The writer of "The Epistle to the Messianic Hebrews" challenges the
believers to leave behind the foundational principles of faith in
Messiah, and to press on to maturity. Once the foundations of the faith
have been laid firmly and the "milk" of the word has strengthened us, it
is time for some real meat. One of the foundations of faith listed in
Hebrews is "the doctrine of baptisms" (plural), yet in the Christian
world very little is known about baptism. What is known is filtered
through a Greek mind-set and ignorance of the Hebrew practice of the
"mikveh" from which "baptism" is loosely translated.
John
the Baptist was not a Baptist, nor was his name John—his name was
Yohannan ben Zechariah, the son of an Aaronic priest. He did not invent
some "new thing", but was performing that of which every Israelite was
intimately familiar—yet of which the average Christian is clueless. He
was "mikveh-ing" Israelites in the Jordan River when he first met the
promised Messiah, Yahshua. Every Israelite understood what Yochannan was
doing in the Jordan, but the religious leaders could not understand why
he was performing the Mikveh outside of their authorized religious
system.
Join Michael Rood on the banks of the beautiful Jordan
River near his home in Israel as he opens the believer's eyes to the
depths of "The Mikveh - the Doctrine of Baptisms". Once this foundation
of the faith is understood, we may then move on to maturity.
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