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Max Perry Mueller

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Obama, Cal Thomas and the Mark of Cain

Posted: 08/15/11 06:25 PM ET

In an August 11 USA Today forum debating the downgraded state of the U.S. credit rating, columnist Cal Thomas equated S&P's loss of public faith in America's economic standing with the "mark of Cain." America and the Obama administration are now cursed, Thomas retorted, with an AA-plus rating, putting America "on financial par with New Zealand and Belgium. Nice."

At first blush, what is offensive about Thomas' comments is not his xenophobic economic prognostication. We'll get back to that a bit later. Instead, it's Thomas' cavalier use of the biblical term "mark of Cain." Especially when it's deployed within even a rhetorical mile of America's first black president. Thomas' language should raise eyebrows as well as move fingers to keyboards to type messages of repudiation for his Don Imus-like racial slur.

Why the fuss over the "mark of Cain"? A quick Bible and history lesson is in order.

The expression "mark of Cain" refers to Genesis 4, in which God "set a mark upon Cain" as punishment for killing his brother, Abel -- a story frequently cited as history's first murder. This "mark" or "curse" on Cain has gone hand in hand with the curse Noah places on the progeny of his disloyal son, Ham, whom Noah declares will be "servant[s] of servants ... unto his brethren" (Genesis 9-18-27). These two curses created convenient biblical anti-heroes that have long been used to justify the segregation, persecution and enslavement of various populations of undesirables, minorities and underclasses.

In medieval Europe, Jews were associated with Cain and Ham, whose Old Testament sins were held to foreshadow the great sin of deicide, for which the New Testament condemned their Jewish descendants. The Jews' supposed crime against Christ justified forcing Jews into ghettos, denying them legal protections and access to many professions.

With the advent of the African slave trade, Cain and Ham's biblical marks -- and Noah's pronouncement of perpetual servitude on Ham's descendants -- were correlated with Africans' dark skin. The insidious full flowering of the link between Cain/Ham and Africans took shape in antebellum America where some southern and northern Christian ministers defended slavery as biblically justified, the result of God's unconditional mark of darkness on Africans who were considered the permanent intellectual and moral inferiors of white Europeans.

Let me be very clear here: The Bible itself is not to blame for creating a link between deicide and Jews, slavery and Africans. Religious ideologies of race that supported anti-Semitism and African slavery were read into, and did not emerge out of, the Bible. But centuries of interpretations of Cain and Ham have accreted race onto Genesis like mud on a riverbank, making a non-racialized reading of the Bible all-but impossible. When Thomas references "the mark of Cain" in relation to Obama, he reactivates the history of misusing the Bible to dehumanize people of African descent.

Cal Thomas cannot plead ignorance of the troubling history of the term "mark of Cain." The churchgoing Thomas is quite biblically literate, often citing the Bible to bolster his conservative economic and political positions. He has a particular fondness for the story of Cain and likes to link it to Obama. In a 2007 column critical of the CNN/Sojourner's forum on faith and politics that was attended by the leading Democratic presidential candidates, Thomas mocked the future president's statement that his faith taught him, "I am my brother's keeper." Thomas correctly writes that Obama, whom Thomas considers only a "nominal Christian," was referencing Genesis 4, the source of the "curse of Cain" mythology. But Thomas fails to realize that Obama flipped the usual interpretation of this passage in which Cain denies responsibility for his brother's safety and welfare. Obama, the future first African American president, asserted that, unlike Cain, he believes that people do have a social responsibility to be their "brothers' keepers," especially to their more economically vulnerable brothers and sisters.

And now we circle back to the economic debate Thomas was putatively engaged in when he made his recent "mark of Cain" riposte. Thomas, ironically it seems, believes that the American government should answer the question of whether we are our brothers' keepers like Cain did -- that the government should deny its responsibility to create a basic safety-net for its citizens. Instead, Thomas declares that the government should follow 2 Thessalonians 3:10 in which St. Paul writes: "If a man will not work, he shall not eat." Thomas' (debatable) interpretation here is that the Bible's basic economic message is one of individual responsibility: "the threat of an empty stomach is the best incentive for providing for one's self."

And herein lies my point about the relationship between religion and politics in America. As pundits and politicians debate America's economic priorities, inevitably some will draw differing interpretations from the Bible to inspire their public policies. This is reasonable, perhaps even welcome. What is not welcome is the kind of not-so-subtle misuse of the Bible, the barely veiled allusions to the ugliest traditions of biblical interpretation, which Thomas uses toward the president, to undermine the president and other political rivals' positions and even their humanity. In discussing the debt and deficit, in debating religion and politics, let's just leave Cain out of it.

 
In an August 11 USA Today forum debating the downgraded state of the U.S. credit rating, columnist Cal Thomas equated S&P's loss of public faith in America's economic standing with the "mark of Cain."...
In an August 11 USA Today forum debating the downgraded state of the U.S. credit rating, columnist Cal Thomas equated S&P's loss of public faith in America's economic standing with the "mark of Cain."...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chrysostomos
Zizek built my hotrod,
07:21 PM on 08/19/2011
I grew up listening to "syndicated columnist," Cal Thomas on christian radio (His program always came on just before dinner) and from what I remember of his mean-spirited, fearmongering the author seems to accurately describe and critique his most recent use of "the mark of cain."
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uncle buc
05:37 PM on 08/19/2011
That is one obscure view of the Mark Of Cain. I doubt Cal has ever heard such a view.Mueller uses Cals church going reputation as a fact that Cal knew what this obscure view of Cain was.

But a paragraph before Mueller lets us know that the Bible does not teach this, its just a view of some.
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
11:39 AM on 08/19/2011
the mark

Kinda like a birthmark I would say !
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
H P
Citizen
11:19 PM on 08/18/2011
Cal Thomas.. just another in a long line of Republicans, who use religion - Christianity and the bible, to gain favor thus votes with the church going voting block.
Cal Thomas, Grover Norquist and all of those ilk should remember some bible IF they really believed
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew+7%3A15-20&version=NIV
Mat 7:15-20.. vs 20 by their fruits you shall know them... .in reference to FALSE PROPHETS.

The thing is the bible is like statistics you can always find a quote( or equation or %) to suit your needs..
just most professing christians don't know their bibles either, thus they get duped by Cal, Grover, Rush, Hannity, ..et al into voting republican.
Republicans are nothing more than 'money changers' taking peoples money..
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coveark
Obstructionists, get off the hill !!!
10:34 PM on 08/19/2011
And it time to throw them out of the Temple.........
08:57 AM on 08/18/2011
The Old Testament God is a funny guy. He punishes a snake by cursing it to slither on its belly the rest of its days. He punishes Cain by casting a charm on him so that no one can kill him. Oh, and he gave us the rainbow so remind him not to try and kill us all with a flood ever again. This guy's got a sense of humor. And killing Job's family to show up the devil, oh man...

If you're interested, here's a more even-handed approach to looking at the Old Testament, one that doesn't rely on dogma, but as interpreting it as ancient literature that doesn't belong in politics. This guy's got a few good entries about it.

http://intrinsicgratification.blogspot.com/2011/08/old-testament-jesus-this-thing-is-huge.html
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coveark
Obstructionists, get off the hill !!!
10:01 PM on 08/19/2011
The OT does indeed have some"funny" as in odd stuff. I used to have the Oxford Bible and it as a fantastic study Bible. I find it "odd" that God could do so many things that in real life would be madness......Oh well......this Cal Thomas seems to be infected by that and bending it to render evil onto others.......reprobate.
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Hillbilly49
Don't tell me you are a Christian; let me guess.
02:42 PM on 08/17/2011
"In every country and every age, the priest had been hostile to Liberty. He is always in alliance with the despot, abetting his abuses in return for protection to his own."




— Thomas Jefferson  1814
08:44 AM on 08/18/2011
- Thomas Jefferson, slaveowner, priest of Liberty.
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Hillbilly49
Don't tell me you are a Christian; let me guess.
12:37 PM on 08/18/2011
"He who is involved in ecstasies and visions, who takes dreams for reality, and his own imagination for prophesy, is a fanatical novice of great hope and promise, and will soon advance to the higher stage and kill men for the love of God."





— Voltaire
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Hillbilly49
Don't tell me you are a Christian; let me guess.
05:52 PM on 08/19/2011
"Religious bondage shackles and debilitates the mind and unfits it for every noble enterprise."


— James Madison, letter to William Bradford, 1771
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uncle buc
05:38 PM on 08/19/2011
Did TJ say this before or after stuping his slave/?
11:58 PM on 08/16/2011
I like your Christ...I do not like your Christians. They are so unlike your Christ ~Gandhi
09:41 PM on 08/16/2011
the mark of cain is NOT he same as the curse on Ham. So I see no reason it cannot be used just because the president happens to be black. They don't go hand in hand.
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Dieter Zerressen
I may be agnostic, I'm not sure.
09:03 PM on 08/16/2011
Oh, BTW, since we have two Mormons running for President: this "mark of Cain" thing is exactly what the Mormon Church taught until about 1973 when they were about to lose their tax exemption. Suddenly their then Prophet had a "revelation" about the equality of black people. It didn't change their minds; only their teachings.
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12:04 AM on 08/18/2011
Thank you.
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Angie Tyne 1
I want my disagree button!!
01:34 PM on 08/16/2011
There are a large number of Christians who do not appreciate the political action that the churches have been involved in. Their families are the ones to suffer when equal marriage is denied, birth control withheld, stem cell research prevented, social services cut, etc.

For the last 30 years the religious right has allowed itself to be co-opted into being an arm of the GOP.

May I recommend an intervention?

www.au.org

Americans United for Separation of Church and State is a group that is lead by a pastor. He recognizes the threat politics represents to faith organizations and works to keep them out of govt. If people of faith wish to stop the decline of their religions than they should work to keep it from controlling the lives of those who do not share their beliefs.
jjtx
living between the trees
06:45 PM on 08/16/2011
I am a Christian and I wish the Christian right would sit down and be quiet. They are making our Lord look bad and I do resent that.

This man needs to have a crisis of conscience to use the "mark of Cain' anywhere or anytime in reference to anything about the president. That is revolting and I deplore it.

As far as a man needs to work to eat, please note that it is not our Lord that says that but instead someone who may or may not be St. Paul or it might have been added to Thessalonians years and years later. We do know from the book of Acts that the early disciples after Christ's ascension lived communally sharing all that they had with each other.
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12:07 AM on 08/18/2011
Thank you.
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uncle buc
05:39 PM on 08/19/2011
nobody makes the lord look bad
01:14 PM on 08/16/2011
I grew up in an evangelical conservative Christian family. I knew EXACTLY what Thomas meant when he used the term 'mark of Cain', because I was indoctrinated into the belief that the mark turned Cain from a non-black into a black person. What is sad is that I was taught this by someone whom I loved and respected when I was young and impressionable. It was VERY hard for me to unlearn my prejudices, as well as my beliefs that all the bible is the inerrant word of God. Meaning, the flood story is true, the creation story is true, the death and resurrection story is true, Jonah and the whale, etc... It's INDOCTRINATION! This is why otherwise smart, thoughtful, good people believe it is not only ok, but it is morally right to be bigots.
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Angie Tyne 1
I want my disagree button!!
01:32 PM on 08/16/2011
I'm glad that you are moving beyond your early experiences. I started when I was in my late teens and am still discovering some of the terrible things advocated by religion and various 'holy' books.

Whatever anyone may believe about god/s the idea that men from any age had the exact right take on what is 'truth' is a stretch.

Organized religion is a terrible thing.

“Anyone who has the power to make you believe absurdities has the power to make you commit injustices.” - Voltaire

"With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion." --- Steven Weinberg, quoted in The New York Times, April 20, 1999
09:42 PM on 08/16/2011
gee what mixed up conservative church did you belong to?No conservtive church that i have been a member of has EVER equated the mark of Cain with being black.
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coveark
Obstructionists, get off the hill !!!
10:36 PM on 08/19/2011
It has been a common Knowledge within certain churches.
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ASpeciallady62
An ethicalbeliever 4 humanity. & equality
12:34 PM on 08/16/2011
The mark of Cain has to do with murder of his brother. To follow the tradition of the family curse you have to follow the Cain name. I know about names because my last name also starts with Mc. Looking at the last name only. If you have a Mc in front of your name that means son of. So the name McCain means son of Cain. My last name also starts with McDaniel. Which also means son of Daniel. The theory would then mean John McCain is the son of Cain. Who would also carry the curse of Cain in his family genes. The curse of cain has nothing to do with dark skin. It has everything to do with murder. Cain was cursed because he murdered his brother. I think the auther of this artical needs some comprehendsion skills when it comes to reading the bible. The mark of Cain was so that the people don't murder him for his crime.The mark of Cain was to keep him alive to suffer for his sin of murder. So please take the racist remarks from your lips about the bible. Obama doesn't bear the curse of Cain. He bears the curse of racism from white people, who look for any reason to hate the black community. What has a man gained in a nation, when he has lost his own soul to get it. John McCain is the son of Cain who bears the curse of his fore fathers.
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04:49 PM on 08/16/2011
Sorry. The author of the article is right about the traditional translation of the "mark of Cain".
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Hillbilly49
Don't tell me you are a Christian; let me guess.
12:17 PM on 08/16/2011
"The Christian resolve to find the world evil and ugly, has made the world evil and ugly."


- Friedrich Nietzsche



09:44 PM on 08/16/2011
one man's opinion.
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11:59 PM on 08/16/2011
Many agree. And those numbers are growing, pushed in the US by the ugliness of the religious right.
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uncle buc
05:42 PM on 08/19/2011
Of course in civilizations were the Bible has never been taught or heard of: murder,theft or any other evil did and does not exist?
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Bombadillo22
Not all who wander are lost...
12:17 PM on 08/16/2011
'When Thomas references "the mark of Cain" in relation to Obama, he reactivates the history of misusing the Bible to dehumanize people of African descent.'

As long as biblical references like that are in vogue, playing the race card will never be out of fashion!
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traceymarie
the President is black, deal with it
02:02 PM on 08/16/2011
Love the hobbit reference, perfectly done.
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Hillbilly49
Don't tell me you are a Christian; let me guess.
11:54 AM on 08/16/2011
Religious leaders tend to serve their own ideological interests and have little to do with God or doing good for mankind.