Washing in Easton's Bible Dictionary
(Mark 7:1-9). The Jews, like other Orientals, used their
fingers
when taking food, and therefore washed their hands
before doing
so, for the sake of cleanliness. Here the reference
is to the
ablutions prescribed by tradition, according to
which "the
disciples ought to have gone down to the side of the
lake,
washed their hands thoroughly, 'rubbing the fist of
one hand in
the hollow of the other, then placed the ten finger-
tips
together, holding the hands up, so that any surplus
water might
flow down to the elbow, and thence to the ground.'"
To neglect
to do this had come to be regarded as a great sin, a
sin equal
to the breach of any of the ten commandments. Moses
had
commanded washings oft, but always for some definite
cause; but
the Jews multiplied the legal observance till they
formed a
large body of precepts. To such precepts about
ceremonial
washing Mark here refers. (See ABLUTION -T0000051.)
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