The Kenites and Cain

The Bible does not explicitly link the Kenites to Cain, but two details implicitly provide the link:

1. The Hebrew term for “Kenite” (קֵינִי, qeiniy) is related to the Hebrew term for “Cain” (קַיִן, qayin). Based on the linguistic relationship, “Kenite” literally means “Cainite” or “the community/clan of Cain.” In fact, in Num 24:22, the Kenites are referred to simply as “Cain” (קַיִן, qayin).

2. Genesis 4:20–22 relates how the descendants of Cain were responsible for mediating the arts of civilization: the establishment of pastoralism, the development of instruments, and the forging of bronze and iron. Moreover, the name “Cain” (קַיִן, qayin) is derived from a root that means “metalworker, smith” in other Semitic languages such as Aramaic, Palmyrene, Nabataean, and Arabic. Archaeologists have discovered mines and forges in the region associated with the Kenites south and east of Israel. This has led some scholars, such as William Albright and Roland de Vaux, to argue that the origin of the name “Kenite” refers to a people whose area of expertise was metalworking (de Vaux, Ancient Israel, 478–79; Albright, Archaeology, 98). Both options are linguistically possible.

It is possible that the Kenites traced their origin back to Cain and thus took his name as their own, and they may have also been skilled in the arts associated with Cain’s descendants. Both of these details lend support to the notion that Cain, in some way, was the eponymous ancestor of the Kenites.

Scholars beginning with Heinrich Ewald and Julius Wellhausen have observed the link between the Kenites and Cain. Others, such as Claus Westermann, have questioned but not absolutely dismissed the possibility (Westermann, Genesis, 317, 333; for a list of commentators who have failed to mention the connection between the Kenites and Cain, or even the possibility thereof, see Day, “Cain and Kenites,” 336 n. 2).