McClintock Biblical Encyclopedia: Chamber

Online Resource Library

Commentary Index | Return to PrayerRequest.com | Download

McClintock Biblical Encyclopedia: Chamber


Subjects in this Topic:

(the translation of various Hebrews words). Oriental houses have in general a court in the center, with cloisters and a gallery, into which the chambers open, the apartments of the women being at the back, and only to be approached by passing through the others. Toward the street is a dead wall, with a porch, over which is a chamber, sometimes used as a lodging for guests, and sometimes as a store-room, it being well suited for either of these purposes, by being connected with the rest of the house by a door in the gallery, and having a separate staircase opening into the porch. This is the "chamber on the wall" ( òֲìַéִּúàּ÷ַéø , wall-loft, Sept. ὐðÝñῳïí ) which the Shunamite prepared for the prophet Elisha (2Ki_4:10). Such an "upper chamber" ( ὐðÝñῳïí ) is still the guestchamber. where entertainments are made, which was the custom with the Greeks as well as the Jews (Mat_9:14; Mar_14:14). Among the former it occupied the upper story; among the Hebrews it seems to have been on, or connected with, the flat roof of their dwellings (comp. Act_20:8). These upper chambers were also sometimes used for the performance of idolatrous rites (2Ki_23:12), and in them the bodies of the dead were laid out (Act_9:37). The early Christians, too, held their meetings for worship in such places. Besides these, there were inner chambers, or a "chamber within a chamber" (1Ki_22:25), such as that into which the messenger of Elisha retired to anoint Jehu (2Ki_9:2). SEE HOUSE.

The term chamber is used metaphorically in many places of the Scriptures, as Psa_104:3; Psa_104:13; Pro_7:27. To apply ourselves to earnest prayer and supplication, and to depend on the promises and providence of God for special protection, is to enter into our chambers, that we may be safe, as the Hebrews were in their houses, from the destroying angel (Isa_26:20). SEE BED-CHAMBER.

The "chambers of the south" (Job_9:9) are the constellations, or clusters of stars, belonging to the southern part of the firmament. SEE ASTRONOMY.

The term "Chambers of Imagery" ( çִãְøֵé îִùְׂëַּéç , figure-apartments; Sept. êïéôῶí êñõðôüò ) is used by the prophet Ezekiel (Eze_8:12) to denote the vision which he had of the abominations practiced by the Jews in the distant Jerusalem. As the practices there denounced were evidently borrowed from their Chaldaean oppressors, they derive striking elucidation from the gorgeous halls of the Assyrian palaces lately brought to light by Layard, with their long lines of sculptured animals, and kings worshipping before them (Nineveh, 2:209). SEE IMAGERY.

"Chambering" ( êüôáé ) signifies in Rom_14:13, that lewd association with courtesans and similar characters that was a peculiar feature of the heathenism of that age. SEE HARLOT.

Chamber

in architectural usage, is a room or apartment, distinguished from the hall, chapel, etc. The great chamber usually adjoined, or was contiguous to, the hall, and answered to the modern drawing-room, or withdrawing-room. The camera of an abbot or prior means his suite of lodgings in. the establishment. The guest chamber was usually over the buttery and pantry, at the lower end of the hall, in a medieval house, and in monasteries near the entrance. In some instances there was a separate hall called the Guesten-hall, as at Worcester.