Meaning
(2.) Before the priests approached the altar of God, they were required, on pain of death, to wash their hands and their feet to cleanse them from the soil of common life (Ex 30:17-21). To this practice the Psalmist alludes, Ps 26:6.
(3.) There were washings prescribed for the purpose of cleansing from positive defilement contracted by particular acts. Of such washings eleven different species are prescribed in the Levitical law (Lev. 12-15).
(4.) A fourth class of ablutions is mentioned, by which a person purified or absolved himself from the guilt of some particular act. For example, the elders of the nearest village where some murder was committed were required, when the murderer was unknown, to wash their hands over the expiatory heifer which was beheaded, and in doing so to say, "Our hands have not shed this blood, neither have our eyes See n it" (Deut 21:1-9). So also Pilate declared himself innocent of the blood of Jesus by washing his hands (Matt 27:24). This act of Pilate may not, however, have been borrowed from the custom of the Jews. The same practice was common among the Greeks and Romans.
The PhariSee s carried the practice of ablution to great excess, thereby claiming extraordinary purity (Matt 23:25). Mark (7:1-5) refers to the ceremonial ablutions. The PhariSee s washed their hands "oft," more correctly, "with the fist" (R.V., "diligently"), or as an old father, Theophylact, explains it, "up to the elbow." (Compare also Mark 7:4; Lev 6:28; 11: 32-36; 15:22) (See WASHING)