Hope of Israel Ministries (Ecclesia of YEHOVAH):
Why was the Messiah Baptized and Should We Follow His Example?
The purpose of the baptism of the Messiah was to cleanse the offering in preparation for its coming sacrifice and to prepare the Messiah for his office as High Priest. The baptism of John was for the Messiah and the sons of Levi, and from that point forward the Messiah informs them that they are to baptize only with the holy spirit. |
by TruthVids
Why was the Messiah baptized? This is a popular question which the church has attempted to answer with fabricated ordinances and rituals that are entirely unscriptural in regards to what baptism was and how it was interpreted. In regards to the baptism of the Messiah, he answered that his personal baptism was necessary in order to fulfill all righteousness. Righteousness is the keeping of the Law. Therefore what Law was the Messiah fulfilling in being baptized?
Our Passover Lamb
We know that the Messiah was our final Passover lamb (1 Corinthians 5:7), a sin offering, a peace offering, and more for the children of Israel. Therefore in order to be a legitimate sacrifice, the life of the Messiah must have fulfilled the Levitical laws related to sacrificial offerings as much as his life must have been guiltless, as he was our unblemished lamb (John 1:29, 1 Peter 1:19). In Leviticus, we read that a sacrifice needs to be washed before it can properly be offered on the altar:
Leviticus chapter 1:1-3, 9: “And the LORD called unto Moses, and spake unto him out of the tabernacle of the congregation, saying, Speak unto the children of Israel, and say unto them, If any man of you bring an offering unto the LORD, ye shall bring your offering of the cattle, even of the herd, and of the flock. If his offering be a burnt sacrifice of the herd, let him offer a male without blemish: he shall offer it of his own voluntary will at the door of the tabernacle of the congregation before the LORD… But his inwards and his legs shall he wash in water: and the priest shall burn all on the altar, to be a burnt sacrifice, an offering made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD…."
The Priestly Washings
We also read that the Levitical priests themselves had to be washed for a
sacrifice to be legitimate:
From Leviticus 8:4-6:
“And Moses did as the LORD commanded him; and the assembly was gathered together unto the door of the tabernacle of the congregation. And Moses said unto the congregation, This is the thing which the LORD commanded to be done. And Moses brought Aaron and his sons, and washed them with water.”
To fulfill these needed requirements for the Levitical priests and the cleansing of a sacrifice, we see in a prophecy of John the Baptist found in Malachi, that he would “purify the sons of Levi” (Malachi 3:3). The Messiah himself confirmed that John was the Second Ministry of Elijah, the one who would perform this. John cried out his voice in the wilderness and washed any true Israelite who came to him at the Jordan river, and through this he himself and many other Levites were cleansed and purified.
It is important to identify that John would not cleanse those who were not of Israel, even if they were geographically from Israel (Romans 9:6). A prime example being those Idumean Pharisees, who were the offspring of vipers, and had no part in the Body of the Messiah (Antiquities 13:9:1, Strabo 16.2.34). The Messiah agreed, and Judas Iscariot also, an Idumean, was similarly not cleansed through the words he spoke to his apostles (John 13:10). The Messiah confirmed that it is his Word of Truth that cleanses (John 17:17-19).
An Illegitimate Sacrifice?
Once the Levites were purified, the Messiah of course came to be baptized himself after fulfilling the required thirty years for him to be of age to teach (Numbers 4:3). The Messiah’s life and ministry was a perfect fulfillment of the Law and Prophets (Matthew 5:17), and throughout his ministry he would also fulfill all the Levitical laws related to the offering of a legitimate sacrifice. We see another instance for example where he prevented Mary Magdalene from touching him after his resurrection (John 20:17) in fulfillment of another aspect of Leviticus 1 which says:
Leviticus 7:19-20: "And the flesh that toucheth any unclean thing shall not be eaten; it shall be burnt with fire: and as for the flesh, all that be clean shall eat thereof. But the soul that eateth of the flesh of the sacrifice of peace offerings, that pertain unto the LORD, having his uncleanness upon him, even that soul shall be cut off from his people."
No sacrifice is complete until it is offered to YEHOVAH God: the whole burnt offerings were burnt until little was left and the smoke symbolically sent it all to YEHOVAH, this being the sweet savor (Leviticus 1). The Messiah being sacrificed, had to first present himself before YEHOVAH God until one could touch him. This is because in Leviticus 7, it is commanded that if anyone with unclean hands touches the sacrifice, it would make the sacrifice illegitimate and they who touched it themselves would then be cut off from the people.
Mary Magdalene
Therefore, if Mary Magdalene had touched the Messiah before he had presented himself to the Father, the sacrifice would have been voided, she would have been cut off, and it all would have been for nothing. It is amazing the extent the Messiah went to fulfill his Father's Law, and it is an example to us also to read and understand the Law and Prophets, so that we can better understand YEHOVAH God and our place in the world of Israel.
There are those who claim the Messiah told Mary not to touch him because he was to appear before YEHOVAH God in Heaven at 9:00 a.m. that morning (the very time of the Morning Sacrifice in the Jerusalem Temple) to "wave" the sheaf or omer (representing the first-century Ecclesia and all those to follow) before his Father, and to be exalted to the right hand of YEHOVAH God and take on his NEW spiritual body.
But let me ask this question -- WHY would the Messiah zoom all the way to Heaven and then zoom back to earth when YEHOVAH's Shekinah Glory was resident in the Jerusalem Temple? Wouldn't this then be his second coming, and his future arrival at the end of the age his third coming? This presents all kinds of problems!
YEHOVAH's Glory was present in the Tabernacle and then in the Jerusalem Temples that followed.
The question is: Why
did he tell Mary not to touch him, and yet the disciples held him by the feet,
worshipping him? The assumption is that between these two events, he very
quickly ascended to Heaven and returned, being accepted of the Father -- so now
they could "touch" him. But is this assumption correct?
Let's examine John 20:17 in detail and see what it really says!
It appears that both Matthew and Luke are saying that after the Messiah's
resurrection he could be "held" and "handled" while John is saying that he could
not even be "touched" in some translations. To answer this apparent
contradiction we first need a mini-lesson in Greek grammar.
Now, let's apply the original Greek to the beginning of John 20:17. The verse
also includes a prohibitive, present imperative: me mou haptou. It would
be better rendered as "Stop touching me." The point? A prohibition in the
present imperative demands that ACTION then IN PROGRESS be stopped. So Mary was
not just touching the Messiah -- she was HOLDING him, GRASPING him, CLINGING to
him. The Messiah is simply telling her to let go, enough is enough already!
Putting all the above together, the first part of John 20:17 should be rendered,
"Stop holding me..." or possibly, "Stop clinging to me..."
So Mary is already touching the risen Messiah. But the Messiah is commanding her
to stop. But why? Help in answering this question can be found by looking at the
word rendered "touch."
In his commentary on the Gospel of John, Merril C. Tenny summarizes the lexical
connotations of this verb as: "The verb hapto DOES NOT mean to touch with
the tip of a finger to test whether an object is real or not but to "CLUTCH" or
"GRIP."
So the Messiah is being "held" in Matthew; he is being "handled" in Luke; and he
is being "held" or "clung to" in John.
Now let's answer WHY the Messiah is telling Mary to "Stop clinging to me...."
In Wesley's Notes we read:
"20:17 Touch me not -- Or rather, Do not cling to me (for she held him by the feet,) Mt. 28:9. Detain me not now. You will have other opportunities of conversing with me. For I am not ascending to my Father -- I have not yet left the world. But go IMMEDIATELY to my brethren..."
When you think about it this was
the MOST MOMENTOUS event in the history of Israel! Without the resurrection
there is nothing -- this life is all there is, no life after death, nothing --
just a huge blank! With the resurrection of the Messiah Israel could now reach
for the stars -- become kings and leaders in the World Tomorrow here on this
earth -- and eventually the entire universe! Clearly Mary did not yet understand
this, and instead of RUSHING immediately to inform the disciples that everything
the scriptures pointed to had occurred, she clung to the Messiah and thereby
received his loving rebuke.
It is evident that the Messiah had completed his task of presenting
himself to YEHOVAH God in the Temple prior to this dialogue with Mary Magdalene and his later encounter with
the apostles.
The Levitical Priesthood
So John the Baptist fulfilled the duty of the Aaronic priesthood, being a descendant of
Aaron himself. Being a Levite, he could fulfill the priestly role of cleansing
which Moses had done first before him. [1] With the priesthood no longer consisting
of Levites at the time of John, of course no Sadducee would never have ever been
able to fulfill such a role as this. We read that the Levites at the time of
John were in fact starving because of the oppression they experienced from the
Sadducees, who stole from them their birthright of priesthood. Interestingly,
the Messiah subtly eludes to the corruption of the Levitical priesthood when
he
mentions a priest and Levite separately in his parable of the Good Samaritan
(Luke 10:31-32).
We know of course, that there should have been no distinction between a priest
and a Levite in that parable, because if one was not a Levite, they were not a
legitimate priest (Malachi 2:8, Leviticus 21:15). The denominational scholars will read
the parable a hundred times and twist it to support universalism: but will never
notice this subtle nod which the Messiah makes and its associated implications.
YEHOVAH God prophesied through Malachi that the priesthood would become further
corrupted (Malachi 2:3), and as it was fulfilled it allowed for the Messiah to be killed
by the power of the dog (Psalm 22:20), just like the other prophets which had
preceded him (Luke 11:51). The Messiah is the last prophet (Hebrews 1).
Baptism as a Ritual
So this was the purpose of the baptism of the Messiah: to cleanse the offering in
preparation for its coming sacrifice. However, baptism as a ritual was not
unheard of at the time and was in fact well known. YEHOVAH speaks to His people
through terms they understand in the times which they are living, for example
having done this when making His oath to Abraham (Genesis 15:17). The Pharisees when
hearing of John’s baptism did not ask what baptism was, but asked John who gave
him the authority to baptize, as they ostensibly perceived John as a lesser man
than themselves (John 1:25). The Pharisees themselves performed a ritual similar
to John’s baptism when they accepted new proselytes (Lightfoot’s volume 2 on
pages 55 to 63 in A Commentary on the New Testament ).
The Pharisees viewed baptism as a rebirth, and aliens would be considered
Israelites after the vain ritual was completed. The Pharisaical understanding
was later adopted by the Roman Catholic Church and is now shared by nearly all
denominational churches. This is a mistake. While the Pharisees would baptize
anyone and make them twice the sons of hell (Matthew 23:15), John refused to baptize
vipers (Matthew 3:7). The Messiah also rejected the traditions of the elders, saying “ye
hold the tradition of men, as the washing of pots and cups: and many other such
like things ye do.” Concluding that “Full well ye reject the commandment of
God, that ye may keep your own tradition” (Mark 7:1-23) These traditions were
not scriptural, but came from the rites and practices of men.
An Evolution of Understanding
Many of the Messiah’s apostles were former students of John and clung for a time
to their former teacher’s ways. The apostles did not immediately understand the
purpose of the baptism carried out by John, therefore while the apostles baptized some
during the Ministry of the Messiah, Yeshua himself did not baptize anyone. John
himself is recorded at Matthew 3:11 as stating: “I indeed baptize you with water
unto repentance: but he that cometh after me is mightier than I, whose shoes I
am not worthy to bear: he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost, and with fire”
The Messiah affirmed shortly before his departure that “John truly baptized with water,
but you shall be baptized with the holy spirit not many days from now” (Acts
1:5, NKJV).
The apostles did not even understand the technicalities behind the requirement
for the Messiah’s death, until after several periods of time and revelation from
the Messiah himself. This was often in waves of independent growth and understanding.
The transition from the Old to New Covenant is recorded in the Book of Acts and
was an era of learning for them, as they came to understand the meaning of the
New Covenant in its scope and purpose.
So while in the beginning of Acts we see that they did not fully understand why
John had baptized, by the end of the account growth and understanding had
enveloped them and their assemblies. Peter at the household of Cornelius saw
that they were baptized with the holy spirit, and adjusted his understanding
(Acts 11:15-16). The baptism of John was for the Messiah and the sons of Levi, and
from that point forward the Messiah informs them that they are to baptize with the
holy spirit. This was the baptism into his death, which the
crucifixion had allowed after the washing of the sacrifice (Romans 6:3). But once
the sacrifice had been made, the baptism of John was no longer required.
Therefore we read of when Priscila and Aquila saw Apollos still teaching the
baptism of John, they took him aside and “expounded unto him the way of God
more perfectly” (Acts 18:24-26). While the apostles went on to baptize during
the Acts era, during the transition we see an evolution of understanding
regarding what the Messiah had meant when he said that the baptism of water was for
John, but they were to baptize with the holy spirit.
The Messiah's Baptism
The baptism of the Messiah was what it was, despite how men sought to interpret it in the generations that followed. Many incorporated their former pagan ideas in their attempts to understand its meaning. The meaning was of course defined in the Old Testament, which the Messiah came to fulfill, and was not a new ritual sprung out of thin air. In fact, the works of the Law are done away with (meaning the rituals and rituals only; namely anything related to the Leviticus priesthood). [2] This passing does not include the moral Laws of YEHOVAH God apart from the rites and rituals of the Levitical priesthood, for those are eternal (Matthew 5:18, Romans 3:31).
If it was required at a time for men to be cleansed in water, to prepare and
present sacrifices, such is no longer required, for we now have the Messiah, who died
once as a sacrifice (Hebrews 10:12). With this simple understanding of what the
Baptism of the Messiah was, we once again open many doors and opportunities towards
understanding scripture on a more cohesive level.
The word baptism comes from the Greek word baptizo, which can mean
immersion. However, baptizo doesn't always mean immersion as some would
like you to believe. Sometimes it merely means "washing up" in the Bible --
depending on the context. Therefore the Messiah said he had a baptism to be
baptized in, which
was his death. This is the same baptism which Paul and Peter speak of in their
epistles, a baptism of the Word, of his Death, and not of the baptism of the
flesh. The baptism which was fulfilled at the Jordan river was the baptism which
was required for the Messiah to be a legitimate sacrifice and to carry out the
office of High Priest for Israel. This baptism was the
preparation for salvation, but salvation is not from the baptism of John but is
rather from the sacrifice which was sanctified through it: that being the
Messiah.
Having been sacrificed, we are able to enter into his baptism: which is his
death. If we die with him, then we live with him also (Romans 6:8). Therefore, as
Paul said, we have his marks on our body, being regarded dead in body but alive
through the Messiah (Galatians 6:17). This is the baptism for the children of Israel, and
they have no further need for cleansing. To think otherwise is to believe that
men need rites and rituals to be saved, and that the Messiah alone was not enough.
That is the heresy of the Judaizers, the heresy of the Nicolaitans, and of all
modern churches.
Let none steal away our liberty in the Messiah to bond us in rituals, for his
sacrifice certainly sanctified all of Israel, and indeed we are sanctified.
From the Editor:
Many have wondered exactly why the Messiah insisted on being baptized. While Yeshua the Messiah obeyed Levitical priestly law throughout his ministry, it is his baptism that the Messiah said gave him the legal authority to carry out his priestly ministry -- he had been truly ordained a priest and possessed authority to cleanse the Temple. So how does this apply to us today?
The answer is found in the writings of Peter and John -- notice!
Revelation 20:6: "Blessed and holy are those who share in the first resurrection. The second death has no power over them, but they will be priests of God and of Christ and will reign with Him [YEHOVAH God] for a thousand years."
Revelation 5:9-10: "And they sang a new song, saying: 'You are worthy to take the scroll, and to open its seals; for you were slain, and have redeemed us [of Israel] to God by your blood out of every tribe and tongue and people and nation [where the 12 tribes were dispersed], and have made us kings and priests to our God; and we share reign on the earth.'"
1 Peter 2:5: "Coming to Him as to a living stone, rejected indeed by men, but chosen by God and precious, you also, as living stones, are being built up a spiritual house, a holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ."
1 Peter 2:9: "But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for His possession, so that you may proclaim the praises of the One [YEHOVAH God] who called you out of darkness into His marvelous light."
Revelation 1:6: "...and from Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, the firstborn [of many brothers] from the dead, and ruler over the kings of the earth. To him who loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood, and has made us kings and priests to his God and Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen."
Our Calling
Clearly YEHOVAH God has chosen those of us of Israel to be in the First Resurrection and to assist YEHOVAH God and the Messiah in ruling in the Kingdom of YEHOVAH God. As part of that responsibility we are to act as "kings and priests;" and to do so we have to abide by the Old Testament procedure put in place by YEHOVAH God.
Notice what Douglas A. Van Dorn states in his article, The Old Testament Roots of the Baptism of the Messiah:
"...the writer of Hebrews makes clear that the Messiah is obeying Levitical priestly law throughout his ministry. It begins this extended argument (Hebrews 4:14-10:18) by explaining that the Messiah as High Priest is called by YEHOVAH God 'as Aaron was' (5:4). It then quotes Psalm 2:7 ('You are My son, today I have begotten you') and 110:4 ('You are a priest forever, after the order of Melchizedek'). There are only two occasions in the life of the Messiah where the voice of the Father says anything like this to him: the transfiguration (Matthew 17:4; Mark 9:7; Luke 9:35; 2 Peter 1:17) and his baptism (Matthew 3:17; Mark 1:11; Luke 3:22).
Van Dorn goes on:
"Only at his baptism, however, is the holy spirit said to descend upon the Messiah 'like a dove.' In the Old Testament, when the spirit comes upon someone, it is sometimes said to 'clothe' them (Gideon: Judges 6:34; Amasai: 1 Chronicles 12:18; Zechariah the priest: 2 Chronicles 24:20). The word is labash. It means to 'dress, be clothed' (TWOT 175.0) or 'put on (a garment), wear, clothe, be clothed (BDB 4789). It is translated by the Septuagint with enduw. This Greek word has the same meaning in the Lexicons. In this way, we find both the washing and the clothing occurred at the Messiah's baptism. Using this same Greek word and combining it with baptism, the Apostle Paul says, 'For all of you [of Israel] who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ' (Galatians 3:27)."
The Legal Authority
In both the baptism of the Messiah and the baptism of Israelite-Christians, the imagery is identical to that of the priestly ordination in Exodus 29:4-9. Therefore, as the Messiah's baptism gave him the legal authority to carry out his priestly ministry, so too does the baptism of those Israelites called to be in the First Resurrection give us the required legal authority to act as priests in the Kingdom of YEHOVAH God.
According to Ben L. Rose:
"As evidence of the fact that the Messiah was made a priest by John's baptism, we note that when the Messiah cleansed the Temple (Matthew 21:12; Mark 11:15), he was exercising the authority of a priest. And when the Jews came to him asking, 'By what authority doest thou these things, and who gave thee this authority?' (Matthew 21:23; Mark 11:28), Yeshua cited to them John's baptism, which he had received, and asked, 'Was it from heaven or of men?' In Yeshua's mind there is obviously a definite connection between his priestly 'authority' and his 'baptism by John.' He indicates that if John's baptism was from heaven, and he surely believed it was, then he had been truly ordained a priest and possessed authority to cleanse the Temple" (Ben L. Rose, Baptism by Sprinkling (Reprint from the Southern Presbyterian Journal: Weaverville, 1949) pp. 10-11).
Since YEHOVAH God has called those of us of Israel to be "kings and priests" in His soon-coming Kingdom, we should follow the Messiah's example and be baptized into the priesthood to enable us to fulfill the roles promised us in YEHOVAH's Kingdom. This, however, does not mean that baptism is required for salvation. All the Israelites resurrected in the Second Resurrection (Ezekiel 37) at the end of the Millennium will receive the gift of eternal life without the baptism into the priesthood as they will not be serving as priests in the Kingdom.
-- Edited by John D. Keyser.
References:
[1] Leviticus 8:4-6.
[2] Romans 3:19-28; 4:1-9; 9:11, 32; 11:6-7; Galatians 2:16; 3:2-10; Ephesians 2:15; Colossians 2:14; Hebrews 6:1-2 and 9:1-14.
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