Search:

  Home  ::  Articles  :: Authors  ::  Forum  ::  Calendar  ::  Blogs  ::  Bookstore   ::  Contact Us  
 
View full articles with Premium Content Membership
Password:

Not a member? - Register Now!


Other articles by this author...
  • Design and Maintenance of First-century Ritual Immersion Baths
  • Jewish Burial Customs in the First Century: Sidebar to "Ossuary Inscriptions from the Caiaphas Tomb"
  • Ossuary Inscriptions from the Caiaphas Tomb
  • Six Stone Water Jars
  • Design and Maintenance of First-century Ritual Immersion Baths

    by Ronny Reich

    Published: 01-Jan-2004


    What we know about ritual immersion in the late Second Temple period derives mainly from archaeological digs, the Dead Sea Scrolls and rabbinic literature. The archaeological remains of mikvaot (ritual immersion pools; pronounced meek·vah·ote; singular: mikveh) and the Dead Sea Scrolls date precisely from this period; whereas, the data coming from rabbinic literature, primarily from the Mishnah and Sifra, have been preserved in texts compiled and edited 150 years after the destruction of the Second Temple. Despite the gap in time between the close of the Second Temple period in 70 C.E. and the completion of the Mishnah and Sifra at approximately 250 C.E., these early rabbinic texts contain information that dovetails remarkably with the archaeological record, and therefore, is relevant for studying ritual immersion in the late Second Temple period.

    In the tractate Mikvaot, one of the tractates of the Mishnah, and in Parashah Metsora and Parashah Shemini, two sections of Sifra, the rabbis recorded highlights of their discussions resolving various problems concerning ritual immersion. From their discussions we learn five requirements for a ritually proper mikveh:

    1. Water provided by God (in rabbinic parlance, “By the hands of Heaven”). Rain or spring water had to flow naturally, without direct human intervention, into a mikveh. Channels, gutters and ducts were allowed for directing into a mikveh the course of flowing or running water; how



      To view the remainder of this article, please log in at the top of this page.
      OR


      OR
      If you are not yet a Premium Content subscriber, please consider this amazing tool for Bible study. Premium Content membership gives you access to hundreds of articles, written by many of the best New Testament scholars in Israel and abroad, which illuminated Jesus' sayings. (Read our free sample articles!)
      New articles are continually being added to this database of knowledge. Articles are searchable by keyword, category or scripture reference.

    Articles published by Jerusalem Perspective Online express the views of their authors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of Jerusalem Perspective Online, David Bivin or other members of the Jerusalem School of Synoptic Research.

    Copyright 1987 - 2010  Jerusalem Perspective. All rights reserved.
    Click to find other articles with same subject categories:
  • Archaeology
  • Cairo Genizah
  • Culture and Customs
  • Dead Sea Scrolls
  • Essene Thought and Practice
  • First-century Jewish Sects
  • Intertestamental Literature
  • Qumran Community
  • Rabbinic Literature

  • All bookstore transactions are secure through encryption and all private information is kept strictly confidential.