Easton's Bible Dictionary

(Kiana) #1

  • CHANNEL (1.) The bed of the sea or of a river (Psalm 18:15; Isaiah 8:7).


(2.) The “chanelbone” (Job 31:22 marg.), properly “tube” or “shaft,” an
old term for the collar-bone.



  • CHAPEL a holy place or sanctuary, occurs only in Amos 7:13, where one
    of the idol priests calls Bethel “the king’s chapel.”

  • CHAPITER the ornamental head or capital of a pillar. Three Hebrew
    words are so rendered. (1.) Cothereth (1 Kings 7:16; 2 Kings 25:17; 2
    Chronicles 4:12), meaning a “diadem” or “crown.” (2.) Tzepheth (2
    Chronicles 3:15). (3.) Rosh (Exodus 36:38; 38:17, 19, 28), properly a
    “head” or “top.”

  • CHAPTER The several books of the Old and New Testaments were from
    an early time divided into chapters. The Pentateuch was divided by the
    ancient Hebrews into 54 parshioth or sections, one of which was read in
    the synagogue every Sabbath day (Acts. 13:15). These sections were
    afterwards divided into 669 sidrim or orders of unequal length. The
    Prophets were divided in somewhat the same manner into haphtaroth or
    passages.


In the early Latin and Greek versions of the Bible, similar divisions of the
several books were made. The New Testament books were also divided
into portions of various lengths under different names, such as titles and
heads or chapters.


In modern times this ancient example was imitated, and many attempts of
the kind were made before the existing division into chapters was fixed.
The Latin Bible published by Cardinal Hugo of St. Cher in A.D. 1240 is
generally regarded as the first Bible that was divided into our present
chapters, although it appears that some of the chapters were fixed as early
as A.D. 1059. This division into chapters came gradually to be adopted in
the published editions of the Hebrew, with some few variations, and of the
Greek Scriptures, and hence of other versions.



  • CHARASHIM craftsmen, a valley named in 1 Chronicles 4:14. In
    Nehemiah 11:35 the Hebrew word is rendered “valley of craftsmen” (R.V.
    marg., Geha-rashim). Nothing is known of it.

  • CHARGER a bowl or deep dish. The silver vessels given by the heads of
    the tribes for the services of the tabernacle are so named (Numbers 7:13,

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