Sacrifices & Feasts · purity-procedure

Red Heifer

A unique purification procedure in Numbers 19 that used the ashes of a red heifer mixed with water to cleanse those defiled by contact with death.

Torah Function

Numbers 19 commands the slaughter and burning of an unblemished red heifer outside the camp. Cedar wood, hyssop, and scarlet wool are burned with it, and its ashes are kept for water of cleansing. The rite purifies those made unclean through contact with death, and failure to be cleansed leaves the person cut off because the Lord's sanctuary has been defiled.

In Plain Language

The red heifer ritual dealt with uncleanness caused by death. Its ashes were kept for water of cleansing, allowing those defiled by corpse contact to be restored to purity and kept from contaminating the sanctuary community.

Key Torah Passages
New Testament Connections
Hebrews 9:13-14 Typological Fulfillment

Hebrews explicitly names the ashes of a heifer as purifying those ceremonially unclean, then contrasts that limited cleansing with Christ's blood, which cleanses the conscience from acts that lead to death.

Christological Trajectory

Hebrews explicitly contrasts the ashes of a heifer, which sanctified outwardly for the cleansing of the flesh, with the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit cleanses the conscience. The trajectory is not that the heifer itself atones for sin, but that its limited flesh-cleansing function points by contrast to Christ's superior inward purification.

Interpretive Boundary

This profile should not treat the red heifer as a general sacrifice for moral guilt or collapse it into the sin offering system. It is a purity rite focused on corpse defilement and sanctuary protection.

Key Terms
פָּרָה אֲדֻמָּה parah adummah red heifer

red heifer

מֵי נִדָּה mei niddah water of cleansing/removal for impurity

water of cleansing/removal for impurity

חָטָּאת chatta't purification offering / sin offering term used in this purification context

purification offering / sin offering term used in this purification context