Entering Our Mikvah Waters

When we accept His pursuit and His Mohar, when He places His Name on us and seals us with His Holy Spirit we then find ourselves in the waters of the Mikvah.  In coming to the mikvah we are accepting His pursuit of us and telling Him that we are willing to follow, to take up our cross and follow Him daily as Luke 9 tells us to do.

Romans 6:3-4 says, “Or don’t you know that all of us who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life.”(NIV)  For Jesus it was Him telling His Father, “I’m ready to pursue this course of marriage.  I’m ready to pursue my Bride and I’m ready to pay the Mohar.  I know where it goes, it goes to me paying the Mohar and I’m willing to follow”.  That’s why the Father could say, “This is my Son, whom I love, with Him I am well pleased.”  John let’s us know that the reason the Father loves Him is because He laid down His life.  He was willing to pay the Mohar.

For us though, remember, it’s all about our response to Him because we cannot come to Him unless He draws us.  So everything we do is in response to Him.  I Peter 3:20b-22 “In it only a few people, eight in all, were saved through water, and this water symbolizes baptism that now saves you also–not the removal of dirt from the body but the pledge of a good conscience toward God. It saves you by the resurrection of Jesus Christ, who has gone into heaven and is at God’s right hand–with angels, authorities and powers in submission to him.”(NIV)  Our Mikvah is not about clean verses unclean, not the removal of dirt from the body.  Do you remember as we accept His Mohar, remember from Hebrews 9, His Mohar  redeems us and cleanses our conscience.  Only with that good conscience can we respond in any way to Him.

I want to talk to you about that phrase, “pledge of a good conscience” because it is essential, it is the whole crux of the matter.  The word “pledge”, if you have a different translation you might see the word “response” or “answer”.  That word in the Greek literally means “question”.  What question might that be?  Take a wild guess.  Will you marry Me?  Will you marry Me?  What we do is a response to His question.  It is our pledge, our vow, our answer and our response.  It is our “yes” to Him. 

It’s important that you let your yes be yes.  Numbers 30 let’s us know that vows and promises and pledges are irrevocable.  They’re forever binding.  So we give Him our “yes” in the waters of the Mikvah.  We give it to Him out of the good conscience He has given us, the conscience that He purchased for us.  Did you catch that?  We give Him our “yes” through the waters of the Mikvah, that physical act, out of that good conscience that He purchased for us.

There is a second part, though, to our Mikvah.  Do you know that when we come to Christ were entering a nation?   We are acknowledging our rebirth into the nation of Israel by the Name of Jesus.  I want to share with you what happens when anyone converts to Judaism to this day.  A convert to Judaism, whether male or female, is required to immerse themselves in the mikvah waters two or three times marking their rebirth as members of the people of Israel.  Isn’t that interesting?  Are you aware that in very early Christian history it was very popular that when one was baptized they would be immersed three times, in the Name of the Father, in the Name of the Son, and in the Name of the Holy Spirit and some denominations still practice that?  Upon doing so, they exit the waters as a Jew, a citizen of the nation.

Unfortunately, the Christian church has distanced itself from it’s heritage and roots in Judaism.  Even though the Old Testament is still read and preached, the church has in a lot of ways removed itself from that same Old Testament.  Yes, we are under the New Covenant, but that New Covenant writes the Old Covenant on our hearts.  To say it another way, it writes the Israelite Constitution on our hearts.  Therefore, we are exiting the waters of our mikvah as citizens of God’s Kingdom, members of God’s household.

This leads us to Acts 2:38-39 where Peter responds to the people on the day of Pentecost when the people ask the disciples, “What shall we do?”  “Peter replied, “Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. The promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off–for all whom the Lord our God will call.”(NIV) 

In other words, go through the waters of the Mikvah, everyone of you.  You see, on this particular day and in very early church history there was no separation in the accepting of the pursuit, the accepting of the Mohar, the coming of the Holy Spirit and going through the waters of the Mikvah.   Today, we tend to think of  those as separate steps or stages.  But for them, it was all one fluid motion. 

Whereas, we tend to dissect it into different pieces, making salvation more about us getting the steps right than on the work of the Messiah and God’s ability to call us and justify us through His Holy Spirit.  Upon exiting the mikvah waters they had re-identified themselves with Yeshua and the New Covenant.  They became true citizens of the Kingdom of God, God’s Israel, God’s Royal family (His princes and princesses) under King Yeshua, God’s Ambassadors, God’s Holy Priesthood under His High Priest Jesus Christ.

We also find in Isaiah 44:3-5 the following words:  “For I will pour water on the thirsty land, and streams on the dry ground;  I will pour out my Spirit on your offspring, and my blessing on your descendants.  They will spring up like grass in a meadow, like poplar trees by flowing streams.  One will say, `I belong to the LORD’; another will call himself by the name of Jacob; still another will write on his hand, `The LORD’s,’ and will take the name Israel.”(NIV)

All who go through this process of Kiddushin, go through the waters of the Mikvah and receive the Holy Spirit, it’s all one fluid motion, remember that.  Don’t try to divide it in your head like we often do today.  It is all one fluid motion.  Those who do that, who receive the Spirit, look what it says, one will say I belong to the Lord, another will call himself by the name of Jacob, still another will write on his hand ‘the Lord’s’ and will do what, will take the name Israel.  Those of us who are not Jewish by birth, we have to take on that name because it is completely foreign to us.  We take on the name of Israel.  Therefore our Mikvah gives Jesus our pledge or our answer to His marriage proposal and confers our citizenship as part of Israel.

I know that the book of Romans can be a very deep, deep theological book, but I am going to attempt to sum it up in just a few sentences to show how it fits our theme here.  First of all we are dead in our sins in need of a redeemer.  We call on the name of the Lord and we are baptized, we go through the water of the Mikvah in the name of Christ and receive and live according to His Spirit, the Seal.  We are brought into the nation of Israel and made God’s children and heirs of His promise.  And Israel lives how?  According to the Spirit by giving sacrifices acceptable to God, living sacrifices.  That’s the book of Romans.  If you ever wondered why that talk of Israel is right in the middle of the book, that’s why.  Because when we call on the Name of Jesus and go through the waters of the Mikvah we are entering the nation.  The blessed nation of Israel.

I want to make it very clear that I am in no way advocating Replacement Theology in any way, shape, or fashion.  I do not believe the “church” replaces Israel and God still has some very specific promises for the land of Israel and the Jewish people.  However, we are now included in those promises in the way God sees fit because we have been grafted into that nation and those Jews who place their faith in Yeshua will also be grafted back into that nation.  We are all one nation.  There is not one way of salvation for the Jew and one for the Gentile, but one way for all, Jesus Christ.  My Jewish brothers and sisters in the faith have their part to play and I have mine as a non-Jewish believer and God decides what those will be.  The “church” does not become the new Israel, but upon belief Jews enter into God’s true Israel – the Assembly of the Saints.  To say the the “church” becomes the new Israel separates the Old Covenant from the New and thereby separates God’s story into two stories.  God’s story is one story.  It is one truth and Jesus/Yeshua is the center of all of it.  You see, all of the Bride awaits the same beloved Bridegroom!

In the Name of Our King,

Vicky

The Marriage Mikvah

First off, Yeshua went through what is known as the mikvah. 

Mikvah is water immersion of a perspective bridegroom and bride done separately before the Kiddushin (their engagement ceremony).  Typically, this is practiced only by the bride, but the bridegroom can also go through the ritual.

For the perspective bride and bridegroom it was a physical representation of them passing from being unmarried to being married. 

Now, let’s see Jesus go through the mikvah.  In Matthew 3:13-17 it says, “Then Jesus came from Galilee to the Jordan to be baptized by John. But John tried to deter him, saying, “I need to be baptized by you, and do you come to me?”  Jesus replied, “Let it be so now; it is proper for us to do this to fulfill all righteousness.” Then John consented.  As soon as Jesus was baptized, he went up out of the water. At that moment heaven was opened, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and lighting on him.  And a voice from heaven said, “This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased.””  

We call this Jesus’ baptism.  He is going though the mikvah.  I want to look at the two times in scripture Jesus is actually referred to as the bridegroom because you might be scratching your head saying, “Yah, that’s His baptism, how do you get the fact that that is a Jewish mikvah and that He is going through a mikvah ritual.  They did celebrate the mikvah for other occasions as well: 

1.  A woman would go through the mikvah after her monthly.  

2.  The High Priest would go through the waters of the mikvah after being in the Holy of Holies once a year. 

Yes, there were other reasons to go through the mikvah.  These were primarily issues of clean verses unclean.  Our purpose here is to take a look at Scripture to see that He is doing this specifically as the bridegroom.

Read John 3:27-29.   

“To this John replied, “A man can receive only what is given him from heaven.  You yourselves can testify that I said, `I am not the Christ but am sent ahead of him.’  The bride belongs to the bridegroom. The friend who attends the bridegroom waits and listens for him, and is full of joy when he hears the bridegroom’s voice. That joy is mine, and it is now complete.” 

That of course is John the Baptist speaking of Jesus the bridegroom. 

Read Matthew 9:14-15.

“Then John’s disciples came and asked him, “How is it that we and the Pharisees fast, but your disciples do not fast?”  Jesus answered, “How can the guests of the bridegroom mourn while he is with them? The time will come when the bridegroom will be taken from them; then they will fast.” 

That is Jesus referring to Himself as the bridegroom, but did you notice who He was talking to.  He’s talking to the disciples of John the Baptist. Both times in Scripture that we see Jesus referred to as the bridegroom it is either John talking about Jesus or it is Jesus talking to the disciples of John.  There is a connection between John the Baptist and Jesus and it is part of His role as the bridegroom.  For some reason, both Jesus and John seem to understand the baptism of Jesus as a part of His role as the bridegroom, Jesus’ mikvah.  They both seem to understand that.  That is the one connection they have.  He was fulfilling a Jewish wedding ritual.

Thankful for My Bridegroom,

Vicky

All Biblical Quotes are NIV

Be sure to check out the Baptism page for more information

Messianic Congregations

Today’s post is one of encouragement.  I want to encourage each of you to reach out to a Messianic Congregation in your region.  Not all of us have one close by so we have to think from a more regional perspective.  You can find the one closest to you by going to the Messianic Alliance of North America at http://www.man-na.com.  Go visit the congregation of your choice and ask how you can participate in their ministry.

My family and I are going to visit a Messianic Congregation in Nashville this Saturday, Kol Dodi. We plan on attending worship and then a Mikvah (baptism) service at the park.  I am really looking forward to this, it will be the first time I have been to a Messianic worship and Mikvah service.  Join me and my family in learning from these amazing people of God.

As I was doing some research this week on Messianic Congregations I also found congregations in Israel.  I have to tell you this was very exciting for me.  The first one I would like to introduce you to is Adonai Roi (The Lord is My Shepherd)/Dugit Messianic Outreach Centre found at:

http://www.dugit.org/dvd.html

I am giving you their dvd page because I would like you to watch these videos and praise God for what He is doing in the land of Israel.  I have had some trouble seeing all of the top video, but the other three work fine.  These videos will amaze you and you will be left with no other response, but praise.  My response was, “And God smiles”.  God is breaking down their wall of hostility and making them one, making them family.

Our prayers need to be with these brothers and sisters in the Holy Land.  I hope you enjoy these videos and also take the time to browse the sites. 

God bless you as you walk in the Light of His grace.

Vicky