Easton's Bible Dictionary

(Kiana) #1

  • CHAMELEON a species of lizard which has the faculty of changing the
    colour of its skin. It is ranked among the unclean animals in Leviticus
    11:30, where the Hebrew word so translated is coah (R.V., “land
    crocodile”). In the same verse the Hebrew tanshemeth, rendered in
    Authorized Version “mole,” is in Revised Version “chameleon,” which is
    the correct rendering. This animal is very common in Egypt and in the
    Holy Land, especially in the Jordan valley.

  • CHAMOIS only in Deuteronomy 14:5 (Hebrews zemer), an animal of
    the deer or gazelle species. It bears this Hebrew name from its leaping or
    springing. The animal intended is probably the wild sheep (Ovis
    tragelephus), which is still found in Sinai and in the broken ridges of Stony
    Arabia. The LXX. and Vulgate render the word by camelopardus, i.e., the
    giraffe; but this is an animal of Central Africa, and is not at all known in
    Syria.

  • CHAMPION (1 Samuel 17:4, 23), properly “the man between the two,”
    denoting the position of Goliath between the two camps. Single combats
    of this kind at the head of armies were common in ancient times. In ver. 51
    this word is the rendering of a different Hebrew word, and properly
    denotes “a mighty man.”

  • CHANCE (Luke 10:31). “It was not by chance that the priest came down
    by that road at that time, but by a specific arrangement and in exact
    fulfilment of a plan; not the plan of the priest, nor the plan of the wounded
    traveller, but the plan of God. By coincidence (Gr. sungkuria) the priest
    came down, that is, by the conjunction of two things, in fact, which were
    previously constituted a pair in the providence of God. In the result they
    fell together according to the omniscient Designer’s plan. This is the true
    theory of the divine government.” Compare the meeting of Philip with the
    Ethiopian (Acts 8:26, 27). There is no “chance” in God’s empire.
    “Chance” is only another word for our want of knowledge as to the way in
    which one event falls in with another (1 Samuel 6:9; Ecclesiastes 9:11).

  • CHANCELLOR one who has judicial authority, literally, a “Lord of
    judgement;” a title given to the Persian governor of Samaria (Ezra 4:8, 9,
    17).

  • CHANGES OF RAIMENT were reckoned among the treasures of rich men
    (Genesis 45:22; Judges 14:12, 13; 2 Kings 5:22, 23).

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