the Week of Proper 28 / Ordinary 33
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Bible Encyclopedias
Ablution
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Ablutions for actual or ritual purification form quite a feature of the Jewish life and ceremonial. No one was allowed to enter a holy place or to approach God by prayer or sacrifice without having first performed the rite of ablution, or "sanctification," as it was sometimes called (Exodus 19:10; 1 Samuel 16:5; 2 Chronicles 29:5; compare Josephus, Ant ,
Three kinds of washing are recognized in Biblical and rabbinical law: (1) washing of the hands, (2) washing of the hands and feet, and (3) immersion of the whole body in water. (1 and 2 = Greek νιπτω ,
Something more than an echo of a universal practice is found in the Scriptures. The rabbis claimed to find support for ceremonial hand-washing in Leviticus 15:11 . David's words, "I will wash my hands in innocency: so will I compass thine altar,
Washing of the hands and feet is prescribed by the Law only for those about to perform priestly functions (compare Koran, Sura 5 8, in contrast: "When ye prepare yourselves for prayer, wash your faces and hands up to the elbows, and wipe your heads and your feet to the ankles"; Hughes, Dict. of Islam ). For example, whenever Moses or Aaron or any subordinate priest desired to enter the sanctuary (Tabernacle) or approach the altar, he was required to wash his hands and feet from the layer which stood between the Tabernacle and the altar (Exodus 30:19; Exodus 40:31 ). The same rule held in the Temple at Jerusalem. The washing of the whole body, however, is the form of ablution most specifically and exactingly required by the Law. The cases in which the immersion of the whole body is commanded, either for purification or consecration, are very numerous. For example, the Law prescribed that no leper or other unclean person of the seed of Aaron should eat of holy flesh until he had washed his whole body in water (Leviticus 22:4-6 ); that anyone coming in contact with a person having an unclean issue, or with any article used by such a one, should wash his whole body (Leviticus 15:5-10 ); that a sufferer from an unclean issue (Leviticus 15:16 , Leviticus 15:18 ); a menstruous woman (2 Samuel 11:2 , 2 Samuel 11:4 ), and anyone who touched a menstruous woman, or anything used by her, should likewise immerse the whole person in water (Leviticus 15:19-27 ): that the high priest who ministered on the Day of Atonement (Leviticus 16:24-28 ), the priest who tended the red heifer (Numbers 19:7 , Numbers 19:8 , Numbers 19:19 ), and every priest at his installation (Exodus 29:4; Exodus 40:12 ) should wash his whole body in water. Compare 'divers baptisms' (immersions) in Hebrews 9:10 , and see Broadus on Mt 15:2-20 with footnote. (For another view on bathing see Kennedy in HDB , I, 257 v.)
Bathing in the modern and non-religious sense is rarely mentioned in the Scriptures (Exodus 2:5 Pharaoh's daughter; 2 Samuel 11:2 the Revised Version (British and American) Bathsheba, and the interesting case 1 Kings 22:38 ). Public baths are first met with in the Greek period - included in the "place of exercise" (1 Macc 1:14), and remains of such buildings from the Roman period are numerous. Recently a remarkable series of bath-chambers have been discovered at Gezer, in Palestine, in connection with a building which is supposed to be the palace built by Simon Maccabeus (Kennedy (illust. in PEFS , 1905, 294f)).
The rite of ablution was observed among early Christians also. Eusebius (Historia Ecclesiastica , X, 4.40) tells of Christian churches being supplied with fountains or basins of water, after the Jewish custom of providing the laver for the use of the priests. The Apostolical Constitutions (VIII.32) have the rule: "Let all the faithful ... when they rise from sleep, before they go to work, pray, after having washed themselves" ,
The attitude of Jesus toward the rabbinical law of ablution is significant. Mk (Mark 7:3 ) prepares the way for his record of it by explaining, 'The Pharisees and all the Jews eat not except they wash their hands to the wrist (,
Literature
For list of older authorities see McClintock and Strong, Cyclopedia; Nowack, Biblische Archaeologie , II, 275-99; and Spitzer, Ueber Baden und Bader bei den alten Hebraern , 1884.
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Orr, James, M.A., D.D. General Editor. Entry for 'Ablution'. International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​isb/​a/ablution.html. 1915.