Cush was Ham’s first-named son, father of Nimrod, and the forefather of powerful peoples in Arabia and Africa known throughout biblical history.
Columbarium in Biblical Archaeology: Dovecotes, Sacrifice, and Daily Life in Judea
A columbarium in biblical archaeology was a dovecote installation that supplied birds, fertilizer, and support for life and worship in Judea.
Coal and Charcoal in the Bible: Fuel, Fire, and Industry in Ancient Israel
Coal in the Bible usually means charcoal or glowing embers, illuminating ancient fuel use, metalworking, and daily life in Israel.
Cherub and Cherubim: Guardians of Holiness and Attendants of Jehovah’s Presence
Cherubim are high-ranking angelic guardians who reveal Jehovah’s holiness, kingship, and regulated presence from Eden to Ezekiel.
Chebar: Ezekiel’s Grand Canal in the Land of the Chaldeans
Chebar was Ezekiel’s Grand Canal in Babylonia, the exile setting where Jehovah revealed His glory and commissioned His prophet.
The Carpenter’s Craft in the Biblical World
The Bible presents the carpenter as an honorable craftsman whose work shaped homes, worship, and daily life, and whose trade was practiced by Jesus Himself.
Mount Carmel and Carmel of Judah: Geography, Fertility, and Prophetic History in Scripture
Mount Carmel and Carmel of Judah reveal how geography, fertility, prophecy, and covenant history unite in one powerful biblical name.
Carchemish: Guardian of the Euphrates Crossing and the Battlefield That Changed Judah’s World
Carchemish controlled the Euphrates crossing, enriched empires through trade, and became the battlefield where Babylon broke Egypt and reshaped Judah’s history.
Capitolias at Beit Ras: A Decapolis City and a Witness to New Testament Geography
Capitolias at Beit Ras was a real Decapolis city whose coins, roads, walls, and archaeology illuminate the New Testament world east of the Jordan.
Caphtor and the Caphtorim: The Homeland of the Philistines and the Expansion of Mizraim’s Descendants
Caphtor was the maritime homeland of the Philistines, and the Caphtorim were Mizraim’s descendants who reshaped Canaan’s southwestern coast.

