Topical Encyclopedia
The term "golden" in the Bible often refers to the precious metal gold, which holds significant symbolic and material value throughout the Scriptures. Gold is frequently associated with wealth, purity, and divine glory, and it is used in various contexts to convey these themes.
Symbolism and Use in WorshipGold is prominently featured in the construction of sacred objects and places of worship. In the Old Testament, God commands the use of gold in the Tabernacle and later in Solomon's Temple. The Ark of the Covenant, for instance, is overlaid with pure gold (
Exodus 25:10-11). The mercy seat and the cherubim on the Ark are also made of gold, symbolizing God's holiness and majesty (
Exodus 25:17-18).
Solomon's Temple is another example where gold is extensively used. The inner sanctuary, the altar, and various furnishings are overlaid with gold, reflecting the splendor and glory of God (
1 Kings 6:20-22). The use of gold in these sacred spaces underscores the idea of divine perfection and the preciousness of God's presence among His people.
Gold in Visions and PropheciesIn prophetic literature, gold often symbolizes kingdoms and divine authority. In the Book of Daniel, King Nebuchadnezzar's dream features a statue with a head of gold, representing the Babylonian Empire (
Daniel 2:32, 38). This imagery conveys the empire's power and splendor, yet also its temporal nature, as the statue is ultimately destroyed by a stone "not cut by human hands" (
Daniel 2:34).
The Book of Revelation also uses gold to depict heavenly realities. The New Jerusalem is described as having streets of pure gold, like transparent glass, illustrating the city's divine origin and eternal beauty (
Revelation 21:21). The imagery of gold in Revelation emphasizes the purity and holiness of God's eternal kingdom.
Moral and Ethical ImplicationsWhile gold is often associated with positive attributes, the Bible also warns against the dangers of wealth and materialism. In the New Testament, Jesus advises storing up treasures in heaven rather than on earth, where "moth and rust destroy" (
Matthew 6:19-20). The Apostle Paul echoes this sentiment, cautioning that the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil (
1 Timothy 6:10).
The account of the golden calf in
Exodus 32 serves as a stark reminder of the potential for idolatry. The Israelites, in Moses' absence, fashion a calf from their gold jewelry and worship it, inciting God's wrath (
Exodus 32:2-4). This incident highlights the tension between the material value of gold and the spiritual danger of elevating it above God.
ConclusionThe concept of "golden" in the Bible is multifaceted, encompassing themes of divine glory, purity, and the potential pitfalls of material wealth. Gold's use in worship and its symbolic presence in visions and prophecies underscore its significance in conveying the majesty and holiness of God, while also serving as a caution against idolatry and the love of earthly riches.
Easton's Bible Dictionary
Golden calf
(Exodus 32:4, 8; Deuteronomy 9:16; Nehemiah 9:18). This was a molten image of a calf which the idolatrous Israelites formed at Sinai. This symbol was borrowed from the custom of the Egyptians. It was destroyed at the command of Moses (Exodus 32:20). (see AARON; MOSES.)
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
1. (
a.) Made of gold; consisting of gold.
2. (a.) Having the color of gold; as, the golden grain.
3. (a.) Very precious; highly valuable; excellent; eminently auspicious; as, golden opinions.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
CALF, GOLDENkaf, gol'-d'-n:
I. THE NAME
II. ANCIENT CALF WORSHIP
1. Narrative of Aaron's Golden Calf
2. Jeroboam's Golden Calves
III. ATTITUDE OF ELIJAH TO THE BULL SYMBOLS
IV. ATTITUDE OF AMOS AND HOSEA TO THE BULL SYMBOLS
LITERATURE
I. The Name.
The term `eghel, is the ordinary Hebrew name for a male calf and is as flexible as the English name, applying to any animal from one a year old (Micah 6:6) or perhaps younger (Leviticus 9:3; Leviticus 12:6) to one three years old (Genesis 15:9; compare Jeremiah 34:18, 19). It has been thought that the habitual use of this diminutive term for the golden bulls which Aaron and Jeroboam set up-especially as it is twice made feminine (Hosea 10:5; Hosea 13:2)-was intended to indicate their small size and thus to express contempt for them. This however, though plausible, is by no means certain. It was not their size which made these bulls contemptible in the eyes of the prophets, and besides there were no life-size bulls of molten gold in any surrounding countries so far as known. The reference to female calves that were kissed (Hosea 13:2), presumably at Bethel, may refer not to the worship of the bulls, but to their female counterparts, since in all other countries such female deities invariably accompanied the bull gods. Bethel may be especially mentioned because it was the "king's sanctuary" (Amos 7:13) or because of the multitude of altars and high places found there (Hosea 10:8; compare Hosea 8:11 Amos 5:26). False worship is also mentioned in connection with Jeroboam's apostasy, at Gilgal and Gilead (Hosea 4:15; Hosea 12:11 Amos 4:4; Amos 5:5), Samaria (Hosea 8:6; Hosea 10:5; Hosea 13:2, 16); and Beersheba (Amos 5:5; Amos 8:14) where no bulls had been set up by Jeroboam so far as stated. That these places receive more condemnation than Dan-which is explicitly mentioned in only one passage (Amos 8:14) though it was a chief center of the bull worship (1 Kings 12:30)-may be due to the fact that the worship of the female deity was the more popular. This was certainly true in neighboring countries and also in other cities in Palestine, as has recently been proved by the excavations (see below).
II. Ancient Calf Worship.
The origin of animal worship is hidden in obscurity, but reverence for the bull and cow is found widespread among the most ancient historic cults. Even in the prehistoric age the influence of the bull symbol was so powerful that it gave its name to one of the most important signs of the Zodiac, and from early historic times the horns of the bull were the familiar emblem of the rays of the sun, and solar gods were very commonly represented as bull-gods (Jensen, Kosmologie, 62-90; Winckler, Altorientalische Forschungen, 1901-5, passim; Jeremias, Das Alter der bah. Astronomie, 1909, passim). The Egyptians, close neighbors of the Hebrews, in all eras from that of the Exodus onward, worshipped living bulls at Memphis (not Mendes, as EB) and Hellopolls as incarnations of Ptah and Ra, while one of the most elaborate rituals was connected with the life-size image of the Hathor-cow (Naville, Deir el Bahari, Part I (1907), 163-67), while the sun was revered as the "valiant bull" and the reigning Pharaoh as "Bull of Bulls." But far more important in this connection is the fact that "calf" worship was almost if not quite universal among all the ancient Semitic peoples. If the immediate ancestors of Abraham did not revere this deity, they were certainly quite unlike their relatives, the Babylonians, among whom, according to all tradition, they lived before they migrated to Palestine (Genesis 11:28, 30; Josephus, Ant, I, vi, 5), for the Babylonians revered the bull as the symbol of their greatest gods, Ann and Sin and Marduk-the ideograph of a young bullock forming a part of the latter's name-while Hadadrimmon, an important Amorite deity, whose attributes remarkably resemble those of Yahweh (see Ward, AJSL, XXV, 175-85; Clay, Amurru (1909), 87-89), is pictured standing on the back of a bull. In Phoenicia also the bull was a sacred animal, as well as in northern Syria where it ranked as one of the chief Hittite deities its images receiving devout worship (see further, Sayce, Encyclopedia of Rel. and Ethics, under the word "Bull"). Among all these peoples the cow goddess was given at least equal honor. In Babylonia the goddess Ishtar has the cow for her symbol on very ancient seal cylinders, and when this nude or half-nude goddess appears in Palestine she often stands on a bull or cow (see William Hayes Ward, Cylinders and Other Ancient Oriental Seals), and under slightly different forms this same goddess is revered in Arabia, Moab, Phoenicia, Syria and elsewhere, while among the Semitic Canaanites the bull was the symbol of Baal, and the cow of Astarte (see particularly Barton, Hebraica, IX, 133-63; X, 1-74, and Semitic Origins, chapter vii; Driver, "Astarte" in DB). Recent excavations in Palestine have shown that during all eras no heathen worship was as popular as that of Astarte in her various forms (see S. A. Cook, Rel. of Ancient Palestine, 1909). That she once is found wearing ram's horns (PEFS (1903), 227) only reveals her nature more clearly as the goddess of fertility. Her relation to the sacred fish at Carnion in Gilead and to the doves of Ascalon, as well as to female prostitution and to Nature's "resurrection" and fruitage, had been previously well known, as also her relation to the moon which governs the seasons. Is there any rational motif which can account for this widespread "calf" worship? Is it conceivable that this cult could so powerfully influence such intelligent and rather spiritually-minded nations as the Egyptians and Babylonians if it were wholly irrational and contained no spiritual content? And is there no rational explanation behind this constant fusion of the deity which controls the breeding of cattle with the deity which controls vegetation? How did the bull come to represent the "corn spirit," so that the running of a bull through the corn (the most destructive act) came to presage good crops; and how did the rending of a bull, spilling his life blood on the soil, increase fertility? (See Fraser, Golden Bough, II, 291-93, 344.) The one real controlling motif of all these various representations and functions of the "calf" god may be found in the ancient awe, especially among the Semites, for the Mystery of Life. This seems to offer a sufficient reason why the bull, which is a most conspicuous example of life-giving power, should be so closely connected with the reproductive processes of the animal and vegetable kingdoms and also with the sun, which from earliest historic times was considered as preeminently the "giver of life." Bull worship was not always an exhibition of gross animalism, but, certainly in Bible times, often represented a concept which was the product of reflection upon one of the deepest mysteries of Nature. Few hymns in Egypt or Babylon express higher spiritual knowledge and aspiration than those addressed to the bull gods or to others honored with this title, e.g. this one to the god Sin of Ur, the "heifer of Anu," "Strong young bull; with strong horns,. with beard of lapislazuli color. self-created, full of developed fruit. Mother-womb who has taken up his abode, begetter of all things, exalted habitation among living creatures; O merciful gracious father, in whose hand rests the life of the whole world; O Lord, thy divinity is full of awe like the far-off heaven and the broad ocean!" (Rogers, Religion of Babylonia and Assyria (1908), 164). Many modern scholars believe that the primitive Egyptians and Babylonians really thought of their earthly and heavenly gods as animals (see especially Maspero, Bulletin critique, 1886; Revue de l'histoiredes religions, 1888), but it seems certain that at least as early as the date of the Exodus these stars and beasts were not regarded by all as being themselves deities, but rather as symbols or representations of deity (Davis and Cobern, Ancient Egypt, 281-89; Brugsch, Die Aegyptologie, I, 135; Chwolsohn, Die Ssabier u. der Ssabismus, II, 134).
1. Narrative of Aaron's Golden Calf:
The text of Exodus 32 is certainly composite (see e.g. Bacon's "Exodus" in the place cited and DB), and some words and phrases are a verbal dupli care of the narrative of Jeroboam's calf worship (compare Exodus 32:4 with 1 Kings 12:28, and see parallel columns in Driver's Deteronomy). Some Bible critics so analyze the text as to make the entire calf story a later element, without ancient basis, added to some short original statement like Exodus 32:7-11, for the sake of satirizing Jeroboam's bull worship and its non-Levitical priesthood (see e.g. Kuenen, Hexateuch). Most recent critics have however accepted the incident as an ancient memory or historic fact attested by the oldest sources, and used thus by the Deuteronomist (Deuteronomy 9), though the verbal form may have been affected by the later editor's scorn of the northern apostasy. It seems clearly unreasonable to suppose that a Hebrew writer at any era would so fiercely abuse his own ancestors, without any traditional basis for his statements, merely for the sake of adding a little more which cast reproach upon his northern neighbors, and it seems equally unlikely that any such baseless charges would have been accepted as true by the slandered nation. The old expositors, accepting the essential historicity of the account, generally followed Philo and the early Fathers in supposing this calf of gold was an image of the Apis or Mnevis bulls of Egypt, and this is occasionally yet advocated by some Egyptologists (e.g. Steindorf, Ancient Egypt (1903), 167; compare also Jeremias, Old Testament in Light of Ancient East (1911), II, 138). The objections made to this view by the skeptics of the 18th century, based on the supposed impossibility of such chemical and mechanical skill being possessed at that era, have mostly been made obsolete by recent discovery. The common modern objection that this could not have been Apis worship because the Apis was a living bull, is by no means conclusive, since images of Apis are not uncommon and were probably worshipped in the temple itself. It may be added that a renaissance of this worship occurred at this very era. So Erman, Handbook of Egyptian Rel. (1907), 23-79. Modern Bible scholars, however, are practically unanimous in the opinion that the Golden Calf, if worshipped at all, must have been a representation of a Semitic, not an Egyptian, deity. In favor of this it may be suggested:
(1) It was an era when each deity was considered as the god of a particular country and it would seem impossible that a native Egyptian god should be thought of as joining with Egypt's enemies and assisting them to reach a land over which he had no control.
(2) The Israelite religion shows little influence from Egypt, but was immensely influenced from Canaan and Babylon, Apis only being mentioned once (Jeremiah 46:20 (translated "heifer"); compare Ezekiel 20:7, 8, and see Brugsch, Steininschrift und Bibelwort, passim, and Robertson, Early Religion of Israel, 217).
(3) The bull and cow are now known to have been ordinary symbols for the most popular deities which were worshipped by all the race-relatives of the Hebrews and nowhere more devoutly than in Canaan and in the adjoining districts (see above).
(4) Some of the chief gods of the pasture land of Goshen, where the Hebrews had resided for centuries (Genesis 47:6; Genesis 50:8), were Semitic gods which were worshipped not only by the Edomitic Bedouin and other foreigners living there by the "pools of Pithom" (compare Exodus 1:11) but by the native Egyptians, Ramses II even naming a daughter after one of these. The special god of this district had as its symbol a bull calf, and one inscription actually speaks of the statue of a "golden calf of 600 pounds weight" which it was the custom to dedicate annually to one of these Semitic gods, while another inscription mentions a statue of gold "a cubit in height" (Breasted, Ancient Records of Egypt (1905), III, 630-38; Naville, Goshen, Store City of Pithom; Erman, Handbook; 173-74; Brugsch, op. cit.).
(5) The chief proof, however, is the statement of the text that the feast in connection with this worship was a "feast to Yahweh" (Exodus 32:5). When Moses disappeared for forty days in the Mount, it was not unnatural that the people should turn back to the visible symbols worshipped by their ancestors, and should give to them the new name or new attributes which had been attached to deity by Moses. The worship was condemned for much the same reason as that of Jeroboam's calves (see next section).
2. Jeroboam's Golden Calves:
Though this passage (1 Kings 12:26-33; compare 2 Chronicles 10:14, 15) may have been reedited later, "there is no reason to infer that any detail of fact is underived from the olden time" (Burney, Hebrew Text of Kings (1902), and DB). These calves which Jeroboam set up were doubtless bulls (1 Kings 12:28, Hebrew) but at least as early as Hosea's time it seems probable (see above) that the more licentious worship of the feminine principle had been added to the official worship (Hosea 10:5; Hosea 13:2, Hebrew). This which else here naturally and universally accompanied the bull worship could most truly be called "the sin of Samaria" (Amos 8:14) and be classed as the "sin of Jeroboam" (1 Kings 14:9, 16; 1 Kings 16:26 2 Kings 10:29). There is no sufficient reason for explaining the term "molten" in any other an its most natural and usual sense (Exodus 32:8, 24 2 Kings 17:16 Deuteronomy 9:16), for molded metal idols were common in all eras in Palestine and the surrounding countries, though the core of the image might be molten or graven of some inferior metal overlaid with gold (Isaiah 30:22; Isaiah 40:19, Hebrew; Deuteronomy 7:25 Exodus 32:4). These bull images were undoubtedly intended to represent Yahweh (yet compare Robertson, op. cit., and Orr, Problem of Old Testament (1906), 145). The text explicitly identifies these images with Aaron's calf (1 Kings 12:28), so that nearly all the reasons given above to prove that Aaron's image represented not an Egyptian but an ancient Semitic deity are equally valid here. To these various other arguments may be added:
(1) The text itself states that it is Yahweh who brought them from Egypt (Hosea 2:15; Hosea 12:13; Hosea 13:4), whom they call "My lord," and to whom they swear (Hosea 2:16, King James Version margin; Hosea 4:15); and to whom they present their wine offerings, sacrifices and feasts (Hosea 8:13; Hosea 9:4, 5, Hebrew; compare Amos 5:8).
(2) Jehu, though he destroyed all Baal idols, never touched these bulls (2 Kings 10:28, 29).
(3) The ritual, though freer, was essentially that of the Jerusalem temple (1 Kings 12:32 Hosea 5:6 Amos 4:5; Amos 5:22, 23; see, Oettli, Greifswalder Studien (1895), quoted in DB, I, 342).
(4) Even the southern prophets recognized that it was Yahweh who had given Jeroboam the kingdom (1 Kings 11:31; 1 Kings 12:15, 24) and only Yahweh worship could have realized Jeroboam's purpose of attaching to the throne by this cult such devout citizens as would otherwise be drawn to Jerusalem to worship. It was to guard against this appeal which the national sanctuary made to devout souls that this counter worship had been established. As Budde says, "A foreign cult would only have driven the devout Ephraimites the more surely over to Jerusalem" (Rel. of Israel (1899), 113). Jeroboam was not attempting to shock the conscience of his religious adherents by making heathenism the state religion, but rather to win these pious worshippers of Yahweh to his cause.
(5) The places selected for the bull worship were places already sacred to Yahweh. This was preeminently true of Bethel which, centuries before Jerusalem had been captured from the Jebusites, had been identified with special revelations of Yahweh's presence (Genesis 13:3, 4; Genesis 28:19; Genesis 31:13; Genesis 35:15 1 Samuel 7:16 Hosea 12:4).
(6) The story shows that the allegiance of his most pious subjects was retained (1 Kings 12:20) and that not even Elijah fled to the Southern, supposing that the Northern Kingdom had accepted the worship of heathen gods as its state religion. Instead of this, Elijah, though the boldest opponent of the worship of Baal, is never reported as uttering one word against the bull worship at Dan and Bethel.
III. Attitude of Elijah to the Bull Symbols.
This surprising silence is variously explained. A few scholars, though without any historic or textual evidence for the charge, are sure that the Bible narratives (though written by southern men) are fundamentally defective at this point, otherwise they would report Elijah's antagonism to this cult. Other few, equally without evidence, are comfortably sure that he fully approved the ancient ancestral calf cult. Others, with more probability, explain his position on the ground that, though he may not have favored the bull symbol-which was never used by the Patriarchs so far as known, and certainly was not used as a symbol of Yahweh in the Southern Kingdom, or Hosea the northern prophet would have spoken of it-yet being himself a northern man of old ideals and simple habits, Elijah may have believed that, even with this handicap, the freer and more democratic worship carried on al the ancient holy places in the North was less dangerous than the elaborate and luxurious ritual of the aristocratic and exclusive priesthood of the South, which insisted upon political and religious centralization, and was dependent upon such enormous revenues for its support (compare 1 Kings 12:10, 14). At any rate it is self-evident that if Elijah had turned against Jeroboam and the state religion, it would have divided seriously the forces which needed to unite, in order to oppose with all energy the much fouler worship of Baal which just at this crisis, as never before or afterward, threatened completely to overwhelm the worship of Yahweh.
IV. Attitude of Amos and Hosea to the Bull Symbols.
It is easy to see why Hosea might fiercely condemn a ritual which Elijah might rightly tolerate.
(1) This calf worship may have deteriorated. Elijah lived closer to the time when the new state ritual was inaugurated and would naturally be at its best. Hosea lived at an era when he could trace the history of this experiment for nearly two cents, and could see clearly that these images had not helped but greatly hindered the development of the ethical and spiritual religion of Yahweh. Even if at first recognized as symbols, these images had become common idols (Hosea 12:11; Hosea 13:2, and passim). "This tiring became a sin" (1 Kings 12:30; 1 Kings 13:34). The history of religion shows many such instances wher the visible or verbal symbol which in one era had been a real aid to devotion at a later time became positively antagonistic to it (see IMAGES). As Baal was also worshipped under the form of a calf and as Yahweh himself was at times called "Baal" (Isaiah 54:5 Jeremiah 31:32 Hosea 2:16 Hebrew) this unethical tendency would be accelerated, as also by the political antagonism between Judah and Ephraim and the bitter hatred between the two rival priesthoods (compare 2 Chronicles 11:15; 2 Chronicles 13:9). Certain it is that by the middle of the 8th century the worship at Dan and Bethel had extended itself to many other points and had become so closely affiliated with the heathen worship as to be practically indistinguishable-at least when viewed from the later prophetic standpoint. But
(2) it cannot be doubted that the prophetic standpoint had changed in 200 years. As the influence of the northern worship had tended toward heathenism, so the influence of the southern worship of an imageless god had tended toward higher spiritual ideals. Elijah could not have recognized the epoch-making importance of an imageless temple. The constant pressure of this idea-God is Spirit-had developed a new spiritual conscience, which by the 8th century was so keen that the worship of Yahweh under the form of an image was not improperly considered as almost if not quite as bad as out-and-out heathenism, just as the Reformers of the 16th century regarded the Roman Catholic images as little better than idols (Hosea 8:5, 6; Hosea 11:2; Hosea 13:2; compare 2 Kings 17:16, 17). The ifluence of this new conscience is also seen in the fact that it is not simply or perhaps chiefly the "calves" which are condemned, but the spirit of ungodliness and unkindness which also made the orthodox worship in Jerusalem little if any better than that at Bethel (Hosea 6:4; Hosea 5:12, 14). The influence of this theology-God is Spirit-had so filled the souls of these prophets that even the sacrifices had lost their importance when unaccompanied by kindness and spiritual knowledge (Hosea 6:6; Hosea 7:1), and it is the absence of this essential spirit, rather than the form of worship, which Amos and Hosea condemn in the Northern Kingdom (Amos 2:6-8; Amos 3:10; Amos 4:1; Amos 5:7, 12-15, 21-24; 6:12; 8:4-6 Hosea 4:2, 3; Hosea 9:1; Hosea 10:12-14). These later prophets could also see, as Elijah could not possibly have seen, that unity of worship was imperatively needed, and that sacrifices in the old sacred "high places" must be discontinued. Only thus could superstitious fanaticism and religious disintegration be avoided. A miscellaneous and unregulated Yahweh cult might become almost as bad as heathenism. Indeed it might be worse if it gave the Baal spirit and interpretation to Yahweh worship.
See also ASTROLOGY, sec. II, 2.
LITERATURE.
Besides references above, see especially commentaries of Dillmann and Driver on Exodus; Kuenen, Religion of Israel; W. R. Smith, Religion of Semites, 93-113 and index; Konig, Hauptprobleme der altisraelitischen Religionsgeschichte; Baeth gen, Beitr. zur semit. Religionsgeschichte; Kittel, History of Hebrews; "Baal" and "Ashtoreth" in Encyclopedia of Rel. and Ethics (full lit.); "Golden Calf" in Jewish Encyclopedia for Rabbinical and Mohammedan lit.
Camden M. Cobern
CANDLESTICK, THE GOLDEN
kan'-d'-l-stik, gold'-'-n (menorah, literally "lamp-stand"): An important part of the furniture of the tabernacle and temples.
See TABERNACLE; TEMPLE; LAMP.
1. The Tabernacle:
The candlestick is first met with in the descriptions of the tabernacle (Exodus 25:31-39; Exodus 37:17-24). It was, with the utensils connected with it (snuffers, snuff dishes), to be made of pure beaten gold, of one piece, a talent in weight (Exodus 25:39). It consisted of a pedestal or base, of a central stem (the name "candlestick" is specially given to this), of six curving branches-three on each side-and of seven lamps resting on the tops of the branches and stem. Stem and branches were ornamented with cups like almond-blossoms, knops and flowers-four of this series on the stem, and three on each of the branches. Some, however, understand the "cup" to embrace the "knop" and "flower" (calyx and corolla). The shape of the pedestal is uncertain. Jewish tradition suggests three small feet; the representation of the candlestick on the Arch of Titus has a solid, hexagonal base. The position of the candlestick was on the South side of the holy place (Exodus 40:24).
2. Temple of Solomon:
In Solomon's temple the single golden candlestick was multiplied to ten, and the position was altered. The candlesticks were now placed in front of the Holy of Holies, five on one side, five on the other (1 Kings 7:49 2 Chronicles 4:7). Further details are not given in the texts, from which it may be presumed that the model of the tabernacle candlestick was followed.
3. Temple of Zerubbabel:
The second temple reverted to the single golden candlestick. When the temple was plundered by Antiochus Epiphanes, the candlestick was taken away (1 Maccabees 1:21); after the cleansing, a new one was made by Judas Maccabeus (1 Maccabees 4:49, 50).
4. Temple of Herod:
The same arrangement of a single golden candlestick, placed on the South side of the holy place, was continued in Herod's Temple (Josephus, BJ, V, v, 5). It was this which, carried away by Titus, was represented on his Arch at Rome.
5. Use and Symbolism:
The immediate object of the candlestick was to give light in the holy place. The lamps were lighted in the evening and burned till the morning (Exodus 30:7, 8 Leviticus 24:3 1 Samuel 3:3 2 Chronicles 13:11), light being admitted into the temple during the day by the upper windows. Josephus in his Cosmical speculations (BJ, V, v, 5) takes the seven lamps to signify the seven planets. In Zechariah's vision of the golden candlestick (Zechariah 4:2), the seven lamps are fed by two olive trees which are interpreted to be "the two anointed ones," Zerubbabel and Joshua-the civil and spiritual representatives of theocracy. The candlestick here, like the seven candlesticks in Revelation 1:20; Revelation 2:1, symbolizes the church of God, then in its Old Testament form, the idea conveyed being that God's church is set to be a lightgiver in the world. Compare Christ's words (Matthew 5:14, 16 Luke 12:35), and Paul's (Philippians 2:15).
The oldest known representation of the seven-branched candlestick is on a coin of Antigonus, circa 40 B.C. (see Madden's Coins of the Jews, 102). For literature see TABERNACLE; TEMPLE.
James Orr
GOLDEN CALF
gold'-'-n: Probably a representation of the sun in Taurus.
See ASTROLOGY, 7; CALF, GOLDEN.
GOLDEN CITY
gold'-'-n: The translation "golden city" (Isaiah 14:4) is an attempt to render the received text (madhhebhah), but can hardly be justified. Almost all the ancient versions read (marhebhah), a word which connotes unrest and insolence, fitting the context well.
GOLDEN NUMBER
gold'-'-n num'-ber: Used in the regulation of the ecclesiastical calendar, in the "Metonic cycle" of 19 years, which almost exactly reconciles the natural month and the solar year.
See ASTRONOMY, sec. I, 5.
CITY, GOLDEN
See GOLDEN CITY.
NUMBER, GOLDEN
See GOLDEN NUMBER.
Greek
5552. chrusous -- golden ... golden. Part of Speech: Adjective Transliteration: chrusous Phonetic Spelling:
(khroo'-seh-os) Short Definition:
golden Definition:
golden, made of gold
... //strongsnumbers.com/greek2/5552.htm - 7k5553. chrusion -- a piece of gold, gold
... a piece of gold, gold. Part of Speech: Noun, Neuter Transliteration: chrusion Phonetic
Spelling: (khroo-see'-on) Short Definition: a golden ornament Definition ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/5553.htm - 7k
2435. hilasterion -- propitiatory
... 2435 (a substantival adjective, derived from 2433 , "to propitiate") -- the ; the
lid of the golden ark (the ) where the blood of a vicarious lamb appeased ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/2435.htm - 7k
5556. chrusoprasos -- a chrysoprase (a greenish-yellow gem)
... Transliteration: chrusoprasos Phonetic Spelling: (khroo-sop'-ras-os) Short Definition:
a chrysoprase Definition: a chrysoprase, gem of a golden-greenish color. ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/5556.htm - 6k
5557. chrusos -- gold
... gold. Perhaps from the base of chraomai (through the idea of the utility of the
metal); gold; by extension, a golden article, as an ornament or coin -- gold. ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/5557.htm - 6k
5558. chrusoo -- to gild, to cover with gold
... adorn, deck. From chrusos; to gild, ie Bespangle with golden ornaments -- deck.
see GREEK chrusos. (kechrusomene) -- 2 Occurrences. 5557, 5558. chrusoo. 5559 ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/5558.htm - 6k
5554. chrusodaktulios -- with a gold ring
... with a gold ring. From chrusos and daktulios; gold-ringed, ie Wearing a golden
finger-ring or similar jewelry -- with a gold ring. see GREEK chrusos. ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/5554.htm - 6k
Strong's Hebrew
4062. madhebah -- golden city... madhebah. 4063 .
golden city. Transliteration: madhebah Phonetic Spelling:
(mad-hay-baw') Short Definition: city. Word Origin see marhebah.
golden city
... /hebrew/4062.htm - 5k 3558. kumaz -- (a golden ornament) perhaps a bracelet
... 3557, 3558. kumaz. 3559 . (a golden ornament) perhaps a bracelet. Transliteration:
kumaz Phonetic Spelling: (koo-mawz') Short Definition: bracelets. ...
/hebrew/3558.htm - 6k
2091. zahab -- gold
... Definition: gold. Word Origin of uncertain derivation Definition gold NASB Word
Usage gold (354), golden (33). golden, fair weather. From an ...
/hebrew/2091.htm - 6k
6669. tsahob -- gleaming, yellow
... Word Origin from tsaheb Definition gleaming, yellow NASB Word Usage yellowish (3).
yellow. From tsahab; golden in color -- yellow. see HEBREW tsahab. ...
/hebrew/6669.htm - 6k
6668. tsaheb -- to gleam
... root Definition to gleam NASB Word Usage shiny (1). fine. A primitive root; to glitter,
ie Be golden in color -- X fine. 6667, 6668. tsaheb or tsahob. 6669 > ...
/hebrew/6668.htm - 5k
1722. dehab -- gold
... Definition: gold. Word Origin (Aramaic) corresponding to zahab Definition gold
NASB Word Usage gold (17), golden (6). gold en. (Aramaic ...
/hebrew/1722.htm - 6k
3800. kethem -- gold
... Word Origin from an unused word Definition gold NASB Word Usage fine gold
(2), gold (6), pure gold (1). most fine, pure golden wedge. ...
/hebrew/3800.htm - 6k
Library
The Golden Calf
... THE BOOK OF EXODUS THE GOLDEN CALF. 'And when the people saw that Moses
delayed to come down out of the mount, the people gathered ...
/.../maclaren/expositions of holy scripture k/the golden calf.htm
The Golden Lampstand
... THE BOOK OF EXODUS THE GOLDEN LAMPSTAND. ... I have to deal now with the meaning
and lessons of this golden lampstand, and it teaches us". ...
/.../maclaren/expositions of holy scripture k/the golden lampstand.htm
The Golden Rule of Life.
... THE GOLDEN RULE OF LIFE. ... This is a good rule for every-day living. It is known
throughout the Christian world as "The Golden Rule." It has great depths. ...
/...//christianbookshelf.org/orr/how to live a holy life/the golden rule of life.htm
The Golden Rule Exemplified
... THE GOLDEN RULE EXEMPLIFIED. Early one morning while it was yet dark, a poor
man came to my door and informed me that he had an infant ...
/.../the golden rule exemplified.htm
Jerusalem the Golden
... No. 118 Jerusalem the Golden. HEAVEN Jerusalem the Golden Urbs Sion aurea. Bernard
of Cluny J. Grabowski Translated by JM Neale Arr. by NAM. Con Moto. ...
/.../the st gregory hymnal and catholic choir book/no 118 jerusalem the golden.htm
Athor, the Golden
... CHAPTER VII ATHOR, THE GOLDEN. At sunrise the morning after ... in his tracks.
He confronted his idea embodied"Athor, the Golden! It was ...
//christianbookshelf.org/miller/the yoke/chapter vii athor the golden.htm
The Golden Eagle is Cut to Pieces. Herod's Barbarity when He was ...
... CHAPTER 33. The Golden Eagle Is Cut To Pieces. Herod's Barbarity When He Was Ready
To Die. He Attempts To Kill Himself. He Commands Antipater To Be Slain. ...
/.../chapter 33 the golden eagle.htm
The Golden Calf. Ex 32:4,31
... EXODUS Hymn 18 The golden calf. Ex 32:4,31. John Newton 8,6,8,6. The golden calf.
Ex 32:4,31. When Israel heard the fiery law,. From Sinai's top proclaimed; ...
//christianbookshelf.org/newton/olney hymns/hymn 18 the golden calf.htm
Of the Golden Age, of Images, and Prometheus, who First Fashioned ...
... The Epitome of the Divine Institutes. Addressed to His Brother Pentadius. Chap.
XXV."Of the Golden Age, of Images, and Prometheus, Who First Fashioned Man. ...
/.../lactantius/the divine institutes/chap xxv of the golden age.htm
The Building of the Golden House.
... THE OLD TESTAMENT CHAPTER XXVI. THE BUILDING OF THE GOLDEN HOUSE. The time
was near when David must leave his people and go to his ...
/.../lathbury/childs story of the bible/chapter xxvi the building of.htm
Thesaurus
Golden (86 Occurrences)... Easton's Bible Dictionary
Golden calf.
... 1. (a.) Made of gold; consisting of gold.
2. (a.) Having the color of gold; as, the
golden grain.
.../g/golden.htm - 66kSpoon (13 Occurrences)
... Beginning with 7:14, we meet at every succeeding 6th verse the statement, "one golden
spoon of ten shekels, full of incense," till at 7:86 the summary ...
/s/spoon.htm - 10k
Weighing (39 Occurrences)
... Genesis 24:22 And it came to pass, as the camels had done drinking, that the man
took a golden ring of half a shekel weight, and two bracelets for her hands of ...
/w/weighing.htm - 17k
Ladle (11 Occurrences)
... Numbers 7:14 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense; (WEB). Numbers
7:20 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense; (WEB). ...
/l/ladle.htm - 9k
Censer (10 Occurrences)
... The vessel in which incense was presented on "the golden altar" before the Lord
in the temple (Exodus 30:1-9). The priest filled the censer with live coal from ...
/c/censer.htm - 14k
Pan (26 Occurrences)
... Numbers 7:14 one golden spoon of ten'shekels , full of incense; (See JPS NAS). Numbers
7:20 one golden spoon of ten'shekels , full of incense; (See JPS NAS). ...
/p/pan.htm - 20k
Candlestick (34 Occurrences)
... In the morning the priests trimmed the seven lamps, borne by the seven branches,
with golden snuffers, carrying away the ashes in golden dishes (Exodus 25:38 ...
/c/candlestick.htm - 27k
Dish (54 Occurrences)
... Numbers 7:14 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense; (See RSV NIV). ... Numbers
7:20 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of incense; (See RSV NIV). ...
/d/dish.htm - 24k
Incense (167 Occurrences)
... was not thus prepared was called "strange incense" (30:9). It was offered along
with every meat-offering; and besides was daily offered on the golden altar in ...
/i/incense.htm - 44k
Lampstands (10 Occurrences)
... Having turned, I saw seven golden lampstands. ... Revelation 1:20 the mystery of the
seven stars which you saw in my right hand, and the seven golden lampstands. ...
/l/lampstands.htm - 9k
Resources
What is the Golden Rule? | GotQuestions.orgHow should Christians react to "The Golden Compass" movie? | GotQuestions.orgWhy wasn't Aaron punished for making the golden calf? | GotQuestions.orgGolden: Dictionary and Thesaurus | Clyx.comBible Concordance •
Bible Dictionary •
Bible Encyclopedia •
Topical Bible •
Bible Thesuarus