“…(Some have seen three-way parallels between Adam, Cain, and Noah and their respective descendants.) Motifs that have been highlighted by scholars in these literary comparisons of Adam and Noah include the following: 1) both were primeval ancestors of all humanity (Gn 2:7, 9:20); 2) Adam was created from the ground (Gn 2:7-8), Cain worked the ground (Gn 4:2), and Noah brought relief from the curse on the ground (Gn 5:29) and was removed from the ground by flood; 3) animals were both in Eden and in the ark "according to their kind'; 4) animals and people were secure first in a garden and later in an ark; 5) adam lived with the animals, Noah was permitted to eat them (Gn 9:2); 6) Adam ate fruit in the garden (Gn 2:17), Cain produced grain (Gn 4:2), and Noah partook from his vineyard (Gn 9:20-21); 7) the consumption of fruit by Adam and wine by Noah led to trouble for both; 8) in both narratives of Adam and Noah "eyes were opened" (Gn 3:7, 9:22) and nakedness seen (Gn 3:7, 9:22); 9) Adam and Eve gained knowledge (Gn 3:7), Cain denied knowledge of his brother (Gn 4:9), and Noah lost knowledge while drunk (Gn 9:21); 10) after the human sin, God "came down" both in Eden and at Babel (Gn 3:8, 11:5); 11) out of the primal experiences of Eden (Gn 3:14-19), the first brothers (Gn 4:11-12), and Babel there came curses (Gn 9:25-27); 12) whereas Adam (and also Cain) were cursed by God, Canaan was cursed by a human, Noah, which implies the rise of human autonomy and the withdrawal of God; 13) both ancestors, Adam and Noah, were told to increase in population as they respectively left the garden and the ark; 14) both ancestors had eponymous children (Gn 4:1-2, 9:18); 15) both ancestors had three children, one of whom was cursed; 16) farming was an occupation of their children (Gn 4:3, 9:20); 17) the children were divided or fought each other (Gn 4:4-8, 9:21-23); 18) a curse fell upon one of the children, a brother (9)(10)(11)(12)(13)(14)(15)(16)(17)(18)(19)(20)(21)(22)(23)(24)(25)(26); 19) the one cursed was expelled from the family (Gn 4:16, 9:27); 20) Adam's family gave rise to city culture (through Cain) (Gn 4:17-24), and Noah's family gave rise to national groups (Gn 10); 21) the first world was destroyed by a flood, the second world was permitted to exist after Babel's sin because God had admitted that people were naturally sinful (Gn 8:21-22); and 22) God feared the line between human and divine would be blurred (Gn 3: 22-24, 11:6).…”