II. כְּרוּב 91 noun masculine cherub; —
כ׳ Exodus 25:19 +
26 times; plural
כְּרוּבִים Psalm 99:1 +
33 times;
כְּרֻבִים Exodus 25:18 +
29 times; (Late Hebrew
id.; Aramaic
כְּרוּבָא √ dubious; Assyrian
karâbu =
be gracious to, bless Dl
HWB 350, but adjective
karûbu is
great, mighty, Id
ib. 352; on possibly connection with
כְּרוּב compare Dl in Baer
Ezech. Xiii.; Assyrian
kirubu =
šêdu (name of winged bull in Assyrian; see Len
Origines 1. 118, Eng. Tr. 126 Dl
Par 154) has not been verified, compare see F.
ZA i. 68 f. Budge
Expos. Apr. May, 1885 Teloni
Za vi, 124 ff.; the older view, connecting
כ׳ with
γρύψ and deriving from Persian
giriften,
griffen, lacks evidence and probability. — Possibly the
thunder-cloud underlies the conception); —
1. the living chariot of the theophanic God; possibly identified with the storm-wind
Psalm 18:11 =
2 Samuel 22:11 וַיִּדְכַּב עַלכְּֿרוּב and he rode upon a cherub (|| flew swiftly on the wings of the wind).
4. P gives an account of:
a. two cherubim of solid gold upon the slab of gold of the
כַּמֹּרֶת facing each other with wings outstretched above, so as to constitute a basis or throne on which the glory of Yahweh appeared, and from whence He spake
Exodus 25:18-22;
Exodus 37:7-9;
Numbers 7:89;
b. numerous cherubim woven into the texture of the inner curtains of the tabernacle and the veils
Exodus 26:1,
31;
Exodus 36:8,
35
5. Kings and Chronicles describe the cherubim of the temple:
a. two gigantic images of olive wood plated with gold, ten cubits high, standing in the
דְּבִיר facing the door, whose wings five cubits each, extended, two of them meeting in the middle of the room to constitute the throne, two of them extending to the walls
1 Kings 6:23-28;
1 Kings 8:6-7;
2 Chronicles 3:10-13;
2 Chronicles 5:7-8; Chronicles (doubtless influenced by Ezekiel) represents them as the chariot of Yahweh
1 Chronicles 28:18;
b. images of cherubim were carved on the gold plated cedar planks which constituted the inner walls of the temple, and upon the olive wood doors
1 Kings 6:29-35;
2 Chronicles 3:7; and on the bases of the portable lavers, interchanging with lions and oxen
1 Kings 7:29-36; Chronicles also represents that they were woven in the veil of the
דְּבִיר 2 Chronicles 3:14.
6. Ezekiel describes the cherubim:
a. as four living creatures, each with four faces, lion, ox, eagle, and man, having the figure and hands of men, and the feet of calves. Each has four wings, two of which are stretched upward, meeting above and sustaining the throne of Yahweh; two of them stretched downwards so as to cover the creatures themselves. The cherubim never turn but go straight forward, as do the wheels of the cherubic chariot, and they are full of eyes and are like burning coals of fire,
Ezekiel 1:5-28;
Ezekiel 9:3;
Ezekiel 10:1-20;
Ezekiel 11:22; the king of Tyre is scornfully compared with one of these, and is assigned a residence in Eden and the mountain of God,
Ezekiel 28:14-16;
b. Ezekiel knows of no cherubic statues in the new temple, but represents the inner walls of the temple as carved with alternating palm trees and cherubim, each with two faces, the lion looking on one side, the man on the other. It is evident that the number and the form of the cherubim vary in the representations (compare
Ezekiel 41:18-25). It is probable that the
שְׂרָפִים of
Isaiah 6:2-6 are another form of the cherubim. The Apocalypse of the seals
Rev 4-6 combines them in four
ζῷα.
Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon, Unabridged, Electronic Database.
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