Sacrifices & Feasts · Ritual

Nazirite Vow

A voluntary Torah vow of temporary consecration marked by abstaining from wine, avoiding corpse defilement, and leaving the hair uncut until completion.

Torah Function

Numbers 6 regulates the Nazirite vow as a specific form of consecration open to men or women. The Nazirite abstains from grape products, avoids corpse defilement even for close family, and lets the hair grow. If defiled, the period must be restarted with sacrifice; when completed, the worshiper presents offerings and cuts the consecrated hair at the sanctuary.

In Plain Language

The Nazirite vow allowed an Israelite man or woman to be specially set apart to the Lord for a period of devotion. It was not priesthood and not moral superiority; it was a bounded act of consecration with visible restrictions and prescribed offerings when completed.

Key Torah Passages
New Testament Connections
Luke 1:13-17 Thematic Echo

John the Baptist is commanded not to drink wine or fermented drink and is set apart from birth for a prophetic mission, echoing Nazirite consecration patterns without explicitly naming the Nazirite vow.

Acts 18:18 Thematic Echo

Paul's haircut because of a vow may reflect Jewish vow practice in the orbit of Numbers 6, though the text does not explicitly identify the vow as Nazirite.

Acts 21:23-26 Thematic Echo

The purification and completion expenses for men under a vow resemble regulated Jewish vow practice and may stand near Nazirite procedures, but the passage does not explicitly name the Nazirite vow.

Christological Trajectory

The Nazirite vow does not receive a direct type-fulfillment treatment in the NT. Its responsible trajectory is consecration to God under divine rule, with later canonical echoes in figures marked by abstinence or special dedication. Christ fulfills holiness perfectly, but the Torah Nazirite rite itself should not be over-typologized.

Interpretive Boundary

The Nazirite vow should not be confused with ordinary holiness, priestly office, monastic withdrawal, or a permanent requirement for all believers. Samson's lifelong calling and later abstinence patterns may echo Nazirite themes but do not define the Torah rite itself.

Key Terms
נָזִיר nazir one separated or consecrated; Nazirite

one separated or consecrated; Nazirite

נֶדֶר neder vow; a solemn commitment made before the LORD

vow; a solemn commitment made before the LORD

קָדֹשׁ qadosh holy, set apart

holy, set apart