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== Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_80531" /> ==
<p> כרב , plural כרבים . It appears, from [[Genesis]] 3:29, that this is a name given to angels; but whether it is the name of a distinct class of celestials, or designates the same order as the seraphim, we have no means of determining. But the term <em> cherbim </em> generally signifies those figures which Moses was commanded to make and place at each end of the mercy seat, or propitiatory, and which covered the ark with expanded wings in the most holy place of the [[Jewish]] tabernacle and temple. See &nbsp; Exodus 25:18-19 . The original meaning of the term, and the shape or form of these, any farther than that they were <em> alata animata, </em> "winged creatures," is not certainly known. The word in [[Hebrew]] is sometimes taken for a calf or ox; and &nbsp;Ezekiel 10:14 , sets down the face of a cherub as synonymous to the face of an ox. The word <em> cherub, </em> in [[Syriac]] and Chaldee, signifies to till or plough, which is the proper work of oxen. <em> [[Cherub]] </em> also signifies strong and powerful. [[Grotius]] says they were figures much like that of a calf; and Bochart, likewise, thinks that they were more like the figure of an ox than any thing beside; and Spencer is of the same mind. But [[Josephus]] says they were extraordinary creatures of a figure unknown to mankind. The opinion of most critics, taken, it seems, from &nbsp; Ezekiel 1:9-10 , is, that they were figures composed of parts of various creatures; as a man, a lion, an ox, an eagle. But certainly we have no decided proof that the figures placed in the holy of holies, in the tabernacle, were of the same form with those described by Ezekiel. The contrary, indeed, seems rather indicated, because they looked <em> down </em> upon the mercy seat, which is an attribute not well adapted to a four-faced creature, like the emblematical cherubim seen by Ezekiel. </p> <p> The cherubim of the sanctuary were two in number; one at each end of the mercy seat; which, with the ark, was placed exactly in the middle, between the north and south sides of the tabernacle. It was here that atonement was made, and that God was rendered propitious by the high priest sprinkling the blood upon and before the mercy seat, &nbsp;Leviticus 16:14-15 . Here the glory of God appeared, and here he met his high priest, and by him his people, and from hence he gave forth his oracles; whence the whole holy place was called דביר , <em> the oracle. </em> These cherubim, it must be observed, had feet whereon they stood &nbsp; 2 Chronicles 3:13; and their feet were joined, in one continued beaten work, to the ends of the mercy seat which covered the ark: so that they were wholly over or above it. Those in the tabernacle were of beaten gold, being but of small dimensions, &nbsp;Exodus 25:18; but those in the temple of [[Solomon]] were made of the wood of the olive tree overlaid with gold; for they were very large, extending their wings to the whole breadth of the oracle, which was twenty cubits, &nbsp;1 Kings 6:23-28; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 3:10-13 . They are called "cherubim of glory," not merely or chiefly on account of the matter or formation of them, but because they had the glory of God, or the glorious symbol of his presence, "the Shekinah,' resting between them. As this glory abode in the inward tabernacle, and as the figures of the cherubim represented the angels who surrounded the manifestation of the divine presence in the world above, that tabernacle was rendered a fit image of the court of heaven, in which light it is considered every where in the [[Epistle]] to the Hebrews. See &nbsp;Hebrews 4:14; &nbsp;Hebrews 8:1; &nbsp;Hebrews 9:8-9; &nbsp;Hebrews 9:23-24; &nbsp;Hebrews 12:22-23 . </p> <p> The cherubim, it is true, have been considered by the disciples of Mr. Hutchinson as designed emblems of [[Jehovah]] himself, or rather of the [[Trinity]] of [[Persons]] in the Godhead, with man taken into the divine essence. But that God, who is a pure Spirit, without parts or passions, perfectly separate and remote from all matter, should command Moses to make material and visible images or emblematical representations of himself, is utterly improbable: especially, considering that he had repeatedly, expressly, and solemnly forbidden every thing of this kind in the second commandment of the moral law, delivered from Mount Sinai, amidst thunder and lightning, "blackness, darkness, and tempest," pronouncing with an audible and awful voice, while "the whole mount quaked greatly, and the sound of the trumpet waxed louder and louder, Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, nor the likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or in the earth beneath, or in the water under the earth." Hence the solemn caution of Moses, &nbsp;Deuteronomy 4:15 , &c: "Take ye good heed unto yourselves, (for ye saw no manner of similitude on the day the Lord spake unto you in [[Horeb]] out of the midst of the fire,) lest ye corrupt yourselves, and make you a graven image, the similitude of any figure, the likeness of male or female, of any beast that is on the earth, of any winged fowl that flieth in the air, of any thing that creepeth on the ground, of any fish that is in the waters." Hence God's demand by his prophet: "To what will ye liken me, or shall I be equal, saith the [[Holy]] One?" And hence the censure of the inspired penman, &nbsp;Psalms 106:20 : They changed their glory into the similitude of an ox that eateth grass." Add to this, that in most or all of the places where the cherubim are mentioned in the Scriptures, God is expressly distinguished from them. Thus, "He," the Lord, "placed at the east of the garden cherubim, and a flaming sword," &nbsp;Genesis 3:24 . "He rode on a cherub and did fly," </p> <p> &nbsp;Psalms 18:10 . "He sitteth between the cherubim," &nbsp;Psalms 99:1 . "He dwelleth between the cherubim," &nbsp;Psalms 80:1 . We also read of "the glory of the God of [[Israel]] going up, from the cherub whereupon he was, to the threshold of the house," &nbsp;Ezekiel 9:3 . And again, "The glory of the Lord went up from the cherub, and the court was full of the brightness of the Lord's glory," &nbsp;Ezekiel 10:4 . And again, "The glory of the Lord departed from off the threshold, and stood over the cherubim," &nbsp;Ezekiel 10:18 . In all these passages the glory of the Lord, that is, the Shekinah, the glorious symbol of his presence, is distinguished from the cherubim; and not the least intimation is given in these passages, or any others, of the Scripture, that the cherubim were images or emblematical representations of him. Mr. Parkhurst's laborious effort to establish Mr. Hutchinson's opinion on the subject of the cherubim, in his Hebrew Lexicon, <em> sub voce, </em> is so obviously fanciful and contradictory, that few will be converted to this strange opinion. It seems much more probable that, as most eminent divines have supposed, the cherubim represented the angels who surround the divine presence in heaven. Accordingly, they had their faces turned toward the mercy seat, where God was supposed to dwell, whose glory the angels in heaven always behold, and upon which their eyes are continually fixed; as they are also upon Christ, the true propitiatory, which mystery of redemption, they "desire," St. Peter tells us, "to look into," &nbsp; 1 Peter 1:12 : a circumstance evidently signified by the faces of the cherubim being turned inward, and their eyes fixed on the mercy seat. We may here also observe that, allowing St. Peter in this passage to allude to the cherubic figures, which, from his mode of expression, can scarcely be doubted, this amounts to a strong presumption that the cherubim represented, not so much one order, as "the angels" in general, all of whom are said to "desire to look into" the subjects of human redemption, and to all whose orders, "the principalities and powers in heavenly places, the manifold wisdom of God is made known by the church." In Ezekiel, the cherubic figures are evidently connected with the dispensations of providence; and they have therefore appropriate forms, emblematical of the strength, wisdom, swiftness, and constancy, with which the holy angels minister in carrying on God's designs: but in the sanctuary they are connected with the administration of grace; and they are rather adoring beholders, than actors, and probably appeared under forms more simple. As to the living creatures, improperly rendered "beasts" in our translation, &nbsp;Revelation 4:7 , some think them a hieroglyphical representation, not of the qualities of angels, but of those of real Christians; especially of those in the suffering and active periods of the church. The first a lion, signifying their undaunted courage, manifested in meeting with confidence the greatest sufferings; the second a calf or ox, emblematical of unwearied patience; the third with the face of a man, representing prudence and compassion; the fourth a flying eagle, signifying activity and vigour. The four qualities thus emblematically set forth in these four living creatures, namely, undaunted courage, unwearied patience under sufferings, prudence united with kindness, and vigorous activity, are found, more or less, in the true members of Christ's church in every age and nation. But others have imagined that this representation might be intended to intimate also that these qualities would especially prevail in succeeding ages of the church, in the order in which they are here placed: that is, that in the first age true [[Christians]] would be eminent for the courage, fortitude, and success, wherewith they should spread the Gospel; that in the next age they would manifest remarkable patience in bearing persecution, when they should be "killed all the day," like calves or oxen appointed for the slaughter; that in the subsequent age or ages, when the storms of persecution were blown over, and [[Christianity]] was generally spread through the whole Roman empire, knowledge and wisdom, piety and virtue, should increase, and the church should wear the face of a man, and excel in prudence, humanity, love, and good works; and that in ages still later, being reformed from various corruptions in doctrine and practice, and full of vigour and activity, it should carry the Gospel, as upon the wings of a flying eagle, to the remotest nations under heaven, "to every kindred, and tongue, and people." This is a thought which deserves some consideration. The four great monarchies of the earth had their prophetic emblems, taken both from metals and from beasts and birds; and it is not unreasonable to look for prophetic emblems of the one kingdom of Christ, in its varied and successive states. Perhaps, however, the most reasonable conclusion is, that, like the "living creatures" in the vision of Ezekiel, they are emblematical of the ministrations of angels in what pertains to those providential events which more particularly concern the church. </p>
       
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_69892" /> ==
<p> [[Cherub]] (plural [[Cherubim]] ). An order of celestial beings or symbolical representations quite distinct from angels, and often referred to in the Old [[Testament]] and in the book of Revelation. [[Angels]] are often sent on messages, but cherubim are not so described. The cherubim are variously represented as living creatures, &nbsp;Genesis 3:24; &nbsp;Ezekiel 1:1-28; &nbsp;Revelation 4:1-11; or as images wrought in tapestry, gold, or wood, &nbsp;Exodus 36:35; &nbsp;Exodus 37:7; &nbsp;Ezekiel 41:25; as having one, two, or four faces, &nbsp;Exodus 25:20; &nbsp;Ezekiel 41:18; &nbsp;Ezekiel 10:14, as having two, four, or six wings, &nbsp;1 Kings 6:27; &nbsp;Ezekiel 1:6; &nbsp;Revelation 4:8; in the simplest form, as in the golden figures above the ark of the covenant; or in the most complex and sublime form, as in Ezekiel's wonderful visions of the glory of God—discerning and ruling all things, and executing irresistibly and with the speed of thought all his wise and just decrees. &nbsp;Ezekiel 1:10. The fullest of these descriptions represents the cherub as a winged figure, like a man in form, full of eyes, and with a four-fold head—of a man, a lion, an ox, and an eagle, with wheels turning every way, and speed like the lightning: presenting the highest earthly forms and powers of creation in harmonious and perfect union. &nbsp;Ezekiel 1:1-28; &nbsp;Ezekiel 10:1-22; &nbsp;Ezekiel 41:1-26; &nbsp;Revelation 4:1-11. Usually also the cherubim stand in a special nearness to God; they are engaged in the loftiest adoration and service, moving in instant accordance with his will, &nbsp;Psalms 18:10; &nbsp;Ezekiel 1:26; &nbsp;Ezekiel 10:20; &nbsp;Revelation 4:1-11; they are seen in the temple inseparably associated with the mercy-seat, "the cherubim of glory," &nbsp;Hebrews 9:5—made of the same mass of pure gold, bending reverently over the place of God's presence, &nbsp;Psalms 99:1, where he met his people, &nbsp;Numbers 7:89, accepting the blood of atonement, &nbsp;Leviticus 16:14-16; they shone forth as their Saviour. &nbsp;Psalms 80:1; &nbsp;Isaiah 37:16. 2. A place in Babylonia. &nbsp;Ezra 2:59; &nbsp;Nehemiah 7:61. </p>
       
== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_15857" /> ==
<p> Plural CHERUBIM, an order of celestial beings or symbolical representations often referred to in the Old Testament and in the book of Revelation. The cherubim are variously represented as living creatures, &nbsp;Ezekiel 1:1-28 &nbsp; Revelation 4:1-11; or as images wrought in tapestry, gold, or wood, &nbsp;Exodus 36:35 &nbsp; 37:7 &nbsp; Ezekiel 41:25; as having one, two, or four faces, &nbsp;Exodus 25:20 &nbsp; Ezekiel 10:14 &nbsp; 41:18; as having two, four, or six wings, &nbsp;1 Kings 6:27 &nbsp; Ezekiel 1:6 &nbsp; Revelation 4:8; in the simplest form, as in the golden figures above the ark of the covenant; or in the most complex and sublime form, as in Ezekiel's wonderful visions of the glory of God-discerning and ruling all things, and executing irresistibly and with the speed of thought all his wise and just decrees, &nbsp;Ezekiel 1:1-28 &nbsp; 10:1-22 . The fullest of these descriptions represents the cherub as a winged figure, like a man in form, full of eyes, and with a fourfold head-of a man, a lion, an ox, and an eagle-with wheels turning every way, and speed like the lightning; presenting the highest earthly forms and powers of creation in harmonious and perfect union, &nbsp;Ezekiel 1:1-28 &nbsp; 10:1-22 &nbsp; Revelation 1:4-11 . Usually also the cherubim stand in a special nearness to God; they are engaged in the loftiest adoration and service, moving in instant accordance with his will, &nbsp;Psalm 18:10 &nbsp; Ezekiel 1:26 &nbsp; 10:20 &nbsp; Revelation 4:1-11; they are seen in the temple inseparably associated with the mercy-seat-made of the same mass of pure gold, &nbsp;Exodus 25:19 , bending reverently over the place of God's presence, &nbsp;Psalm 99:1 , where he met his people, &nbsp;Numbers 7:89 , accepted the blood of atonement, &nbsp;Leviticus 16:14-16 , and shone forth as their Savior, &nbsp;Psalm 80:1 . </p>
       
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_30982" /> ==
&nbsp;Genesis 3:24&nbsp;Exodus 25:17-20&nbsp;26:1,31&nbsp;Numbers 7:89&nbsp;1 Samuel 4:4&nbsp;Isaiah 37:16&nbsp;Psalm 80:1&nbsp;99:1&nbsp;Ezekiel 1:4-14&nbsp;Revelation 4:6&nbsp;Hebrews 9:5 <p> The cherubim were symbolical. They were intended to represent spiritual existences in immediate contact with Jehovah. Some have regarded them as symbolical of the chief ruling power by which God carries on his operations in providence (&nbsp;Psalm 18:10 ). Others interpret them as having reference to the redemption of men, and as symbolizing the great rulers or ministers of the church. Many other opinions have been held regarding them which need not be referred to here. On the whole, it seems to be most satisfactory to regard the interpretation of the symbol to be variable, as is the symbol itself. </p> <p> Their office was, (1) on the expulsion of our first parents from Eden, to prevent all access to the tree of life; and (2) to form the throne and chariot of Jehovah in his manifestation of himself on earth. He dwelleth between and sitteth on the cherubim (&nbsp;1 Samuel 4:4; &nbsp;Psalm 80:1; &nbsp;Ezekiel 1:26,28 ). </p>
       
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_59033" /> ==
<p> CHERUB, n. plu. Cherubs, but the Hebrew plural cherubim is also used. </p> <p> A figure composed of various creatures, as a man, an ox, an eagle or lion. The first mention of cherubs is in &nbsp;Genesis 3:24 , where the figure is not described, but their office was, with a flaming sword, to keep or guard the way of the tree of life. The two cherubs which Moses was commanded to make at the ends of the Mercy seat, were to be of beaten work of gold and their wings were to extend over the Mercy seat, their faces towards each other, and between them was the residence of the Deity. &nbsp;Exodus 15 . The cherubs, in Ezekiels vision, had each four heads or faces, the hands of a man and wings. The four faces were, the face of a bull, that of a man, that of a lion, and that of an eagle. They had the likeness of a man. &nbsp;Ezekiel 4 , and 10. In &nbsp;2 Samuel 22:11 , and &nbsp;Psalms 18 ., Jehovah is represented as riding on a cherub, and flying on the wings of the wind. In the celestial hierarchy, cherubs are represented as spirits next in order to seraphs. The hieroglyphical and emblematical figures embroidered on the vails of the tabernacle are called cherubs of curious or skilful work. &nbsp;Exodus 26 . </p>
       
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_99845" /> ==
<p> '''(1):''' (n.) A beautiful child; - so called because artists have represented cherubs as beautiful children. </p> <p> '''(2):''' (n.) One of a order of angels, variously represented in art. In European painting the cherubim have been shown as blue, to denote knowledge, as distinguished from the seraphim (see Seraph), and in later art the children's heads with wings are generally called cherubs. </p> <p> '''(3):''' (n.) A symbolical winged figure of unknown form used in connection with the mercy seat of the Jewish [[Ark]] and Temple. </p> <p> '''(4):''' (n.) A mysterious composite being, the winged footstool and chariot of the Almighty, described in Ezekiel i. and x. </p>
       
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_72087" /> ==
<p> '''Cher'ub.''' </p> <p> 1. Apparently a place in Babylonia, from which some persons of doubtful extraction returned to Judea, with Zerubbabel. &nbsp;Ezra 2:59; &nbsp;Nehemiah 7:61. </p> <p> 2. ''See '' [[Cherubim]] ''.'' </p>
       
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_50139" /> ==
<p> <strong> CHERUB </strong> (&nbsp; Ezra 2:59 , &nbsp; Nehemiah 7:61 ). One of the places from which certain families, on the return from Babylon, failed to prove their register as genuine branches of the [[Israelite]] people. See Charaathalan. </p>
       
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_65643" /> ==
<p> Place in the East from which some returned to the land of Judah. &nbsp;Ezra 2:59; &nbsp;Nehemiah 7:61 . </p>
       
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_39234" /> ==
&nbsp;Ezra 2:59
       
== Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary <ref name="term_47609" /> ==
<p> See Cherubim </p>
       
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_31997" /> ==
<p> ''' Copyright StatementThese files are public domain. Bibliography InformationMcClintock, John. Strong, James. Entry for 'Cherub'. Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and [[Ecclesiastical]] Literature. https://www.studylight.org/encyclopedias/eng/tce/c/cherub.html. [[Harper]] & Brothers. New York. 1870. ''' </p>
       
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_2198" /> ==
<p> ''''' kē´rub ''''' ( כּרוּב , <i> ''''' kerūbh ''''' </i> , Χερούβ , <i> ''''' Cheroúb ''''' </i> , Χαρούβ , <i> ''''' Charoúb ''''' </i> ): A place in [[Babylonia]] from which people whose genealogies had fallen into confusion went up at the return from exile (&nbsp;Ezra 2:59; &nbsp;Nehemiah 7:61 ); unidentified. In 1 [[Esdras]] 5:36 we read "Charaathalan leading them, and Allar," a phrase that seems to have arisen through confusion of the names in the passages cited above. </p>
       
==References ==
<references>


Cherub <ref name="term_34895" />
<ref name="term_80531"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/watson-s-biblical-theological-dictionary/cherub Cherub from Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary]</ref>
<p> Cherub; plural, Cherubim. Composite animal forms, always spoken of as familiar to the Hebrew: fourfold, Consisting of man, lion, ox, and eagle; ideal representatives of redeemed creaturely life, in which man is prominent (&nbsp;Ezekiel 1:5; &nbsp;Revelation 4:7). Distinct from the [[Assyrian]] and [[Egyptian]] winged forms still existing (almost always a beast' form with human head) in having the fourfold composite animal aspect, with the characteristics of manhood as the basis and body of the whole. "At the [[E.]] of Eden ''(after Adam's fall)'' God placed (yashkeen , 'set as the dwelling place of His [[Shekinah]] glory') the Cherubim, and a flaming sword which turned every way to keep the way of life" (&nbsp;Genesis 3:24). As the flaming sword proclaimed God's just wrath against sin, so the [[Cherubim]] mercy in store for lost man. </p> <p> They were "the provisional occupants of man's lost inheritance" (Fairbairn), the pledge of the restoration of man and the creaturely world closely allied with and subject to him (Psalm 8; &nbsp;Isaiah 11:6-9; &nbsp;Romans 8:17-24; &nbsp;Ezekiel 34:25; &nbsp;Hosea 2:18); the symbolical prophecy of the recovery of the tree of life; for they guard it, not against but for man, against the time when man shall be fit to enjoy it and never to lose it. &nbsp;Revelation 2:7; &nbsp;Revelation 22:14; they, with the flaming sword, were the forerunners of the sanctuary, where the [[Cherub]] on either side of the bright Shekinah cloud (from which, as on Sinai, the flame might at any moment dart) looked down on the blood-sprinkled mercy-seat of the ark, God's meeting place in reconciliation with sinners by the stoning blood; mercy and justice meeting together in man's redemption. </p> <p> Hence it was before God's manifested presence, between the Cherubim at the [[E.]] of Eden, the first sacrifices were offered (&nbsp;Genesis 4:3-4; &nbsp;Genesis 4:16; &nbsp;Genesis 3:21). [[Whereas]] pagan sacrificed to appease their God, Bible sacrifices were brought before God expressing the propitiation which He had already in His gracious purpose made by His Son (&nbsp;Revelation 13:8). The placing of the man-like Cherub on the inheritance once man's suggested the truth that man and the creatures involved in his fall have still by some gracious mystery, of which the Cherubim are the pledge, an interest in Eden. The appearance of the Cherubim in the holiest place afterward suggested to man the same assurance of a common meeting ground with God at peace and in holiness. Finally, their appearance in Revelation, round God's throne as the redeemed, crowned that hope with joyful certainty. </p> <p> As the glory of God was last seen on the [[E.,]] so shall "the glory of the God of [[Israel]] come from the way of the [[E."]] (&nbsp;Genesis 3:24; &nbsp;Ezekiel 11:23; &nbsp;Ezekiel 43:2.) As the redeemed will hereafter be one with Christ in His executing vengeance on the ungodly (&nbsp;Revelation 19:11-16), so the Cherubim (&nbsp;Revelation 15:7; &nbsp;Ezekiel 10:7). In Ezekiel 1 the four living creatures of the Cherubim stand in contrast with the four world monarchies (Daniel 7), termed "beasts." The four answers to the four quarters of the world, implying worldwide extension, true universality, which the world powers sought vainly to attain by ambitious selfishness. The [[Mosaic]] cherubim were formed out of the same mass of pure gold as the mercy-seat (&nbsp;Exodus 25:19-20). The wings express rapidity in fulfilling God's will. The eyes all over (&nbsp;Ezekiel 10:12) express manifold and ubiquitous wisdom. </p> <p> The ox form represents tame animals, of which he is chief; the lion represents wild animals; the eagle represents birds; man, representing the head of all, in his ideal realized by the Son of man, combines all animal excellencies. The redeemed shall be the ruling powers, through whom, as now by the angels, God shall administer the government of the world, and proclaim His manifold wisdom (&nbsp;Matthew 19:28; &nbsp;1 Corinthians 6:2; &nbsp;Ephesians 3:10; &nbsp;Revelation 3:21; &nbsp;Revelation 4:6-8). In &nbsp;Ezekiel 10:13 "it was cried unto the wheels ... [[O]] wheel," i.e. "Roll on." [[Jehovah]] by His word in connection with His ministering powers sets the whole "wheel of nature" (Greek text of &nbsp;James 3:6) and providence in motion. </p> <p> In &nbsp;Revelation 5:9-12 the four living creatures (zooa , not theeria , "beasts") identify themselves as the redeemed (All creation is summed up in man its lord; from whence Christ's command, "preach the gospel to every creature," for man's redemption involves the restoration of the creature now subject to vanity: Romans 8) "Thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God by [[Thy]] blood out of every kindred and tongue ... and hast made us unto our God kings and priests, and we shall reign on the earth." Whereas in Ezekiel (&nbsp;Ezekiel 1:6) each living creature has all four faces, in &nbsp;Revelation 4:6-9 the four faces are distributed, one to each. </p> <p> The [[Christian]] fathers identify them with the four Gospels: Matthew, the lion, the kingly aspect of Christ's manifestation; Mark, the ox, Christ's laborious endurance; Luke, the man, Christ's brotherly sympathy with our whole race; John, the eagle, the soaring majesty of the divine Word made flesh. The grain of truth in this view is that the church of the redeemed, like Christ her Head and His gospel, is one under a fourfold aspect answering to the several characteristics represented by the four heads of animal life. In and with Christ she shall realize the ideal of man combining fourfold creaturely perfection: </p> <p> '''(1)''' kingly righteousness with hatred of evil, as "the lion springing terribly on the victim"; </p> <p> '''(2)''' laborious diligence in duty, as the "ox bound to the soil"; </p> <p> '''(3)''' human sympathy, as "the man"; </p> <p> '''(4)''' sublime contemplation of heavenly things, as "the eagle." </p> <p> In Revelation the four living creatures represent the elect redeemed, as they shall be when perfected, ministering as king-priests unto God, and media of blessing to the redeemed earth with its nations and its animal creation. The four standards under which Israel encamped in the wilderness were a lion for Judah on the [[E.,]] an eagle for Dan on the [[N.,]] an ox for [[Ephraim]] on the [[W.,]] and a man for [[Reuben]] on the [[S.]] In the midst was the tabernacle with the Shekinah cloud symbolizing God's presence, "the picture of the blessed period when the earth being fitted for the kingdom of the Father ... heaven's court will be transferred here (&nbsp;Revelation 21:3), and the world is subject to a never ending theocracy" (DeBurgh). The cherubic four stand always in nearest relationship to God in His holiness and life-imparting presence; compare &nbsp;Exodus 25:22; &nbsp;Psalms 80:1. </p> <p> Whereas angels are "round about the throne," the living creatures occupy the innermost circle next it and Him who is in their midst (&nbsp;Revelation 5:6; &nbsp;Revelation 5:11). Thirty times they are called "the living creatures," full of the life of God everlastingly flowing into them. (See [[Adam.)]] The griffins of northern fable and the winged beasts of [[Assyria]] and Egypt seem a relic of primeval tradition corrupted. The Greek grups , glufo , and the [[Syriac]] and Arabic words for "carve" and griffin, seem kindred words to cherub; cherob is the rabbinical term for an image; cherub, the Coptic. [[Gesenius]] takes the root chaarab "to consecrate a shrine." Colossal figures of compound living creatures are still found "guarding the portals of the Assyrian temples" (Layard). </p> <p> The pagan knowledge of the cherubim of the Book of Revelation is implied in &nbsp;Ezekiel 28:13-14, where the king of [[Tyre]] is represented as having been "in Eden the garden of God," and as boasting that he is "the anointed cherub that covereth," i.e. the cherub of the temple anointed by the consecrating oil, and defending Tyre as the cherubim "covered" or overshadowed the mercy-seat; the type of [[Antichrist]] who shall usurp the attributes of the true [[Anointed]] One, who "covers" His church, the beautiful ideal of humanity. The clearness of the type as symbolizing the redeemed increases as the revelation of the scheme of redemption becomes fuller. At Eden the cherubim are mysteriously indefinite. </p> <p> In the tabernacle they are lifeless carved figures, with faces ever turned to the mercy seat, the pledge of redemption. In Solomon's temple they are of colossal size, symbolizing the future grandeur of the church, reigning with the antitypical [[Solomon]] over the earth. In Ezekiel, for the first time, instinct with life, zeal, and ceaseless untiring motion. In Revelation they reveal who and what they are, and sing the song of praise for their redemption (&nbsp;Revelation 5:8-9). As the mercy-seat (typifying Christ as our propitiation) interposed between the law inside the ark and the cherubim outside, so Christ interposes between the divine justice and the redeemed. </p> <p> As the cherubim were of one piece with the ark, so the redeemed are one with Christ, and one with Him as their propitiation (&nbsp;2 Peter 1:4; &nbsp;Hebrews 2:11; &nbsp;Exodus 29:42-46; &nbsp;Exodus 25:22; &nbsp;1 Corinthians 3:16-17; &nbsp;Galatians 2:20). [[Freeman]] suggests that the cherubim were the archetype in heaven upon which God molded all the various genre and species of the animal kingdom on earth; hence arises the strange similarity in difference; it is the token of a universal pattern, though not of a common parentage, a mutual relation between them, but not a development of one out of the other by natural selection, as Darwin thinks. </p>
       
 
<ref name="term_69892"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/people-s-dictionary-of-the-bible/cherub Cherub from People's Dictionary of the Bible]</ref>
== References ==
       
<references>
<ref name="term_15857"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/american-tract-society-bible-dictionary/cherub Cherub from American Tract Society Bible Dictionary]</ref>
<ref name="term_34895"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/fausset-s-bible-dictionary/cherub+(1) Cherub from Fausset's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_30982"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/easton-s-bible-dictionary/cherub Cherub from Easton's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_59033"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/king-james-dictionary/cherub Cherub from King James Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_99845"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/webster-s-dictionary/cherub Cherub from Webster's Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_72087"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/smith-s-bible-dictionary/cherub Cherub from Smith's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_50139"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-bible/cherub Cherub from Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_65643"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/morrish-bible-dictionary/cherub Cherub from Morrish Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_39234"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/holman-bible-dictionary/cherub Cherub from Holman Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_47609"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hawker-s-poor-man-s-concordance-and-dictionary/cherub Cherub from Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_31997"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/cherub Cherub from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_2198"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/international-standard-bible-encyclopedia/cherub Cherub from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia]</ref>
       
</references>
</references>

Latest revision as of 13:28, 13 October 2021

Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary [1]

כרב , plural כרבים . It appears, from Genesis 3:29, that this is a name given to angels; but whether it is the name of a distinct class of celestials, or designates the same order as the seraphim, we have no means of determining. But the term cherbim generally signifies those figures which Moses was commanded to make and place at each end of the mercy seat, or propitiatory, and which covered the ark with expanded wings in the most holy place of the Jewish tabernacle and temple. See   Exodus 25:18-19 . The original meaning of the term, and the shape or form of these, any farther than that they were alata animata, "winged creatures," is not certainly known. The word in Hebrew is sometimes taken for a calf or ox; and  Ezekiel 10:14 , sets down the face of a cherub as synonymous to the face of an ox. The word cherub, in Syriac and Chaldee, signifies to till or plough, which is the proper work of oxen. Cherub also signifies strong and powerful. Grotius says they were figures much like that of a calf; and Bochart, likewise, thinks that they were more like the figure of an ox than any thing beside; and Spencer is of the same mind. But Josephus says they were extraordinary creatures of a figure unknown to mankind. The opinion of most critics, taken, it seems, from   Ezekiel 1:9-10 , is, that they were figures composed of parts of various creatures; as a man, a lion, an ox, an eagle. But certainly we have no decided proof that the figures placed in the holy of holies, in the tabernacle, were of the same form with those described by Ezekiel. The contrary, indeed, seems rather indicated, because they looked down upon the mercy seat, which is an attribute not well adapted to a four-faced creature, like the emblematical cherubim seen by Ezekiel.

The cherubim of the sanctuary were two in number; one at each end of the mercy seat; which, with the ark, was placed exactly in the middle, between the north and south sides of the tabernacle. It was here that atonement was made, and that God was rendered propitious by the high priest sprinkling the blood upon and before the mercy seat,  Leviticus 16:14-15 . Here the glory of God appeared, and here he met his high priest, and by him his people, and from hence he gave forth his oracles; whence the whole holy place was called דביר , the oracle. These cherubim, it must be observed, had feet whereon they stood   2 Chronicles 3:13; and their feet were joined, in one continued beaten work, to the ends of the mercy seat which covered the ark: so that they were wholly over or above it. Those in the tabernacle were of beaten gold, being but of small dimensions,  Exodus 25:18; but those in the temple of Solomon were made of the wood of the olive tree overlaid with gold; for they were very large, extending their wings to the whole breadth of the oracle, which was twenty cubits,  1 Kings 6:23-28;  2 Chronicles 3:10-13 . They are called "cherubim of glory," not merely or chiefly on account of the matter or formation of them, but because they had the glory of God, or the glorious symbol of his presence, "the Shekinah,' resting between them. As this glory abode in the inward tabernacle, and as the figures of the cherubim represented the angels who surrounded the manifestation of the divine presence in the world above, that tabernacle was rendered a fit image of the court of heaven, in which light it is considered every where in the Epistle to the Hebrews. See  Hebrews 4:14;  Hebrews 8:1;  Hebrews 9:8-9;  Hebrews 9:23-24;  Hebrews 12:22-23 .

The cherubim, it is true, have been considered by the disciples of Mr. Hutchinson as designed emblems of Jehovah himself, or rather of the Trinity of Persons in the Godhead, with man taken into the divine essence. But that God, who is a pure Spirit, without parts or passions, perfectly separate and remote from all matter, should command Moses to make material and visible images or emblematical representations of himself, is utterly improbable: especially, considering that he had repeatedly, expressly, and solemnly forbidden every thing of this kind in the second commandment of the moral law, delivered from Mount Sinai, amidst thunder and lightning, "blackness, darkness, and tempest," pronouncing with an audible and awful voice, while "the whole mount quaked greatly, and the sound of the trumpet waxed louder and louder, Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, nor the likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or in the earth beneath, or in the water under the earth." Hence the solemn caution of Moses,  Deuteronomy 4:15 , &c: "Take ye good heed unto yourselves, (for ye saw no manner of similitude on the day the Lord spake unto you in Horeb out of the midst of the fire,) lest ye corrupt yourselves, and make you a graven image, the similitude of any figure, the likeness of male or female, of any beast that is on the earth, of any winged fowl that flieth in the air, of any thing that creepeth on the ground, of any fish that is in the waters." Hence God's demand by his prophet: "To what will ye liken me, or shall I be equal, saith the Holy One?" And hence the censure of the inspired penman,  Psalms 106:20 : They changed their glory into the similitude of an ox that eateth grass." Add to this, that in most or all of the places where the cherubim are mentioned in the Scriptures, God is expressly distinguished from them. Thus, "He," the Lord, "placed at the east of the garden cherubim, and a flaming sword,"  Genesis 3:24 . "He rode on a cherub and did fly,"

 Psalms 18:10 . "He sitteth between the cherubim,"  Psalms 99:1 . "He dwelleth between the cherubim,"  Psalms 80:1 . We also read of "the glory of the God of Israel going up, from the cherub whereupon he was, to the threshold of the house,"  Ezekiel 9:3 . And again, "The glory of the Lord went up from the cherub, and the court was full of the brightness of the Lord's glory,"  Ezekiel 10:4 . And again, "The glory of the Lord departed from off the threshold, and stood over the cherubim,"  Ezekiel 10:18 . In all these passages the glory of the Lord, that is, the Shekinah, the glorious symbol of his presence, is distinguished from the cherubim; and not the least intimation is given in these passages, or any others, of the Scripture, that the cherubim were images or emblematical representations of him. Mr. Parkhurst's laborious effort to establish Mr. Hutchinson's opinion on the subject of the cherubim, in his Hebrew Lexicon, sub voce, is so obviously fanciful and contradictory, that few will be converted to this strange opinion. It seems much more probable that, as most eminent divines have supposed, the cherubim represented the angels who surround the divine presence in heaven. Accordingly, they had their faces turned toward the mercy seat, where God was supposed to dwell, whose glory the angels in heaven always behold, and upon which their eyes are continually fixed; as they are also upon Christ, the true propitiatory, which mystery of redemption, they "desire," St. Peter tells us, "to look into,"   1 Peter 1:12 : a circumstance evidently signified by the faces of the cherubim being turned inward, and their eyes fixed on the mercy seat. We may here also observe that, allowing St. Peter in this passage to allude to the cherubic figures, which, from his mode of expression, can scarcely be doubted, this amounts to a strong presumption that the cherubim represented, not so much one order, as "the angels" in general, all of whom are said to "desire to look into" the subjects of human redemption, and to all whose orders, "the principalities and powers in heavenly places, the manifold wisdom of God is made known by the church." In Ezekiel, the cherubic figures are evidently connected with the dispensations of providence; and they have therefore appropriate forms, emblematical of the strength, wisdom, swiftness, and constancy, with which the holy angels minister in carrying on God's designs: but in the sanctuary they are connected with the administration of grace; and they are rather adoring beholders, than actors, and probably appeared under forms more simple. As to the living creatures, improperly rendered "beasts" in our translation,  Revelation 4:7 , some think them a hieroglyphical representation, not of the qualities of angels, but of those of real Christians; especially of those in the suffering and active periods of the church. The first a lion, signifying their undaunted courage, manifested in meeting with confidence the greatest sufferings; the second a calf or ox, emblematical of unwearied patience; the third with the face of a man, representing prudence and compassion; the fourth a flying eagle, signifying activity and vigour. The four qualities thus emblematically set forth in these four living creatures, namely, undaunted courage, unwearied patience under sufferings, prudence united with kindness, and vigorous activity, are found, more or less, in the true members of Christ's church in every age and nation. But others have imagined that this representation might be intended to intimate also that these qualities would especially prevail in succeeding ages of the church, in the order in which they are here placed: that is, that in the first age true Christians would be eminent for the courage, fortitude, and success, wherewith they should spread the Gospel; that in the next age they would manifest remarkable patience in bearing persecution, when they should be "killed all the day," like calves or oxen appointed for the slaughter; that in the subsequent age or ages, when the storms of persecution were blown over, and Christianity was generally spread through the whole Roman empire, knowledge and wisdom, piety and virtue, should increase, and the church should wear the face of a man, and excel in prudence, humanity, love, and good works; and that in ages still later, being reformed from various corruptions in doctrine and practice, and full of vigour and activity, it should carry the Gospel, as upon the wings of a flying eagle, to the remotest nations under heaven, "to every kindred, and tongue, and people." This is a thought which deserves some consideration. The four great monarchies of the earth had their prophetic emblems, taken both from metals and from beasts and birds; and it is not unreasonable to look for prophetic emblems of the one kingdom of Christ, in its varied and successive states. Perhaps, however, the most reasonable conclusion is, that, like the "living creatures" in the vision of Ezekiel, they are emblematical of the ministrations of angels in what pertains to those providential events which more particularly concern the church.

People's Dictionary of the Bible [2]

Cherub (plural Cherubim ). An order of celestial beings or symbolical representations quite distinct from angels, and often referred to in the Old Testament and in the book of Revelation. Angels are often sent on messages, but cherubim are not so described. The cherubim are variously represented as living creatures,  Genesis 3:24;  Ezekiel 1:1-28;  Revelation 4:1-11; or as images wrought in tapestry, gold, or wood,  Exodus 36:35;  Exodus 37:7;  Ezekiel 41:25; as having one, two, or four faces,  Exodus 25:20;  Ezekiel 41:18;  Ezekiel 10:14, as having two, four, or six wings,  1 Kings 6:27;  Ezekiel 1:6;  Revelation 4:8; in the simplest form, as in the golden figures above the ark of the covenant; or in the most complex and sublime form, as in Ezekiel's wonderful visions of the glory of God—discerning and ruling all things, and executing irresistibly and with the speed of thought all his wise and just decrees.  Ezekiel 1:10. The fullest of these descriptions represents the cherub as a winged figure, like a man in form, full of eyes, and with a four-fold head—of a man, a lion, an ox, and an eagle, with wheels turning every way, and speed like the lightning: presenting the highest earthly forms and powers of creation in harmonious and perfect union.  Ezekiel 1:1-28;  Ezekiel 10:1-22;  Ezekiel 41:1-26;  Revelation 4:1-11. Usually also the cherubim stand in a special nearness to God; they are engaged in the loftiest adoration and service, moving in instant accordance with his will,  Psalms 18:10;  Ezekiel 1:26;  Ezekiel 10:20;  Revelation 4:1-11; they are seen in the temple inseparably associated with the mercy-seat, "the cherubim of glory,"  Hebrews 9:5—made of the same mass of pure gold, bending reverently over the place of God's presence,  Psalms 99:1, where he met his people,  Numbers 7:89, accepting the blood of atonement,  Leviticus 16:14-16; they shone forth as their Saviour.  Psalms 80:1;  Isaiah 37:16. 2. A place in Babylonia.  Ezra 2:59;  Nehemiah 7:61.

American Tract Society Bible Dictionary [3]

Plural CHERUBIM, an order of celestial beings or symbolical representations often referred to in the Old Testament and in the book of Revelation. The cherubim are variously represented as living creatures,  Ezekiel 1:1-28   Revelation 4:1-11; or as images wrought in tapestry, gold, or wood,  Exodus 36:35   37:7   Ezekiel 41:25; as having one, two, or four faces,  Exodus 25:20   Ezekiel 10:14   41:18; as having two, four, or six wings,  1 Kings 6:27   Ezekiel 1:6   Revelation 4:8; in the simplest form, as in the golden figures above the ark of the covenant; or in the most complex and sublime form, as in Ezekiel's wonderful visions of the glory of God-discerning and ruling all things, and executing irresistibly and with the speed of thought all his wise and just decrees,  Ezekiel 1:1-28   10:1-22 . The fullest of these descriptions represents the cherub as a winged figure, like a man in form, full of eyes, and with a fourfold head-of a man, a lion, an ox, and an eagle-with wheels turning every way, and speed like the lightning; presenting the highest earthly forms and powers of creation in harmonious and perfect union,  Ezekiel 1:1-28   10:1-22   Revelation 1:4-11 . Usually also the cherubim stand in a special nearness to God; they are engaged in the loftiest adoration and service, moving in instant accordance with his will,  Psalm 18:10   Ezekiel 1:26   10:20   Revelation 4:1-11; they are seen in the temple inseparably associated with the mercy-seat-made of the same mass of pure gold,  Exodus 25:19 , bending reverently over the place of God's presence,  Psalm 99:1 , where he met his people,  Numbers 7:89 , accepted the blood of atonement,  Leviticus 16:14-16 , and shone forth as their Savior,  Psalm 80:1 .

Easton's Bible Dictionary [4]

 Genesis 3:24 Exodus 25:17-20 26:1,31 Numbers 7:89 1 Samuel 4:4 Isaiah 37:16 Psalm 80:1 99:1 Ezekiel 1:4-14 Revelation 4:6 Hebrews 9:5

The cherubim were symbolical. They were intended to represent spiritual existences in immediate contact with Jehovah. Some have regarded them as symbolical of the chief ruling power by which God carries on his operations in providence ( Psalm 18:10 ). Others interpret them as having reference to the redemption of men, and as symbolizing the great rulers or ministers of the church. Many other opinions have been held regarding them which need not be referred to here. On the whole, it seems to be most satisfactory to regard the interpretation of the symbol to be variable, as is the symbol itself.

Their office was, (1) on the expulsion of our first parents from Eden, to prevent all access to the tree of life; and (2) to form the throne and chariot of Jehovah in his manifestation of himself on earth. He dwelleth between and sitteth on the cherubim ( 1 Samuel 4:4;  Psalm 80:1;  Ezekiel 1:26,28 ).

King James Dictionary [5]

CHERUB, n. plu. Cherubs, but the Hebrew plural cherubim is also used.

A figure composed of various creatures, as a man, an ox, an eagle or lion. The first mention of cherubs is in  Genesis 3:24 , where the figure is not described, but their office was, with a flaming sword, to keep or guard the way of the tree of life. The two cherubs which Moses was commanded to make at the ends of the Mercy seat, were to be of beaten work of gold and their wings were to extend over the Mercy seat, their faces towards each other, and between them was the residence of the Deity.  Exodus 15 . The cherubs, in Ezekiels vision, had each four heads or faces, the hands of a man and wings. The four faces were, the face of a bull, that of a man, that of a lion, and that of an eagle. They had the likeness of a man.  Ezekiel 4 , and 10. In  2 Samuel 22:11 , and  Psalms 18 ., Jehovah is represented as riding on a cherub, and flying on the wings of the wind. In the celestial hierarchy, cherubs are represented as spirits next in order to seraphs. The hieroglyphical and emblematical figures embroidered on the vails of the tabernacle are called cherubs of curious or skilful work.  Exodus 26 .

Webster's Dictionary [6]

(1): (n.) A beautiful child; - so called because artists have represented cherubs as beautiful children.

(2): (n.) One of a order of angels, variously represented in art. In European painting the cherubim have been shown as blue, to denote knowledge, as distinguished from the seraphim (see Seraph), and in later art the children's heads with wings are generally called cherubs.

(3): (n.) A symbolical winged figure of unknown form used in connection with the mercy seat of the Jewish Ark and Temple.

(4): (n.) A mysterious composite being, the winged footstool and chariot of the Almighty, described in Ezekiel i. and x.

Smith's Bible Dictionary [7]

Cher'ub.

1. Apparently a place in Babylonia, from which some persons of doubtful extraction returned to Judea, with Zerubbabel.  Ezra 2:59;  Nehemiah 7:61.

2. See Cherubim .

Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [8]

CHERUB (  Ezra 2:59 ,   Nehemiah 7:61 ). One of the places from which certain families, on the return from Babylon, failed to prove their register as genuine branches of the Israelite people. See Charaathalan.

Morrish Bible Dictionary [9]

Place in the East from which some returned to the land of Judah.  Ezra 2:59;  Nehemiah 7:61 .

Holman Bible Dictionary [10]

 Ezra 2:59

Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary [11]

See Cherubim

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [12]

Copyright StatementThese files are public domain. Bibliography InformationMcClintock, John. Strong, James. Entry for 'Cherub'. Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature. https://www.studylight.org/encyclopedias/eng/tce/c/cherub.html. Harper & Brothers. New York. 1870.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [13]

kē´rub ( כּרוּב , kerūbh , Χερούβ , Cheroúb , Χαρούβ , Charoúb ): A place in Babylonia from which people whose genealogies had fallen into confusion went up at the return from exile ( Ezra 2:59;  Nehemiah 7:61 ); unidentified. In 1 Esdras 5:36 we read "Charaathalan leading them, and Allar," a phrase that seems to have arisen through confusion of the names in the passages cited above.

References