¿Qué Pasó con CAÍN Después de Matar a Abel? La Historia que la Biblia Continúa

What really happened to Cain after he killed Abel? Most people know about the first murder in the Bible, but very few know that Cain's story continues far beyond the crime. In this video, you'll discover what Genesis really says about the mark of Cain, the land of Nod, the first city in history, who his wife might have been, and how different ancient traditions explain his death. We carefully analyze the biblical account along with historical texts such as the Book of Jubilees, the Midrash, and Flavius ​​Josephus, always distinguishing between Scripture and later traditions. If you're fascinated by the mysteries of the Bible, forbidden books, apocryphal texts, and stories that almost no one tells, this channel is for you. 📖 Key Passages: • Genesis 4 • Genesis 5:4 • Hebrews 12:24 Traditions Cited: • Book of Jubilees • Rabbinic Midrash • Flavius ​​Josephus 00:00 Introduction 00:54 The Judgment 04:02 The Exile 05:41 The First City 07:22 The Lineage 08:03 Closing 🔔 Subscribe to discover the hidden stories of the Bible, the most mysterious figures, and the secrets that have remained forgotten for centuries. SOURCES AND CONTEXT (for narration and video description) Canonical Column (Bible) Genesis 4:9-15 — God's question, "Am I my brother's keeper?", the blood that cries out, the curse, "a wanderer and a fugitive," Cain's fear, the mark, and the sevenfold vengeance. Genesis 4:16 — the land of Nod ("wandering"), east of Eden. Genesis 4:17 — the wife, the son Enoch, and the first city. Genesis 4:18-24 — the genealogy back to Lamech; Jabal, Jubal, Tubal-Cain; Lamech's song (vengeance seventy-seven times). Genesis 5:4 — Adam had other sons and daughters (origin of Cain's wife). Genesis 5:18-24 — the OTHER Enoch, from the line of Seth, who “walked with God” (distinct from Cain’s son). Hebrews 12:24 — the blood that “speaks a better word than the blood of Abel” (hopeful closure). Tradition (NOT canon — marked on screen and voice) Book of Jubilees 4 — names Avan, Cain’s sister and wife; Cain’s death when his stone house collapses on him (“with a stone he killed, and with a stone he was slain”). Rabbinic Midrash (Genesis Rabbah) — theories about the mark (a letter, a glow, a tremor); the tradition of blind Lamech who accidentally kills Cain, guided by Tubal-Cain. Flavius ​​Josephus, Jewish Antiquities I — Cain as the founder of greed, limits and weights, the first city; his degenerate descendants. Gnostic speculation ("Cain, son of the serpent"): heterodox and contradicted by Genesis 4:1. #Bible #Cain #Abel #Genesis #BiblicalHistory #ForbiddenBooks #BibleInDetail #BiblicalMysteries #ApocryphalTexts #Christianity #OldTestament #HiddenHistory