Everybody is more or less familiar with the overused, almost cliched Renaissance image. Two chubby winged babies lean in at the bottom of the frame, holding their respective chins in their hands, looking at the upper frame as if they were up to something slightly mischievous. The image, which originally belonged to Raphael’s Sistine Madonna, has been used ad nauseam in almost every kind of holiday card —from Christmas to thinking-of-you cards, bows and arrows conveniently added for Valentine’s Day.
In the Bible, however, cherubs are “armed” quite differently. To put it bluntly, Raphael’s “cherubs” have nothing to do with the biblical cherubim —they are, in fact, putti or amorini: classic figures originally supposed to represent love-related passions exclusively inspired by Greek mythology. Only in Renaissance and Baroque art did these chubby male winged children came to represent God’s omnipresence — one can find them literally everywhere in a Baroque church.
So, who are the cherubim, according to the Bible, if not these fleshy figures?
Guardians and “Chariots”
As Alice Woods rightly notes in her book Of Wings and Wheels, “aside from Yahweh, the cherubim are the most frequently occurring heavenly being in the Hebrew Bible.” Interestingly, even if the word appears over 90 times in it, they are mentioned only once in the New Testament — and that, not even in the Gospels but in Paul’s letter to the Hebrews: “Above it were the cherubim of glory overshadowing the mercy seat.” (Cf. Hb 9, 5). This reference to the Mercy Seat (the kaporet, a gold lid placed atop the Ark of the Covenant) is key.
Even the origin of the word cherub itself is relatively uncertain. The word behind our use of cherub is certainly the Hebrew kerub — its original plural form being kerubim. Some scholars suggest the word comes from the Akkadian karibu, meaning “guardian” but also a kind of advocate. In any case, it would refer to someone who stands between everyday people and the authority to either grant them an audience or intercede on their behalf.
Others explain kerub derives from the Hebrew word for chariot, merkabah. Those who defend this etymology note how the word is used in the book of Ezekiel. Already in the first chapter of the book, they appear as transporting God’s throne — but, curiously enough, they are not called “cherubim” until much later, in chapter 10. In both chapters, 1 and 10, cherubim are described more or less in the same terms —and quite differently from Raphael’s lovely putti.
Ezekiel 1 opens with the prophet saying the skies opened and he had visions of God by the river Chebar. The text reads as follows:
Ezekiel 10 introduces slight variations in the original vision. Now cherubim either have wheels, or are themselves “wheels within wheels,” “full of eyes all round” —definitely not your chubby putti. The text reads:
Clearly, these biblical cherubim are way more menacing than Raphael’s darling children. It is no surprise then that it was one of these cherubim who was in charge of preventing Adam and Eve from trying to sneak back into the Garden of Eden once expelled from it; or that God commanded Moses and Aaron to make images of cherubim around the Ark of the Covenant. In fact, the cherubim around the Ark seem to fit perfectly well with what the Akkadian “karibu” suggests: they guard and mediate.
Fierce as they clearly are, the images of the cherubim had a dual mission in the Temple. On the one hand, they were guardians of the most sacred — the Ark itself. But on the other, they were an integral part of the kaporet (Cf. Ex 25, 19), the Mercy Seat. The outspread wings of the cherubim covering the kaporet were themselves part of the invisible throne of God in the Tabernacle. This seems to suggest they would somewhat intercede on behalf of those presenting their offerings in the Temple of Jerusalem —what you would expect from your karibu, indeed.
Make sure to visit the slideshow below to discover why the authors of the Gospels came to be associated with the different faces of these cherubim — ox, lion, eagle, and a human face.