Cush

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Fausset's Bible Dictionary [1]

Cush, "the Benjamite," heading of Psalm 7. An enigmatic title for Saul the Benjamite, with an allusion to the similar sounding name of Saul's father, Kish. Cush or the Ethiopian expresses one black at heart, who" cannot change his skin" or heart ( Jeremiah 13:23;  Amos 9:7). David in this  Psalms 7:4 alludes to Saul's gratuitous enmity and his own sparing "him that without cause is mine enemy," namely, in the cave at Engedi, when Saul was in his power (1 Samuel 24).

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [2]

kush ( כּוּשׁ , kūsh ):

1. The Ancestor of Many Nations

(1) The first of the sons of Ham, from whom sprang Seba, Havilah, Sabtah, Raamah and Sabtecah. He was also the father of Nimrod, who rounded Babel (Babylon) and the other great states of Shinar or Babylonia ( Genesis 10:6-8 ). The meaning of the name is uncertain.

(2) The name of the country around which the Gihon flowed ( Genesis 2:13 ), rendered "Ethiopia" in the King James Version, but in view of the distance of that country from the other rivers mentioned, this seems to be an unlikely identification.

2. A D istrict of the Garden of Eden

Fried. Delitzsch has suggested ( Wo lag das Paradies? 74ff) that the watercourse in question is the canal Gu - h̬andê or Arah̬tu , which, coming from the South, entered Babylon a little to the East of the Euphrates, and, flowing alongside the Festival-Street, entered the Euphrates to the North of Nebuchadrezzar's palace. Koldewey ( Tempel von Babylon und Borsippa , 38) regards the Gu - h̬andê as the section of the Euphrates itself at this point. There is no indication, however, that the district which it enclosed was ever called Kûšu or Cush, and the suppression of the final syllable of Gu - h̬andê would remain unexplained. Moreover, the identification of Cush with a possible Cas , for Kasdu , "Chaldea," seems likewise improbable, especially as that name could only have been applied, in early times, to the district bordering on the Persian Gulf (see Chaldea ).

3. Probably Not in Asia Minor

Another theory is, that the Cush of  Genesis 2:13 is the Kusu of certain Assyrian letters, where it seems to designate a district in the neighborhood of Cappadocia. This identification apparently leads us back to an ancient tradition at one time current in the East, but later forgotten, which caused the Pyramus river to assume the name of Jı̂hûn (i.e. Gihon). This stream rises in the mountains Northeast of the Gulf of Alexandretta, and, taking a southwesterly course, flows into the Mediterranean near Karatash. Though nearer than the Ethiopian Cush, this is still too far West, and therefore unsatisfactory as an identification - all the streams or waterways of the Garden of Eden ought to flow through the same district.

4. The Ethiopian Cush

(3) The well-known country of Cush or Ethiopia, from Syene ( Ezekiel 29:10 ) southward - E gyptian Kôs , Babylonian Kûšu , Assyrian Kûsu . This name sometimes denotes the land ( Isaiah 11:11;  Isaiah 18:1;  Zephaniah 3:10;  Ezekiel 29:10;  Job 28:19;  Esther 1:1;  Esther 8:9 ); sometimes the peopl ( Isaiah 20:4;  Jeremiah 46:9;  Ezekiel 38:5 ); but is in many passages uncertain. Notwithstanding that the descendants of Ham are always regarded as non-Semites, the Ethiopians, Ge'ez, as they called themselves, spoke a Semitic language of special interest on account of its likeness to Himyaritic, and its illustration of certain forms in Assyro-Babylonian. These Cushites were in all probability migrants from another (more northerly) district, and akin to the Canaanites - like them, dark, but by no means black, and certainly not Negroes. W. Max Müller ( Asien und Europa , 113 note) states that it cannot be proved whether the Egyptians had quite black neighbors (on the South). In earlier times they are represented as brown, and later as brown mingled with black, implying that negroes only came to their knowledge as a distinct and extensive race in comparatively late times. Moses' (first?) wife ( Numbers 12:1 ) was certainly therefore not a Negress, but simply a Cushite woman, probably speaking a Semitic language - prehistoric Ge'ez or Ethiopian (see Cushite Woman ). In all probability Semitic tribes were classed as Hamitic simply because they acknowledged the supremacy of the Hamitic Egyptians, just as the non-Sem Elamites were set down as Semites ( Genesis 10:22 ) on account of their acknowledging Babylonian supremacy. It is doubtful whether the Hebrews, in ancient times, knew of the Negro race - they probably became acquainted with them long after the Egyptians.

5. Negroes Probably Not Included

In the opinion of W. Max Müller ( Asien und Europa , 112), the Egyptians, when they became acquainted with the Negroes, having no word to express this race, classed them with the neḥesē , which thereafter included the Negroes. If the Hebrew name Phinehas ( Pı̄ - neḥāṣ ) be really Egyptian and mean "the black," there is still no need to suppose that this meant "the Negro," for no Israelite would have borne a name with such a signification. The treasurer of Candace queen of Meroë ( Acts 8:27-39 ) - the Ethiopian eunuch - was an Abyssinian, not a Negro; and being an educated man, was able to read the Hebrew Scriptures in the Greek (Septuagint) version. Cush ( mât Kusi , pr. Kushi ) is frequently mentioned in the Assyrian inscriptions in company with Meluh̬h̬a ( Meroh̬h̬a ) to indicate Ethiopia and Meroë. See Eden; Ethiopia; Table Of Nations .

References