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ABLUTION ( See also: physical or hygienic cleanliness of persons and things obtained by the use of See also: soap and See also: water.l Indeed the two states may contradict each other, as in the See also: case of the 4th-century Christian See also: pilgrim to Jerusalem who boasted that she had not washed her face for eighteen years for fear of removing therefrom the See also: holy chrism of See also: baptism
.
The purport, then, of ablutions is to remove, not dust and dirt, but the—to us imaginary—stains contracted by contact with the dead, with childbirth, with menstruous,See also: women, with See also: murder whether wilful or involuntary, with almost any See also: form of bloodshed, with persons of inferior caste, with dead animal refuse, e.g. See also: leather or excrement, with leprosy, madness and any form of disease
.
Among all races in a certain grade of development such associations are vaguely felt to be dangerous and to impair vitality
.
In a later stage the taint is regarded as alive, as a demon or evil spirit alighting on and passing into the things and persons exposed to contamination
.
In general, water, cows' urine and See also: blood of See also: swine are the materials used in ablutions
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Of these water is the commonest, and its efficacy is enhanced if it be See also: running, and still more if a magical or sacramental virtue has been imparted to it by ritual blessing or consecration
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Some concrete examples will best illustrate the nature of such ablutions
.
In the Atharva-Veda, vii
.
116, we have this allopathic remedy for fever
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The patient's skin burns, that of a See also: frog is cold to the touch; therefore tie to the See also: foot of the See also: bed a frog, bound with red and black thread, and See also: wash down the sick See also: man so that the water of ablution falls
In its technical ecclesiastical sense the ablution is the ritual washing of the chalice and of the See also: priest's fingers after the celebration of Holy Communion in the Catholic See also: Church
.
The
See also: wine and water used for this purpose are themselves sometimes called "the ablution."
II
0
ABNAKI=--See also: ABO
on the frog
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Let the See also: medicine man or magician pray that the fever may pass into the frog, and the frog be forthwith re-leased, and the cure will be effected
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In the old Athenian See also: Anthesteria the blood of victims was poured over the unclean
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A See also: bath of bulls' blood was much in vogue as a baptism in the mysteries of See also: Attis
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The water must in ritual washings run off in See also: order to carry away the miasma or unseen demon of disease; and accordingly in baptism the early Christians used living or running water
.
Nor was it enough that the See also: person baptized should himself enter the water; the baptizer must pour it over his See also: head, so that it run down his person
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Similarly the See also: Brahman takes care, after ablution of a person, to wipe the cathartic water off from head to feet downwards, that the malign influence may pass out through the feet
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The same care is shown in ritual ablutions in the See also: Bukovina and elsewhere
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Water and fire, spices and See also: sulphur, are used in ritual cleansings, says Iamblichus in his See also: book on mysteries (v
.
23), as being specially full of the divine nature
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Nevertheless in all religions, and especially in the Brahmanic and Christian, the cathartic virtue of water is enhanced by the introduction into it by means of suitable prayers and incantations of a divine or magical power
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Ablutions both of persons and things are usually cathartic, that is, intended to purge away evil influences (KaOaipecv, to make KaOapbs, pure)
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But, as See also: Robertson See also: Smith observes, "holiness is contagious, just as uncleanness is "; and
See also: common things and persons may..become See also: taboo, that is, so holy as to be dangerous and useless for daily See also: life through the See also: mere infection of holiness
.
Thus in See also: Syria one who touched a dove became taboo for one whole See also: day, and if a drop of blood of the See also: Hebrew sin-offering See also: fell on a garment it had to be ritually washed off
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It was as necessary in the Hebrew See also: religion for the priest to wash his hands after handling the sacred See also: volume as before
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Christians might not enter a church to say their prayers without first washing their hands
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So See also: Chrysostom says: "Although our hands may be already pure, yet unless we have washed them thoroughly, we do not spread them upwards in prayer." See also: Tertullian (c
.
200) had long before condemned this as a See also: heathen See also: custom; none the less, it was insisted on in later ages, and is a survival of the See also: pagan lustrations or frepeppavrijpca
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See also: Sozomen (vi
.
6) tells how a priest sprinkled Julian and Valentinian with water according to the heathen custom as they entered his See also: temple
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The same custom prevails among Mahommedans
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Porphyry (de Abst. ii
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44) relates that one who touched a sacrifice meant to avert divine anger must bathe and wash his clothes in running water before returning to his city and home, and similar scruples in regard to holy See also: objects and persons have been observed among the natives of Polynesia, New Zealand and See also: ancient See also: Egypt
.
The See also: rites, met within all lands, of pouring out water or bathing in order to produce rain from heaven, differ in their significance from ablutions with water and belong to the See also: realm of sympathetic magic
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There are certain forms of See also: purification which one does not know whether to describe as ablutions or anointings
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Thus See also: Demosthenes in his speech " On the See also: crown" accused Aeschines of having " purified the initiated and wiped them clean with (not from) mud and See also: pitch." Smearing with See also: gypsum (rtravoc, titanos) had a similar purifying effect, and it has been suggestedI that the See also: Titans were no more than old-See also: world votaries who had so disguised themselves
.
Perhaps the use of ashes in mourning had the same origin . In the rite ofSee also: death-bed penance given in the old Mozarabic Christian ritual of See also: Spain, ashes were poured over. the sick man
.
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