The Many
Prefigurations of Baptism in Scripture
Listen to
the Apostle’s teaching: For all our fathers were under the cloud, and
all passed through the sea, and were all baptized into Moses in the cloud and
in the sea.
Moreover,
Moses himself sings in triumph You sent your Spirit and the sea covered
them. As you see, holy
baptism was prefigured even then at the crossing of the sea, where the
Egyptians perished but the Hebrews escaped.
What
else, after all, are we daily taught about baptism? That with the immersion in
water, guilt is swallowed up and error done away with, but that virtue and
innocence remain unharmed?
You
hear that our fathers were under the cloud, a kindly cloud which cooled the
heat of carnal passions. That kindly cloud overshadows those whom the Holy
Spirit visits. Finally it came upon the Virgin Mary, and the Power of the Most
High overshadowed her, when she conceived Redemption for the race of men. The
miracle worked by Moses was a prefiguration of this miracle. But then – if
the Spirit was in the figure, how can he not be present in the reality? As
Scripture says, The law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by
Jesus Christ.
Marah
was a spring of unendurably bitter water: Moses threw wood into it and it
became sweet. For you see: water without the preaching of the Cross of the Lord
is of no use for future salvation, but, after it has been consecrated by the
mystery of the wood of the saving Cross, it is made suitable for the use of the
spiritual cleansing and of the cup of salvation. So as Moses (that is, the
prophet) threw wood into that fountain, so the priest utters over this font the
proclamation of the Lord’s cross, and the water is made sweet for the purpose
of grace.
You
must not trust, then, wholly to your bodily eyes. What is not seen is in
reality seen more clearly; for what we see with our eyes is temporal whereas
what is eternal (and invisible to the eye) is discerned by the mind and spirit.
There
is a final lesson to be learned from the book of the Kings which we have just
been reading. Naaman was a Syrian, and suffered from leprosy, and there was
no-one who could cleanse him. Then a maiden from among the captives said that
there was a prophet in Israel, who could cleanse him from the defilement of the
leprosy. And it is said that, having taken silver and gold, Naaman went to the
king of Israel. And the king, when he heard why Naaman had come, tore his
garments, saying that this was an attempt to put him in the wrong, since
healing leprosy was not in the power of kings. Elisha, however, sent word to
the king that he should send the Syrian to him, so that he might know there was
a God in Israel. And when he had come, he told him to dip himself seven times
in the river Jordan.
Naaman
doubted until the time when he was cleansed; but you are cleansed by now, and
so you should not have doubts.
From the treatise “On the Mysteries” by Saint Ambrose
Photo taken from Wikimedia Commons
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