Difference between revisions of "Red Heifer"
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== | == Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary <ref name="term_48639" /> == | ||
<p> | <p> Among all the laws of the [[Levitical]] priesthood concerning sacrifices, there is hardly one more striking in all the particulars of it: as referring to the Lord Jesus Christ; and yet there is not one so generally little understood, or attended to. [[I]] beg the reader's attention to it as a subject highly interesting. He will find the account of it set forth at large, Numbers 19:1-10. Moses was commanded to speak unto the children of [[Israel]] to bring a red heifer without spot, wherein was no blemish, and upon which never came yoke. Eleazer the priest was to bring her forth without the camp, and one was to slay her before his face. Eleazer was then to take of her blood with his finger, and sprinkle of her blood directly before the tabernacle of the congregation seven times. One was then to burn the heifer in his sight; her skin, her flesh, and her blood, with her dung, all was to be burnt. Then the priest was to take cedar wood, and hyssop, and scarlet, and cast it into the midst of the burning of the heifer. Then the priest was to wash his clothes, and to bathe his flesh in water, and afterward he was to come into the camp, and be unclean until the even. And he that burned the heifer was to wash his clothes inwater, and bathe his flesh in water, and be unclean until the even. And a man that was clean was to gather the ashes of the heifer and lay them up without the camp in a clean place, to be kept for the congregation of the children of Israel for a water of separation: it is a purification for sin. And this was to be both to the children of Israel, and the stranger that sojourned among them, for a statute for ever. </p> <p> Such are the interesting particulars in the Lord's appointment of the sacrifice of the red heifer. [[I]] would now beg to call the reader's attention to the service itself, in order to remark the prominent features of the ordinance, as typical of the person and offering of the Lord Jesus Christ, </p> <p> And first, the heifer was to be red. [[A]] most unlikely thing to obtain, as if to prefigure the singularity of the person of Jesus; for none but the Lord Christ could be suited for our salvation: and the personal fitness of Jesus, in the singularity of his person and character, is that which endears him so highly to his people. Perhaps the reader may not know, or if he doth, he may not immediately re collect, that Adam was called Adam, or Adamah, on account of the red earth or dust from whence he was taken. [[Pure]] virgin earth is naturally red. Now the Lord Jesus is also called the last Adam. ( 1 Corinthians 15:45) And it is said of him, with peculiar reference to his human nature, that "forasmuch as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same." ( Hebrews 2:14) And hence the church sings of him in the joy of her heart, "My beloved (said she) is white and ruddy, the chiefest among, ten thousand." ( Song of Song of [[Solomon]] 5:10) </p> <p> Secondly, this red heifer was to be without spot, and wherein there was no blemish. What could more strikingly depicture the features of him "who with out spot offered himself to God!" He was indeed, as the [[Holy]] Ghost hath drawn him, "holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners, and made higher than the heavens." ( Hebrews 7:26) We are told that the [[Jews]] were so very tenacious that this heifer should be exactly corresponding to the %ordinance in those particulars, that if the animal had but a spot of different colour from the red, yea, but in a single hair, it was rejected. Surely nothing could be more in reference to the "lamb of God who was without blemish and without spot." ( 1 Peter 1:19) </p> <p> Thirdly, that particularity of the red heifer in the [[Jewish]] church, that it should be one upon which there never came yoke, is of all others the most striking, as typical of Christ; and the more so, be cause, among all the sacrifices under the law, it is the only one we ever meet with of such an appoint ment. There was no yoke, no obligation, upon Christ, but his own freewill, for which he became a sacrifice for his people. For although he glorified not himself to be either an high priest, or sacrifice, uncalled and unsent of God, yet equally certain it is, that without his own voluntary offering he could not have suited the purpose of our redemption. Hence he saith himself, ( John 10:17-18) "Therefore doth my Father love me because [[I]] lay down my life, that [[I]] might take it again. No man taketh it from me, but [[I]] lay it down of myself; [[I]] have power to lay it down, and [[I]] have power to take it again. This commandment have [[I]] received of my Father." </p> <p> Fourthly, the heifer, to signify uncleanness, was "slain without the camp." And Jesus, that he "might sanctify the people with his own blood, suffered without the gate," The apostle makes a most beautiful persuasive and unanswerable appeal to the church, in this view of Jesus, when he saith, "Let us go forth therefore unto him without the camp, bearing his reproach;" ( Hebrews 13:12-13) </p> <p> Fifthly, when the heifer had been slain, the blood was to be sprinkled directly before the tabernacle seven times. And it forms an express doc trine of the cross, the blood of sprinkling. As the tabernacle represented the whole church of Jesus, so all his people are supposed to be brought under the cleansing by the blood of Christ. [[Believers]] are said to have received the atonement. ( Romans 5:11) Hence Paul, speaking of the privilege of the church, saith, "Ye are come to the blood of sprinkling." The blood of the heifer shed was not sufficient; it must be sprinkled. The blood of Christ is not only shed, but sprinkled, speaking peace from God to the sinner, and speaking of covenant faithfulness to God, in the infinite fulness of Christ's merits. Seven times performing the sprinkling of the blood of the heifer may probably mean, as [[Scripture]] numbers sometimes do, an indefinite number for a definite, by way of shewing the importance of it. The number seven is certainly used in Scripture with peculiar honour. The seven days of creation, the seventh day for the Sabbath, the seven times seven for the [[Sabbatical]] or [[Jubilee]] year, and the seventh day becoming an emblem of the everlasting [[Sabbath]] of heaven; all these are very high evidences of the peculiar honour conferred on the number. But no special reason other wise that [[I]] know of is given in the word of God for the consecration of seven to sacred things. </p> <p> Sixthly, the heifer was to be wholly burnt, no part nor portion exempted. So Christ is a whole Saviour. They that are looking to him for salvation must wholly look. "Is Christ divided?" saith the apostle. The completeness of acceptance in Jesus renders it essentially necessary that his people should look only to him, for the everlasting acceptance of their persons in him. "If righteousness come by the law, then Christ is dead in vain." ( Galatians 2:21) </p> <p> Seventhly, the whole congregation are said to be alike interested in this heifer, both in providing it, and in the enjoyment of the privileges of it. So the Lord Jesus is said "to have given himself a ransom for all, to be testified in due time." ( 1 Timothy 2:6) And as we do not read in any other part of this ordinance being appointed to be observed but once, so nothing could more blessedly point out the everlasting efficacy of that "one offering of the body of Jesus Christ once offered, whereby he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified." ( Hebrews 10:14) </p> <p> The Jews have a tradition, that this one heifer, with the ashes of the water of purification, lasted for near a thousand years, until the time of the captivity. But of this we have no Scriptural authority. It is sufficient for [[Christians]] to behold Christ both preached to the ear, and set forth to the eye, in type and figure, under the law. And it is doubly blessed, under the gospel, to behold the whole fulfilled in the person, blood, and righteousness of the Lord Jesus Christ. The Lord give his people grace, while beholding the law as having "a shadow of good things to come," to know that Christ is the substance, and that Christ is indeed "the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth!" </p> | ||
== | == Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_53693" /> == | ||
<p> | <p> <strong> [[Red]] [[Heifer]] </strong> . The ashes of a ‘red heifer’ more correctly a red <em> cow </em> added to ‘running water,’ formed the most powerful means known to the Hebrews of removing the defilement produced by contact with a dead body. The method of preparing the ashes and the regulations for the application of the ‘water of impurity’ (see below) are the subject of a special section of the Priests’ Code ( Numbers 19:1-22 ). It will be advisable to summarize the contents of the chapter, in the first place, and thereafter to inquire into the significance of the rite in the light of recent anthropological research. </p> <p> <strong> 1 </strong> . The chapter above cited consists of two parts; the first part, Numbers 19:1-13 , gives instructions for the preparation of the ashes, and ( Numbers 19:11-13 ) for the removal by their means of the defilement contracted by actual contact with the dead body. The second part, Numbers 19:14-22 , is an expansion of Numbers 19:12 f., extending the application of ‘the water of impurity’ to uncleanness arising from a variety of sources connected with death. </p> <p> The animal whose ashes acquired this special virtue had to be of the female sex, of a red, or rather reddish-brown, colour, physically without blemish, and one that had never borne the yoke. The duty of superintending the burning, which took place ‘without the camp,’ was entrusted to a deputy of the high priest. The actual burning, however, was carried through by a lay assistant, which fact, taken along with the detail ( Numbers 19:5 ) that every particle of the animal, <em> including the blood </em> , was burned, shows that we have not to do here with a ritual sacrifice, as might be inferred from the [[Ev]] [Note: English Version.] of Numbers 19:9 . The word there rendered ‘sin-offering’ properly denotes in this connexion (cf. Numbers 8:7 ) ‘a purification for sin’ ( <em> Oxf. Heb. Lex </em> . 310 a; cf. Sacrifice, [[§]] 14). The priest’s share in the ceremony was confined to the sprinkling of some of the blood ‘toward the front of the tent of meeting’ ( Numbers 8:4 [[Rv]] [Note: Revised Version.] ), in token of the dedication of the animal to J″ [Note: Jahweh.] , and to the casting into the burning mass of a piece of cedar wood and a bunch of hyssop bound with a piece of scarlet cloth (such, at least, is the regulation of the [[Mishna]] treatise dealing with this subject). </p> <p> [[A]] third person the priest and his assistant having themselves [[Become]] ‘unclean’ through contact with these sacred things (see below) now gathered the ashes and laid them up ‘without the camp in a clean place,’ to be used as occasion required. The special name given to the mixture of ‘running water’ ( Numbers 8:17 , lit. ‘living water,’ <em> i.e. </em> water from a spring, not a cistern) and the ashes is properly ‘water of impurity’ ( Numbers 8:9; Numbers 8:13; Numbers 8:20-21 so RVm [Note: Revised Version margin.]; Amer. [[Rv]] [Note: Revised Version.] ‘water for impurity’; [[Ev]] [Note: English Version.] <strong> water of separation </strong> ), <em> i.e. </em> water for the removal of impurity or uncleanness. This powerful cathartic was applied to the person or thing to be cleansed, either by being thrown over them (see Gray, <em> Com </em> . on Numbers 8:13 ), or by being sprinkled with a sprinkler of hyssop ( Numbers 8:18 ). This was done on the third and seventh days, after which the defiled person washed his person and garments, and was then restored to the privileges of the cult and the community. The only other reference to ‘the water of impurity’ is in the late passage, Numbers 31:23 . </p> <p> <strong> 2. </strong> The clue to the significance of the rite above described is found in the primitive conception of uncleanness, as this has been disclosed by modern anthropological research (see Clean and Unclean). In all primitive societies a dead body in particular is regarded as not only unclean in itself, but as capable of infecting with uncleanness all who come in contact with it or are even in proximity to it. The Semites shared these ideas with primitive communities in every part of the world. Hence, although the literary formulation of the rite of the Red Heifer in Numbers 19:1-22 may be late, the ideas and practices thereof are certainly older than the Hebrews themselves. </p> <p> While the central idea of the rite the efficacy of ashes as a cathartic, due probably to their connexion with fire (cf. Numbers 31:23 , and Farnell, <em> The [[Evolution]] of [[Religion]] </em> , 101 n. [Note: . note.] ) has its parallels elsewhere, the original significance of several of the details is still very obscure. This applies, for example, to the red colour of the cow, and to the addition to her ashes of the ‘cedar wood and hyssop and scarlet’ (for various suggestions see, in addition to Gray, <em> op. cit., </em> Hastings’ <em> [[Db]] </em> <em> [Note: Dictionary of the Bible.] </em> iv. 208 ff.; Bewer in <em> [[Jbl]] </em> <em> [Note: [[Bl]] Journ. of Biblical Literature.] </em> xxiv. (1905) 42 ff., who suggests that the cow may have been originally a sacrifice to the dead). </p> <p> The value of the chapter for the student of [[Hebrew]] ritual lies in the illustration it affords of the primitive conceptions of uncleanness, especially of the uncleanness of the dead, and of the ‘contagiousness of holiness,’ the nature of which has been so clearly expounded by Robertson Smith (see <em> [[Rs]] </em> <em> [Note: [[S]] Religion of the Semites.] </em> 2 446ff. ‘Holiness, Uncleanness, and Taboo’). The ashes of the red heifer and the water of impurity here appear, in virtue of their intense ‘holiness,’ as ‘a conducting vehicle of a dangerous spiritual electricity’ (Farnell, <em> op. cit. </em> 95), and have the same power as the dead body of rendering unclean all who come in contact with them (see Numbers 31:7 ff., Numbers 31:21 f. and art. Clean and Unclean). </p> <p> There are no inventions in ritual, it has been said, only survivals, and in the rite under review we have one of the most interesting of these survivals. The remarks made in a previous article (Atonement [Day of]) are equally applicable to the present case. As re-interpreted by the compilers of the Priests’ Code, the rite conveys, in striking symbolism, the eternal truth that purity and holiness are the essential characteristics of the people of God. </p> <p> [[A.]] [[R.]] [[S.]] Kennedy. </p> | ||
== | == Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_43319" /> == | ||
Numbers 19:1 Leviticus 14:4 Hebrews 9:14 Hebrews 6:1 | |||
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_68413" /> == | |||
<p> See [[Heifer,]] [[Red.]] </p> | |||
==References == | ==References == | ||
<references> | <references> | ||
<ref name=" | <ref name="term_48639"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hawker-s-poor-man-s-concordance-and-dictionary/red+heifer Red Heifer from Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary]</ref> | ||
<ref name="term_53693"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-bible/red+heifer Red Heifer from Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible]</ref> | |||
<ref name=" | <ref name="term_43319"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/holman-bible-dictionary/red+heifer Red Heifer from Holman Bible Dictionary]</ref> | ||
<ref name=" | <ref name="term_68413"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/morrish-bible-dictionary/red+heifer Red Heifer from Morrish Bible Dictionary]</ref> | ||
</references> | </references> |
Revision as of 22:46, 12 October 2021
Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary [1]
Among all the laws of the Levitical priesthood concerning sacrifices, there is hardly one more striking in all the particulars of it: as referring to the Lord Jesus Christ; and yet there is not one so generally little understood, or attended to. I beg the reader's attention to it as a subject highly interesting. He will find the account of it set forth at large, Numbers 19:1-10. Moses was commanded to speak unto the children of Israel to bring a red heifer without spot, wherein was no blemish, and upon which never came yoke. Eleazer the priest was to bring her forth without the camp, and one was to slay her before his face. Eleazer was then to take of her blood with his finger, and sprinkle of her blood directly before the tabernacle of the congregation seven times. One was then to burn the heifer in his sight; her skin, her flesh, and her blood, with her dung, all was to be burnt. Then the priest was to take cedar wood, and hyssop, and scarlet, and cast it into the midst of the burning of the heifer. Then the priest was to wash his clothes, and to bathe his flesh in water, and afterward he was to come into the camp, and be unclean until the even. And he that burned the heifer was to wash his clothes inwater, and bathe his flesh in water, and be unclean until the even. And a man that was clean was to gather the ashes of the heifer and lay them up without the camp in a clean place, to be kept for the congregation of the children of Israel for a water of separation: it is a purification for sin. And this was to be both to the children of Israel, and the stranger that sojourned among them, for a statute for ever.
Such are the interesting particulars in the Lord's appointment of the sacrifice of the red heifer. I would now beg to call the reader's attention to the service itself, in order to remark the prominent features of the ordinance, as typical of the person and offering of the Lord Jesus Christ,
And first, the heifer was to be red. A most unlikely thing to obtain, as if to prefigure the singularity of the person of Jesus; for none but the Lord Christ could be suited for our salvation: and the personal fitness of Jesus, in the singularity of his person and character, is that which endears him so highly to his people. Perhaps the reader may not know, or if he doth, he may not immediately re collect, that Adam was called Adam, or Adamah, on account of the red earth or dust from whence he was taken. Pure virgin earth is naturally red. Now the Lord Jesus is also called the last Adam. ( 1 Corinthians 15:45) And it is said of him, with peculiar reference to his human nature, that "forasmuch as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same." ( Hebrews 2:14) And hence the church sings of him in the joy of her heart, "My beloved (said she) is white and ruddy, the chiefest among, ten thousand." ( Song of Song of Solomon 5:10)
Secondly, this red heifer was to be without spot, and wherein there was no blemish. What could more strikingly depicture the features of him "who with out spot offered himself to God!" He was indeed, as the Holy Ghost hath drawn him, "holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners, and made higher than the heavens." ( Hebrews 7:26) We are told that the Jews were so very tenacious that this heifer should be exactly corresponding to the %ordinance in those particulars, that if the animal had but a spot of different colour from the red, yea, but in a single hair, it was rejected. Surely nothing could be more in reference to the "lamb of God who was without blemish and without spot." ( 1 Peter 1:19)
Thirdly, that particularity of the red heifer in the Jewish church, that it should be one upon which there never came yoke, is of all others the most striking, as typical of Christ; and the more so, be cause, among all the sacrifices under the law, it is the only one we ever meet with of such an appoint ment. There was no yoke, no obligation, upon Christ, but his own freewill, for which he became a sacrifice for his people. For although he glorified not himself to be either an high priest, or sacrifice, uncalled and unsent of God, yet equally certain it is, that without his own voluntary offering he could not have suited the purpose of our redemption. Hence he saith himself, ( John 10:17-18) "Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life, that I might take it again. No man taketh it from me, but I lay it down of myself; I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again. This commandment have I received of my Father."
Fourthly, the heifer, to signify uncleanness, was "slain without the camp." And Jesus, that he "might sanctify the people with his own blood, suffered without the gate," The apostle makes a most beautiful persuasive and unanswerable appeal to the church, in this view of Jesus, when he saith, "Let us go forth therefore unto him without the camp, bearing his reproach;" ( Hebrews 13:12-13)
Fifthly, when the heifer had been slain, the blood was to be sprinkled directly before the tabernacle seven times. And it forms an express doc trine of the cross, the blood of sprinkling. As the tabernacle represented the whole church of Jesus, so all his people are supposed to be brought under the cleansing by the blood of Christ. Believers are said to have received the atonement. ( Romans 5:11) Hence Paul, speaking of the privilege of the church, saith, "Ye are come to the blood of sprinkling." The blood of the heifer shed was not sufficient; it must be sprinkled. The blood of Christ is not only shed, but sprinkled, speaking peace from God to the sinner, and speaking of covenant faithfulness to God, in the infinite fulness of Christ's merits. Seven times performing the sprinkling of the blood of the heifer may probably mean, as Scripture numbers sometimes do, an indefinite number for a definite, by way of shewing the importance of it. The number seven is certainly used in Scripture with peculiar honour. The seven days of creation, the seventh day for the Sabbath, the seven times seven for the Sabbatical or Jubilee year, and the seventh day becoming an emblem of the everlasting Sabbath of heaven; all these are very high evidences of the peculiar honour conferred on the number. But no special reason other wise that I know of is given in the word of God for the consecration of seven to sacred things.
Sixthly, the heifer was to be wholly burnt, no part nor portion exempted. So Christ is a whole Saviour. They that are looking to him for salvation must wholly look. "Is Christ divided?" saith the apostle. The completeness of acceptance in Jesus renders it essentially necessary that his people should look only to him, for the everlasting acceptance of their persons in him. "If righteousness come by the law, then Christ is dead in vain." ( Galatians 2:21)
Seventhly, the whole congregation are said to be alike interested in this heifer, both in providing it, and in the enjoyment of the privileges of it. So the Lord Jesus is said "to have given himself a ransom for all, to be testified in due time." ( 1 Timothy 2:6) And as we do not read in any other part of this ordinance being appointed to be observed but once, so nothing could more blessedly point out the everlasting efficacy of that "one offering of the body of Jesus Christ once offered, whereby he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified." ( Hebrews 10:14)
The Jews have a tradition, that this one heifer, with the ashes of the water of purification, lasted for near a thousand years, until the time of the captivity. But of this we have no Scriptural authority. It is sufficient for Christians to behold Christ both preached to the ear, and set forth to the eye, in type and figure, under the law. And it is doubly blessed, under the gospel, to behold the whole fulfilled in the person, blood, and righteousness of the Lord Jesus Christ. The Lord give his people grace, while beholding the law as having "a shadow of good things to come," to know that Christ is the substance, and that Christ is indeed "the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth!"
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [2]
Red Heifer . The ashes of a ‘red heifer’ more correctly a red cow added to ‘running water,’ formed the most powerful means known to the Hebrews of removing the defilement produced by contact with a dead body. The method of preparing the ashes and the regulations for the application of the ‘water of impurity’ (see below) are the subject of a special section of the Priests’ Code ( Numbers 19:1-22 ). It will be advisable to summarize the contents of the chapter, in the first place, and thereafter to inquire into the significance of the rite in the light of recent anthropological research.
1 . The chapter above cited consists of two parts; the first part, Numbers 19:1-13 , gives instructions for the preparation of the ashes, and ( Numbers 19:11-13 ) for the removal by their means of the defilement contracted by actual contact with the dead body. The second part, Numbers 19:14-22 , is an expansion of Numbers 19:12 f., extending the application of ‘the water of impurity’ to uncleanness arising from a variety of sources connected with death.
The animal whose ashes acquired this special virtue had to be of the female sex, of a red, or rather reddish-brown, colour, physically without blemish, and one that had never borne the yoke. The duty of superintending the burning, which took place ‘without the camp,’ was entrusted to a deputy of the high priest. The actual burning, however, was carried through by a lay assistant, which fact, taken along with the detail ( Numbers 19:5 ) that every particle of the animal, including the blood , was burned, shows that we have not to do here with a ritual sacrifice, as might be inferred from the Ev [Note: English Version.] of Numbers 19:9 . The word there rendered ‘sin-offering’ properly denotes in this connexion (cf. Numbers 8:7 ) ‘a purification for sin’ ( Oxf. Heb. Lex . 310 a; cf. Sacrifice, § 14). The priest’s share in the ceremony was confined to the sprinkling of some of the blood ‘toward the front of the tent of meeting’ ( Numbers 8:4 Rv [Note: Revised Version.] ), in token of the dedication of the animal to J″ [Note: Jahweh.] , and to the casting into the burning mass of a piece of cedar wood and a bunch of hyssop bound with a piece of scarlet cloth (such, at least, is the regulation of the Mishna treatise dealing with this subject).
A third person the priest and his assistant having themselves Become ‘unclean’ through contact with these sacred things (see below) now gathered the ashes and laid them up ‘without the camp in a clean place,’ to be used as occasion required. The special name given to the mixture of ‘running water’ ( Numbers 8:17 , lit. ‘living water,’ i.e. water from a spring, not a cistern) and the ashes is properly ‘water of impurity’ ( Numbers 8:9; Numbers 8:13; Numbers 8:20-21 so RVm [Note: Revised Version margin.]; Amer. Rv [Note: Revised Version.] ‘water for impurity’; Ev [Note: English Version.] water of separation ), i.e. water for the removal of impurity or uncleanness. This powerful cathartic was applied to the person or thing to be cleansed, either by being thrown over them (see Gray, Com . on Numbers 8:13 ), or by being sprinkled with a sprinkler of hyssop ( Numbers 8:18 ). This was done on the third and seventh days, after which the defiled person washed his person and garments, and was then restored to the privileges of the cult and the community. The only other reference to ‘the water of impurity’ is in the late passage, Numbers 31:23 .
2. The clue to the significance of the rite above described is found in the primitive conception of uncleanness, as this has been disclosed by modern anthropological research (see Clean and Unclean). In all primitive societies a dead body in particular is regarded as not only unclean in itself, but as capable of infecting with uncleanness all who come in contact with it or are even in proximity to it. The Semites shared these ideas with primitive communities in every part of the world. Hence, although the literary formulation of the rite of the Red Heifer in Numbers 19:1-22 may be late, the ideas and practices thereof are certainly older than the Hebrews themselves.
While the central idea of the rite the efficacy of ashes as a cathartic, due probably to their connexion with fire (cf. Numbers 31:23 , and Farnell, The Evolution of Religion , 101 n. [Note: . note.] ) has its parallels elsewhere, the original significance of several of the details is still very obscure. This applies, for example, to the red colour of the cow, and to the addition to her ashes of the ‘cedar wood and hyssop and scarlet’ (for various suggestions see, in addition to Gray, op. cit., Hastings’ Db [Note: Dictionary of the Bible.] iv. 208 ff.; Bewer in Jbl [Note: Bl Journ. of Biblical Literature.] xxiv. (1905) 42 ff., who suggests that the cow may have been originally a sacrifice to the dead).
The value of the chapter for the student of Hebrew ritual lies in the illustration it affords of the primitive conceptions of uncleanness, especially of the uncleanness of the dead, and of the ‘contagiousness of holiness,’ the nature of which has been so clearly expounded by Robertson Smith (see Rs [Note: S Religion of the Semites.] 2 446ff. ‘Holiness, Uncleanness, and Taboo’). The ashes of the red heifer and the water of impurity here appear, in virtue of their intense ‘holiness,’ as ‘a conducting vehicle of a dangerous spiritual electricity’ (Farnell, op. cit. 95), and have the same power as the dead body of rendering unclean all who come in contact with them (see Numbers 31:7 ff., Numbers 31:21 f. and art. Clean and Unclean).
There are no inventions in ritual, it has been said, only survivals, and in the rite under review we have one of the most interesting of these survivals. The remarks made in a previous article (Atonement [Day of]) are equally applicable to the present case. As re-interpreted by the compilers of the Priests’ Code, the rite conveys, in striking symbolism, the eternal truth that purity and holiness are the essential characteristics of the people of God.
Holman Bible Dictionary [3]
Numbers 19:1 Leviticus 14:4 Hebrews 9:14 Hebrews 6:1