took the incense.
4 Then God commanded his angel Raphael to go down to the garden, and speak to
the cherub about some myrrh, to give to Adam.
5 And the angel Raphael went down and told the cherub as God had commanded him,
and the cherub said, "Well." Then Raphael went in and took the myrrh.
6 The golden rods were from the Indian sea, where there are precious stones. The
incense was from the eastern border of the garden; and the myrrh from the
western border, from where bitterness came over Adam.
7 And the angels brought these things to God, by the Tree of Life, in the
garden.
8 Then God said to the angels, "Dip them in the spring of water; then take them
and sprinkle their water over Adam and Eve, that they be a little comforted in
their sorrow, and give them to Adam and Eve.
9 And the angels did as God had commanded them, and they gave all those things
to Adam and Eve on the top of the mountain on which Satan had placed them, when
he sought to make an end of them.
10 And when Adam saw the golden rods, the incense and the myrrh, he was rejoiced
and cried because he thought that the gold was a token of the kingdom from where
he had come, that the incense was a token of the bright light which had been
taken from him, and that the myrrh was a token of the sorrow in which he was.
Chapter XXXI They make themselves more comfortable in the Cave of Treasures on
the third day.
1 After these things God said to Adam, "You asked Me for something from the
garden, to be comforted therewith, and I have given you these three tokens as a
consolation to you; that you trust in Me and in My covenant with you.
2 For I will come and save you; and kings shall bring me when in the flesh,
gold, incense and myrrh; gold as a token of My kingdom; incense as a token of My
divinity; and myrrh as a token of My suffering and of My death.
3 But, O Adam, put these by you in the cave; the gold that it may shed light
over you by night; the incense, that you smell its sweet savor; and the myrrh,
to comfort you in your sorrow."
4 When Adam heard these words from God, he worshipped before Him. He and Eve
worshipped Him and gave Him thanks, because He had dealt mercifully with them.
5 Then God commanded the three angels, Michael, Gabriel and Raphael, each to
bring what he had brought, and give it to Adam. And they did so, one by one.
6 And God commanded Suriyel and Salathiel to bear up Adam and Eve, and bring
them down from the top of the high mountain, and to take them to the Cave of
Treasures.
7 There they laid the gold on the south side of the cave, the incense on the
eastern side, and the myrrh on the western side. For the mouth of the cave was
on the north side.
8 The angels then comforted Adam and Eve, and departed.
9 The gold was seventy rods*; the incense, twelve pounds; and the myrrh, three
pounds.
10 These remained by Adam in the Cave of Treasures**.
11 God gave these three things to Adam on the third day after he had come out of
the garden, in token of the three days the Lord should remain in the heart of
the earth.
12 And these three things, as they continued with Adam in the cave, gave him
light by night; and by day they gave him a little relief from his sorrow. * A
rod is a unit of linear measure equivalent to 5.5 yards and also a unit of area
measure equivalent to 30.25 square yards. In this case, the word rod simply
means a kind of long, thin piece of gold of unspecified size and weight. ** This
is the original text which appears to contain embedded editorial content: "These
remained by Adam in the House of Treasures; therefore was it called 'of
concealment.' But other interpreters say it was called the 'Cave of Treasures,'
by reason of the bodies of righteous men that were in it.
Chapter XXXII Adam and Eve go into the water to pray.
1 And Adam and Eve remained in the Cave of Treasures until the seventh day; they
neither ate of the fruit the earth, nor drank water.
2 And when it dawned on the eighth day, Adam said to Eve, "O Eve, we prayed God
to give us something from the garden, and He sent his angels who brought us what
we had desired.
3 But now, get up, let us go to the sea of water we saw at first, and let us
stand in it, praying that God will again be favorable to us and take us back to
the garden; or give us something; or that He will give us comfort in some other
land than this in which we are."
4 Then Adam and Eve came out of the cave, went and stood on the border of the
sea in which they had before thrown themselves, and Adam said to Eve:−−
5 Come, go down into this place, and come not out of it until the end of thirty
days, when I shall come to you. And pray to God with burning heart and a sweet
voice, to forgive us.
6 And I will go to another place, and go down into it, and do like you."
7 Then Eve went down into the water, as Adam had commanded her. Adam also went
down into the water; and they stood praying; and besought the Lord to forgive
them their offense, and to restore them to their former state.
8 And they stood like that praying, until the end of the thirty−five days.
Chapter XXXIII Satan falsely promises the "bright light."
1 But Satan, the hater of all good, sought them in the cave, but found them not,
although he searched diligently for them.
2 But he found them standing in the water praying and thought within himself,
"Adam and Eve are standing like that in that water praying to God to forgive
them their transgression, and to restore them to their former state, and to take
them from under my hand.
3 But I will deceive them so that they shall come out of the water, and not
fulfil their vow."
4 Then the hater of all good, went not to Adam, but he went to Eve, and took the
form of an angel of God, praising and rejoicing, and said to her:−−
5 "Peace be to you! Be glad and rejoice! God is favorable to you, and He sent me
to Adam. I have brought him the glad tidings of salvation, and of his being
filled with bright light as he was at first.
6 And Adam, in his joy for his restoration, has sent me to you, that you come to
me, in order that I crown you with light like him.
7 And he said to me, 'Speak to Eve; if she does not come with you, tell her of
the sign when we were on the top of the mountain; how God sent his angels who
took us and brought us to the Cave of Treasures; and laid the gold on the
southern side; incense, on the eastern side; and myrrh on the western side.' Now
come to him."
8 When Eve hear these words from him, she rejoiced greatly. And thinking Satan's
appearance was real, she came out of the sea.
9 He went before, and she followed him until they came to Adam. Then Satan hid
himself from her, and she saw him no more.
10 She then came and stood before Adam, who was standing by the water and
rejoicing in God's forgiveness.
11 And as she called to him, he turned around, found her there and cried when he
saw her, and beat his chest; and from the bitterness of his grief, he sank into
the water.
12 But God looked at him and at his misery, and at his being about to breathe
his last. And the Word of God came from heaven, raised him out of the water, and
said to him, "Go up the high bank to Eve." And when he came up to Eve he said to
her, "Who told you to come here?"
13 Then she told him the discourse of the angel who had appeared to her and had
given her a sign.
14 But Adam grieved, and gave her to know it was Satan. He then took her and
they both returned to the cave.
15 These things happened to them the second time they went down to the water,
seven days after their coming out of the garden.
16 They fasted in the water thirty−five days; altogether forty−two days since
they had left the garden.
Chapter XXXIV Adam recalls the creation of Eve
1 And on the morning of the forty−third day, they came out of the cave,
sorrowful and crying. Their bodies were lean, and they were parched from hunger
and thirst, from fasting and praying, and from their heavy sorrow on account of
their transgression.
2 And when they had come out of the cave they went up the mountain to the west
of the garden. 3 There they stood and prayed and besought God to grant them
forgiveness of their sins.
4 And after their prayers Adam began to beg God, saying, "O my Lord, my God, and
my Creator, You commanded the four elements* to be gathered together, and they
were gathered together by Thine order.
5 Then You spread Your hand and created me out of one element, that of dust of
the earth; and You brought me into the garden at the third hour, on a Friday,
and informed me of it in the cave.
6 Then, at first, I knew neither night nor day, for I had a bright nature;
neither did the light in which I lived ever leave me to know night or day.
7 Then, again, O Lord, in that third hour in which You created me, You brought
to me all beasts, and lions, and ostriches, and fowls of the air, and all things
that move in the earth, which You had created at the first hour before me of the
Friday.
8 And Your will was that I should name them all, one by one, with a suitable
name. But You gave me understanding and knowledge, and a pure heart and a right
mind from you, that I should name them after Thine own mind regarding the naming
of them.
9 O God, You made them obedient to me, and ordered that not one of them break
from my sway, according to Your commandment, and to the dominion which You had
given me over them. But now they are all estranged from me.
10 Then it was in that third hour of Friday, in which You created me, and
commanded me concerning the tree, to which I was neither to go near, nor to eat
thereof; for You said to me in the garden, 'When you eat of it, of death you
shall die.'
11 And if You had punished me as You said, with death, I should have died that
very moment.
12 Moreover, when You commanded me regarding the tree, I was neither to approach
nor to eat thereof, Eve was not with me; You had not yet created her, neither
had You yet taken her out of my side; nor had she yet heard this order from you.
13 Then, at the end of the third hour of that Friday, O Lord, You caused a
slumber and a sleep to come over me, and I slept, and was overwhelmed in sleep.
14 Then You drew a rib out of my side, and created it after my own likeness and
image. Then I awoke; and when I saw her and knew who she was, I said, 'This is
bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh; from now on she shall be called woman.'
15 It was of Your good will, O God, that You brought a slumber in a sleep over
me, and that You immediately brought Eve out of my side, until she was out, so
that I did not see how she was made; neither could I witness, O my Lord, how
awful and great are Your goodness and glory.
16 And of Your goodwill, O Lord, You made us both with bodies of a bright
nature, and You made us two, one; and You gave us Your grace, and filled us with
praises of the Holy Spirit; that we should be neither hungry nor thirsty, nor
know what sorrow is, nor yet faintness of heart; neither suffering, fasting nor
weariness.
17 But now, O God, since we transgressed Your commandment and broke Your law,
You have brought us out into a strange land, and have caused suffering, and
faintness, hunger and thirst to come over us.
18 Now, therefore, O God, we pray you, give us something to eat from the garden,
to satisfy our hunger with it; and something wherewith to quench our thirst.
19 For, behold, many days, O God, we have tasted nothing and drunk nothing, and
our flesh is dried up, and our strength is wasted, and sleep is gone from our
eyes from faintness and crying.
20 Then, O God, we dare not gather anything from the fruit of trees, from fear
of you. For when we transgress at first You spared us and did not make us die.
21 But now, we thought in our hearts, if we eat of the fruit of the trees,
without God's order, He will destroy us this time, and will wipe us off from the
face of the earth.
22 And if we drink of this water, without God's order, He will make an end of us
and root us up at once.
23 Now, therefore, O God, that I am come to this place with Eve, we beg You to
give us some fruit from the garden, that we may be satisfied with it.
24 For we desire the fruit that is on the earth, and all else that we lack in
it." * The medieval belief that there were only four elements fire, earth, air,
and water was widely accepted until about 1500 AD when the current atomic theory
was in its infancy.
Chapter XXXV God's reply.
1 Then God looked again at Adam and his crying and groaning, and the Word of God
came to him, and said to him: −−
2 "O Adam, when you were in My garden, you knew neither eating nor drinking;
neither faintness nor suffering; neither leanness of flesh, nor change; neither
did sleep depart from thine eyes. But since you transgressed, and came into this
strange land, all these trials are come over you."
Chapter XXXVI Figs.
1 Then God commanded the cherub, who kept the gate of the garden with a sword of
fire in his hand, to take some of the fruit of the fig−tree, and to give it to
Adam.
2 The cherub obeyed the command of the Lord God, and went into the garden and
brought two figs on two twigs, each fig hanging to its leaf; they were from two
of the trees among which Adam and Eve hid themselves when God went to walk in
the garden, and the Word of God came to Adam and Eve and said to them, "Adam,
Adam, where are you?"
3 And Adam answered, "O God, here I am. When I heard the sound of You and Your
voice, I hid myself, because I am naked."
4 Then the cherub took two figs and brought them to Adam and Eve. But he threw
them to them from a distance; for they might not come near the cherub by reason
of their flesh, that could not come near the fire.
5 At first, angels trembled at the presence of Adam and were afraid of him. But
now Adam trembled before the angels and was afraid of them.
6 Then Adam came closer and took one fig, and Eve also came in turn and took the
other.
7 And as they took them up in their hands, they looked at them, and knew they
were from the trees among which they had hidden themselves.
Chapter XXXVII Forty−three days of penance do not redeem one hour of sin
1 Then Adam said to Eve, "Do you not see these figs and their leaves, with which
we covered ourselves when we were stripped of our bright nature? But now, we do
not know what misery and suffering may come over us from eating them.
2 Now, therefore, O Eve, let us restrain ourselves and not eat of them, you and
I; and let us ask God to give us of the fruit of the Tree of Life."
3 Thus did Adam and Eve restrain themselves, and did not eat of these figs.
4 But Adam began to pray to God and to beseech Him to give him of the fruit of
the Tree of Life, saying thus: "O God, when we transgressed Your commandment at
the sixth hour of Friday, we were stripped of the bright nature we had, and did
not continue in the garden after our transgression, more than three hours.
5 But in the evening You made us come out of it. O God, we transgressed against
You one hour, and all these trials and sorrows have come over us until this day.
6 And those days together with this the forty−third day, do not redeem that one
hour in which we transgressed!
7 O God, look at us with an eye of pity, and do not avenge us according to our
transgression of Your commandment, in Your presence.
8 O God, give us of the fruit of the Tree of Life, that we may eat of it, and
live, and turn not to see sufferings and other trouble, in this earth; for You
are God.
9 When we transgressed Your commandment, You made us come out of the garden, and
sent a cherub to keep the Tree of Life, lest we should eat thereof, and live;
and know nothing of faintness after we transgressed.
10 But now, O Lord, behold, we have endured all these days, and have borne
sufferings. Make these forty−three days an equivalent for the one hour in which
we transgressed."
Chapter XXXVIII "When 5500 years are fulfilled. . . ."
1 After these things the Word of God came to Adam, and said to him: −−
2 "O Adam, as to the fruit on the Tree of Life that you have asked for, I will
not give it to you now, but only when the 5500 years are fulfilled. At that time
I will give you fruit from the Tree of Life, and you will eat, and live forever,
you, and Eve, and your righteous descendants.
3 But these forty−three days cannot make amends for the hour in which you
transgressed My commandment.
4 O Adam, I gave you the fruit of the fig−tree to eat in which you hid yourself.
Go and eat of it, you and Eve.
5 I will not deny your request, neither will I disappoint your hope; therefore,
endure until the fulfillment of the covenant I made with you."
6 And God withdrew HIS Word from Adam.
Chapter XXXIX Adam is cautious −− but too late.
1 Then Adam returned to Eve, and said to her, "Get up, and take a fig for
yourself, and I will take another; and let us go to our cave."
2 Then Adam and Eve took each a fig and went towards the cave; the time was
about the setting of the sun; and their thoughts made them long to eat of the
fruit.
3 But Adam said to Eve, "I am afraid to eat of this fig. I know not what may
come over me from it."
4 So Adam cried, and stood praying before God, saying, "Satisfy my hunger,
without my having to eat this fig; for after I have eaten it, what will it
profit me? And what shall I desire and ask of you, O God, when it is gone?"
5 And he said again, "I am afraid to eat of it; for I know not what will befall
me through it."
Chapter XL The first Human hunger.
1 Then the Word of God came to Adam, and said to him, "O Adam, why didn't you
have this dread, or this fasting, or this care before now? And why didn't you
have this fear before you transgressed?
2 But when you came to live in this strange land, your animal body could not
survive on earth without earthly food, to strengthen it and to restore its
powers."
3 And God withdrew HIS Word for Adam.
Chapter XLI The first Human thirst.
1 Then Adam took the fig, and laid it on the golden rods. Eve also took her fig,
and put it on the incense.
2 And the weight of each fig was that of a water−melon; for the fruit of the
garden was much larger than the fruit of this land*.
3 But Adam and Eve remained standing and fasting the whole of that night, until
the morning dawned.
4 When the sun rose they were still praying, but after they had finished
praying, Adam said to Eve: −−
5 "O Eve, come, let us go to the border of the garden looking south; to the
place from where the river flows, and is parted into four heads. There we will
pray to God, and ask Him to give us some of the Water of Life to drink .
6 For God has not fed us with the Tree of Life, in order that we may not live.
Therefore, we will ask him to give us some of the Water of Life, and to quench
our thirst with it, rather than with a drink of water of this land."
7 When Eve heard these words from Adam, she agreed; and they both got up and
came to the southern border of the garden, at the edge of the river of water a
short distance from the garden.
8 And they stood and prayed before the Lord, and asked Him to look at them this
once, to forgive them, and to grant them their request.
9 After this prayer from both of them, Adam began to pray with his voice before
God, and said; −−
10 "O Lord, when I was in the garden and saw the water that flowed from under
the Tree of Life, my heart did not desire, neither did my body require to drink
of it; neither did I know thirst, for I was living; and above that which I am
now.
11 So that in order to live I did not require any Food of Life, neither did I
drink of the Water of Life.
12 But now, O God, I am dead; my flesh is parched with thirst. Give me of the
Water of Life that I may drink of it and live.
13 Of Your mercy, O God, save me from these plagues and trials, and bring me
into another land different from this, if You will not let me live in Your
garden." * This is substantiated by Genesis 3:7 whereby the leaves of the fig
tree were large enough that Adam and Eve could fashion garments from them.
Chapter XLII A promise of the Water of Life.
1 Then came the Word of God to Adam, and said to him:−−
2 "O Adam, as to what you said, 'Bring me into a land where there is rest,' it
is not another land than this, but it is the kingdom of heaven where alone there
is rest.
3 But you can not make your entrance into it at present; but only after your
judgment is past and fulfilled.
4 Then will I make you go up into the kingdom of heaven, you and your righteous
descendants; and I will give you and them the rest you ask for at present.
5 And if you said, 'Give me of the Water of Life that I may drink and live' −−
it cannot be this day, but on the day that I shall descend into hell, and break
the gates of brass, and bruise in pieces the kingdoms of iron.
6 Then will I in mercy save your soul and the souls of the righteous, to give
them rest in My garden. And that shall be when the end of the world is come.
7 And, again, in regards to the Water of Life you seek, it will not be granted
you this day; but on the day that I shall shed My blood on your head* in the
land of Golgotha**.
8 For My blood shall be the Water of Life to you at that time, and not to just
you alone, but to all your descendants who shall believe in Me***; that it be to
them for rest forever."
9 The Lord said again to Adam, "O Adam, when you were in the garden, these
trials did not come to you.
10 But since you transgressed My commandment, all these sufferings have come
over you.
11 Now, also, does your flesh require food and drink; drink then of that water
that flows by you on the face of the earth.
12 Then God withdrew HIS Word from Adam.
13 And Adam and Eve worshipped the Lord, and returned from the river of water to
the cave. It was noon−day; and when they drew near to the cave, they saw a large
fire by it. * This phrase indicates that the bleeding will take place in an
elevated position above the populace. This is believed to be a reference to the
cross whereby Christ bled profusely above the people below. ** Golgotha
(goal−goth−uh) was the hill outside the walls of Jerusalem where Jesus was
crucified. Its exact location is not precisely known, but the Church of the Holy
Sepulcher is believed to have been constructed on this hill. *** Reference: John
6:25 and 7:38
Chapter XLIII The Devil attempts arson.
1 Then Adam and Eve were afraid, and stood still. And Adam said to Eve, "What is
that fire by our cave? We have done nothing in it to cause this fire.
2 We neither have bread to bake therein, nor broth to cook there. As to this
fire, we have never known anything like it, neither do we know what to call it.
3 But ever since God sent the cherub with a sword of fire that flashed and
lightened in his hand, from fear of which we fell down and were like corpses,
have we not seen the like.
4 But now, O Eve, behold, this is the same fire that was in the cherub's hand,
which God has sent to keep the cave in which we live.
5 O Eve, it is because God is angry with us, and will drive us from it.
6 O Eve, we have again transgressed HIS commandment in that cave, so that He had
sent this fire to burn around it, and to prevent us from going into it.
7 If this be really so, O Eve, where shall we live? And where shall we flee from
before the face of the Lord? Since, in regards to the garden, He will not let us
live in it, and He has deprived us of the good things thereof; but He has placed
us in this cave, in which we have borne darkness, trials and hardships, until at
last we have found comfort therein.
8 But now that He has brought us out into another land, who knows what may
happen in it? And who knows but that the darkness of that land may be far
greater than the darkness of this land?
9 Who knows what may happen in that land by day or by night? And who knows
whether it will be far or near, O Eve? Where it will please God to put us, may
be far from the garden, O Eve? Or where God will prevent us from beholding Him,
because we have transgressed HIS commandment, and because we have made requests
of Him at all times?
10 O Eve, if God will bring us into a strange land other than this, in which we
find consolation, it must be to put our souls to death, and blot out our name
from the face of the earth.
11 O Eve, if we are further alienated from the garden and from God, where shall
we find Him again, and ask Him to give us gold, incense, myrrh, and some fruit
of the fig−tree?
12 Where shall we find Him, to comfort us a second time? Where shall we find
Him, that He may think of us, as regards the covenant He has made on our
behalf?"
13 Then Adam said no more. And they kept looking, He and Eve, towards the cave,
and at the fire that flared up around it.
14 But that fire was from Satan. For he had gathered trees and dry grasses, and
had carried and brought them to the cave, and had set fire to them, in order to
consume the cave and what was in it.
15 So that Adam and Eve should be left in sorrow, and he should cut off their
trust in God, and make them deny Him.
16 But by the mercy of God he could not burn the cave, for God sent HIS angel
around the cave to guard it from such a fire, until it went out.
17 And this fire lasted from noon−day until the break of day. That was the
forty−fifth day.
Chapter XLIV The power of fire over man.
1 Yet Adam and Eve were standing and looking at the fire, and unable to come
near the cave from their dread of the fire.
2 And Satan kept on bringing trees and throwing them into the fire, until the
flames of the fire rose up on high, and covered the whole cave, thinking, as he
did in his own mind, to consume the cave with much fire. But the angel of the
Lord was guarding it.
3 And yet he could not curse Satan, nor injure him by word, because he had no
authority over him, neither did he take to doing so with words from his mouth.
4 Therefore the angel tolerated him, without saying one bad word, until the Word
of God came who said to Satan, "Go away from here; once before you deceived My
servants, and this time you seek to destroy them.
5 Were it not for My mercy I would have destroyed you and your hosts from off
the earth. But I have had patience with you, until the end of the world."
6 Then Satan fled from before the Lord. But the fire went on burning around the
cave like a coal−fire the whole day; which was the forty−sixth day Adam and Eve
had spent since they came out of the garden.
7 And when Adam and Eve saw that the heat of the fire had somewhat cooled down,
they began to walk towards the cave to get into it as they usually did; but they
could not, by reason of the heat of the fire.
8 Then they both began crying because of the fire that separated them from the
cave, and that came towards them, burning. And they were afraid.
9 Then Adam said to Eve, "See this fire of which we have a portion in us: which
formerly yielded to us, but no longer does so, now that we have transgressed the
limit of creation, and changed our condition, and our nature is altered. But the
fire is not changed in its nature, nor altered from its creation. Therefore it
now has power over us; and when we come near it, it scorches our flesh."
Chapter XLV Why Satan didn't fulfil his promises. Description of hell.
1 Then Adam rose and prayed to God, saying, "See, this fire has separated us
from the cave in which You have commanded us to live; but now, behold, we cannot
go into it."
2 Then God heard Adam, and sent him HIS Word, that said: −−
3 "O Adam, see this fire! How different the flame and heat thereof are from the
garden of delights and the good things in it!
4 When you were under My control, all creatures yielded to you; but after you
have transgressed My commandment, they all rise over you."
5 God said again to him, "See, O Adam, how Satan has exalted you! He has
deprived you of the Godhead, and of an exalted state like Me, and has not kept
his word to you; but has, after all, become your enemy. He is the one who made
this fire in which he meant to burn you and Eve.
6 Why, O Adam, has he not kept his agreement with you, not even one day; but has
deprived you of the glory that was on you −− when you yielded to his command?
7 Do you think, Adam, that he loved you when he made this agreement with you? Or
that he loved you and wished to raise you on high?
8 But no, Adam, he did not do all that out of love to you; but he wished to make
you come out of light into darkness; and from an exalted state to degradation;
from glory to abasement; from joy to sorrow; and from rest to fasting and
fainting."
9 God also said to Adam, "See this fire kindled by Satan around your cave; see
this wonder that surrounds you; and know that it will encompass about both you
and your descendants, when you obey his command; that he will plague you with
fire; and that you will go down into hell after you are dead.
10 Then you will see the burning of his fire, that will be burning around you
and likewise your descendants. You will not be delivered from it until My
coming; just like you cannot go into your cave right now because of the great
fire around it; not until My Word comes and makes a way for you on the day My
covenant is fulfilled.
11 There is no way for you at present to come from this life to rest, not until
My Word comes, who is My Word. Then He will make a way for you, and you shall
have rest." Then God called with HIS Word to the fire that burned around the
cave, that it split itself in half, until Adam had gone through it. Then the
fire parted itself by God's order, and a way was made for Adam*.
12 And God withdrew HIS Word from Adam. * Reference: Exodus 14:21,22 and Joshua
3:15−17
Chapter XLVI "How many times have I delivered you out of his hand . . ."
1 Then Adam and Eve began again to come into the cave. And when they came to the
way between the fire, Satan blew into the fire like a whirlwind, and caused the
burning coal−fire to cover Adam and Eve; so that their bodies were singed; and
the coal−fire scorched them*.
2 And from the burning of the fire Adam and Eve screamed, and said, "O Lord,
save us! Leave us not to be consumed and plagued by this burning fire; neither
require us for having transgressed Your commandment."
3 Then God looked at their bodies, on which Satan had caused fire to burn, and
God sent HIS angel that stayed the burning fire. But the wounds remained on
their bodies.
4 And God said to Adam, "See Satan's love for you, who pretended to give you the
Godhead and greatness; and, behold, he burns you with fire, and seeks to destroy
you from off the earth.
5 Then look at Me, O Adam; I created you, and how many times have I delivered
you out of his hand? If not, wouldn't he have destroyed you?"
6 God said again to Eve, "What is that he promised you in the garden, saying,
'As soon as you eat from the tree, your eyes will be opened, and you shall
become like gods, knowing good and evil.' But look! He has burnt your bodies
with fire, and has made you taste the taste of fire, for the taste of the
garden; and has made you see the burning of fire, and the evil of it, and the
power it has over you.
7 Your eyes have seen the good he has taken from you, and in truth he has opened
your eyes; and you have seen the garden in which you were with Me, and you have
also seen the evil that has come over you from Satan. But as to the Godhead he
cannot give it to you, neither fulfil his speech to you. No, he was bitter
against you and your descendants, that will come after you."
8 And God withdrew HIS Word form them. * At this time, the garments that the
Lord had given them in Genesis 3:21 were burned off so that Adam and Eve were
again naked. Reference
Chapter XLVII The Devil's own Scheming.
1 Then Adam and Eve came into the cave, yet trembling at the fire that had
scorched their bodies. So Adam said to Eve:−−
2 "Look, the fire has burnt our flesh in this world; but how will it be when we
are dead, and Satan shall punish our souls? Is not our deliverance long and far
off, unless God come, and in mercy to us fulfil HIS promise?"
3 Then Adam and Eve passed into the cave, blessing themselves for coming into it
once more. For it was in their thoughts, that they never should enter it, when
they saw the fire around it.
4 But as the sun was setting the fire was still burning and nearing Adam and Eve
in the cave, so that they could not sleep in it. After the sun had set, they
went out of it. This was the forty−seventh day after they came out of the
garden.
5 Adam and Eve then came under the top of hill by the garden to sleep, as they
were accustomed.
6 And they stood and prayed God to forgive them their sins, and then fell asleep
under the summit of the mountain.
7 But Satan, the hater of all good, thought within himself: "Whereas God has
promised salvation to Adam by covenant, and that He would deliver him out of all
the hardships that have befallen him −− but has not promised me by covenant, and
will not deliver me out of my hardships; no, since He has promised him that He
should make him and his descendants live in the kingdom in which I once was −− I
will kill Adam.
8 The earth shall be rid of him; and shall be left to me alone; so that when he
is dead he may not have any descendants left to inherit the kingdom that shall
remain my own realm; God will then be wanting me, and He will restore it to me
and my hosts."
Chapter XLVIII Fifth apparition of Satan to Adam and Eve.
1 After this Satan called to his hosts, all of which came to him, and said to
him: −−
2 "O, our lord, what will you do?"
3 He then said to them, "You know that this Adam, whom God created out of the
dust, is the one who has taken our kingdom, come, let us gather together and
kill him; or hurl a rock at him and at Eve, and crush them under it."
4 When Satan's hosts heard these words, they came to the part of the mountain
where Adam and Eve were asleep.
5 Then Satan and his host took a huge rock, broad and even, and without blemish,
thinking within himself, "If there should be a hole in the rock, when it fell on
them, the hole in the rock might come over them, and so they would escape and
not die."
6 He then said to his hosts, "Take up this stone, and throw it flat on them, so
that it doesn't roll off them to somewhere else. And when you have hurled it,
get away from there quickly."
7 And they did as he told them. But as the rock fell down from the mountain
toward Adam and Eve, God commanded the rock to become a dome over them*, that
did them no harm. And so it was by God's order.
8 But when the rock fell, the whole earth quaked with it**, and was shaken from
the size of the rock.
9 And as it quaked and shook, Adam and Eve awoke from sleep, and found
themselves under a dome of rock. But they didn't know what had happened; because
when the fell asleep they were under the sky, and not under a dome; and when
they saw it, they were afraid.
10 Then Adam said to Eve, "Wherefore has the mountain bent itself, and the earth
quaked and shaken on our account? And why has this rock spread itself over us
like a tent?
11 Does God intend to plague us and to shut us up in this prison? Or will He
close the earth over us?
12 He is angry with us for our having come out of the cave, without HIS order;
and for our having done so of our own accord, without consulting Him, when we
left the cave and came to this place."
13 Then Eve said, "If, indeed, the earth quaked for our sake, and this rock
forms a tent over us because of our transgression, then we will be sorry, O
Adam, because our punishment will be long.
14 But get up and pray to God to let us know concerning this, and what this rock
is that is spread over us like a tent."
15 Then Adam stood up and prayed before the Lord, to let him know what had
brought about this difficult time. And Adam stood praying like that until the
morning. * The word "dome" is used here but the text does not specifically
suggest that the covering was round only that it covered them on all sides,
however a dome is the most likely shape that would have be able to withstand the
impact with the ground. From verse 9 that says "when they saw it" and verse
11 that says "shut us up in this prison", we can conclude that the dome had
holes in its sides that were big enough to let in light and air but were too
small to allow Adam and Eve to escape. Another conclusion would be that the
holes were large but too high up for Adam and Eve to reach, however the former
is more likely. ** In verse 7 of the next
Chapter XLIX The first prophecy of the Resurrection.
1 Then the Word of God came and said: −−
2 "O Adam, who counselled you, when you came out of the cave, to come to this
place?"
3 And Adam said to God, "O Lord, we came to this place because of the heat of
the fire, that came over us inside the cave."
4 Then the Lord God said to Adam, "O Adam, you dread the heat of fire for one
night, but how will it be when you live in hell?
5 Yet, O Adam, don't be afraid, and don't believe that I have placed this dome
of rock over you to plague you with it.
6 It came from Satan, who had promised you the Godhead and majesty. It is he who
threw down this rock to kill you under it, and Eve with you, and thus to prevent
you from living on the earth.
7 But, in mercy for you, just as that rock was falling down on you, I commanded
it to form an dome over you; and the rock under you to lower itself.
8 And this sign, O Adam, will happen to Me at My coming on earth: Satan will
raise the people of the Jews to put Me to death; and they will lay Me in a rock,
and seal a large stone over Me, and I shall remain within that rock three days
and three nights.
9 But on the third day I shall rise again, and it shall be salvation to you, O
Adam, and to your descendants, to believe in Me. But, O Adam, I will not bring
you from under this rock until three days and three nights have passed."
10 And God withdrew HIS Word from Adam.
11 But Adam and Eve lived under the rock three days and three nights, as God had
told them.
12 And God did so to them because they had left their cave and had come to this
same place without God's order.
13 But, after three days and three nights, God created an opening in the dome of
rock and allowed them to get out from under it. Their flesh was dried up, and
their eyes and hearts were troubled from crying and sorrow.
Chapter L Adam and Eve seek to cover their nakedness.
1 Then Adam and Eve went forth and came into the Cave of Treasures, and they
stood praying in it the whole of that day, until the evening.
2 And this took place at the end of the fifty days after they had left the
garden.
3 But Adam and Eve rose again and prayed to God in the cave the whole of that
night, and begged for mercy from Him.
4 And when the day dawned, Adam said to Eve, "Come! Let us go and do some work
for our bodies."
5 So they went out of the cave, and came to the northern border of the garden,
and they looked for something to cover their bodies with*. But they found
nothing, and knew not how to do the work. Yet their bodies were stained, and
they were speechless from cold and heat.
6 Then Adam stood and asked God to show him something with which to cover their
bodies.
7 Then came the Word of God and said to him, "O Adam, take Eve and come to the
seashore where you fasted before. There you will find skins of sheep that were
left after lions ate the carcasses. Take them and make garments for yourselves,
and clothe yourselves with them. *
Chapter XLVI verse
1, says "Satan blew into the fire ... so that their bodies were singed". At this
time, the garments that the Lord had given them in Genesis 3:21 were burned off
so that Adam and Eve were again naked.
Chapter LI "What is his beauty that you should have followed him?"
1 When Adam heard these words from God, he took Eve and went from the northern
end of the garden to the south of it, by the river of water where they once
fasted.
2 But as they were going on their way, and before they got there, Satan, the
wicked one, had heard the Word of God communing with Adam respecting his
covering.
3 It grieved him, and he hastened to the place where the sheep−skins were, with
the intention of taking them and throwing them into the sea, or of burning them
with fire, so that Adam and Eve would not find them.
4 But as he was about to take them, the Word of God came from heaven, and bound
him by the side of those skins until Adam and Eve came near him. But as they got
closer to him they were afraid of him, and of his hideous look.
5 Then came the Word of God to Adam and Eve, and said to them, "This is he who
was hidden in the serpent, and who deceived you, and stripped you of the garment
of light and glory in which you were.
6 This is he who promised you majesty and divinity. Where, then, is the beauty
that was on him? Where is his divinity? Where is his light? Where is the glory
that rested on him?
7 Now his figure is hideous; he is become abominable among angels; and he has
come to be called Satan.
8 O Adam, he wished to take from you this earthly garment of sheep−skins, and to
destroy it, and not let you be covered with it.
9 What, then, is his beauty that you should have followed him? And what have you
gained by obeying him? See his evil works and then look at Me; at Me, your
Creator, and at the good deeds I do you.
10 See, I bound him until you came and saw him and beheld his weakness, that no
power is left with him." 11 And God released him from his bonds.
Chapter LII Adam and Eve sew the first shirt.
1 After this Adam and Eve said no more, but cried before God on account of their
creation, and of their bodies that required an earthly covering.
2 Then Adam said to Eve, "O Eve, this is the skin of beasts with which we shall
be covered, but when we put it on, behold, we shall be wearing a token of death
on our bodies. Just as the owners of these skins have died and have wasted away,
so also shall we die and pass away."
3 Then Adam and Eve took the skins, and went back to the Cave of Treasures; and
when in it, they stood and prayed as they were accustomed.
4 And they thought how they could make garments of those skins; for they had no
skill for it.
5 Then God sent to them HIS angel to show them how to work it out. And the angel
said to Adam, "Go forth, and bring some palm−thorns." Then Adam went out, and
brought some, as the angel had commanded him.
6 Then the angel began before them to work out the skins, after the manner of
one who prepares a shirt. And he took the thorns and stuck them into the skins,
before their eyes.
7 Then the angel again stood up and prayed God that the thorns in those skins
should be hidden, so as to be, as it were, sewn with one thread.
8 And so it was, by God's order; they became garments for Adam and Eve, and He
clothed them therewith.
9 From that time the nakedness of their bodies was covered from the sight of
each other's eyes.
10 And this happened at the end of the fifty−first day.
11 Then when Adam's and Eve's bodies were covered, they stood and prayed, and
sought mercy of the Lord, and forgiveness, and gave Him thanks for that He had
had mercy on them, and had covered their nakedness. And they ceased not from
prayer the whole of that night.
12 Then when the morning dawned at the rising of the sun, they said their
prayers after their custom; and then went out of the cave.
13 And Adam said to Eve, "Since we don't know what there is to the west of this
cave, let us go out and see it today." Then they came forth and went toward the
western border.
Chapter LIII The prophecy of the Western Lands and of the great flood.
1 They were not very far from the cave, when Satan came towards them, and hid
himself between them and the cave, under the form of two ravenous lions three
days without food, that came towards Adam and Eve, as if to break them in pieces
and devour them.
2 Then Adam and Eve cried, and prayed God to deliver them from their paws.
3 Then the Word of God came to them, and drove away the lions from them.
4 And God said to Adam, "O Adam, what do you seek on the western border? And why
have you left of thine own accord the eastern border, in which was your living
place?
5 Now then, turn back to your cave, and remain in it, so that Satan won't
deceive you or work his purpose over you.
6 For in this western border, O Adam, there will go from you a descendant, that
shall replenish it; and that will defile themselves with their sins, and with
their yielding to the commands of Satan, and by following his works.
7 Therefore will I bring over them the waters of a flood, and overwhelm them
all. But I will deliver what is left of the righteous among them; and I will
bring them to a distant land, and the land in which you live now shall remain
desolate and without one inhabitant in it.
8 After God had thus spoken to them, they went back to the Cave of Treasures.
But their flesh was dried up, and they were weak from fasting and praying, and
from the sorrow they felt at having trespassed against God.
Chapter LIV Adam and Eve go exploring.
1 Then Adam and Eve stood up in the cave and prayed the whole of that night
until the morning dawned. And when the sun was risen they both went out of the
cave; their heads were wandering from heaviness of sorrow and they didn't know
where they were going.
2 And they walked in that condition to the southern border of the garden. And
they began to go up that border until they came to the eastern border beyond
which there was no more land.
3 And the cherub who guarded the garden was standing at the western gate, and
guarding it against Adam and Eve, lest they should suddenly come into the
garden. And the cherub turned around, as if to put them to death; according to
the commandment God had given him.
4 When Adam and Eve came to the eastern border of the garden −− thinking in
their hearts that the cherub was not watching −− as they were standing by the
gate as if wishing to go in, suddenly came the cherub with a flashing sword of
fire in his hand; and when he saw them, he went forth to kill them. For he was
afraid that God would destroy him if they went into the garden without HIS
order.
5 And the sword of the cherub seemed to shoot flames a distance away from it.
But when he raised it over Adam and Eve, the flame of the sword did not flash
forth.
6 Therefore the cherub thought that God was favorable to them, and was bringing
them back into the garden. And the cherub stood wondering.
7 He could not go up to Heaven to determine God's order regarding their getting
into the garden; he therefore continued to stand by them, unable as he was to
part from them; for he was afraid that if they should enter the garden without
permission, God would destroy him.
8 When Adam and Eve saw the cherub coming towards them with a flaming sword of
fire in his hand, they fell on their faces from fear, and were as dead.
9 At that time the heavens and the earth shook; and another cherubim came down
from heaven to the cherub who guarded the garden, and saw him amazed and silent.
10 Then, again, other angels came down close to the place where Adam and Eve
were. They were divided between joy and sorrow.
11 They were glad, because they thought that God was favorable to Adam, and
wished him to return to the garden; and wished to restore him to the gladness he
once enjoyed.
12 But they sorrowed over Adam, because he was fallen like a dead man, he and
Eve; and they said in their thoughts, "Adam has not died in this place; but God
has put him to death, for his having come to this place, and wishing to get into
the garden without HIS permission."
Chapter LV The Conflict between God and Satan.
1 Then came the Word of God to Adam and Eve, and raised them from their dead
state, saying to them, "Why did you come up here? Do you intend to go into the
garden, from which I brought you out? It cannot be today; but only when the
covenant I have made with you is fulfilled."
2 Then Adam, when he heard the Word of God, and the fluttering of the angels
whom he did not see, but only heard the sound of them with his ears, he and Eve
cried, and said to the angels: −−
3 "O Spirits, who wait on God, look at me, and at my being unable to see you!
For when I was in my former bright nature, then I could see you. I sang praises
as you do; and my heart was far above you.
4 But now, that I have transgressed, that bright nature is gone from me, and I
am come to this miserable state. And now I have come to this, that I cannot see
you, and you do not serve me like you used to do. For I have become animal
flesh.
5 Yet now, O angels of God, ask God with me, to restore me to that wherein I was
formerly; to rescue me from this misery, and to remove from me the sentence of
death He passed on me, for having trespassed against Him."
6 Then, when the angels heard these words, they all grieved over him; and cursed
Satan who had misled Adam, until he came from the garden to misery; from life to
death; from peace to trouble; and from gladness to a strange land.
7 Then the angels said to Adam, "You obeyed Satan, and ignored the Word of God
who created you; and you believed that Satan would fulfil all he had promised
you.
8 But now, O Adam, we will make known to you, what came over us though him,
before his fall from heaven.
9 He gathered together his hosts, and deceived them, promising to give them a
great kingdom, a divine nature; and other promises he made them.
10 HIS hosts believed that his word was true, so they yielded to him, and
renounced the glory of God.
11 He then sent for us −− according to the orders in which we were −− to come
under his command, and to accept his vein promise. But we would not, and we did
not take his advice.
12 Then after he had fought with God, and had dealt forwardly with Him, he
gathered together his hosts, and made war with us. And if it had not been for
God's strength that was with us, we could not have prevailed against him to hurl
him from heaven.
13 But when he fell from among us, there was great joy in heaven, because of his
going down from us. For if he had remained in heaven, nothing, not even one
angel would have remained in it.
14 But God in HIS mercy, drove him from among us to this dark earth; for he had
become darkness itself and a worker of unrighteousness.
15 And he has continued, O Adam, to make war against you, until he tricked you
and made you come out of the garden, to this strange land, where all these
trials have come to you. And death, which God brought to him, he has also
brought to you, O Adam, because you obeyed him, and trespassed against God."
16 Then all the angels rejoiced and praised God, and asked Him not to destroy
Adam this time, for his having sought to enter the garden; but to bear with him
until the fulfillment of the promise; and to help him in this world until he was
free from Satan's hand.
Chapter LVI A Chapter of divine comfort.
1 Then came the Word of God to Adam, and said to him: −−
2 "O Adam, look at that garden of joy and at this earth of toil, and behold the
garden is full of angels, but look at yourself alone on this earth with Satan
whom you obeyed.
3 Yet, if you had submitted, and been obedient to Me, and had kept My Word, you
would be with My angels in My garden.
4 But when you transgressed and obeyed Satan, you became his guests among his
angels, that are full of wickedness; and you came to this earth, that brings
forth to you thorns and thistles.
5 O Adam, ask him who deceived you, to give you the divine nature he promised
you, or to make you a garden as I had made for you; or to fill you with that
same bright nature with which I had filled you.
6 Ask him to make you a body like the one I made you, or to give you a day of
rest as I gave you; or to create within you a reasonable soul, as I created for
you; or to take you from here to some other earth than this one which I gave
you. But, O Adam, he will not fulfil even one of the things he told you.
7 Acknowledge, then, My favor towards you, and My mercy on you, My creature;
that I have not avenged you for your transgression against Me, but in My pity
for you I have promised you that at the end of the great five and a half days I
will come and save you."
8 Then God said again to Adam and Eve, "Get up, go down from here, before the
cherub with a sword of fire in his hand destroys you."
9 But Adam's heart was comforted by God's words to him, and he worshipped before
Him.
10 And God commanded HIS angels to escort Adam and Eve to the cave with joy,
instead of the fear that had come over them.
11 Then the angels took up Adam and Eve, and brought them down from the mountain
by the garden, with songs and psalms, until they arrived at the cave. There the
angels began to comfort and to strengthen them, and then departed from them
towards heaven, to their Creator, who had sent them.
12 But after the angels had departed from Adam and Eve, Satan came with
shamefacedness, and stood at the entrance of the cave in which were Adam and
Eve. He then called to Adam, and said, "O Adam, come, let me speak to you."
13 Then Adam came out of the cave, thinking he was one of God's angels that was
come to give him some good counsel.
Chapter LVII "Therefore I fell. . . . "
1 But when Adam came out and saw his hideous figure, he was afraid of him, and
said to him, "Who are you?"
2 Then Satan answered and said to him, "It is I, who hid myself within the
serpent, and who spoke to Eve, and who enticed her until she obeyed my command.
I am he who sent her, using my deceitful speech, to deceive you, until you both
ate of the fruit of the tree and abandoned the command of God."
3 But when Adam heard these words from him, he said to him, "Can you make me a
garden as God made for me? Or can you clothe me in the same bright nature in
which God had clothed me?
4 Where is the divine nature you promised to give me? Where is that slick speech
of yours that you had with us at first, when we were in the garden?"
5 Then Satan said to Adam, "Do you think that when I have promised one something
that I would actually deliver it to him or fulfil my word? Of course not. For I
myself have never even thought of obtaining what I promised.
6 Therefore I fell, and I made you fall by that for which I myself fell; and
with you also, whosoever accepts my counsel, falls thereby.
7 But now, O Adam, because you fell you are under my rule, and I am king over
you; because you have obeyed me and have transgressed against your God. Neither
will there be any deliverance from my hands until the day promised you by your
God."
8 Again he said, "Because we do not know the day agreed on with you by your God,
nor the hour in which you shall be delivered, for that reason we will multiply
war and murder on you and your descendants after you.
9 This is our will and our good pleasure, that we may not leave one of the sons
of men to inherit our orders in heaven.
10 For as to our home, O Adam, it is in burning fire; and we will not stop our
evil doing, no, not one day nor one hour. And I, O Adam, shall set you on fire
when you come into the cave to live there."
11 When Adam heard these words he cried and mourned, and said to Eve, "Hear what
he said; that he won't fulfil any of what he told you in the garden. Did he
really then become king over us?
12 But we will ask God, who created us, to deliver us out of his hands."
Chapter LVIII "About sunset on the 53rd day. . ."
1 Then Adam and Eve spread their hands before God, praying and begging Him to
drive Satan away from them so that he can't harm them or force them to deny God.
2 Then God sent to them at once, HIS angel, who drove away Satan from them. This
happened about sunset, on the fifty−third day after they had come out of the
garden.
3 Then Adam and Eve went into the cave, and stood up and turned their faces to
the ground, to pray to God.
4 But before they prayed Adam said to Eve, "Look, you have seen what temptations
have befallen us in this land. Come, let us get up, and ask God to forgive us
the sins we have committed; and we will not come out until the end of the day
next to the fortieth. And if we die in here, He will save us."
5 Then Adam and Eve got up, and joined together in entreating God.
6 They continued praying like this in the cave; neither did they come out of it,
by night or by day, until their prayers went up out of their mouths, like a
flame of fire.
Chapter LIX Eighth apparition of Satan of Satan to Adam and Eve.
1 But Satan, the hater of all good, did not allow them to finish their prayers.
For he called to his hosts, and they came, all of them. Then he said to them,
"Since Adam and Eve, whom we deceived, have agreed together to pray to God night
and day, and to beg Him to deliver them, and since they will not come out of the
cave until the end of the fortieth day.
2 And since they will continue their prayers as they have both agreed to do,
that He will deliver them out of our hands, and restore them to their former
state, see what we shall do to them." And his hosts said to him, "Power is
thine, O our lord, to do what you list."
3 Then Satan, great in wickedness, took his hosts and came into the cave, in the
thirtieth night of the forty days and one; and he beat Adam and Eve, until he
left them dead.
4 Then came the Word of God to Adam and Eve, who raised them from their
suffering, and God said to Adam, "Be strong, and be not afraid of him who has
just come to you."
5 But Adam cried and said, "Where were you, O my God, that they should punish me
with such blows, and that this suffering should come over us; over me and over
Eve, Your handmaiden?"
6 Then God said to him, "O Adam, see, he is lord and master of all you have, he
who said, he would give you divinity. Where is this love for you? And where is
the gift he promised?
7 Did it please him just once, O Adam, to come to you, comfort you, strengthen
you, rejoice with you, or send his hosts to protect you; because you have obeyed
him, and have yielded to his counsel; and have followed his commandment and
transgressed Mine?"
8 Then Adam cried before the Lord, and said, "O Lord because I transgressed a
little, You have severely punished me in return for it, I ask You to deliver me
out of his hands; or else have pity on me, and take my soul out of my body now
in this strange land."
9 Then God said to Adam, "If only there had been this sighing and praying
before, before you transgressed! Then would you have rest from the trouble in
which you are now."
10 But God had patience with Adam, and let him and Eve remain in the cave until
they had fulfilled the forty days.
11 But as to Adam and Eve, their strength and flesh withered from fasting and
praying, from hunger and thirst; for they had not tasted either food or drink
since they left the garden; nor were the functions of their bodies yet settled;
and they had no strength left to continue in prayer from hunger, until the end
of the next day to the fortieth. They were fallen down in the cave; yet what
speech escaped from their mouths, was only in praises.
Chapter LX The Devil appears like an old man. He offers "a place of rest."
1 Then on the eighty−ninth day, Satan came to the cave, clad in a garment of
light, and girt about with a bright girdle.
2 In his hands was a staff of light, and he looked most awful; but his face was
pleasant and his speech was sweet.
3 He thus transformed himself in order to deceive Adam and Eve, and to make them
come out of the cave, before they had fulfilled the forty days.
4 For he said within himself, "Now that when they had fulfilled the forty days'
fasting and praying, God would restore them to their former state; but if He did
not do so, He would still be favorable to them; and even if He had not mercy on
them, would He yet give them something from the garden to comfort them; as
already twice before."
5 Then Satan drew near the cave in this fair appearance, and said: −−
6 "O Adam, get up, stand up, you and Eve, and come along with me, to a good
land; and don't be afraid. I am flesh and bones like you; and at first I was a
creature that God created.
7 And it was so, that when He had created me, He placed me in a garden in the
north, on the border of the world.
8 And He said to me, 'Stay here!' And I remained there according to HIS Word,
neither did I transgress HIS commandment.
9 Then He made a slumber to come over me, and He brought you, O Adam, out of my
side, but did not make you stay with me.
10 But God took you in HIS divine hand, and placed you in a garden to the
eastward.
11 Then I worried about you, for that while God had taken you out of my side, He
had not let you stay with me.
12 But God said to me: 'Do not worry about Adam, whom I brought out of your
side; no harm will come to him.
13 For now I have brought out of his side a help−meet* for him; and I have given
him joy by so doing.' "
14 Then Satan said again, "I did not know how it is you are in this cave, nor
anything about this trial that has come over you −− until God said to me,
'Behold, Adam has transgressed, he whom I had taken out of your side, and Eve
also, whom I took out of his side; and I have driven them out of the garden; I
have made them live in a land of sorrow and misery, because they transgressed
against Me, and have obeyed Satan. And look, they are in suffering until this
day, the eightieth.'
15 Then God said to me, 'Get up, go to them, and make them come to your place,
and suffer not that Satan come near them, and afflict them. For they are now in
great misery; and lie helpless from hunger.'
16 He further said to me, 'When you have taken them to yourself, give them to
eat of the fruit of the Tree of Life, and give them to drink of the water of
peace; and clothe them in a garment of light, and restore them to their former
state of grace, and leave them not in misery, for they came from you. But grieve
not over them, nor repent of that which has come over them.
17 But when I heard this, I was sorry; and my heart could not patiently bear it
for your sake, O my child.
18 But, O Adam, when I heard the name of Satan, I was afraid, and I said within
myself, I will not come out because he might trap me as he did my children, Adam
and Eve.
19 And I said, 'O God, when I go to my children, Satan will meet me in the way,
and war against me, as he did against them.'
20 Then God said to me, 'Fear not; when you find him, hit him with the staff
that is in thine hand, and don't be afraid of him, for you are of old standing,
and he shall not prevail against you.'
21 Then I said, 'O my Lord, I am old, and cannot go. Send Your angels to bring
them.'
22 But God said to me, 'Angels, verily, are not like them; and they will not
consent to come with them. But I have chosen you, because they are your
offspring and are like you, and they will listen to what you say.'
23 God said further to me, 'If you don't have enough strength to walk, I will
send a cloud to carry you and set you down at the entrance of their cave; then
the cloud will return and leave you there.
24 And if they will come with you, I will send a cloud to carry you and them.'
25 Then He commanded a cloud, and it bear me up and brought me to you; and then
went back.
26 And now, O my children, Adam and Eve, look at my old gray hair and at my
feeble state, and at my coming from that distant place. Come, come with me, to a
place of rest."
27 Then he began to cry and to sob before Adam and Eve, and his tears poured on
the ground like water.
28 And when Adam and Eve raised their eyes and saw his beard, and heard his
sweet talk, their hearts softened towards him; they obeyed him, for they
believed he was true.
29 And it seemed to them that they were really his offspring, when they saw that
his face was like their own; and they trusted him. * The existence of the two
words helpmeet and helpmate, meaning exactly the same thing, is a comedy of
errors. God's promise to Adam, as rendered in the King James version of the
Bible, was to give him an help meet for him (that is, a helper fit for him). In
the 17th century the two words help and meet in this passage were mistaken for
one word, applying to Eve, and thus helpmeet came to mean a wife. Then in the
18th century, in a misguided attempt to make sense of the word, the spelling
helpmate was introduced. Both errors are now beyond recall, and both spellings
are acceptable.
Chapter LXI They begin to follow Satan.
1 Then he took Adam and Eve by the hand, and began to bring them out of the
cave.
2 But when they had come a little ways out of it, God knew that Satan had
overcome them, and had brought them out before the forty days were ended, to
take them to some distant place, and to destroy them.
3 Then the Word of the Lord God again came and cursed Satan, and drove him away
from them.
4 And God began to speak to Adam and Eve, saying to them, "What made you come
out of the cave, to this place?"
5 Then Adam said to God, "Did you create a man before us? For when we were in
the cave there suddenly came to us a friendly old man who said to us, 'I am a
messenger from God to you, to bring you back to some place of rest.'
6 And we believed, O God, that he was a messenger from you; and we came out with
him; and knew not where we should go with him."
7 Then God said to Adam, "See, that is the father of evil arts, who brought you
and Eve out of the Garden of Delights. And now, indeed, when he saw that you and
Eve both joined together in fasting and praying, and that you came not out of
the cave before the end of the forty days, he wished to make your purpose vein,
to break your mutual bond; to cut off all hope from you, and to drive you to
some place where he might destroy you.
8 Because he couldn't do anything to you unless he showed himself in the
likeness of you.
9 Therefore he came to you with a face like your own, and began to give you
tokens as if they were all true.
10 But because I am merciful and am favorable to you, I did not allow him to
destroy you; instead I drove him away from you.
11 Now, therefore, O Adam, take Eve, and return to your cave, and remain in it
until the morning after the fortieth day. And when you come out, go towards the
eastern gate of the garden."
12 Then Adam and Eve worshipped God, and praised and blessed Him for the
deliverance that had come to them from Him. And they returned towards the cave.
This happened in the evening of the thirty−ninth day.
13 Then Adam and Eve stood up and with a fiery passion, prayed to God, to give
them strength; for they had become weak because of hunger and thirst and prayer.
But they watched the whole of that night praying, until morning.
14 Then Adam said to Eve, "Get up, let us go towards the eastern gate of the
garden as God told us."
15 And they said their prayers as they were accustomed to do every day; and they
left the cave to go near to the eastern gate of the garden.
16 Then Adam and Eve stood up and prayed, and appealed to God to strengthen
them, and to send them something to satisfy their hunger.
17 But after they finished their prayers, they were too weak to move.
18 Then came the Word of God again, and said to them, "O Adam, get up, go and
bring the two figs here." 19 Then Adam and Eve got up, and went until they came
near to the cave.
Chapter LXII Two fruit trees.
1 But Satan the wicked was envious, because of the consolation God had given
them.
2 So he prevented them, and went into the cave and took the two figs, and buried
them outside the cave, so that Adam and Eve should not find them. He also had in
his thoughts to destroy them.
3 But by God's mercy, as soon as those two figs were in the ground, God defeated
Satan's counsel regarding them; and made them into two fruit trees, that
overshadowed the cave. For Satan had buried them on the eastern side of it.
4 Then when the two trees were grown, and were covered with fruit, Satan grieved
and mourned, and said, "It would have been better to have left those figs where
they were; for now, behold, they have become two fruit trees, whereof Adam will
eat all the days of his life. Whereas I had in mind, when I buried them, to
destroy them entirely, and to hide them forever.
5 But God has overturned my counsel; and would not that this sacred fruit should
perish; and He has made plain my intention, and has defeated the counsel I had
formed against HIS servants."
6 Then Satan went away ashamed because he hadn't thought his plans all the way
through.
Chapter LXIII The first joy of trees.
1 But Adam and Eve, as they got closer to the cave, saw two fig trees, covered
with fruit, and overshadowing the cave.
2 Then Adam said to Eve, "It seems to me that we have gone the wrong way. When
did these two trees grow here? It seems to me that the enemy wishes to lead us
the wrong way. Do you suppose that there is another cave besides this one in the
earth?
3 Yet, O Eve, let us go into the cave, and find in it the two figs; for this is
our cave, in which we were. But if we should not find the two figs in it, then
it cannot be our cave."
4 They went then into the cave, and looked into the four corners of it, but
found not the two figs.
5 And Adam cried and said to Eve, "Did we go to the wrong cave, then, O Eve? It
seems to me these two fig trees are the two figs that were in the cave." And Eve
said, "I, for my part, do not know."
6 Then Adam stood up and prayed and said, "O God, You commanded us to come back
to the cave, to take the two figs, and then to return to you.
7 But now, we have not found them. O God, have you taken them, and sown these
two trees, or have we gone astray in the earth; or has the enemy deceived us? If
it be real, then, O God, reveal to us the secret of these two trees and of the
two figs."
8 Then came the Word of God to Adam, and said to him, "O Adam, when I sent you
to fetch the figs, Satan went before you to the cave, took the figs, and buried
them outside, eastward of the cave, thinking to destroy them; and not sowing
them with good intent.
9 Not for his mere sake, then, have these trees grown up at once; but I had
mercy on you and I commanded them to grow. And they grew to be two large trees,
that you be overshadowed by their branches, and find rest; and that I made you
see My power and My marvelous works.
10 And, also, to show you Satan's meanness, and his evil works, for ever since
you came out of the garden, he has not ceased, no, not one day, from doing you
some harm. But I have not given him power over you."
11 And God said, "From now on, O Adam, rejoice on account of the trees, you and
Eve; and rest under them when you feel weary. But do not eat any of their fruit
or come near them."
12 Then Adam cried, and said, "O God, will You again kill us, or will You drive
us away from before Your face, and cut our life from off the face of the earth?
13 O God, I beg you, if You know that there be in these trees either death or
some other evil, as at the first time, root them up from near our cave, and with
them; and leave us to die of the heat, of hunger and of thirst.
14 For we know Your marvelous works, O God, that they are great, and that by
Your power You can bring one thing out of another, without one's wish. For Your
power can make rocks to become trees, and trees to become rocks."
Chapter LXIV Adam and Eve partake of the first earthly food.
1 Then God looked at Adam and at his strength of mind, at his endurance of
hunger and thirst, and of the heat. And He changed the two fig trees into two
figs, as they were at first, and then said to Adam and to Eve, "Each of you may
take one fig." And they took them, as the Lord commanded them.
2 And He said to them, "You must now go into the cave and eat the figs, and
satisfy your hunger, or else you will die."
3 So, as God commanded them, they went into the cave about sunset. And Adam and
Eve stood up and prayed during the setting sun.
4 Then they sat down to eat the figs; but they knew not how to eat them; for
they were not accustomed to eat earthly food. They were afraid that if they ate,
their stomach would be burdened and their flesh thickened, and their hearts
would take to liking earthly food.
5 But while they were thus seated, God, out of pity for them, sent them HIS
angel, so they wouldn't perish of hunger and thirst.
6 And the angel said to Adam and Eve, "God says to you that you do not have the
strength that would be required to fast until death; eat, therefore, and
strengthen your bodies; for you are now animal flesh and cannot subsist without
food and drink."
7 Then Adam and Eve took the figs and began to eat of them. But God had put into
them a mixture as of savory bread and blood.
8 Then the angel went from Adam and Eve, who ate of the figs until they had
satisfied their hunger. Then they put aside what was left; but by the power of
God, the figs became whole again, because God blessed them.
9 After this Adam and Eve got up, and prayed with a joyful heart and renewed
strength, and praised and rejoiced abundantly the whole of that night. And this
was the end of the eighty−third day.
Chapter LXV Adam and Eve acquire digestive organs
1 And when it was day, they got up and prayed, after their custom, and then went
out of the cave.
2 But they became sick from the food they had eaten because they were not used
to it, so they went about in the cave saying to each other: −−
3 "What has our eating caused to happen to us, that we should be in such pain?
We are in misery, we shall die! It would have been better for us to have died
keeping our bodies pure than to have eaten and defiled them with food."
4 Then Adam said to Eve, "This pain did not come to us in the garden, neither
did we eat such bad food there. Do you think, O Eve, that God will plague us
through the food that is in us, or that our innards will come out; or that God
means to kill us with this pain before He has fulfilled HIS promise to us?"
5 Then Adam besought the Lord and said, "O Lord, let us not perish through the
food we have eaten. O Lord, don't punish us; but deal with us according to Your
great mercy, and forsake us not until the day of the promise You have made us."
6 Then God looked at them, and then fitted them for eating food at once; as to
this day; so that they should not perish.
7 Then Adam and Eve came back into the cave sorrowful and crying because of the
alteration of their bodies. And they both knew from that hour that they were
altered beings, that all hope of returning to the garden was now lost; and that
they could not enter it.
8 For that now their bodies had strange functions; and all flesh that requires
food and drink for its existence, cannot be in the garden.
9 Then Adam said to Eve, "Behold, our hope is now lost; and so is our trust to
enter the garden. We no longer belong to the inhabitants of the garden; but from
now on we are earthy and of the dust, and of the inhabitants of the earth. We
shall not return to the garden, until the day in which God has promised to save
us, and to bring us again into the garden, as He promised us."
10 Then they prayed to God that He would have mercy on them; after which, their
mind was quieted, their hearts were broken, and their longing was cooled down;
and they were like strangers on earth. That night Adam and Eve spent in the
cave, where they slept heavily by reason of the food they had eaten.
Chapter LXVI Adam does his first day's work.
1 When it was morning, the day after they had eaten food, Adam and Eve prayed in
the cave, and Adam said to Eve, "Look, we asked for food of God, and He gave it.
But now let us also ask Him to give us a drink of water."
2 Then they got up, and went to the bank of the stream of water, that was on the
south border of the garden, in which they had before thrown themselves. And they
stood on the bank, and prayed to God that He would command them to drink of the
water.
3 Then the Word of God came to Adam, and said to him, "O Adam, your body has
become brutish, and requires water to drink. Take some and drink it, you and
Eve, then give thanks and praise."
4 Adam and Eve then went down to the stream and drank from it, until their
bodies felt refreshed. After having drunk, they praised God, and then returned
to their cave, after their former custom. This happened at the end of
eighty−three days.
5 Then on the eighty−fourth day, they took the two figs and hung them in the
cave, together with the leaves thereof, to be to them a sign and a blessing from
God. And they placed them there so that if their descendants came there, they
would see the wonderful things God had done for them.
6 Then Adam and Eve again stood outside the cave, and asked God to show them
some food with which they could nourish their bodies.
7 Then the Word of God came and said to him, "O Adam, go down to the westward of
the cave until you come to a land of dark soil, and there you shall find food."
8 And Adam obeyed the Word of God, took Eve, and went down to a land of dark
soil, and found there wheat* growing in the ear and ripe, and figs to eat; and
Adam rejoiced over it.
9 Then the Word of God came again to Adam, and said to him, "Take some of this
wheat and make yourselves some bread with it, to nourish your body therewith."
And God gave Adam's heart wisdom, to work out the corn until it became bread.
10 Adam accomplished all that, until he grew very faint and weary. He then
returned to the cave; rejoicing at what he had learned of what is done with
wheat, until it is made into bread for one's use. * In this book, the terms
'corn' and 'wheat' are used interchangeably. The reference is possibly used to
indicate a type of ancient grain resembling Egyptian Corn also known as Durra.
Durra is a wheat−like cereal grain frequently cultivated in dry regions such as
Egypt.
Chapter LXVII "Then Satan began to lead astray Adam and Eve. . . ."
1 When Adam and Eve went down to the land of black mud and came near to the
wheat God had showed them and saw that it was ripe and ready for reaping, they
did not have a sickle to reap it with. So they readied themselves, and began to
pull up the wheat by hand, until it was all done.
2 Then they heaped it into a pile; and, faint from heat and from thirst, they
went under a shady tree, where the breeze fanned them to sleep.
3 But Satan saw what Adam and Eve had done. And he called his hosts, and said to
them, "Since God has shown to Adam and Eve all about this wheat, wherewith to
strengthen their bodies −− and, look, they have come and made a big pile of it,
and faint from the toil are now asleep −− come, let us set fire to this heap of
corn, and burn it, and let us take that bottle of water that is by them, and
empty it out, so that they may find nothing to drink, and we kill them with
hunger and thirst.
4 Then, when they wake up from their sleep, and seek to return to the cave, we
will come to them in the way, and will lead them astray; so that they die of
hunger and thirst; when they may, perhaps, deny God, and He destroy them. So
shall we be rid of them."
5 Then Satan and his hosts set the wheat on fire and burned it up.
6 But from the heat of the flame Adam and Eve awoke from their sleep, and saw
the wheat burning, and the bucket of water by them, poured out.
7 Then they cried and went back to the cave.
8 But as they were going up from below the mountain where they were, Satan and
his hosts met them in the form of angels, praising God.
9 Then Satan said to Adam, "O Adam, why are you so pained with hunger and
thirst? It seems to me that Satan has burnt up the wheat." And Adam said to him,
"Yes."
10 Again Satan said to Adam, "Come back with us; we are angels of God. God sent
us to you, to show you another field of corn, better than that; and beyond it is
a fountain of good water, and many trees, where you shall live near it, and work
the corn field to better purpose than that which Satan has consumed."
11 Adam thought that he was true, and that they were angels who talked with him;
and he went back with them.
12 Then Satan began to lead astray Adam and Eve eight days, until they both fell
down as if dead, from hunger, thirst, and faintness. Then he fled with his
hosts, and left them.
Chapter LXVIII How destruction and trouble is of Satan when he is the master
1 Then God looked at Adam and Eve, and at what had come over them from Satan,
and how he had made them perish.
2 God, therefore, sent HIS Word, and raised up Adam and Eve from their state of
death.
3 Then, Adam, when he was raised, said, "O God, You have burnt and taken from us
the corn You have given us, and You have emptied out the bucket of water. And
You have sent Your angels, who have caused us to lose our way from the corn
field. Will You make us perish? If this be from you, O God, then take away our
souls; but punish us not."
4 Then God said to Adam, "I did not burn down the wheat, and I did not pour the
water out of the bucket, and I did not send My angels to lead you astray.
5 But it is Satan, your master who did it; he to whom you have subjected
yourself; my commandment being meanwhile set aside. He it is, who burnt down the
corn, and poured out the water, and who has led you astray; and all the promises
he has made you were just a trick, a deception, and a lie.
6 But now, O Adam, you shall acknowledge My good deeds done to you."
7 And God told HIS angels to take Adam and Eve, and to bear them up to the field
of wheat, which they found as before, with the bucket full of water. 8 There
they saw a tree, and found on it solid manna; and wondered at God's power. And
the angels commanded them to eat of the manna when they were hungry.
9 And God admonished Satan with a curse, not to come again, and destroy the
field of corn.
10 Then Adam and Eve took of the corn, and made of it an offering, and took it
and offered it up on the mountain, the place where they had offered up their
first offering of blood.
11 And they offered this offering again on the altar they had built at first.
And they stood up and prayed, and besought the Lord saying, "Thus, O God, when
we were in the garden, our praises went up to you, like this offering; and our
innocence went up to you like incense. But now, O God, accept this offering from
us, and don't turn us away, deprived of Your mercy."
12 Then God said to Adam and Eve, "Since you have made this offering and have
offered it to Me, I shall make it My flesh, when I come down on earth to save
you; and I shall cause it to be offered continually on an altar, for forgiveness
and for mercy, for those who partake of it duly."
13 And God sent a bright fire over the offering of Adam and Eve, and filled it
with brightness, grace, and light; and the Holy Ghost came down on that
offering.
14 Then God commanded an angel to take fire tongs, like a spoon, and with it to
take an offering and bring it to Adam and Eve. And the angel did so, as God had
commanded him, and offered it to them.
15 And the souls of Adam and Eve were brightened, and their hearts were filled
with joy and gladness and with the praises of God.
16 And God said to Adam, "This shall be to you a custom, to do so, when
affliction and sorrow come over you. But your deliverance and your entrance in
to the garden, shall not be until the days are fulfilled as agreed between you
and Me; were it not so, I would, of My mercy and pity for you, bring you back to
My garden and to My favor for the sake of the offering you have just made to My
name."
17 Adam rejoiced at these words which he heard from God; and he and Eve
worshipped before the altar, to which they bowed, and then went back to the Cave
of Treasures.
18 And this took place at the end of the twelfth day after the eightieth day,
from the time Adam and Eve came out of the garden.
19 And they stood up the whole night praying until morning; and then went out of
the cave.
20 Then Adam said to Eve, with joy of heart, because of the offering they had
made to God, and that had been accepted of Him, "Let us do this three times
every week, on the fourth day Wednesday, on the preparation day Friday, and on
the Sabbath Sunday, all the days of our life."
21 And as they agreed to these words between themselves, God was pleased with
their thoughts, and with the resolution they had each taken with the other.
22 After this, came the Word of God to Adam, and said, "O Adam, you have
determined beforehand the days in which sufferings shall come over Me, when I am
made flesh; for they are the fourth Wednesday, and the preparation day Friday.
23 But as to the first day, I created in it all things, and I raised the
heavens. And, again, through My rising again on this day, will I create joy, and
raise them on high, who believe in Me; O Adam, offer this offering, all the days
of your life."
24 Then God withdrew HIS Word from Adam.
25 But Adam continued to offer this offering thus, every week three times, until
the end of seven weeks. And on the first day, which is the fiftieth, Adam made
an offering as he was accustomed, and he and Eve took it and came to the altar
before God, as He had taught them.
Chapter LXIX Twelfth apparition of Satan to Adam and Eve,
1 Then Satan, the hater of all good, envious of Adam and of his offering through
which he found favor with God, hastened and took a sharp stone from among the
sharp iron stones; appeared in the form of a man, and went and stood by Adam and
Eve.
2 Adam was then offering on the altar, and had begun to pray, with his hands
spread before God.
3 Then Satan hastened with the sharp iron stone he had with him, and with it
pierced Adam on the right side, from which flowed blood and water, then Adam
fell on the altar like a corpse. And Satan fled.
4 Then Eve came, and took Adam and placed him below the altar. And there she
stayed, crying over him; while a stream of blood flowed from Adam's side over
his offering.
5 But God looked at the death of Adam. He then sent HIS Word, and raised him up
and said to him, "Fulfil your offering, for indeed, Adam, it is worth much, and
there is no shortcoming in it."
6 God said further to Adam, "Thus will it also happen to Me, on the earth, when
I shall be pierced and blood and water shall flow from My side and run over My
body, which is the true offering; and which shall be offered on the altar as a
perfect offering."
7 Then God commanded Adam to finish his offering, and when he had ended it he
worshipped before God, and praised Him for the signs He had showed him.
8 And God healed Adam in one day, which is the end of the seven weeks; and that
is the fiftieth day.
9 Then Adam and Eve returned from the mountain, and went into the Cave of
Treasures, as they were used to do. This completed for Adam and Eve, one hundred
and forty days since their coming out of the garden.
10 Then they both stood up that night and prayed to God. And when it was
morning, they went out, and went down westward of the cave, to the place where
their corn was, and there rested under the shadow of a tree, as they were
accustomed.
11 But when there a multitude of beasts came all around them. It was Satan's
doing, in his wickedness; in order to wage war against Adam through marriage.
Chapter LXX Thirteenth apparition of Satan, to trick Adam into marrying Eve.
1 After this Satan, the hater of all good, took the form of an angel, and with
him two others, so that they looked like the three angels who had brought to
Adam gold, incense, and myrrh.
2 They passed before Adam and Eve while they were under the tree, and greeted
Adam and Eve with fair words that were full of deceit.
3 But when Adam and Eve saw their pleasant expression, and heard their sweet
speech, Adam rose, welcomed them, and brought them to Eve, and they remained all
together; Adam's heart the while, being glad because he thought concerning them,
that they were the same angels, who had brought him gold, incense, and myrrh.
4 Because, when they came to Adam the first time, there came over him from them,
peace and joy, through their bringing him good tokens; so Adam thought that they
had come a second time to give him other tokens for him to rejoice therewith.
For he did not know it was Satan; therefore he received them with joy and
consorted with them.
5 Then Satan, the tallest of them, said, "Rejoice, O Adam, and be glad. Look,
God has sent us to you to tell you something."
6 And Adam said, "What is it?" Then Satan answered, "It is a simple thing, yet
it is the Word of God, will you accept it from us and do it? But if you will not
accept it, we will return to God, and tell Him that you would not receive HIS
Word."
7 And Satan said again to Adam, "Don't be afraid and don't tremble; don't you
know us?"
8 But Adam said, "I do not know you."
9 Then Satan said to him, "I am the angel that brought you gold, and took it to
the cave; this other angel is the one that brought you incense; and that third
angel, is the one who brought you myrrh when you were on top of the mountain,
and who carried you to the cave.
10 But as to the other angels our fellows, who bare you to the cave, God has not
sent them with us this time; for He said to us, 'You will be enough'. "
11 So when Adam heard these words he believed them, and said to these angels,
"Speak the Word of God, that I may receive it."
12 And Satan said to him, "Swear, and promise me that you will receive it."
13 Then Adam said, "I do not know how to swear and promise."
14 And Satan said to him, "Hold out your hand, and put it inside my hand."
15 Then Adam held out his hand, and put it into Satan's hand; when Satan said to
him, "Say, now −− So true as God is living, rational, and speaking, who raised
the stars in heaven, and established the dry ground on the waters, and has
created me out of the four elements*, and out of the dust of the earth −− I will
not break my promise, nor renounce my word."
16 And Adam swore thus.
17 Then Satan said to him, "Look, it is now some time since you came out of the
garden, and you know neither wickedness nor evil. But now God says to you, to
take Eve who came out of your side, and to marry her so that she will bear you
children, to comfort you, and to drive from you trouble and sorrow; now this
thing is not difficult, neither is there any scandal in it to you. * See the
previous footnote in Chapter XXXIV regarding the 'four elements'.
Chapter LXXI Adam is troubled by the thought of marrying Eve.
1 But when Adam heard these words from Satan, he sorrowed much, because of his
oath and of his promise, and said, "Shall I commit adultery with my flesh and my
bones, and shall I sin against myself, for God to destroy me, and to blot me out
from off the face of the earth?
2 Since, when at first, I ate of the tree, He drove me out of the garden into
this strange land, and deprived me of my bright nature, and brought death over
me. If, then, I should do this, He will cut off my life from the earth, and He
will cast me into hell, and will plague me there a long time.
3 But God never spoke the words that you have said; and you are not God's
angels, and you weren't sent from Him. But you are devils that have come to me
under the false appearance of angels. Away from me; you cursed of God!"
4 Then those devils fled from before Adam. And he and Eve got up, and returned
to the Cave of Treasures, and went into it.
5 Then Adam said to Eve, "If you saw what I did, don't tell anyone; for I sinned
against God in swearing by HIS great name, and I have placed my hand another
time into that of Satan." Eve, then, held her peace, as Adam told her.
6 Then Adam got up, and spread his hands before God, beseeching and entreating
Him with tears, to forgive him what he had done. And Adam remained thus standing
and praying forty days and forty nights. He neither ate nor drank until he
dropped down on the ground from hunger and thirst.
7 Then God sent HIS Word to Adam, who raised him up from where he lay, and said
to him, "O Adam, why have you sworn by My name, and why have you made agreement
with Satan another time?"
8 But Adam cried, and said, "O God, forgive me, for I did this unwittingly;
believing they were God's angels."
9 And God forgave Adam, saying to him, "Beware of Satan."
10 And He withdrew HIS Word from Adam.
11 Then Adam's heart was comforted; and he took Eve, and they went out of the
cave, to prepare some food for their bodies.
12 But from that day Adam struggled in his mind about his marrying Eve; afraid
that if he was to do it, God would be angry with him.
13 Then Adam and Eve went to the river of water, and sat on the bank, as people
do when they enjoy themselves.
14 But Satan was jealous of them; and planned to destroy them.
Chapter LXXII Adam's heart is set on fire. Satan appears as beautiful maidens.
1 Then Satan, and ten from his hosts, transformed themselves into maidens,
unlike any others in the whole world for grace.
2 They came up out of the river in presence of Adam and Eve, and they said among
themselves, "Come, we will look at the faces of Adam and Eve, who are of the men
on earth. How beautiful they are, and how different is their look from our own
faces." Then they came to Adam and Eve, and greeted them; and stood wondering at
them.
3 Adam and Eve looked at them also, and wondered at their beauty, and said, "Is
there, then, under us, another world, with such beautiful creatures as these in
it?"
4 And those maidens said to Adam and Eve, "Yes, indeed, we are an abundant
creation."
5 Then Adam said to them, "But how do you multiply?"
6 And they answered him, "We have husbands who have married us, and we bear them
children, who grow up, and who in their turn marry and are married, and also
bear children; and thus we increase. And if so be, O Adam, you will not believe
us, we will show you our husbands and our children."
7 Then they shouted over the river as if to call their husbands and their
children, who came up from the river, men and children; and every man came to
his wife, his children being with him.
8 But when Adam and Eve saw them, they stood dumb, and wondered at them.
9 Then they said to Adam and Eve, "See all our husbands and our children? You
should marry Eve, as we have married our husbands, so that you will have
children as we have." This was a device of Satan to deceive Adam.
10 Satan also thought within himself, "God at first commanded Adam concerning
the fruit of the tree, saying to him, 'Eat not of it; else of death you shall
die.' But Adam ate of it, and yet God did not kill him; He only decreed on him
death, and plagues and trials, until the day he shall come out of his body.
11 Now, then, if I deceive him to do this thing, and to marry Eve without God's
permission, God will kill him then."
12 Therefore Satan worked this apparition before Adam and Eve; because he sought
to kill him, and to make him disappear from off the face of the earth.
13 Meanwhile the fire of sin came over Adam, and he thought of committing sin.
But he restrained himself, fearing that if he followed this advice of Satan, God
would put him to death.
14 Then Adam and Eve got up, and prayed to God, while Satan and his hosts went
down into the river, in presence of Adam and Eve; to let them see that they were
going back to their own world.
15 Then Adam and Eve went back to the Cave of Treasures, as they usually did;
about evening time.
16 And they both got up and prayed to God that night. Adam remained standing in
prayer, yet not knowing how to pray, by reason of the thoughts in his heart
regarding his marrying Eve; and he continued so until morning.
17 And when light came up, Adam said to Eve, "Get up, let us go below the
mountain, where they brought us gold, and let us ask the Lord concerning this
matter."
18 Then Eve said, "What is that matter, O Adam?"
19 And he answered her, "That I may request the Lord to inform me about marrying
you; for I will not do it without HIS permission or else He will make us perish,
you and me. For those devils have set my heart on fire, with thoughts of what
they showed us, in their sinful apparitions.
20 Then Eve said to Adam, "Why need we go below the mountain? Let us rather
stand up and pray in our cave to God, to let us know whether this counsel is
good or not."
21 Then Adam rose up in prayer and said, "O God, you know that we transgressed
against you, and from the moment we transgressed, we were stripped of our bright
nature; and our body became brutish, requiring food and drink; and with animal
desires.
22 Command us, O God, not to give way to them without Your permission, for fear
that You will turn us into nothing. Because if you do not give us permission, we
shall be overpowered, and follow that advice of Satan; and You will again make
us perish.
23 If not, then take our souls from us; let us be rid of this animal lust. And
if You give us no order respecting this thing, then sever Eve from me, and me
from her; and place us each far away from the other.
24 Then again, O God, if You separate us from each other, the devils will
deceive us with their apparitions that resemble us, and destroy our hearts, and
defile our thoughts towards each other. Yet if it is not each of us towards the
other, it will, at all events, be through their appearance when the devils come
to us in our likeness." Here Adam ended his prayer.
Chapter LXXIII The marriage of Adam and Eve.
1 Then God considered the words of Adam that they were true, and that he could
long await HIS order, respecting the counsel of Satan.
2 And God approved Adam in what he had thought concerning this, and in the
prayer he had offered in HIS presence; and the Word of God came to Adam and said
to him, "O Adam, if only you had had this caution at first, before you came out
of the garden into this land!"
3 After that, God sent HIS angel who had brought gold, and the angel who had
brought incense, and the angel who had brought myrrh to Adam, that they should
inform him respecting his marriage to Eve.
4 Then those angels said to Adam, "Take the gold and give it to Eve as a wedding
gift, and promise to marry her; then give her some incense and myrrh as a
present; and be you, you and she, one flesh."
5 Adam obeyed the angels, and took the gold and put it into Eve's bosom in her
garment; and promised to marry her with his hand.
6 Then the angels commanded Adam and Eve to get up and pray forty days and forty
nights; when that was done, then Adam was to have sexual intercourse with his
wife; for then this would be an act pure and undefiled; so that he would have
children who would multiply, and replenish the face of the earth.
7 Then both Adam and Eve received the words of the angels; and the angels
departed from them.
8 Then Adam and Eve began to fast and pray, until the end of the forty days; and
then they had sexual intercourse, as the angels had told them. And from the time
Adam left the garden until he wedded Eve, were two hundred and twenty−three
days, that is seven months and thirteen days.
9 Thus was Satan's war with Adam defeated.
Chapter LXXIV The birth of Cain and Luluwa. Why they received those names.
1 And they lived on the earth working in order to keep their bodies in good
health; and they continued so until the nine months of Eve's pregnancy were
over, and the time drew near when she must give birth.
2 Then she said to Adam, "The signs placed in this cave since we left the garden
indicate that this is a pure place and we will be praying in it again some time.
It is not appropriate then, that I should give birth in it. Let us instead go to
the sheltering rock cave that was formed by the command of God when Satan threw
a big rock down on us in an attempt to kill us with it.
3 Adam then took Eve to that cave. When the time came for her to give birth, she
strained a lot. Adam felt sorry, and he was very worried about her because she
was close to death and the words of God to her were being fulfilled: "In
suffering shall you bear a child, and in sorrow shall you bring forth a child."
4 But when Adam saw the distress in which Eve was, he got up and prayed to God,
and said, "O Lord, look at me with the eye of Your mercy, and bring her out of
her distress."
5 And God looked at HIS maid−servant Eve, and delivered her, and she gave birth
to her first−born son, and with him a daughter.
6 The Adam rejoiced at Eve's deliverance, and also over the children she had
borne him. And Adam ministered to Eve in the cave, until the end of eight days;
when they named the son Cain, and the daughter Luluwa.
7 The meaning of Cain is "hater," because he hated his sister in their mother's
womb; before they came out of it. Therefore Adam named him Cain.
8 But Luluwa means "beautiful," because she was more beautiful than her mother.
9 Then Adam and Eve waited until Cain and his sister were forty days old, when
Adam said to Eve, "We will make an offering and offer it up in behalf of the
children."
10 And Eve said, "We will make one offering for the first−born son and then
later we shall make one for the daughter."
Chapter LXXV The family revisits the Cave of Treasures. Birth of Abel and Aklia.
1 Then Adam prepared an offering, and he and Eve offered it up for their
children, and brought it to the altar they had built at first.
2 And Adam offered up the offering, and asked God to accept his offering.
3 Then God accepted Adam's offering, and sent a light from heaven that shown on
the offering. Adam and his son drew near to the offering, but Eve and the
daughter did not approach it.
4 Adam and his son were joyful as they came down from on the altar. Adam and Eve
waited until the daughter was eighty days old, then Adam prepared an offering
and took it to Eve and to the children. They went to the altar, where Adam
offered it up, as he was accustomed, asking the Lord to accept his offering.
5 And the Lord accepted the offering of Adam and Eve. Then Adam, Eve, and the
children, drew near together, and came down from the mountain, rejoicing.
6 But they returned not to the cave in which they were born; but came to the
Cave of Treasures, in order that the children should go around in it, and be
blessed with the tokens brought from the garden.
7 But after they had been blessed with these tokens, they went back to the cave
in which they were born.
8 However, before Eve had offered up the offering, Adam had taken her, and had
gone with her to the river of water, in which they threw themselves at first;
and there they washed themselves. Adam washed his body and Eve hers also clean,
after the suffering and distress that had come over them.
9 But Adam and Eve, after washing themselves in the river of water, returned
every night to the Cave of Treasures, where they prayed and were blessed; and
then went back to their cave, where their children were born.
10 Adam and Eve did this until the children had been weaned. After they were
weaned, Adam made an offering for the souls of his children in addition to the
three times every week he made an offering for them.
11 When the children were weaned, Eve again conceived, and when her pregnancy
came to term, she gave birth to another son and daughter. They named the son
Abel and the daughter Aklia.
12 Then at the end of forty days, Adam made an offering for the son, and at the
end of eighty days he made another offering for the daughter, and treated them,
as he had previously treated Cain and his sister Luluwa.
13 He brought them to the Cave of Treasures, where they received a blessing, and
then returned to the cave where they were born. After these children were born,
Eve stopped having children.
Chapter LXXVI Cain becomes jealous of Abel because of his sisters.
1 And the children began to grow stronger and taller; but Cain was hard−hearted,
and ruled over his younger brother.
2 Often when his father made an offering, Cain would remain behind and not go
with them, to offer up.
3 But, as to Abel, he had a meek heart, and was obedient to his father and
mother. He frequently moved them to make an offering, because he loved it. He
prayed and fasted a lot.
4 Then came this sign to Abel. As he was coming into the Cave of Treasures, and
saw the golden rods, the incense and the myrrh, he asked his parents, Adam and
Eve, to tell him about them and asked, "Where did you get these from?"
5 Then Adam told him all that had befallen them. And Abel felt deeply about what
his father told him.
6 Furthermore his father, Adam, told him of the works of God, and of the garden.
After hearing that, Abel remained behind after his father left and stayed the
whole of that night in the Cave of Treasures.
7 And that night, while he was praying, Satan appeared to him under the figure
of a man, who said to him, "You have frequently moved your father into making
offerings, fasting and praying, therefore I will kill you, and make you perish
from this world."
8 But as for Abel, he prayed to God, and drove away Satan from him; and did not
believe the words of the devil. Then when it was day, an angel of God appeared
to him, who said to him, "Do not cut short either fasting, prayer, or offering
up an offering to your God. For, look, the Lord had accepted your prayer. Be not
afraid of the figure which appeared to you in the night, and who cursed you to
death." And the angel departed from him.
9 Then when it was day, Abel came to Adam and Eve, and told them of the vision
he had seen. When they heard it, they grieved much over it, but said nothing to
him about it; they only comforted him.
10 But as to the hard−hearted Cain, Satan came to him by night, showed himself
and said to him, "Since Adam and Eve love your brother Abel so much more than
they love you, they wish to join him in marriage to your beautiful sister
because they love him. However, they wish to join you in marriage to his ugly
sister, because they hate you.
11 Now before they do that, I am telling you that you should kill your brother.
That way your sister will be left for you, and his sister will be cast away."
12 And Satan departed from him. But the devil remained behind in Cain's heart,
and frequently aspired to kill his brother.
Chapter LXXVII Cain, 15 years old, and Abel 12 years old, grow apart.
1 But when Adam saw that the older brother hated the younger, he endeavored to
soften their hearts, and said to Cain, "O my son, take of the fruits of your
sowing and make an offering to God, so that He might forgive you for your
wickedness and sin."
2 He said also to Abel, "Take some of your sowing and make an offering and bring
it to God, so that He might forgive you for your wickedness and sin."
3 Then Abel obeyed his father's voice, took some of his sowing, and made a good
offering, and said to his father, Adam, "Come with me and show me how to offer
it up."
4 And they went, Adam and Eve with him, and they showed him how to offer up his
gift on the altar. Then after that, they stood up and prayed that God would
accept Abel's offering.
5 Then God looked at Abel and accepted his offering. And God was more pleased
with Abel than with his offering, because of his good heart and pure body. There
was no trace of guile in him.
6 Then they came down from the altar, and went to the cave in which they lived.
But Abel, by reason of his joy at having made his offering, repeated it three
times a week, after the example of his father Adam.
7 But as to Cain, he did not want to make an offering, but after his father
became very angry, he offered up a gift once. He took the smallest of his sheep
for an offering and when he offered it up, his eyes were on the lamb.
8 Therefore God did not accept his offering, because his heart was full of
murderous thoughts.
9 And they all thus lived together in the cave in which Eve had brought forth,
until Cain was fifteen years old, and Abel twelve years old.
Chapter LXXVIII Jealousy overcomes Cain. He makes trouble in the family
1 Then Adam said to Eve, "Behold the children are grown up; we must think of
finding wives for them."
2 Then Eve answered, "How can we do it?"
3 Then Adam said to her, "We will join Abel's sister in marriage to Cain, and
Cain's sister to Abel.
4 The said Eve to Adam, "I do not like Cain because he is hard−hearted; but let
them stay with us until we offer up to the Lord in their behalf."
5 And Adam said no more.
6 Meanwhile Satan came to Cain in the figure of a man of the field, and said to
him, "Behold Adam and Eve have taken counsel together about the marriage of you
two; and they have agreed to marry Abel's sister to you, and your sister to him.
7 But if it was not that I love you, I would not have told you this thing. Yet
if you will take my advice, and obey me, I will bring to you on your wedding day
beautiful robes, gold and silver in plenty, and my relations will attend you."
8 Then Cain said with joy, "Where are your relations?"
9 And Satan answered, "My relations are in a garden in the north, where I once
meant to bring your father Adam; but he would not accept my offer.
10 But you, if you will receive my words and if you will come to me after your
wedding, you shall rest from the misery in which you are; and you shall rest and
be better off than your father Adam."
11 At these words of Satan Cain opened his ears, and leaned towards his speech.
12 And he did not remain in the field, but he went to Eve, his mother, and beat
her, and cursed her, and said to her, "Why are you planning to take my sister to
wed her to my brother? Am I dead?"
13 HIS mother, however, quieted him, and sent him to the field where he had
been.
14 Then when Adam came, she told him of what Cain had done.
15 But Adam grieved and held his peace, and said not a word.
16 Then on the next morning Adam said to Cain his son, "Take of your sheep,
young and good, and offer them up to your God; and I will speak to your brother,
to make to his God an offering of corn."
17 They both obeyed their father Adam, and they took their offerings, and
offered them up on the mountain by the altar.
18 But Cain behaved haughtily towards his brother, and shoved him from the
altar, and would not let him offer up his gift on the altar; but he offered his
own on it, with a proud heart, full of guile, and fraud.
19 But as for Abel, he set up stones that were near at hand, and on that, he
offered up his gift with a heart humble and free from guile.
20 Cain was then standing by the altar on which he had offered up his gift; and
he cried to God to accept his offering; but God did not accept it from him;
neither did a divine fire come down to consume his offering.
21 But he remained standing over against the altar, out of humor and meanness,
looking towards his brother Abel, to see if God would accept his offering or
not.
22 And Abel prayed to God to accept his offering. Then a divine fire came down
and consumed his offering. And God smelled the sweet savor of his offering;
because Abel loved Him and rejoice in Him.
23 And because God was well pleased with him, He sent him an angel of light in
the figure of a man who had partaken of his offering, because He had smelled the
sweet savor of his offering, and they comforted Abel and strengthened his heart.
24 But Cain was looking on all that took place at his brother's offering, and
was angry because of it.
25 Then he opened his mouth and blasphemed God, because He had not accepted his
offering.
26 But God said to cain, "Why do you look sad? Be righteous, that I may accept
your offering. Not against Me have you murmured, but against yourself.
27 And God said this to Cain in rebuke, and because He abhorred him and his
offering.
28 And Cain came down from the altar, his color changed and with a sad face, and
came to his father and mother and told them all that had befallen him. And Adam
grieved much because God had not accepted Cain's offering.
29 But Abel came down rejoicing, and with a gladsome heart, and told his father
and mother how God had accepted his offering. And they rejoiced at it and kissed
his face.
30 And Abel said to his father, "Because Cain shoved me from the altar, and
would not allow me to offer my gift on it, I made an altar for myself and
offered my gift on it."
31 But when Adam heard this he was very sorry, because it was the altar he had
built at first, and on which he had offered his own gifts.
32 As to Cain, he was so resentful and so angry that he went into the field,
where Satan came to him and said to him, "Since your brother Abel has taken
refuge with your father Adam, because you shoved him from the altar, they have
kissed his face, and they rejoice over him, far more than over you."
33 When Cain heard these words of Satan, he was filled with rage; and he let no
one know. But he was laying wait to kill his brother, until he brought him into
the cave, and then said to him: −−
34 "O brother, the country is so beautiful, and there are such beautiful and
pleasurable trees in it, and charming to look at! But brother, you have never
been one day in the field to take your pleasure in that place.
35 Today, O, my brother, I very much wish you would come with me into the field,
to enjoy yourself and to bless our fields and our flocks, for you are righteous,
and I love you much, O my brother! But you have alienated yourself from me."
36 Then Abel consented to go with his brother Cain into the field.
37 But before going out, Cain said to Abel, "Wait for me, until I fetch a staff,
because of wild beasts."
38 Then Abel stood waiting in his innocence. But Cain, the forward, fetched a
staff and went out. 39 And they began, Cain and his brother Abel, to walk in the
way; Cain talking to him, and comforting him, to make him forget everything.
Chapter LXXIX A wicked plan is carried to a tragic conclusion.
1 And so they went on, until they came to a lonely place, where there were no
sheep; then Abel said to Cain, "Behold, my brother, we are tired from walking;
for we see none of the trees, nor of the fruits, nor of the flourishing green
plants, nor of the sheep, nor any one of the things of which you told me. Where
are those sheep of thine you told me to bless?"
2 Then Cain said to him, "Come on, and you shall see many beautiful things very
soon, but go before me, until I catch up to you."
3 Then went Abel forward, but Cain remained behind him.
4 And Abel was walking in his innocence, without guile; not believing his
brother would kill him.
5 Then Cain, when he came up to him, comforted him with his talk, walking a
little behind him; then he ran up to him and beat him with the staff, blow after
blow, until he was stunned.
6 But when Abel fell down on the ground, seeing that his brother meant to kill
him, he said to Cain, "O, my brother, have pity on me. By the breasts we have
sucked, don't hit me! By the womb that bore us and that brought us into the
world, don't beat me to death with that staff! If you will kill me, take one of
these large stones and kill me outright."
7 Then Cain, the hard−hearted, and cruel murderer, took a large stone, and beat
his brother's head with it, until his brains oozed out, and he wallowed in his
blood, before him.
8 And Cain repented not of what he had done.
9 But the earth, when the blood of righteous Abel fell on it, trembled, as it
drank his blood, and would have destroyed Cain because of it.
10 And the blood of Abel cried mysteriously to God, to avenge him of his
murderer.
11 Then Cain began at once to dig the ground wherein to lay his brother; for he
was trembling from the fear that came over him, when he saw the earth tremble on
his account.
12 He then cast his brother into the pit he made, and covered him with dust. But
the ground would not receive him; but it threw him up at once.
13 Again Cain dug the ground and hid his brother in it; but again the ground
threw him up on itself; until three times the ground thus threw up on itself the
body of Abel.
14 The muddy ground threw him up the first time, because he was not the first
creation; and it threw him up the second time and would not receive him, because
he was righteous and good, and was killed without a cause; and the ground threw
him up the third time and would not receive him, that there might remain before
his brother a witness against him.
15 And so the earth mocked Cain, until the Word of God, came to him concerning
his brother.
16 Then was God angry, and much displeased at Abel's death; and He thundered
from heaven, and lightnings went before Him, and the Word of the Lord God came
from heaven to Cain, and said to him, "Where is Abel your brother?"
17 Then Cain answered with a proud heart and a gruff voice, "How, O God? Am I my
brother's keeper?"
18 Then God said to Cain, "Cursed be the earth that has drunk the blood of Abel
your brother; and as for you, you will always be trembling and shaking; and this
will be a mark on you so that whoever finds you, will kill you."
19 But Cain cried because God had said those words to him; and Cain said to Him,
"O God, whosoever finds me shall kill me, and I shall be blotted out from the
face of the earth."
20 Then God said to Cain, "Whoever finds you will not kill you;" because before
this, God had been saying to Cain, "I shall put seven punishments on anyone that
kills Cain." For as to the word of God to Cain, "Where is your brother?" God
said it in mercy for him, to try and make him repent.
21 For if Cain had repented at that time, and had said, "O God, forgive me my
sin, and the murder of my brother," God would then have forgiven him his sin.
22 And as to God saying to Cain, "Cursed be the ground that has drunk the blood
of your brother" That also, was God's mercy on Cain. For God did not curse him,
but He cursed the ground; although it was not the ground that had killed Abel,
and committed a wicked sin.
23 For it was fitting that the curse should fall on the murderer; yet in mercy
did God so manage HIS thoughts as that no one should know it, and turn away from
Cain.
24 And He said to him, "Where is your brother?" To which he answered and said,
"I know not." Then the Creator said to him, "Be trembling and quaking."
25 Then Cain trembled and became terrified; and through this sign did God make
him an example before all the creation, as the murderer of his brother. Also did
God bring trembling and terror over him, that he might see the peace in which he
was at first, and see also the trembling and terror he endured at the last; so
that he might humble himself before God, and repent of his sin, and seek the
peace that he enjoyed at first.
26 And in the word of God that said, "I will put seven punishments on anyone who
kills Cain," God was not seeking to kill Cain with the sword, but He sought to
make him die of fasting, and praying and crying by hard rule, until the time
that he was delivered from his sin.
27 And the seven punishments are the seven generations during which God awaited
Cain for the murder of his brother.
28 But as to Cain, ever since he had killed his brother, he could find no rest
in any place; but went back to Adam and Eve, trembling, terrified, and defiled
with blood.
Chapter I.
The grief stricken family. Cain marries Luluwa and they move away.
1 When Luluwa heard Cain's words, she wept and went to call her
father and mother, and told them how that Cain had killed his brother Abel.
2 Then they all cried aloud and lifted up their voices, and slapped their faces, and
threw dust upon their heads, and rent asunder their garments, and went out and came to the
place where Abel was killed.
3 And they found him lying on the earth, killed, and beasts around him; while they wept
and cried because of this just one. From his body, by reason of its purity, went forth a
smell of sweet spices.
4 And Adam carried him, his tears streaming down his face; and went to the Cave of
Treasures, where he laid him, and wound him up with sweet spices and myrrh.
5 And Adam and Eve continued by the burial of him in great grief a hundred and forty
days. Abel was fifteen and a half years old, and Cain seventeen years and a half.
6 As for Cain, when the mourning for his brother was ended, he took his sister Luluwa
and married her, without leave from his father and mother; for they could not keep him
from her, by reason of their heavy heart.
7 He then went down to the bottom of the mountain, away from the garden, near to the
place where he had killed his brother.
8 And in that place were many fruit trees and forest trees. HIS sister bare him
children, who in their turn began to multiply by degrees until they filled that place.
9 But as for Adam and Eve, they came not together after Abel's funeral, for seven
years. After this, however, Eve conceived; and while she was with child, Adam said to her,
"Come, let us take an offering and offer it up unto God, and ask Him to give us a
fair child, in whom we may find comfort, and whom we may join in marriage to Abel's
sister."
10 Then they prepared an offering and brought it up to the altar, and offered it before
the Lord, and began to entreat Him to accept their offering, and to give them a good
offspring.
11 And God heard Adam and accepted his offering. Then, they worshipped, Adam, Eve, and
their daughter, and came down to the Cave of Treasures and placed a lamp in it, to burn by
night and by day, before the body of Abel.
12 Then Adam and Eve continued fasting and praying until Eve's time came that she
should be delivered, when she said to Adam, "I wish to go to the cave in the rock, to
bring forth in it."
13 And he said, "Go, and take with thee thy daughter to wait on thee; but I will
remain in this Cave of Treasures before the body of my son Abel."
14 Then Eve hearkened to Adam, and went, she and her daughter. But Adam remained by
himself in the Cave of Treasures.
Chapter II.
1 A third son is born to Adam and Eve. And Eve brought forth a son perfectly beautiful in figure and in countenance. HIS
beauty was like that of his father Adam, yet more beautiful.
2 Then Eve was comforted when she saw him, and remained eight days in the cave; then
she sent her daughter unto Adam to tell him to come and see the child and name him. But
the daughter stayed in his place by the body of her brother, until Adam returned. So did
she.
3 But when Adam came and saw the child's good looks, his beauty, and his perfect
figure, he rejoiced over him, and was comforted for Abel. Then he named the child Seth,
that means, "that God has heard my prayer, and has delivered me out of my
affliction." But it means also "power and strength."
4 Then after Adam had named the child, he returned to the Cave of Treasures; and his
daughter went back to her mother.
5 But Eve continued in her cave, until forty days were fulfilled, when she came to
Adam, and brought with her the child and her daughter.
6 And they came to a river of water, where Adam and his daughter washed themselves, because of their sorrow for Abel; but Eve and the babe washed for purification.
7 Then they returned, and took an offering, and went to the mountain and offered it up,
for the babe; and God accepted their offering, and sent HIS blessing upon them, and upon
their son Seth; and they came back to the Cave of Treasures.
8 As for Adam, he knew not again his wife Eve, all the days of his life; neither was any
more offspring born of them; but only those five, Cain, Luluwa, Abel, Aklia, and Seth
alone.
9 But Seth waxed in stature and in strength; and began to fast and pray, fervently.
Chapter III.
Satan appears as a beautiful woman tempting Adam, telling him he is still a youth.
"Spend thy youth in mirth and pleasure." (12) The different forms which Satan
takes (15).
1 As for our father Adam, at the end of seven years from the
day he had been severed from his wife Eve, Satan envied him, when he saw him thus
separated from her; and strove to make him live with her again.
2 Then Adam arose and went up above the Cave of Treasures; and continued to sleep there
night by night. But as soon as it was light every day he came down to the cave, to pray
there and to receive a blessing from it.
3 But when it was evening he went up on the roof of the cave, where he slept by himself,
fearing lest Satan should overcome him. And he continued thus apart thirty-nine days.
4 Then Satan, the hater of all good, when he saw Adam thus alone, fasting and praying,
appeared unto him in the form of a beautiful woman, who came and stood before him in the
night of the fortieth day, and said unto him:-
5 "Adam, from the time ye have dwelt in this cave, we have experienced great
peace from you, and your prayers have reached us, and we have been comforted about you.
6 "But now, 0 Adam, that thou hast gone up over the roof of the cave to sleep, we
have had doubts about thee, and a great sorrow has come upon us because of thy separation
from Eve. Then again, when thou art on the roof of this cave, thy prayer is poured out,
and thy heart wanders from side to side.
7 "But when thou wast in the cave thy prayer was like fire gathered together; it
came down to us, and thou didst find rest.
8 "Then I also grieved over thy children who are severed from thee; and my sorrow
is great about the murder of thy son Abel; for he was righteous; and over a righteous man
every one will grieve.
9 "But I rejoiced over the birth of thy son Seth; yet after a little while I
sorrowed greatly over Eve, because she is my sister. For when God sent a deep sleep over
thee, and drew her out of thy side, He brought me out also with her. But HE raised her by
placing her with thee, while He lowered me.
10 "I rejoiced over my sister for her being with thee. But God had made me a
promise before, and said, 'Grieve not; when Adam has gone up on the roof of the Cave of
Treasures, and is separated from Eve his wife, I will send thee to him, thou shalt join
thyself to him in marriage, and bear him five children, as Eve did bear him five.'
11 "And now, lo! God's promise to me is fulfilled; for it is He who has sent me to
thee for the wedding; because if thou wed me, I shall bear thee finer and better children
than those of Eve.
12 "Then again, thou art as yet but a youth; end not thy youth in this world in
sorrow; but spend the days of thy youth in mirth and pleasure. For thy days are few and
thy trial is great. Be strong; end thy days in this world in rejoicing. I shall take
pleasure in thee, and thou shall rejoice with me in this wise, and without fear.
13 "Up, then, and fulfil the command of thy God," she then drew near to Adam,
and embraced him.
14 But when Adam saw that he should be overcome by her, he prayed to God with a fervent
heart to deliver him from her.
15 Then God sent HIS Word unto Adam, saying, "0 Adam, that figure is the one that
promised thee the Godhead, and majesty; he is not favourably disposed towards thee; but
shows himself to thee at one time in the form of a woman; another moment, in the likeness
if an angel; on another occasions, in the similitude of a serpent; and at another time, in
the semblance of a god; but he does all that only to destroy thy soul.
16 "Now, therefore, 0 Adam, understanding thy heart, I have delivered thee many a
time from his hands; in order to show thee that I am a merciful God; and that I wish thy
good, and that I do not wish thy ruin."
Chapter IV.
Adam sees the Devil in his true colors.
1 Then God ordered Satan to show himself to Adam plainly, in his own hideous form.
2 But when Adam saw him, he feared, and trembled at the sight of him.
3 And God said to Adam, 'Look at this devil, and at his hideous look, and know that he
it is who made thee fall from brightness into darkness, from peace and rest to toil and
misery.
4 And look, 0 Adam, at him, who said of himself that he is God! Can God be black? Would
God take the form of a woman? Is there any one stronger than God? And can He be
overpowered?
5 "See, then, 0 Adam, and behold him bound in thy presence, in the air, unable to
flee away! Therefore, I say unto thee, be not afraid of him; henceforth take care, and
beware of him, in whatever he may do to thee."
6 Then God drove Satan away from before Adam, whom He strengthened, and whose heart He
comforted, saying to him, "Go down to the Cave of Treasures, and separate not thyself
from Eve; I will quell in you all animal lust."
7 From that hour it left Adam and Eve, and they enjoyed rest by the commandment of God.
But God did not the like to any one of Adam's seed; but only to Adam and Eve.
8 Then Adam worshipped before the Lord, for having delivered him, and for having layed
his passions. And he came down from above the cave, and dwelt with Eve as aforetime.
9 This ended the forty days of his separation from Eve.
Chapter V.
The devil paints a brilliant picture for Seth to feast his thoughts upon.
1 As for Seth, when he was seven years old, he knew good and evil, and was consistent in
fasting and praying, and spent all his nights in entreating God for mercy and forgiveness.
2 He also fasted when bringing up his offering every day, more than his father did; for
he was of a fair countenance, like unto an angel of God. He also had a good heart,
preserved the finest qualities of his soul; and for this reason he brought up his offering
every day.
3 And God was pleased with his offering; but He was also pleased with his purity. And
he continued thus in doing the will of God, and of his father and mother, until he was
seven years old.
4 After that, as he was corning down from the altar, having ended his offering, Satan
appeared unto him in the form of a beautiful angel, brilliant with light; with a staff of
light in his hand, himself girt about with a girdle of light.
5 He greeted Seth with a beautiful smile, and began to beguile him with fair words,
saying to him, "0 Seth, why abidest thou in this mountain? For it is rough, full of
stones and of sand, and of trees with no good fruit on them; a wilderness without
habitations and without towns; no good place to dwell in. But all is heat, weariness, and
trouble."
6 He said further, 'But we dwell in beautiful places, in another world than this earth.
Our world is one of light and our condition is of the best; our women are handsomer than
any others; and I wish thee, 0 Seth, to wed one of them; because I see that thou art fair
to look upon, and in this land there is not one woman good enough for thee. Besides, all
those who live in this world, are only five souls.
7 "But in our world there are very many men and many maidens, all more beautiful
one than another. I wish, therefore, to remove thee hence, that thou mayest see my
relations and be wedded to which ever thou likest.
8 "Thou shalt then abide by me and be at peace; thou shalt be filled with
splendour and light, as we are.
9 "Thou shalt remain in our world. and rest from this world and the misery of it;
thou shalt never again feel faint and weary; thou shalt never bring up an offering, nor
sue for mercy; for thou shalt commit no more sin nor be swayed by passions.
10 "And if thou wilt hearken to what I say, thou shalt wed one of my daughters;
for with us it is no sin so to do; neither is it reckoned animal lust.
11 "For in our world we have no God; but we all are gods; we all are of the light,
heavenly, powerful, strong and glorious."
Chapter VI.
Seth's conscience helps him. He returns to Adam and Eve.
1 When Seth heard these words he was amazed, and inclined his heart to Satan's
treacherous speech, and said to him, "Saidst thou there is an-other world created
than this; and other creatures more beautiful than the creatures that are in this
world?"
2 And Satan said "Yes; behold thou hast heard me; but I will yet praise them and
their ways, in thy hearing."
3 But Seth said to him, "Thy speech has amazed me; and thy beautiful description
of it all."
4 "Yet I cannot go with thee to-day; not until I have gone to my father Adam and
to my mother Eve, and told them all thou hast said to me. Then if they give me leave to go
with thee, I will come."
5 Again Seth said, "I am afraid of doing any thing without my father's and
mother's leave, lest I perish like my brother Cain, and like my father Adam, who
transgressed the commandment of God. But, behold, thou knowest this place; come, and meet
me here to-morrow."
6 When Satan heard this, he said to Seth, "If thou tellest thy father Adam what I
have told thee, he will not let thee come with me.
7 But hearken to me; do not tell thy father and mother what I have said to thee; but
come with me to-day, to our world; where thou shalt see beautiful things and enjoy thyself
there, and revel this day among my children, beholding them and taking thy fill of mirth;
and rejoice ever more. Then I shall bring thee back to this place to-morrow; but if thou
wouldest rather abide with me, so be it."
8 Then Seth answered, "The spirit of my father and of my mother, hangs on me; and
if I hide from them one day, they will die, and God will hold me guilty of sinning against
them.
9 "And except that they know I am come to this place to bring up to it my
offering, they would not be separated from me one hour; neither should I go to any other
place, unless they let me. But they treat me most kindly, because I come back to them
quickly."
10 Then Satan said to him, "What will happen to thee if thou hide thyself from
them one night, and return to them at break of day?"
11 But Seth, when he saw how he kept on talking, and that he would not leave him-ran,
and went up to the altar, and spread his hands unto God, and sought deliverance from Him.
12 Then God sent HIS Word, and cursed Satan, who fled from Him.
13 But as for Seth, he had gone up to the altar, saying thus in his heart. "The
altar is the place of offering, and God is there; a divine fire shall consume it; so shall
Satan be unable to hurt me, and shall not take me away thence."
14 Then Seth came down from the altar and went to his father and mother, whom he found
in the way, longing to hear his voice; for he had tarried a while.
15 He then began to tell them what had befallen him from Satan, under the form of an
angel.
16 But when Adam heard his account, he kissed his face, and warned him against that
angel, telling him it was Satan who thus appeared to him. Then Adam took Seth, and they
went to the Cave of Treasures, and rejoiced therein.
17 But from that day forth Adam and Eve never parted from him, to whatever place he
might go, whether for his offering or for any thing else.
18 This sign happened to Seth, when he was nine years old.
Chapter VII.
Seth marries Aklia. Adam lives to see grand children and great - grand children.
1 When our father Adam saw that Seth was of a perfect heart, he wished him to marry; lest
the enemy should appear to him another time, and overcome him.
2 So Adam said to his son Seth, "I wish, 0 my son, that thou wed thy sister Aklia,
Abel's sister, that she may bear thee children, who shall replenish the earth, according
to God's promise to us.
3 "Be not afraid, 0 my son; there is no disgrace in it. I wish thee to marry, from
fear lest the enemy overcome thee.'
4 Seth, however, did not wish to marry; but in obedience to his father and mother, he
said not a word.
5 So Adam married him to Aklia. And he was fifteen years old.
6 But when he was twenty years of age, he begat a son, whom he called Enos; and then
begat other children than him,
7 Then Enos grew up, married, and begat Cainan.
8 Cainan also grew up, married, and begat Mahalaleel.
9 Those fathers were born during Adam's lifetime, and dwelt by the Cave of Treasures.
10 Then were the days of Adam nine hundred and thirty years, and those of Mahalaleel
one hundred. But Mahalaleel, when he was grown up, loved fasting, praying, and with hard
labours, until the end of our father Adam's days drew near.
Chapter VII.
Adam's remarkable last words. He predicts the Flood. He exhorts his offspring to good. He reveals certain mysteries of life.
1 When our father Adam saw that his end was near, he called his son Seth, who came to him
in the Cave of Treasures,
and he said unto him: -
2 "0 Seth, my son bring me thy children and thy children's children, that I may
shed my blessing on them ere I die."
3 When Seth heard these words from his father Adam, he went from him, shed a flood of
tears over his face, and gathered together his children and his children's children, and
brought them to his father Adam.
4 But when our father Adam saw them around him, he wept at having to be separated from
them.
5 And when they saw him weeping, they all wept together, and fell upon his face saying,
"How shalt thou be severed from us, 0 our father? And how shall the earth receive
thee and hide thee from our eyes?" Thus did they lament much, and in like words.
6 Then our father Adam blessed them all, and said to Seth, after he had blessed them:-
7 "0 Seth, my son, thou knowest this world - that it is full of sorrow, and of
weariness; and thou knowest all that has come upon us, from our trials in it I therefore
flow command thee in these words: to keep innocency, to be pure and just, and trusting in
God; and lean not to the discourses of Satan, nor to the apparitions in which he will show
himself to thee.
8 But keep the commandments that I give thee this day; then give the same to thy son
Enos; and let Enos give it to his son Cainan; and Cainan to his son Mahalaleel; so that
this commandment abide firm among all your children.
9 "0 Seth, my son, the moment I am dead take ye my body and wind it up with myrrh,
aloes, and cassia, and leave me here in this Cave of Treasures in which are all these
tokens which God gave us from the garden.
10 "0 my son, hereafter shall a flood come and overwhelm all creatures, and leave
out only eight souls.
11 "But, 0 my son, let those whom it will leave out from among your children at
that time, take my body with them out of this cave; and when they have taken it with them,
let the oldest among them command his children to lay my body in a ship until the flood
has been assuaged, and they come out of the ship.
12 Then they shall take my body and lay it in the middle of the earth, shortly after
they have been saved from the waters of the flood.
13 "For the place where my body shall be laid, is the middle of the earth; God
shall come from thence and shall save all our kindred.
14 "But now, 0 Seth, my son, place thyself at the head of thy people; tend them
and watch over them in the fear of God; and lead them in the good way. Command them to
fast unto God; and make them understand they ought not to hearken to Satan, lest he
destroy them.
15 "Then, again, sever thy children and thy children's children from Cain's
children; do not let them ever mix with those, nor come near them either in their words or
in their deeds."
16 Then Adam let his blessing descend upon Seth, and upon his children, and upon all
his children's children.
17 He then turned to his son Seth, and to Eve his wife, and ,said to them,
"Preserve this gold, this incense, and this myrrh, that God has given us for a sign;
for in days that are coming, a flood will overwhelm the whole creation. But those who
shall go into the ark shall take with them the gold, the incense, and the myrrh, together
with my body; and will lay the gold, the incense, and the myrrh, with my body in the midst
of the earth.
18 "Then, after a long time, the city in which the gold, the incense, and the
myrrh are found with my body, shall be plundered. But when it is spoiled, the gold the
incense, and the myrrh shall be taken care of with the spoil that is kept; and naught of
them shall perish, until the Word of God, made man shall come; when kings shall take them,
and shall offer to Him, gold in token of HIS being King; incense, in token of HIS being
God of heaven and earth; and myrrh, in token of HIS passion.
19 "Gold also, as a token of HIS overcoming Satan, and all our foes; incense as a
token that He will rise from the dead, and be exalted above things in heaven and things in
the earth; and myrrh, in token that He will drink bitter gall; and feel the pains of hell
from Satan.
20 "And now, 0 Seth, my son, behold I have revealed unto thee hidden mysteries,
which God had revealed unto me. Keep my commandment, for thyself, and for thy
people."
Chapter IX.
The death of Adam.
1 When Adam had ended his commandment to Seth, his limbs were loosened, his hands and
feet lost all power, his mouth became dumb, and his tongue ceased altogether to speak. He
closed his eyes and gave up the ghost.
2 But when his children saw that he was dead, they threw themselves over him, men and
women, old and young, weeping.
3 The death of Adam took place at the end of nine hundred and thirty years that he
lived upon the earth; on the fifteenth day of Barmudeh, after the reckoning of an epact of
the sun, at the ninth hour.
4 It was on a Friday, the very day on which he was created, and on which he rested; and
the hour at which he died, was the same as that at which he came out of the garden.
5 Then Seth wound him up well, and embalmed him with plenty of sweet spices, from
sacred trees and from the Holy Mountain; and he laid his body on the eastern side of the
inside of the cave, the side of the incense; and placed in front of him a lamp - stand
kept burning.
6 Then his children stood before him weeping and wailing over him the whole night until
break of day.
7 Then Seth and his son Enos, and Cainan, the son of Enos, went out and took good
offerings to present unto the Lord, and they came to the altar upon which Adam offered
gifts to God, when he did offer.
8 But Eve said to them, "Wait until we have first asked God to accept our
offering, and to keep by Him the soul of Adam HIS servant, and to take it up to
rest."
9 And they all stood up and prayed.
Chapter X.
"Adam was the first. . ."
1 AND when they had ended their prayer, the Word of God came and comforted them
concerning their father Adam.
2 After this, they offered their gifts for themselves and for their father.
3 And when they had ended their offering, the Word of God came to Seth, the eldest
among them, saying unto him, "0 Seth, Seth, Seth, three times. As I was with thy
father, so also shall I be with thee, until the fulfilment of the promise I made him - thy
father saying, I will send My Word and save thee and thy seed.
4 "But as to thy father Adam, keep thou the commandment he gave thee; and sever
thy seed from that of Cain thy brother."
5 And God withdrew HIS Word from Seth.
6 Then Seth, Eve, and their children, came down from the mountain to the Cave of
Treasures.
7 But Adam was the first whose soul died in the land of Eden, in the Cave of Treasures;
for no one died before him, but his son Abel, who died murdered.
8 Then all the children of Adam rose up, and wept over their father Adam, and made
offerings to him, one hundred and forty days.
Chapter XI.
Seth becomes head of the most happy and just tribe of people who ever lived.
1 After the death of Adam and of Eve, Seth severed his children, and his children's
children, from Cain's children. Cain and his seed went down and dwelt westward, below the
place where he had killed his brother Abel.
2 But Seth and his children, dwelt northwards upon the mountain of the Cave of
Treasures, in order to be near to their father Adam.
3 And Seth the elder, tall and good, with a fine soul, and of a strong mind, stood at
the head of his people; and tended them in innocence, penitence, and meekness, and did not
allow one of them to go down to Cain's children.
4 But because of their own purity, they were named "Children of God," and
they were with God, instead of the hosts of angels who fell; for they continued in praises
to God, and in singing psalms unto Him, in their cave - the Cave of Treasures.
5 Then Seth stood before the body of his father Adam, and of his mother Eve, and prayed
night and day, and asked for mercy towards himself and his children; and that when he had
some difficult dealing with a child, He would give him counsel.
6 But Seth and his children did not like earthly work, but gave themselves to heavenly
things; for they had no other thought than praises, doxologies, and psalms unto God.
7 Therefore did they at all times hear the voices of angels, praising and glorifying
God; from within the garden, or when they were sent by God on an errand, or when they were
going up to heaven.
8 For Seth and his children, by reason of their own purity, heard and saw those angels.
Then, again, the garden was not far above them, but only some fifteen spiritual cubits.
9 Now one spiritual cubit answers to three cubits of man, altogether forty-five cubits.
10 Seth and his children dwelt on the mountain below the garden; they sowed not,
neither did they reap; they wrought no food for the body. not even wheat; but only
offerings. They ate of the fruit and of trees well flavoured that grew on the mountain
where they dwelt.
11 Then Seth often fasted every forty days, as did also his eldest children. For the
family of Seth smelled the smell of the trees in the garden, when the wind blew that way.
12 They were happy, innocent, without sudden fear, there was no jealousy, no evil
action, no hatred among them. There was no animal passion; from no mouth among them went
forth either foul words or curse; neither evil counsel nor fraud. For the men of that time
never swore, but under hard circumstances, when men must swear, they swore by the blood of
Abel the just.
13 But they constrained their children and their women every day in the cave to fast
and pray, and to worship the most High God. They blessed themselves in the body of their
father Adam, and anointed themselves with it.
14 And they did so until the end of Seth drew near.
Chapter XII.
Seth's family affairs. HIS death. The headship of Enos. How the outcast branch of
Adam's family fared.
1 Then Seth, the just, called his son Enos, and Cainan, son of Enos, and Mahalaleel, son
of Cainan, and said unto them:-
2 "As my end is near, I wish to build a roof over the altar on which gifts are
offered."
3 They hearkened to his commandment and went out, all of them, both old and young, and
worked hard at it, and built a beautiful roof over the altar.
4 And Seth's thought, in so doing, was that a blessing should come upon his children on
the mountain; and that he should present an offering for them before his death.
5 Then when the building of the roof was completed, he commanded them to make
offerings. They worked diligently at these, and brought them to Seth their father who took
them and offered them upon the altar; and prayed God to accept their offerings, to have
mercy on the souls of his children, and to keep them from the hand of Satan.
6 And God accepted his offering, and sent HIS blessing upon him and upon his children.
And then God made a promise to Seth, saying, "At the end of the great five days and a
half, concerning which I have made a promise to thee and to thy father, I will send My
Word and save thee and thy seed."
7 Then Seth and his children, and his children's children, met together, and came down
from the altar, and went to the Cave of Treasures - where they prayed, and blessed
themselves in the body of our father Adam, and anointed themselves with it.
8 But Seth abode in the Cave of Treasures, a few days, and then suffered - sufferings
unto death.
9 Then Enos, his first - born son, came to him, with Cainan, his son, and Mahalaleel,
Cainan's son, and Jared, the son of Mahalaleel, and Enoch, Jared's son, with their wives
and children to receive a blessing from Seth.
10 Then Seth prayed over them, and blessed them, and adjured them by the blood of Abel
the just, saying, "I beg of you my children, not to let one of you go down from this
Holy and pure Mountain.
11 Make no fellowship with the children of Cain the murderer and the sinner, who killed
his brother; for ye know, 0 my children, that we flee from him, and from all his sin with
all our might because he killed his brother Abel."
12 After having said this, Seth blessed Enos, his first - born son, and commanded him
habitually to minister in purity before the body of our father Adam, all the days of his
life; then, also, to go at times to the altar which he Seth had built. And he commanded
him to feed his people in righteousness, in judgment and purity all the days of his life.
13 Then the limbs of Seth were loosened; his hands and feet lost all power; his mouth
became dumb and unable to speak; and he gave up the ghost and died the day after his nine
hundred and twelfth year; on the twenty - seventh day of the month Abib; Enoch being then
twenty years old.
14 Then they wound up carefull the body of Seth, and embalmed him with sweet spices,
and laid him in the Cave Treasures, on the right side of our father Adam's body, and they
mourned for him forty days. They offered gifts for him, as they had done for our father
Adam.
15 After the death of Seth, Enos rose at the head of his people, whom he fed in
righteousness, and judgment, as his father had commanded him.
16 But by the time Enos was eight hundred and twenty years old, Cain had a large
progeny; for they married frequently, being given to animal lusts; until the land below
the mountain, was filled with them.
Chapter XIII.
"Among the children of Cain there was much robbery, murder and Sin."
1 In those days lived Lamech the blind, who was of the sons of Cain. He had a son whose
name was Atun, and they two had much cattle.
2 But Lamech was in the habit of sending them to feed with a young shepherd, who tended
them; and who, when coming home in the evening wept before his grandfather, and before his
father Atun and his mother Hazina, and said to them, "As for me, I cannot feed those
cattle alone, lest one rob me of some of them, or kill me for the sake of them." For
among the children of Cain, there was much robbery, murder and sin.
3 Then Lamech pitied him, and he said, "Truly, he when alone, might be overpowered
by the men of this place."
4 So Lamech arose, took a bow he had kept ever since he was a youth, ere he became
blind, and he took large arrows, and smooth stones, and a sling which he had, and went to
the field with the young shepherd, and placed himself behind the cattle; while the young
shepherd watched the cattle. Thus did Lamech many days.
5 Meanwhile Cain, ever since God had cast him off, and had cursed him with trembling
and terror, could neither settle nor find rest in any one place; but wandered from place
to place.
6 In his wanderings he came to Lamech's wives, and asked them about him. They said to
him, "He is in the field with the cattle."
7 Then Cain went to look for him; and as he came into the field, the young shepherd
heard the noise he made, and the cattle herding together from before him,
8 Then said he to Lamech, "0 my lord, is that a wild beast or a robber?"
9 And Lamech said to him, "Make me understand which way he looks, when he comes
up.
10 Then Lamech bent his bow, placed an arrow on it, and fitted a stone in the sling,
and when Cain came out from the open country, the shepherd said to Lamech, "Shoot,
behold, he is coming."
11 Then Lamech shot at Cain with his arrow and hit him in his side. And Lamech struck
him with a stone from his sling, that fell upon his face, and knocked out both his eyes;
then Cain fell at once and died.
12 Then Lamech and the young shepherd came up to him, and found him lying on the
ground. And the young shepherd said to him, "It is Cain our grandfather, whom thou
hast killed, 0 my lord!"
18 Then was Lamech sorry for it, and from the bitterness of his regret, he clapped his
hands together, and struck with his flat palm the head of the youth, who fell as if dead;
but Lamech thought it was a feint; so he took up a stone and smote him, and smashed his
head until he died.
Chapter XIV.
Time, like an ever rolling stream, bears away another generation of men.
1 When Enos was nine hundred years old, all the children of Seth, and of Cainan, and his
first-born, with their wives and children, gathered around him, asking for a blessing from
him.
2 He then prayed over them and blessed them, and adjured them by the blood of Abel the
just saying to them, "Let not one of your children go down from this Holy Mountain,
and let them make no fellowship with the children of Cain the murderer."
3 Then Enos called his son Cainan and said to him, "See, 0 my son, and set thy
heart on thy people, and establish them in righteousness, and in innocence; and stand
ministering before the body of our father Adam, all the days of thy life."
4 After this Enos entered into rest, aged nine hundred and eighty - five years; and
Cainan wound him up, and laid him in the Cave of Treasures on the left of his father Adam;
and made offerings for him, after the custom of his fathers.
Chapter XV.
The offspring of Adam continue to keep the Cave of Treasures as a family shrine.
1 After the death of Enos, Cainan stood at the head of his people in righteousness and
innocence, as his father had commanded him; he also continued to minister before the body
of Adam, inside the Cave of Treasures.
2 Then when he had lived nine hundred and ten years, suffering and affliction came upon
him. And when he was about to enter into rest, all the fathers with their wives and
children came to him, and he blessed them, and adjured them by the blood of Abel, the
just, saying to them, "Let not one among you go down from this Holy Mountain; and
make no fellowship with the children of Cain the murderer."
3 Mahalaleel, his first - born son, received this commandment from his father, who
blessed him and died.
4 Then Mahalaleel embalmed him with sweet spices, and laid him in the Cave of
Treasures, with his fathers; and they made offerings for him, after the custom of their
fathers.
Chapter XVI.
The good branch of the family is still afraid of the children of Cain.
1 Then Mahalaleel stood over his people, and fed them in righteousness and innocence, and
watched them to see they held no intercourse with the children of Cain.
2 He also continued in the Cave of Treasures praying and ministering before the body of
our father Adam, asking God for mercy on himself and on his people; until he was eight
hundred and seventy years old, when he fell sick.
3 Then all his children gathered unto him, to see him, and to ask for his blessing on
them all, ere he left this world.
4 Then Mahalaleel arose and sat on his bed, his tears streaming down his face, and he
called his eldest son Jared, who came to him.
5 He then kissed his face, and said to him, "0 Jared, my son, I adjure thee by Him
who made heaven and earth, to watch over thy people, and to feed them in righteousness and
in innocence; and not to let one of them go down from this Holy Mountain to the children
of Cain, lest he perish with them.
6 "Hear, 0 my son, hereafter there shall come a great destruction upon this earth
on account of them; God will be angry with the world, and will destroy them with waters.
7 "But I also know that thy children will not hearken to thee, and that they will
go down from this mountain and hold intercourse with the children of Cain, and that they
shall perish with them.
8 "0 my son! teach them, and watch over them, that no guilt attach to thee on
their account."
9 Mahalaleel said, moreover, to his son Jared, "When I die, embalm my body and lay
it in the Cave of Treasures, by the bodies of my fathers; then stand thou by my body and
pray to God; and take care of them, and fulfil thy ministry before them, until thou
enterest into rest thyself."
10 Mahalaleel then blessed all his children; and then lay down on his bed, and entered
into rest like his fathers.
11 But when Jared saw that his father Mahalaleel was dead, he wept, and sorrowed, and
embraced and kissed his hands and his feet; and so did all his children.
12 And his children embalmed him carefully, and laid him by the bodies of his fathers.
Then they arose, and mourned for him forty days.
Chapter XVII.
Jared turns martinet. He is lured away to the land of Cain where he sees many
voluptuous sights. Jared barely escapes with a clean heart.
1 Then Jared kept his father's commandment, and arose like a lion over his people. He fed
them in righteousness and innocence, and commanded them to do nothing without his counsel.
For he was afraid concerning them, lest they should go to the children of Cain.
2 Wherefore did he give them orders repeatedly; and continued to do so until the end of
the four hundred and eighty-fifth year of his life.
3 At the end of these said years, there came unto him this sign. As Jared was standing
like a lion before the bodies of his fathers, praying and warning his people, Satan envied
him, and wrought a beautiful apparition, because Jared would not let his children do aught
without his counsel.
4 Satan then appeared to him with thirty men of his hosts, in the form of handsome men;
Satan himself being the elder and tallest among them, with a fine beard.
5 They stood at the mouth of the cave, and called out Jared, from within it.
6 He came out to them, and found them looking like fine men, full of light, and of
great beauty. He wondered at their beauty and at their looks; and thought within himself
whether they might not be of the children of Cain.
7 He said also in his heart, "As the children of Cain cannot come up to the height
of this mountain, and none of them is so handsome as these appear to be; and among these
men there is not one of my kindred - they must be strangers."
8 Then Jared and they exchanged a greeting and he said to the elder among them, "0
my father, explain to me the wonder that is in thee, and tell me who these are, with thee;
for they look to me like strange men."
9 Then the elder began to weep, and the rest wept with him; and he said to Jared,
"I am Adam whom God made first; and this is Abel my son, who was killed by his
brother Cain, into whose heart Satan put to murder him.
10 "Then this is my son Seth, whom I asked of the Lord, who gave him to me, to
comfort me instead of Abel.
11 "Then this one is my son Enos, son of Seth, and that other one is Cainan, son
of Enos, and that other one is Mahalaleel, son of Cainan, thy father."
12 But Jared remained wondering at their appearance, and at the speech of the elder to
him.
13 Then the elder said to him, "Marvel not, 0 my son; we live in the land north of
the garden, which God created before the world. He would not let us live there, but placed
us inside the garden, below which ye are now dwelling.
14 "But after that I transgressed, He made me come out of it, and I was left to
dwell in this cave; great and sore troubles came upon me; and when my death drew near, I
commanded my son Seth to tend his people well; and this my commandment is to be handed
from one to another, unto the end of the generations to come.
15 "But, 0 Jared, my son, we live in beautiful regions, while you live here in
misery, as this thy father Mahalaleel informed me; telling me that a great flood will come
and overwhelm the whole earth.
16 "Therefore, 0 my son, fearing for your sakes, I rose and took my children with
me, and came hither for us to visit thee and thy children; but I found thee standing in
this cave weeping, and thy children scattered about this mountain, in the heat and in
misery.
17 "But, 0 my son, as we missed our way, and came as far as this, we found other
men below this mountain; who inhabit a beautiful country, full of trees and of fruits, and
of all manner of verdure; it is like a garden; so that when we found them we thought they
were you; until thy father Mahalaleel told me they were no such thing.
18 "Now, therefore, 0 my son, hearken to my counsel, and go down to them, thou and
thy children. Ye will rest from all this suffering in which ye are. But if thou wilt not
go down to them, then, arise, take thy children, and come with us to our garden; ye shall
live in our beautiful land, and ye shall rest from all this trouble, which thou and thy
children are now bearing."
19 But Jared when he heard this discourse from the elder, wondered; and went hither and
thither, but at that moment he found not one of his children.
20 Then he answered and said to the elder, "Why have you hidden yourselves until
this day?"
21 And the elder replied, "If thy father had not told us, we should not have known
it."
22 Then Jared believed his words were true.
23 So that elder said to Jared, "Wherefore didst thou turn about, so and so?"
And he said, "I was seeking one of my children, to tell him about my going with you,
and about their coming down to those about whom thou hast spoken to me."
24 When the elder heard Jared's intention, he said to him, "Let alone that purpose
at present, and come with us; thou shalt see our country; if the land in which we dwell
pleases thee, we and thou shall return hither and take thy family with us. But if our
country does not please thee, thou shalt come back to thine own place."
25 And the elder urged Jared, to go before one of his children came to counsel him
otherwise.
26 Jared, then, came out of the cave and went with them, and among them. And they
comforted him, until they came to the top of the mountain of the sons of Cain.
27 Then said the elder to one of his companions, "We have forgotten something by
the mouth of the cave, and that is the chosen garment we had brought to clothe Jared
withal."
28 He then said to one of them, "Go back, thou, some one; and we will wait for
thee here, until thou come back. Then will we clothe Jared and he shall be like us, good,
handsome, and fit to come with us into our country."
29 Then that one went back.
30 But when he was a short distance off, the elder called to him and said to him,
"Tarry thou, until I come up and speak to thee."
31 Then he stood still, and the elder went up to him and said to him, "One thing
we forgot at the cave, it is this - to put out the lamp that burns inside it, above the
bodies that are therein. Then come back to us, quick."
32 That one went, and the elder came back to his fellows and to Jared. And they came
down from the mountain, and Jared with them; and they stayed by a fountain of water, near
the houses of the children of Cain and waited for their companion until he brought the
garment for Jared.
33 He, then, who went back to the cave, put out the lamp, and came to them and brought
a phantom with him and showed it them. And when Jared saw it he wondered at the beauty and
grace thereof, and rejoiced in his heart believing it was all true.
34 But while they were staying there, three of them went into houses of the sons of
Cain and said to them, "Bring us to - day some food by the fountain of water, for us
and our companions to eat."
35 But when the sons of Cain saw them, they wondered at them and thought: "These
are beautiful to look at, and such as we never saw before." So they rose and came
with them to the fountain of water, to see their companions.
36 They found them so very handsome, that they cried aloud about their places for
others to gather together and come and look at these beautiful beings. Then they gathered
around them both men and women.
37 Then the elder said to them, "We are strangers in your land, bring us some good
food and drink, you and your women, to refresh ourselves with you."
38 When those men heard these words of the elder, every one of Cain's sons brought his
wife, and another brought his daughter, and so, many women came to them; every one
addressing Jared either for himself or for his wife; all alike.
39 But when Jared saw what they did, his very soul wrenched itself from them; neither
would he taste of their food or of their drink.
40 The elder saw him as he wrenched himself from them, and said to him, "Be not
sad; I am the great elder, as thou shalt see me do, do thyself in like manner."
41 Then he spread his hands and took one of the women, and five of his companions did
the same before Jared, that he should do as they did.
42 But when Jared saw them working infamy he wept, and said in his mind, - My fathers
never did the like.
43 He then spread his hands and prayed with a fervent heart, and with much weeping, and
entreated God to deliver him from their hands.
44 No sooner did Jared begin to pray than the elder fled with his companions; for they
could not abide in a place of prayer.
45 Then Jared turned round but could not see them, but found himself standing in the
midst of the children of Cain.
46 He then wept and said, "0 God, destroy me not with this race, concerning which
my fathers have warned me; for now, 0 my Lord God, I was thinking that those who appeared
unto me were my fathers; but I have found them out to be devils, who allured me by this
beautiful apparition, until I believed them.
47 "But now I ask Thee, 0 God, to deliver me from this race, among whom I am now
staying, as Thou didst deliver me from those devils. Send Thy angel to draw me out of the
midst of them; for I have not myself power to escape from among them."
48 When Jared had ended his prayer, God sent HIS angel in the midst of them, who took
Jared and set him upon the mountain, and showed him the way, gave him counsel, and then
departed from him.
Chapter XVIII.
Confusion in the Cave of Treasures. Miraculous speech of the dead Adam.
1 The children of Jared were in the habit of visiting him hour after hour, to receive his
blessing and to ask his advice for every thing they did; and when he had a work to do,
they did it for him.
2 But this time when they went into the cave they found not Jared, but they found the
lamp put out, and the bodies of the fathers thrown about, and voices came from them by the
power of God, that said, "Satan in an apparition has deceived our son, wishing to
destroy him, as he destroyed our son Cain."
3 They said also, "Lord God of heaven and earth, deliver our son from the hand of
Satan, who wrought a great and false apparition before him." They also spake of other
matters, by the power of God.
4 But when the children of Jared heard these voices they feared, and stood weeping for
their father; for they knew not what had befallen him.
5 And they wept for him that day until the setting of the sun.
6 Then came Jared with a woeful countenance, wretched in mind and body, and sorrowful
at having been separated from the bodies of his fathers.
7 But as he was drawing near to the cave, his children saw him, and hastened to the
cave, and hung upon his neck, crying, and saying to him, "0 father, where hast thou
been, and why hast thou left us, as thou wast not wont to do?" And again, "0
father, when thou didst disappear, the lamp over the bodies of our fathers went out, the
bodies were thrown about, and voices came from them"
8 When Jared heard this he was sorry, and went into the cave; and there found the
bodies thrown about, the lamp put out, and the fathers themselves praying for his
deliverance from the hand of Satan.
9 Then Jared fell upon the bodies and embraced them, and said, "0 my fathers,
through your intercession, let God deliver me from the hand of Satan! And I beg you will
ask God to keep me and to hide me from him unto the day of my death."
10 Then all the voices ceased save the voice of our father Adam, who spake to Jared by
the power of God, just as one would speak to his fellow, saying, "0 Jared, my son,
offer gifts to God for having delivered thee from the hand of Satan; and when thou
bringest those offerings, so be it that thou offerest them on the altar on which I did
offer. Then also, beware of Satan; for he deluded me many a time with his apparitions,
wishing to destroy me, but God delivered me out of his hand.
11 "Command thy people that they be on their guard against him; and never cease to
offer up gifts to God."
12 Then the voice of Adam also became silent; and Jared and his children wondered at
this. Then they laid the bodies as they were at first; and Jared and his children stood
praying the whole of that night, until break of day.
13 Then Jared made an offering and offered it up on the altar, as Adam had commanded
him. And as he went up to the altar, he prayed to God for mercy and for forgiveness of his
sin, concerning the lamp going out.
14 Then God appeared unto Jared on the altar and blessed him and his children, and
accepted their offerings; and commanded Jared to take of the sacred fire from the altar,
and with it to light the lamp that shed light on the body of Adam.
Chapter XIX.
The children of Jared are led astray.
1 Then God revealed to him again the promise He had made to Adam; He explained to him the
5500 years, and revealed unto him the mystery of HIS coming upon the earth.
2 And God said to Jared, "As to that fire which thou hast taken from the altar to
light the lamp withal, let it abide with you to give light to the bodies; and let it not
come out of the cave, until the body of Adam comes out of it.
3 But, 0 Jared, take care of the fire, that it burn bright in the lamp; neither go thou
again out of the cave until thou receivest an order through a vision, and not in an
apparition, when seen by thee.
4 "Then command again thy people not to hold intercourse with the children of
Cain, and not to learn their ways; for I am God who loves not hatred and works of
iniquity."
5 God gave also many other commandments to Jared, and blessed him. And then withdrew
HIS Word from him.
6 Then Jared drew near with his children, took some fire, and came down to the cave,
and lighted the lamp before the body of Adam; and he gave his people commandments as God
had told him to do.
7 This sign happened to Jared at the end of his four hundred and fiftieth year; as did
also many other wonders, we do not record. But we record only this one for shortness sake,
and in order not to lengthen our narrative.
8 And Jared continued to teach his children eighty years; but after that they began to
transgress the commandments he had given them, and to do many things without his counsel.
They began to go down from the Holy Mountain one after another, and to mix with the
children of Cain, in foul fellowships.
9 Now the reason for which the children of Jared went down the Holy Mountain, is this,
that we will now reveal unto you.
Chapter XX.
Ravishing music; strong drink loosed among the sons of Cain. They
don colorful clothing. The children of Seth look on with longing eyes.
1 After Cain had gone down to the land of dark soil, and his children had multiplied
therein, there was one of them, whose name was Genun, son of Lamech the blind who slew
Cain.
2 But as to this Genun, Satan came into him in his childhood; and he made sundry
trumpets and horns, and string instruments, cymbals and psalteries, and lyres and harps,
and flutes; and he played on them at all times and at every hour.
3 And when he played on them, Satan came into them, so that from among them were heard
beautiful and sweet sounds, that ravished the heart.
4 Then he gathered companies upon companies to play on them; and when they played, it
pleased well the children of Cain, who inflamed themselves with sin among themselves, and
burnt as with fire; while Satan inflamed their hearts, one with another, and increased
lust among them.
5 Satan also taught Genun to bring strong drink out of corn; and this Genun used to
bring together companies upon companies in drink-houses; and brought into their hands all
manner of fruits and flowers; and they drank together.
6 Thus did this Genun multiply sin exceedingly; he also acted with pride, and taught
the children of Cain to commit all manner of the grossest wickedness, which they knew not;
and put them up to manifold doings which they knew not before.
7 Then Satan, when he saw that they yielded to Genun and hearkened to him in every
thing he told them, rejoiced greatly, increased Genun's understanding until he took iron
and with it made weapons of war.
8 Then when they were drunk, hatred and murder increased among them; one man used
violence against another to teach him evil taking his children and defiling them before
him.
9 And when men saw they were overcome, and saw others that were not overpowered, those
who were beaten came to Genun, took refuge with him, and he made them his confederates.
10 Then sin increased among them greatly; until a man married his own sister, or
daughter, or mother, and others; or the daughter of his father's sister, so that there was
no more distinction of relationship, and they no longer knew what is iniquity; but did
wickedly, and the earth was defiled with sin; and they angered God the Judge, who had
created them.
11 But Genun gathered together companies upon companies, that played on horns and on
all the other instruments we have already mentioned, at the foot of the Holy Mountain; and
they did so in order that the children of Seth who were on the Holy Mountain should hear
it.
12 But when the children of Seth heard the noise, they wondered, and came by companies,
and stood on the top of the mountain to look at those below; and they did thus a whole
year.
13 When, at the end of that year, Genun saw that they were being won over to him little
by little, Satan entered into him, and taught him to make dyeing - stuffs for garments of
divers patterns, and made him understand how to dye crimson and purple and what not.
14 And the sons of Cain who wrought all this, and shone in beauty and gorgeous apparel,
gathered together at the foot of the mountain in splendour, with horns and gorgeous
dresses, and horse races, committing all manner of abominations.
15 Meanwhile the children of Seth, who were on the Holy Mountain, prayed and praised
God, in the place of the hosts of angels who had fallen; wherefore God had called them
'angels," because He rejoiced over them greatly.
16 But after this, they no longer kept HIS commandment, nor held by the promise He had
made to their fathers; but they relaxed from their fasting and praying, and from the
counsel of Jared their father. And they kept on gathering together on the top of the
mountain, to look upon the children of Cain, from morning until evening, and upon what
they did, upon their beautiful dresses and ornaments.
17 Then the children of Cain looked up from below, and saw the children of Seth,
standing in troops on the top of the mountain; and they called to them to come down to
them.
18 But the children of Seth said to them from above, "We don't know the way."
Then Genun, the son of Lamech, heard them say they did not know the way, and he bethought
himself how he might bring them down.
19 Then Satan appeared to him by night, saying, "There is no way for them to come
down from the mountain on which they dwell; but when they come to-morrow, say to them,
'Come ye to the western side of the mountain; there you will find the way of a stream of
water, that comes down to the foot of the mountain, between two hills; come down that way
to us."
20 Then when it was day, Genun blew the horns and beat the drums below the mountain, as
he was wont. The children of Seth heard it, and came as they used to do.
21 Then Genun said to them from down below, "Go to the western side of the
mountain, there you will find the way to come down."
22 But when the children of Seth heard these words from him, they went back into the
cave to Jared, to tell him all they had heard.
23 Then when Jared heard it, he was grieved; for he knew that they would transgress his
counsel.
24 After this a hundred men of the children of Seth gathered together, and said among
themselves, "Come, let us go down to the children of Cain, and see what they do, and
enjoy ourselves with them."
25 But when Jared heard this of the hundred men, his very soul was moved, and his heart
was grieved. He then arose with great fervour, and stood in the midst of them, and adjured
them by the blood of Abel the just, "Let not one of you go down from this holy and
pure mountain, in which our fathers have ordered us to dwell."
26 But when Jared saw that they did not receive his words, he said unto them, "0
my good and innocent and holy children, know that when once you go down from this holy
mountain, God will not allow you to return again to it."
27 He again adjured them, saying, "I adjure by the death of our father Adam, and
by the blood of Abel, of Seth, of Enos, of Cainan, and of Mahalaleel, to hearken to me,
and not to go down from this holy mountain; for the moment you leave it, you will be reft
of life and of mercy; and you shall no longer be called 'children of God,' but 'children
of the devil.'
28 But they would not hearken to his words.
29 Enoch at that time was already grown up, and in his zeal for God, he arose and said,
"Hear me, 0 ye sons of Seth, small and great-when ye transgress the commandment of
our fathers, and go down from this holy mountain-ye shall not come up hither again for
ever."
30 But they rose up against Enoch, and would not hearken to his words, but went down
from the Holy Mountain.
31 And when they looked at the daughters of Cain, at their beautiful figures, and at
their hands and feet dyed with colour, and tattooed in ornaments on their faces, the fire
of sin was kindled in them.
32 Then Satan made them look most beautiful before the sons of Seth, as he also made
the sons of Seth appear of the fairest in the eyes of the daughters of Cain, so that the
daughters of Cain lusted after the sons of Seth like ravenous beasts, and the sons of Seth
after the daughters of Cain, until they committed abomination with them.
33 But after they had thus fallen into this defilement, they returned by the way they
had come, and tried to ascend the Holy Mountain. But they could not, because the stones of
that holy mountain were of fire flashing before them, by reason of which they could not go
up again.
34 And God was angry with them, and repented of them because they had come down from
glory, and had thereby lost or forsaken their own purity or innocence, and were fallen
into the defilement of sin.
35 Then God sent HIS Word to Jared, saying, "These thy children, whom thou didst
call 'My children,' - behold they have transgressed My commandment, and have gone down to
the abode of perdition, and of sin. Send a messenger to those that are left, that they may
not go down, and be lost."
36 Then Jared wept before the Lord, and asked of Him mercy and forgiveness. But he
wished that his soul might depart from his body, rather than hear these words from God
about the going down of his children from the Holy Mountain.
37 But he followed God's order, and preached unto them not to go down from that holy
mountain, and not to hold intercourse with the children of Cain.
38 But they heeded not his message, and would not obey his counsel.
Chapter XXI.
Jared dies in sorrow for his sons who had gone astray. A prediction of the Flood.
1 After this another company gathered together, and they went to look after their
brethren; but they perished as well as they. And so it was, company after company, until
only a few of them were left.
2 Then Jared sickened from grief, and his sickness was such that the day of his death
drew near.
3 Then he called Enoch his eldest son, and Methuselah Enoch's son, and Lamech the son
of Methuselah, and Noah the son of Lamech.
4 And when they were come to him he prayed over them and blessed them, and said to
them, "Ye are righteous, innocent sons; go ye not down from this holy mountain; for
behold, your children and your children's children have gone down from this holy mountain,
and have estranged themselves from this holy mountain, through their abominable lust and
transgression of God's commandment.
5 "But I know, through the power of God, that He will not leave you on this holy
mountain, because your children have transgressed HIS commandment and that of our fathers,
which we had received from them.
6 "But, 0 my sons, God will take you to a strange land, and ye never shall again
return to behold with your eyes this garden and this holy mountain.
7 "Therefore, 0 my sons, set your hearts on your own selves, and keep the
commandment of God which is with you. And when you go from this holy mountain, into a
strange land which ye know not, take with you the body of our father Adam, and with it
these three precious gifts and offerings, namely, the gold, the incense, and the myrrh;
and let them be in the place where the body of our father Adam shall lay.
8 "And unto him of you who shall be left, 0 my sons, shall the Word of God come,
and when he goes out of this land he shall take with him the body of our father Adam, and
shall lay it in the middle of the earth, the place in which salvation shall be
wrought."
9 Then Noah said unto him, "Who is he of us that shall be left?"
10 And Jared answered, "Thou art he that shall be left. And thou shalt take the
body of our father Adam from the cave, and place it with thee in the ark when the flood
comes.
11 "And thy son Shem, who shall come out of thy loins, he it is who shall lay the
body of our father Adam in the middle of the earth, in the place whence salvation shall
come."
12 Then Jared turned to his son Enoch, and said unto him "Thou, my son, abide in
this cave, and minister diligently before the body of our father Adam all the days of thy
life; and feed thy people in righteousness and innocence."
13 And Jared said no more. HIS hands were loosened, his eyes closed, and he entered
into rest like his fathers. HIS death took place in the three hundred and sixtieth year of
Noah, and in the nine hundred and eighty-ninth year of his own life; on the twelfth of
Takhsas on a Friday.
14 But as Jared died, tears streamed down his face by reason of his great sorrow, for
the children of Seth, who had fallen in his days.
15 Then Enoch, Methuselah, Lamech and Noah, these four, wept over him; embalmed him
carefully, and then laid him in the Cave of Treasures. Then they rose and mourned for him
forty days.
16 And when these days of mourning were ended, Enoch, Methuselah, Lamech and Noah
remained in sorrow of heart, because their father had departed from them, and they saw him
no more.
Chapter XXII.
Only three righteous men left in the world. The evil conditions of men prior to the Flood.
1 But Enoch kept the commandment of Jared his father, and continued to minister in the
cave.
2 It is this Enoch to whom many wonders happened, and who also wrote a celebrated book;
but those wonders may not be told in this place.
3 Then after this, the children of Seth went astray and fell, they, their children and
their wives. And when Enoch, Methuselah, Lamech and Noah saw them, their hearts suffered
by reason of their fall into doubt full of unbelief; and they wept and sought of God
mercy, to preserve them, and to bring them out of that wicked generation.
4 Enoch continued in his ministry before the Lord three hundred and eighty-five years,
and at the end of that time he became aware through the grace of God, that God intended to
remove him from the earth.
5 He then said to his son, "0 my son, I know that God intends to bring the waters
of the Flood upon the earth, and to destroy our creation.
6 "And ye are the last rulers over this people on this mountain; for I know that
not one will be left you to beget children on this holy mountain; neither shall any one of
you rule over the children of his people; neither shall any great company be left of you,
on this mountain."
7 Enoch said also to them, "Watch over your souls, and hold fast by your fear of
God and by your service of Him, and worship Him in upright faith, and serve Him in
righteousness, innocence and judgment, in repentance and also in purity."
8 When Enoch had ended his commandments to them, God transported him from that mountain
to the land of life, to the mansions of the righteous and of the chosen, the abode of
Paradise of joy, in light that reaches up to heaven; light that is outside the light of
this world; for it is the light of God, that fills the whole world, but which no place can
contain.
9 Thus, because Enoch was in the light of God, he found himself out of the reach of
death; until God would have him die.
10 Altogether, not one of our fathers or of their children, remained on that holy
mountain, except those three, Methuselah, Lamech, and Noah. For all the rest went down
from the mountain and fell into sin with the children of Cain. Therefore were they
forbidden that mountain, and none remained on it but those three men.