Christian denominations divide over the question of how to
conduct a baptism, but the New Testament hardly describes the procedure.
THIS WEEK'S TORAH PORTION:
Metzora (מצורע
| Leper)
Torah: Leviticus 14:1-15:33
Haftarah: 2 Kings 7:3-20
Gospel: Luke 9:51-10:42
A special portion for Shabbat HaGadol is read this Shabbat!
Shabbat HaGadol (שבת
הגדול | The Great
Sabbath)
Haftarah: Malachi 3:4-24
Baptizo
The New Testament tells several stories about people being
baptized, but the stories do not spell out the details of how the baptism was
accomplished. The apostolic writers thought that the method and procedure of
baptism was so well known that they felt no compulsion to record any of the
details of the ritual. Because the apostles were all Jews, they considered
baptism to be a basic part of daily life which required no description.
Baptism was originally a Levitical purification rite. Most
purification ceremonies, such as the purification after leprosy, require
immersion into a mikvah. The Greek New Testament expresses immersion into the
mikvah with the term baptizo (βαπτίζω), the word from which we derive the
English term baptism. Leviticus 15 prescribes baptism as the mode of
purification for a variety of ritual contaminations.
Baptism means different things to different forms of
Christianity. Disagreements about the mode and meaning of baptism can be
blamed, in part, on the New Testament’s scanty descriptions of the ritual. The
apostles say very little about the mode, never explaining exactly how a person
is to be baptized. They say a bit more about the symbolism, but they leave most
of that as if it is already taken for granted.
A person needs to be ritually pure before he or she can
enter the Sanctuary or eat of the sacrifices. At a minimum, purification from
ritual uncleanness required a full-body immersion into mayim chayim (מים חיים): Living water, that is water collected from
a natural source like a spring, a river, or rainwater, but not drawn from a
cistern or well. A pool of living water is called a mikvah.
A person undergoing immersion descends into the mikvah (or
river, or lake, or ocean, or whatever the case may be). The person immerses
himself or herself by wading into chest-deep water and bending the knees to
completely submerge himself or herself. The dunking is repeated two more times
for a total of three consecutive dunks. A person who immersed himself in this
manner washed away his ritual uncleanness.
All worshipers going up to the Temple underwent immersion
before entering the holy place. Archaeology has unearthed the remains of many
apostolic-era immersion facilities near the entrance to the Temple. These are
the same immersion baths that Yeshua and His disciples used as they went up to
the Temple when in Jerusalem. Archaeologists have found remains of
apostolic-era immersion baths all over the land of Israel, and they consider
the presence of a mikvah in an excavation as key evidence of a Jewish
population.
All of this indicates that baptism was not a Christian
invention or even an apostolic innovation. From the days of Moses, Jews
regularly practiced ritual immersion. Anyone who became ritually unclean needed
to undergo a baptism before he or she could enter the Temple or eat from the
sacrifices. The priests immersed every day. After a woman completed her monthly
cycle, she needed to immerse herself before she could rejoin her husband. Some
pious Pharisees went beyond the letter of the law and attempted to maintain a
constant state of ritual purity which necessitated regular, daily immersion.
The immersion ritual symbolizes death and resurrection. When
a proselyte converts to Judaism to become legally Jewish, he passes through an
immersion in the mikvah. His legal identity as a Gentile dies in the water of
the mikvah, and the proselyte emerges from the mikvah reborn as a Jew.
Likewise, John the Immerser employed immersion as the physical token of
repentance. The penitent entering the water of the Jordan died to sin and
emerged from the water reborn to a life of repentance and righteousness. Paul
attached similar symbolism to the immersion in Messiah:
Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into
Messiah Yeshua have been baptized into His death? … Our old self was crucified
with Him, in order that our body of sin might be done away with, so that we
would no longer be slaves to sin; for he who has died is freed from sin.
(Romans 6:3-7)
-First Fruits of Zion
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