(Ethiopian) Woman Cushite
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [1]
kush´ı̄t : In Numbers 12:1 Moses is condemned by his sister Miriam and his brother Aaron "because of the Cushite woman האשׁה הכּשׁית , hā - 'ishshāh ha - kushı̄th whom he had married"; and the narrator immediately adds by way of needed explanation, "for he had married a Cushite woman" (אשׁה כשׁית , 'ishshāh khushı̄th ). Views regarding this person have been of two general classes: (1) She is to be identified with Zipporah ( Exodus 2:21 and elsewhere), Moses' Midianite wife, who is here called "the Gushite," either in scorn of her dark complexion (compare Jeremiah 13:23 ) and foreign origin (so most older exegetes), or as a consequence of an erroneous notion of the late age when this apocryphal addition, "because of the Cushite," etc., was inserted in the narrative (so Wellhansen). (2) She is a woman whom Moses took to wife after the death of Zipporah, really a Cushite (Ethiopian) by race, whether the princess of Meroë of whom Josephus ( Ant. , II, x, 2) romances (so Targum of Jonathan ), or one of the "mixed multitude" ( Exodus 12:38; compare Numbers 11:4 ) that accompanied the Hebrews on their wanderings (so Ewald and most). Dillmann suggests a compromise between the two classes of views, namely, that this woman is a mere "variation in the saga" from the wife elsewhere represented as Midianite, yet because of this variation she was understood by the author as distinct from Zipporah. The implication of the passage, in any case, is clearly that this connection of Moses tended to injure his prestige in the eyes of race-proud Hebrews, and, equally, that in the author's opinion such a view of the matter was obnoxious to God.