Monday, June 24, 2013

Living Water

“Lord, you are the hope of Israel; all who forsake you will be put to shame. Those who turn away from you will be written in the dust because they have forsaken the Lord, the spring of living water.” (Jeremiah 17:13)


Yesterday my husband Brad and I joined a Smithsonian Association day-long tour to learn about the Jewish community in Baltimore, which is quite large and has an interesting history. One of the places we visited was a mikveh. In case you’re not familiar with the term, this is a pool of water that Jews immerse themselves in to achieve ritual purity. It must be a “natural collection” of “living water” from rainfall or a flowing stream. Its main uses nowadays are by married Jewish women after menstruation or childbirth, by Jewish men before daily prayer or the sabbath, as part of the process of conversion to Judaism, and to purify utensils used for food (especially if they were fabricated by a non-Jew).

On the way home I began to think about the like between water and purity, and how water has a central place in the practices and beliefs of many religions. In the first place, water makes things clean. It washes away impurities and pollutants, and can make an object appear as good as new. It can also make a person clean, externally or spiritually, and ready to come into the presence of God.  In the second place, water is a primary building block of life.  Without water there is no life, yet water has the power to destroy as well as to create.  We are sometimes at the mercy of water just as we are at the mercy of God.  (Recent floods in the American Midwest come to mind…)

In Judaism ritual washing is intended to restore or maintain a state of ritual purity, and its origins can be found in the Torah (the first five books of the Old Testament).  It can be washing the hands, the hands and the feet, or total immersion in the sea, a river, a spring or in a mikveh. 

The story of the Great Flood is told in Genesis 6-8.  God destroyed humanity by sending a great flood.  Only Noah and his family and a pair of each animal were saved in the ark built by Noah.  Afterwards God promised he would never attempt to destroy the earth again and sent the rainbow as a sign of this covenant.  The story of a Great Flood is also found in other cultures such as the Australian Aborigines and some Pacific Islanders.  But the Israelites' story is different because it emphasizes the ethical demands of God.  The flood is a divine punishment from which Noah survives because of his moral worthiness.  The Flood washed away all the sins of the world so that we could start afresh.  This is echoed in Christianity by the death and resurrection of Christ that eradicates sin so that nothing will stand in the way of man and God.

The Red Sea is significant in Jewish history because its parting by Moses was a miraculous event at the beginning of the Exodus which enabled the Israelites to escape from the Egyptian army that was chasing them.  God allowed Moses to part the sea so that the Israelites could walk safely to the other side on dry land, while the Egyptians drowned as the sea came together again.  This miracle was a reward for the faith of Moses and the Israelites, God's Chosen People.  The parting and crossing of the Red Sea shows that God has power over nature, even the mighty oceans.  Water here is powerful, but an instrument of God for punishment (for the Egyptians) and blessing (for the Israelites).

Almost all Christian churches have an initiation ritual involving the use of water.  Baptism has its origins in the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist in the Jordan River.  After Jesus' resurrection he commanded his disciples to baptize in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit (Matthew 28:19-20).  Baptism is a symbol of liberation from the oppression of sin that separates us from God. The use of water is important for its own symbolic value in three ways: it cleanses and washes away dirt, fills everything it enters as God fills those who are immersed in Him and we need water to survive physically as we need God to survive spiritually.  In the early church baptism was usually performed with the person standing in water and with water being poured over the upper part of the body.  This was called “immersion” but today the term refers to the method of dipping the whole body under water which is used, for example, by the Baptist and Orthodox churches.  In most Western churches today the rite is performed by pouring water over the head three times (affusion) and sometimes sprinkling water over the head (aspersion).

Another important significance of water for Christianity is the "living water" that Jesus described himself as.  John 4: 1-42 is the story of Jesus and a Samaritan woman to whom he offers living water so that she will never thirst again. In other words, she will achieve eternal life through him. 

Holy water is water which is blessed for use in certain rites, especially that which is blessed at the Easter Vigil for baptism of catechumens.  The use of water other than for baptism goes back to the 4th century in the East and the 5th century in the West.  The custom of sprinkling people with water at mass began in the 9th century.  At this time “stoups”, basins for holy water from which people could sprinkle themselves on entering a church, came into common use.  Holy water is also used at blessings, dedications, exorcisms and burials.

Ablutions in Christianity are mainly baptism and the washing of fingers and communion vessels after the communion.  This takes place in two parts.  Firstly the chalice is rinsed with the wine, and then the chalice and priests' fingers with wine and water.  This ablution is important because after the bread and wine has been consecrated, Christ is believed to be present. 

In Islam water is also important for cleansing and purifying.  Muslims must be ritually pure before approaching God in prayer.  Some mosques have a courtyard with a pool or fountain of clear water in the centre, but in most mosques the ablutions are found outside the walls. Ritual purity is required before carrying out religious duties, especially worship. There are three kinds of ablutions.  Firstly, ghusl, the major ablution, is the washing of the whole body in pure water, after declaring the intention to do so.  Muslims are obliged to perform ghusl after sex which incurs a state of major ritual impurity.  It is also recommended before the Friday prayer, the two main feasts, before touching the Koran, and for the dead before they are buried. The second ablution is wudu, the minor ablution, which is performed to remove minor ritual impurity from everyday life.  This must be done before each of the five daily prayers and involves using pure water to wash the face with pure water, rub the head with water, and wash the hands and arms up to the elbows and the feet up to the ankles. The third type of ablution is performed when no water is available.  In this case clean sand may be used.

 Water in Hinduism has a special place because it is believed to have spiritually cleansing powers.  To Hindus all water is sacred, especially rivers, and there are seven sacred rivers: the Ganges, Yamuna, Godavari, Sarasvati, Narmada, Sindhu and Kaveri.  Although Hinduism encompasses so many different beliefs, most Hindus share a belief in the importance of striving to attain purity and avoiding pollution.  This relates to both physical cleanliness and spiritual well-being. Every temple has a pond near it and devotees are supposed to take a bath before entering the temple.

Pilgrimage is very important to Hindus.  Holy places are usually located on the banks of rivers, coasts, seashores and mountains.  Sites of convergence, between land and river or two, or even better three, rivers, carry special significance and are especially sacred.  Sacred rivers are thought to be a great equalizer.  In the Ganges the pure are made even more pure and the impure have their pollution removed if only temporarily. 

For Hindus, morning cleansing with water is a basic obligation.  Tarpana is the point at which the worshipper makes a cup with his hands and pours the water back into the river reciting mantras.  After sipping some water, he may then apply the distinguishing mark of his tradition, and say the morning prayer.  

The story of the Great Flood of Manu appears in Hindu scriptures.  This is the story of how all creation is submerged in a great deluge but Manu is rescued by a fish that he once saved from being eaten by a larger fish.  The fish told him to build a large boat and to take into it seeds and animals.  The fish then towed the boat to safety by anchoring it on the highest of the Himalayas.  He stayed on the mountain (known as Manu's Descent) while the flood swept away all living creatures. Manu alone survived.

Shinto is Japan's indigenous religion and is based on the veneration of the kami -- the deities believed to inhabit mountains, trees, rocks, springs and other natural phenomenon.  Worship of kamis, whether public or private, always begins with purification by water.  Troughs for ritual washing are placed inside many sacred shrines.  Waterfalls are held sacred and standing under them is believed to purify. 

Purity and pollution are central concerns in Zoroastrian thought and practice. The significance of water in Zoroastrianism is a combination of its purifying properties and its importance as a fundamental life element.  Therefore, while water is used in purification rites and rituals, it is sacred itself and so must be kept from being polluted. Zoroastrianism is a dualistic religion with emphasis placed on the opposing forces of good and evil.  When the world was created the Evil Spirit Angra Mainyu attacked the earth and, among other things, made pure water salty.  Zoroastrians believe that pollution is evil and that water, when pure, is sacred.  Zoroastrians themselves must avoid pollution of any kind and must perform ritual ablutions before saying their prayers (which are said 5 times a day facing a source of light) and before any religious ceremonies such as weddings.  

The sanctity of water is very important to Zoroastrians.  People must not urinate, spit or wash one's hands in a river or allow anyone else to.  In Zoroastrianism the dead are not cremated, buried or immersed in water because fire, earth and water must be kept pure.  Instead, corpses are left to birds of prey.  

Zoroastrians believe in 6 benevolent divine beings known as Amesha Spentas. Haurvatat (meaning wholeness, health and integrity) is a feminine being and the creator of water, and is represented by consecrated water used in priestly acts of worship.  The holy day of Haurvatat and water is in midsummer and people pray and make offerings by the seashore or any natural water.  In everyday life Haurvatat is observed by keeping water unpolluted and being temperate and self-disciplined.  

Zoroastrianism also has a Great Flood story.  Ahura Mazda warned Yima that destruction in the form of floods, subsequent to the melting of the snow, was threatening the sinful world and gave him instructions for building a boat in which specimens of small and large cattle, humans, dogs, birds, fires, plants and foods were to be deposited in pairs.

For Buddhists, most symbolism and ritual is pointless because they seek spiritual enlightenment that comes from seeing the “reality of unreality.” But even in Buddhism, water has a role. In Buddhist funerals, water is poured into a bowl placed before the monks and the dead body.  As it fills and pours over the edge, the monks recite, "As the rains fill the rivers and overflow into the ocean, so likewise may what is given here reach the departed."
  
“For the Lamb at the center of the throne will be their shepherd; he will lead them to springs of living water. And God will wipe away every tear from their eyes.” (Revelation 7:17)

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