Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Hyssop-אזוב-Significance and Fulfillment

Preface

Hyssop (אזוב) is a small, bushy herb deeply woven into the fabric of biblical rituals, symbolizing purification and the application of sacrificial blood. Its recurring presence in the Torah and New Testament points to profound spiritual truths, particularly the cleansing from sin and death through Yahusha haMashiach . This note explores hyssop’s role in key purification rituals—Passover, the cleansing of the leper, and the red heifer ceremony—revealing its prophetic significance as a foreshadowing of Messiah’s redemptive work. By examining its use in scripture, alongside its gematria value of 16, we uncover how hyssop bridges the earthly and divine, culminating in its appearance at the crucifixion, where the shadow of Torah rituals meets the reality of Yahusha’s sacrifice.

🍃Hyssop (אזוב) : is a small, bushy herb mentioned repeatedly in the Scriptures, often associated with ritual purification and sacrificial blood applications. It holds rich symbolic meaning in both the Tanakh (Old Testament) and the New Testament (Brit Hadashah), especially in relation to cleansing from sin and pointing prophetically to Yahusha haMashiach.

📘1. Exodus 12:22 – Passover in Egypt

“And you shall take a bunch of hyssop, and dip it in the blood that is in the basin, and strike the lintel and the two side posts with the blood…”

Hyssop was used to apply lamb’s blood on the doorposts.

It allowed the blood to be applied without directly touching it with the hand, which is significant because 

Blood was sacred — it represented life (Leviticus 17:11) and could not be eaten or treated casually.

It would keep a priest away from religious impurity

2. Purification of skin diseases 

📖Lev 14:6  “Let him take the live bird and the cedar wood and the scarlet and the hyssop, and dip them and the live bird in the blood of the bird that was slain over the running water. 

it’s a ritual “sprinkler” — avoiding direct touch with the purifying liquid.

🐄3. Numbers 19 — Red Heifer Water of Purification

📖Num 19:6  And the priest shall take cedar wood and hyssop and scarlet, and throw them into the midst of the fire burning the heifer. 

📖Num 19:18  And a clean man shall take hyssop and dip it in the water, and shall sprinkle it on the tent, and on all the vessels, and on the beings who were there, or on the one who touched a bone, or the slain, or the dead, or a burial-site. 

So the exclusive Torah command for hyssop in applying blood is Exodus 12:22 — the original Passover.

In other cases, it applies purifying water/blood mixtures, not purely blood from a lamb.

Azub אזוב has gematria value of 16

Aleph =1 Zayin = 7 Uau= 6 Beyt= 2. Total 16

The ashes of the red heifer (parah adumah: פרה אדמה) were not part of the Day of Atonement service — they were a separate ritual described in Numbers 19.

Their purpose was to deal with the most severe form of ritual impurity: contact with death.

❓Why they were needed

In Torah, coming into contact with a human corpse — even being under the same roof — caused a person to become טמא לנפש (tamei lanefesh, ritually impure because of a dead body).

This impurity was considered so severe that:

The person could not enter the Tabernacle/Temple precincts.

If they entered while still impure, they would be cut off (karet) from YasharaEL (Numbers 19:13).

📖Num 19:9  And a clean man shall gather up the ashes of the heifer, and shall place them outside the camp in a clean place. And they shall be kept for the congregation of the children of Yisra’ěl for the water for uncleanness, it is for cleansing from sin
📖Num 19:10  And he who gathers the ashes of the heifer shall wash his garments, and is unclean until evening. And it shall be a law forever to the children of Yisra’ěl and to the stranger who sojourns in their midst. 
📖Num 19:11  He who touches the dead of any human being is unclean for seven days. 
📖Num 19:12  He is to cleanse himself with the water on the third day, and on the seventh day he is clean. But if he does not cleanse himself on the third day, then on the seventh day he is not clean. 
📖Num 19:13  Anyone who touches the dead of a human being, and does not cleanse himself, defiles the Dwelling Place of יהוה. And that being shall be cut off from Yisra’ěl. He is unclean, for the water for uncleanness was not sprinkled on him, his uncleanness is still upon him. 
📖Num 19:14  This is the Torah when a man dies in a tent: All who come into the tent and all who are in the tent are unclean for seven days, 
📖Num 19:16  Anyone in the open field who touches someone slain by a sword or who has died, or a bone of a man, or a burial-site, is unclean for seven days. 
📖Num 19:21  And it shall be a law for them forever. And the one who sprinkles the water for uncleanness washes his garments. And the one who touches the water for uncleanness is unclean until evening. 

Normal washing in water was not enough for this kind of defilement.

Only the “water of purification” (מי נדה) made from the ashes of the red heifer mixed with living water could remove it.

According to Numbers 19:11–22, the following people had to be cleansed with it:

1. Anyone who touched a dead body (v. 11)

2. Anyone present in a tent/house where someone died (v. 14)

3. Anyone who touched a human bone or a grave (v. 16)

4. Anyone who touched a person slain in battle (v. 16)

5. The gatherer of the ashes (v. 10) and the sprinkler of the water (v. 21) — because handling the purification materials paradoxically made them temporarily impure until evening.

The Torah (Numbers 19:17) just says the ashes of the red heifer had to be mixed with "living water" (mayim chayim), which means flowing, fresh, spring water — not stagnant water from a cistern.

It does not specify which spring in the text.

However, later Jewish tradition (especially from the Mishnah Parah and Temple sources) says that in Yerushalayim during the Second Temple period, the water for purification was indeed brought from the Gihon Spring in the Kidron Valley.

This makes sense because:

  • Gihon was the main natural spring near Yerushalayim.

  • It was considered ritually pure because it was running water.

  • It was also used for Temple service water supplies.

So while Torah doesn’t name Gihon, historically in Temple times they likely did use it for the red heifer water.

The Hebrew word גיחון (Gichon / Gihon) comes from the root גיח (giyach), meaning “to burst forth,” “gush,” or “break out.”

So Gihon literally means:

  • Bursting forth

  • Gushing stream

  • Outpouring

In scripture, it’s used for:

  1. One of the four rivers in Eden (Genesis 2:13) — the one said to “compass the whole land of Cush.”

  2. The spring of Gihon in Yerushalayim — the main water source of the city in King David’s time, famous for its sudden surges of water.

The name captures the idea of a sudden, strong outflow, whether of water or, symbolically, of life and blessing.

❓How it was used

1. The ashes were stored outside the camp (v. 9).

2. When needed, a small portion was mixed with living water (flowing or spring water).

3. On the third and seventh day after the defilement, a clean person would sprinkle the mixture on the defiled person, their clothes, and their tent (v. 12, 19).

4. After the seventh-day sprinkling, they bathed in water and were clean by evening.

🛎️Significance:

1. Death was the ultimate uncleanness — representing separation from Yahuah, the Source of life.

2. The ashes came from a completely red, unblemished cow, burnt outside the camp — a picture later applied to Messiah (Hebrews 9:13–14; 13:11–12) as the one who cleanses the conscience from the defilement of death.

3. The paradox: the ashes cleansed the unclean, yet made the clean person who prepared or applied them temporarily unclean.

This illustrated that sin and death are contagious, but cleansing comes from Yahuah’s appointed means.

📖Heb 9:13  For if the blood of bulls and goats and the ashes of a heifer, sprinkling the defiled, sets apart for the cleansing of the flesh, 
📖Heb 9:14  how much more shall the blood of the Messiah, who through the everlasting Spirit offered Himself unblemished to Elohim, cleanse your conscience from dead works to serve the living Elohim?

📖Heb 13:11  For the bodies of those beasts whose blood is brought into the Set-apart Place by the high priest for sin, are burned outside the camp. 
📖Heb 13:12  And so יהושע also suffered outside the gate, to set apart the people with His own blood.

In Numbers 19, the Torah calls it פרה אדמה (parah adumah — “red heifer”), but the Hebrew words themselves carry layers of meaning:

אדם (adam) = “man,” but also “red” (root dam: דם — blood). It connects directly to the first Adam, made from the adamah (ground).

פרה (parah) = “heifer,” but also from the root פרה “to be fruitful, to increase.”

So פרה אדמה (parah adamah) can be read symbolically as “the fruitful red man” — a picture of Messiah Yahusha as the last Adam (1 Cor 15:45), fruitful in obedience even unto death, whose blood cleanses from defilement.

🖋️The Torah specifies:

📖”…he shall purify himself with it on the third day, and on the seventh day he shall be clean” (Numbers 19:12).

the third day in the parah adumah (red heifer) ritual clearly points to Yahusha’s resurrection (Hoshea 6:2, Mattityahu 17:23), because the unclean person could not be restored without the midway sprinkling.

🌩️The seventh day cleansing carries a second, deeper prophetic layer:

In Hebrew thought, the 7th always symbolizes completion, covenant rest, and perfection (shabbat).

This points to the final, complete redemption — not just resurrection, but entry into eternal rest (Hebrews 4:9-10; Revelation 21:4).

The third-day cleansing = initial salvation and life from the dead.

The third day corresponds to Torah purification using Hyssop as Yahuah created all plant life on the third day. It also corresponds to the rosh (poisonous plants) which was mixed in gall and given to Yahusha before his impaling which we will see later.

📖Gen 1:11  And Elohim said, “Let the earth bring forth grass, the plant that yields seed, and the fruit tree that yields fruit according to its kind, whose seed is in itself, on the earth.” And it came to be so. 
📖Gen 1:12  And the earth brought forth grass, the plant that yields seed according to its kind, and the tree that yields fruit, whose seed is in itself according to its kind. And Elohim saw that it was good. 
📖Gen 1:13  And there came to be evening and there came to be morning, the third day

The seventh-day cleansing = final sanctification at the end of the age when all uncleanness is gone — no more death, sin, or defilement.

In the parah adumah, the person is still considered unclean between days 3–6 — even after the first sprinkling. That matches our current state: resurrected in spirit, but still awaiting final glorification in body (Romans 8:23).

📖Rom 8:23  And not only so, but even we ourselves who have the first-fruits of the Spirit, we ourselves also groan within ourselves, eagerly waiting for the adoption, the redemption of our body.

🛡️“Day 1 – Day 3 – Day 7” pattern:

🩸1. Passover (Exodus 12) – Hyssop applies the blood

Day 1: The lamb is slain at twilight on 14 Abib; blood is applied with hyssop.

Day 3: Messiah’s resurrection (3rd day from His death — Luke 24:46).

📖Luk 24:46  and said to them, “Thus it has been written, and so it was necessary for the Messiah to suffer and to rise again from the dead the third day, 

Day 7: The first weekly Shabbat within Unleavened Bread → beginning the count toward Shavuot (Omer count).

💦2. Cleansing of the Leper (Leviticus 14) – Hyssop used in purification

Day 1: Initial cleansing with blood & water (bird sacrifice, cedar wood, scarlet, hyssop).

Day 3: In leprosy law, mid-point washing and re-evaluation; doesn’t exist. It was a waiting time for Leper outside the camp. 

📅Day 1 — Outside the Camp (Lev 14:4–7)

  • Elements used:

    • Two live clean birds

    • Cedar wood

    • Scarlet yarn

    • Hyssop

  • Ritual:

    • One bird is slaughtered over living water (the water of purification from the ashes of the red heifer.), as 📖Hebrews 9:13 states ".... and the ashes of a heifer, sprinkling the defiled, sets apart for the cleansing of the flesh.."  Also 📖Num 19:9 says " And a clean man shall gather up the ashes of the heifer, and shall place them outside the camp in a clean place. And they shall be kept for the congregation of the children of Yisra’ěl for the water for uncleanness, it is for cleansing from sin"

    • That was where the leper was, outside the camp & that's where the ashes of the red heifer were stored

Leviticus 14:3 is huge for the typology.

📖Lev 14:3  and the priest shall go out of the camp, and the priest shall look and see, if the leprosy is healed in the leper, 

📌 Why the priest goes outside the camp:

  • The leper is cut off from YasharEL — physically and ritually “dead” to the community.

  • The priest’s movement outside the camp mirrors Yahusha, our High Priest, leaving the heavenly throne to come into the “place of the unclean” (Hebrews 13:11–13).

  • Outside the camp is also where the red heifer was burned (Numbers 19:3), and where Messiah was crucified (John 19:17–20).

📜 Link to the red heifer water:

  • If the leper is being inspected outside the camp, there’s no bronze laver there — the only “authorized” water that could be brought and used without defiling the priest would be living water mixed with the ashes of the red heifer, which was stored in a clean place outside the camp (Num. 19:9).

  • This keeps the priest clean while engaging with the “death” imagery of leprosy.

    • The live bird, cedar, scarlet, and hyssop are dipped in the blood of the slain bird.

    • The blood-water mixture is sprinkled seven times on the leper with the hyssop.

    • The live bird is then set free into the open field.

🛎️Significance:

  • Death + life — the slain bird represents death (end of the leper’s old, unclean life); the released bird represents restored life and freedom, pointing to death and resurrection of Yahusha.

  • Outside the camp — The leper is still not fully restored to community; this is an initial cleansing, like Yahusha’s death providing immediate atonement but not yet the fullness of resurrection life until He entered the heavenly sanctuary.

  • The materials (cedar, scarlet, hyssop) link directly to Passover and the Red Heifer — all are “application” imagery for cleansing blood and removing death defilement.

Day 7: Full entry back into the camp, restoration to the community — like the “Sabbath rest” after being made whole.

📅Day 8 — Inside the Camp (Lev 14:10–20, or 21–22 for the poor)

  • The leper has spent seven days in a transitional period — shaved, washed, staying in the camp but outside his tent.

  • On the 8th day, he comes to the priest at the entrance of the Tabernacle with his offerings.

  • For a poor leper:

    • One male lamb — guilt offering (asham).

    • One log of oil — waved before Yahuah.

    • Two turtledoves or pigeons — one sin offering (chatat), one burnt offering (olah).

Why not Day 3 cleansing for the leper?

Because the leper is not “death-defiled” but living in a prolonged state of exclusion — his condition is like being socially dead, not ritually dead by corpse contact as in Red Heifer ashes cleansing water (though the same water is used here for dead skin which is now restored).

🎵The Torah’s rhythm here is:

  • Day 1 → examine him declare him clean so he can start the return process.

  • Day 7 → complete restoration to worship and community.

The seven-day wait matches other “full-cycle” purifications (childbirth, bodily discharges, Nazirite defilement), where a complete week is the symbolic boundary between old state and new creation.

Significance:

  • 8th day = covenant renewal, new creation.

  • The guilt offering is about restoring him fully to his covenant position in YasharEL.

  • The sin offering clears the remaining impurity.

  • The burnt offering symbolizes total dedication to Yahuah going forward.

🖋️The Flow of Meaning

  • Day 1 — cleansing from the power of death and impurity → symbolic resurrection promise (bird released).

  • Days 2–7 — transition, separation, preparation. 7th Day admitted within the camp

  • Day 8 — full covenant restoration, acceptance in Yahuah’s presence through the offering.

🗲When read prophetically:
  • Day 1 = Messiah’s death and resurrection begun. (dead bird blood and live bird dipped in its blood and let to fly, also emblems of cedar wood (stake), hyssop (cleansing agent), scarlet (thread of redemption to be continued pointing to Messiah), living water (spring water mixed with ashes of red heifer)

  • Day 8 = New creation reality — the eternal priesthood (Melchizedek) bringing complete restoration into the heavenly dwelling. We declared clean and waiting for the redemption of our body (by His stripes we are healed), just as leper waited until the 7th Day.

🐂3. Red Heifer Ashes (Numbers 19) – Hyssop sprinkles the water of purification

 • Day 1: Contact with death → needs cleansing.

 • Day 3: First sprinkling — symbolic of resurrection life entering the defiled.

 • Day 7: Second sprinkling, then full cleansing — complete restoration and ability to enter the sanctuary.

🧩How it fits Passover–Resurrection imagery

It’s slightly different from the Red Heifer or Passover hyssop pattern, because here:

Passover (Day 1) → Blood applied immediately → person is covered.

Resurrection (Day 3) → New life manifest.

Leper → The focus is on first redemption and final restoration (Day 1 & Day 7) with a full new creation on Day 8.

This makes the leper cleansing more of a full salvation timeline:

Day 1 — Messiah’s sacrifice

Seven days — the Assembly age / sanctification

Day 7–8 — Return of Messiah, glorification, and entering the eternal covenant fully.

Significance of shaving of hair on 7th day for a leper:

📖Lev 14:9  “And on the seventh day it shall be that he shaves all the hair off his head and his beard and his eyebrows, even all his hair he shaves off. And he shall wash his garments and wash his body in water, and shall be clean. 

In Torah, שׂער (“hair”) in the leper’s cleansing isn’t just about hygiene; it carries a symbolic meaning tied to identity, inheritance, and transformation.

Edom / Esau — “hairy” (Esau was literally described as seir), connected to Mount Seir, a place representing the nation that lost its covenant birthright. Being outside the camp parallels being outside the covenant inheritance.

Shaving in leper’s cleansing — Symbolically removing the old identity (like Edom’s hairy nature), stripping away the old man who is alienated from the covenant.

Messiah’s cleansing — In Yahusha, the leper (excluded, unclean) is restored, regaining inheritance within YasharEL. This is a spiritual reversal of Edom’s fate — instead of losing the birthright, the cleansed leper receives it back through grace.

So shaving שׂער Seir here is like a paradigm shift — a visible sign that the old, rejected identity is gone, and the person is now restored to covenant life.

📖Gen 25:25  And the first came out red all over, like a hairy שׂער H8181 garment, so they called his name Ěsaw. 

📖Gen 36:8  So Ěsaw dwelt in Mount Seir שׂעיר H165. Ěsaw is Eḏom. 

Seir שׂעיר means hairy

In poetic texts, שׂערה (seʿarah) — from the same root — means storm, whirlwind (Job 38:1 – Then Yahuah answered Job out of the whirlwind).

Yahuah showing Ayob/Job that the whirlwind that He Himself will go through will be far greater than the suffering of Job.

🐐Goat’s Hair Covering on the Tabernacle

📖Exodus 26:7 – “And you shall make curtains of goat’s hair for a tent over the tabernacle…”

Goat’s hair was the outer covering over the fine linen curtains (which were closest to the Set Apart Place). Goat imagery is strongly tied to sin-bearing in Torah — especially the Azazel scapegoat on Yom Kippur (Leviticus 16). The goat’s hair covering symbolically stood as the visible outer layer of sin covering — the thing the people would see from outside, while the beauty of the linen (Messiah’s righteousness) was hidden beneath. Goat’s hair covering on the tabernacle = the sin layer that stands between Yahuah and His people. The common people of YasharEL couldn’t see within the Tabernacle.

Hair on the leper’s body = the visible outer mark of uncleanness that keeps him outside.

In Messiah, both are removed or transformed 

The veil was torn from top to bottom-way to the Most Set Apart Place made for His people. Now His people can see within.

The leper’s hair is shaved as a public sign of restored access to the camp (symbol of being welcomed back into YasharEL’s inheritance).

The Esau kind of treatment which Carnal Torah brought was eternally removed by Mashiyach Yahusha making us heirs in Him with full access to Sonship entry.

There is a waiting period though as seven days for a leper showing end of age for we are now adopted sons accessing the Dabar promises through the Ruach.

Hence, The tabernacle’s outer goat hair covering foreshadowed the sinner’s condition — separated by sin. The leper’s shaving is the removal of that old covering when atonement is applied.

In Messiah, the “goat covering” of sin is taken away, and the person is seen in the pure “linen” of righteousness.

➡️1. Torah provisions about defilement from a dead body

📖Numbers 19:11–13 — Whoever touches/naga נגע H5060 the dead body of any man is unclean 7 days. They must be cleansed with the ashes of the red heifer water on the 3rd and 7th days or they remain unclean and are cut off.

📖Numbers 9:6–13 — If someone is unclean because of a dead body or is away on a journey, they cannot keep Passover in the first month; they may keep it in the second month instead.

The priests at the stake (crucifixion) were literally within touching range of the body of Yahusha. Even if they did not physically touch Him, Numbers 19:14–16 says being in the same enclosed area as a dead body causes the same defilement. At Golgotha, they were within the “tent” zone of His death.

Naga H5060 נגע also means to to reach, extend, attain, arrive, come, approach, come near 

📖1Sa 14:9  “If they say this to us, ‘Wait until we come/naga נגע H5060 to you,’ then we shall stand still in our place and not go up to them. 

📖Lev 5:7  ‘And if he is unable to bring/naga נגע H5060 a lamb, then he shall bring to יהוה, he who has sinned, two turtledoves or two young pigeons, one for a sin offering and the other for an ascending offering. 

📖Jdg 20:34  And ten thousand chosen men from all Yisra’ěl came against Giḇ‛ah, and the battle was fierce. But they did not know that calamity was near/naga נגע H5060 them. 

📖2Sa 5:8  And David said on that day, Whosoever comes/naga נגע H5060 to the gutter, and smites the Yebusites, and the lame and the blind, that are hated of David's soul, he shall be chief and captain. Wherefore they said, The blind and the lame shall not come into the house. 

📖Ezr 3:1   Now when the seventh new moon came/naga נגע H5060, and the children of Yisra’ěl were in the cities, the people gathered as one man to Yerushalayim. 

Please Note: I’ve taken the context of Naga being used as coming of being near.

In Torah contexts about ritual impurity, נגע (naga) isn’t limited to direct touching — it can include coming into proximity to a corpse, leper, or other source of defilement (Numbers 19:11–13).

That means in the crucifixion scene, if priests or anyone else “approached” the dying body of Yahusha, the Torah’s naga language could apply, triggering the very red heifer cleansing requirement — and thus making the connection to the Second Passover provision in Numbers 9:6–13.

📖Mat 27:40  and saying, “You who destroy the Dwelling Place and build it in three days, save Yourself! If You are the Son of Elohim, come down from the stake.”
📖Mat 27:41  And likewise the chief priests, with the scribes and elders, mocking, said, 
📖Mat 27:42  “He saved others – He is unable to save Himself. If He is the Sovereign of Yisra’ěl, let Him now come down from the stake, and we shall believe Him.

📖Mrk 15:30  save Yourself, and come down from the stake!”
📖Mrk 15:31  And likewise the chief priests and the scribes, mocking to one another said, “He saved others, He is unable to save Himself.

📘Torah says:

📖Lev 21:10  ‘And the high priest among his brothers, on whose head the anointing oil was poured and who is ordained to wear the garments, does not unbind his head nor tear his garments, 
📖Lev 21:11  nor come near any dead body, nor defile himself for his father or his mother,

And here we have chief priests the representatives of the high priest performing his duties in his absence at the foot of the stake when Yahusha died. We already know that the high priest was disqualified as he tore his garments when he heard Yahusha’s testimony. Yahuah is showing us how the Torah keepers of the letter themselves were breaking Torah and were lawless even to their understanding of it.

They should have immediately:

1. Removed themselves from the scene.

2. Gone through the Numbers 19 purification on Day 3 and Day 7.

3. Deferred their Passover to the second month.

Instead, John 18:28 shows they were obsessed with “not being defiled” by entering Pilate’s hall so they could eat the Passover — yet ignored the greater defilement of corpse proximity.

📖Jhn 18:28  Then they led יהושע (Yahusha) from Qayapha to the palace, and it was early. And they themselves did not go into the palace, lest they should be defiled, but that they might eat the Pěsaḥ.

🌱Hyssop link — Passover, Leper, Red Heifer

Hyssop appears in all three cleansing shadows:

1. Passover (Exodus 12:22) — Hyssop dipped in lamb’s blood, applied to the doorposts.

2. Leper cleansing (Leviticus 14:4–7) — Hyssop used with cedar wood and scarlet in the blood-water ritual.

3. Red Heifer ashes (Numbers 19:6, 18) — Hyssop dipped in the purifying water to sprinkle the unclean.

✝️At the crucifixion:

📖Jhn 19:29  A bowl of sour wine stood there, and they filled a sponge with sour wine, put it on hyssop, and held it to His mouth. 

This unites all three hyssop uses:

Passover blood application → Yahusha is the Lamb.

Leper cleansing water-blood mix → His blood + water from His side purifies. Also, it says of Yahusha :

📖1Jn 5:6  This is the One that came by water and blood: יהושע Messiah, not only by water, but by water and blood. And it is the Spirit who bears witness, because the Spirit is the Truth. 

Red Heifer corpse defilement remedy → His death provides the only true purification from death.

💫The prophetic collision:

At Golgotha:

The priests were breaking Torah by standing in corpse proximity.

It was Passover week, so corpse defilement meant they were disqualified from the feast — unless they kept the second month Passover after purification.

The only true ashes-of-red-heifer water is the blood and water from Yahusha Himself (John 19:34).

The hyssop to His mouth signifies application of His offering, just as in Torah hyssop applied cleansing blood or water.

The chief priests thought they were the guardians of Torah purity, but:

They rejected the true Lamb.

They defiled themselves by His death.

They refused His blood-water cleansing.

They missed the only valid second-month Passover opportunity

The gall and the sour wine:

📖Psa 69:21  And they gave me gall/ ראשׁ  H7219 Rosh for my food, And for my thirst they gave me vinegar/ חמץ chomets H2558 to drink. 

In Psalm 69:21 the Hebrew word רֹאשׁ (rosh) is used, but here it doesn’t mean “head” — it’s a homonym in Hebrew. We saw the plant life was created on Day 3 of creation and this species of rosh poison offering mixed with gall to Yahusha signifies the death it brings -trying to disqualify His death and resurrection.

Here rosh means a bitter, poisonous plant — often identified with poison hemlock or wormwood — not “head.”

The same word Rosh which means chief of the poisonous plant is used figuratively in Deut 29:18 and translated as gall. Also used in Jer 9:15 figuratively.

But in Yahusha's instance it was literal. The word rosh is translated actually as “poison” or “bitterness.” 

So in Psalm 69:21:

rosh = bitter poison → “They gave me poison for food…”

Prophetic fulfillment: Matthew 27:34 / Mark 15:23 — gall mixed with wine offered to Yahusha.

When we put all four Gospel accounts side by side, it becomes clear that there were two separate drink offerings given to Yahusha on the cross, and that explains why one says He refused and another says He received. This a 4 dimensional view

📖Matthew 27:34 – “They gave him wine mingled with gall to drink; but when he had tasted it, he would not drink.”

📖Mark 15:23 – “They gave him wine mingled with myrrh to drink; but he did not take it.”

This first drink was offered before He was actually crucified or in the early moments.

Gall (Heb. rosh) and myrrh were both bitter — and gall/rosh in Psalm 69:21 can refer to a poisonous or sedating substance. The Romans sometimes gave this to dull pain (a form of mercy killing), but He refused because He chose to endure the full suffering. Hence, He refused it or it wouldn't serve the whole Atonement purpose He came for. 

📖John 19:28–30 – “Yahusha, knowing that all things were now accomplished, that the Scripture might be fulfilled, said, ‘I thirst.’ … So when Yahusha had received the sour wine, He said, ‘It is finished!’”

Matthew 27:48 / Mark 15:36 – A sponge soaked in sour wine was put on a reed (John says hyssop) and given to Him.

This was hours later, near His final breath.

This sour wine (chometz) on hyssop at the very end wasn’t about a narcotic at all, but a deep prophetic enactment:

Early in the crucifixion, they offered wine mixed with gall/myrrh (Matthew 27:34, Mark 15:23) — a sedative or poison — and He refused it, because He would not dull His senses nor hasten His death.

Hours later, John 19:28–30 shows Him receiving the chometz, after declaring “I thirst,” fulfilling scripture, and immediately saying “It is finished.”

The hyssop detail (John 19:29) ties directly to Torah cleansing rituals:

Passover — blood applied with hyssop to doorposts (Ex 12:22)

Leper cleansing — hyssop with water and blood (Lev 14:4)

Red Heifer water — for purification from death (Num 19:18)

💦⚠️Bitter water of jealously: 

Bitter water of jealousy — priest gives the suspected bride water mixed with dust from the tabernacle floor (Num 5:11–31)

Yahusha, as the husband, is treated as if He were the suspected unfaithful wife — bearing the curse in our place. He drinks the “bitter water” so that His bride (YasharEL) is vindicated and set free.

📖Psalm 51:7 – David cries, “Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean” — immediately after confessing adultery with Bathsheba.

David had been “exposed” for adultery by Nathan, much like an accused wife in Numbers 5.

He invokes hyssop — not because the Torah said “use hyssop for jealousy water”, but because Hyssop symbolized applying cleansing water to defiled persons. He saw himself as the unfaithful partner who needed the priestly application of purification and that priest he was calling upon in Ruach was Yahusha but with his understanding of Torah as hyssop as a application agent for his cleansing..

📖Num 5:17  And the priest shall take set-apart water in an earthen vessel, and take some of the dust that is on the floor of the Dwelling Place and put it into the water. 

👁️The typography is embedded in the context:

The set part water many say is from the basin besides the bronze altar used for washing of animal sacrifices etc. But we saw the context that In Numbers 19, the mei niddah (water of separation) from the ashes of the parah adumah (red heifer) is specifically prescribed for removing the defilement of death — and priests, by the nature of their work, were constantly in contact with the dead bodies of sacrificial animals.

If they were to remain ritually clean while handling sacrificial pieces, they couldn’t just wash with ordinary water. The set apart water for certain ritual uses — such as in Numbers 5 for the bitter water of jealousy — would make the most sense if it was drawn from a source already sanctified and capable of cleansing from corpse defilement.

📖Numbers 19:9 "And a man that is clean shall gather up the ashes of the heifer, and lay them up outside the camp in a clean place, and it shall be kept for the congregation of the children of Yisrael for a water of purification; it is for sin."

From this, the Mishnah (Parah 3:11) and later Jewish tradition teach that:

  • The ashes were divided into three parts:

    1. One kept on the Temple Mount for priestly use.

    2. One kept on the Mount of Olives for ritual use for outcasts as lepers, people with skin diseases etc.

    3. One kept in a special guarded location as a memorial and reserve.

  • These ashes were mixed with living water (spring water) to make the “water of purification” for cleansing from corpse defilement (Num 19:17).

The rabbinic record even claims that a very small amount of ash from each previous red heifer was added to the ashes of the next one, making a continuous chain from Moses onward.

Otherwise, the priest himself could have been rendered tamei (unclean) and disqualified from performing the test of jealousy or other duties.

However, there’s a nuance:

  • Rabbinic tradition makes a distinction between human corpse impurity (טומאת מת) and the impurity from touching slaughtered sacrificial animals. They say latter didn’t require the red heifer water — it could be resolved by simple washing and waiting until evening (Leviticus 11:39–40).

  • But the deeper symbolic reading — which traced with Yahusha — collapses that separation. Spiritually, death is death, whether animal or man. In that light, the “bronze basin” (כיור נחשת) between the altar and the Tent of Meeting (Exodus 30:18–21) could indeed be seen as the station where priests washed hands and feet with water would have included the ashes of the red heifer, which Rabbinic tradition diluted the understanding of the requirement of the law.

That would mean:

  • The bronze basin points to ongoing purification in the priestly service.

  • The stored ashes show there was always provision for true cleansing from death-contact.

  • Yahusha, as the Melchizedek priest, bypasses the whole cycle — His own blood and water cleanse fully without hyssop or red heifer water.

And if that’s the case, the bitter water of jealousy would be doubly significant:

It contained set apart water associated with cleansing death.

It had dust from the Tabernacle floor — symbolizing humility and mortality.

The hyssop connection (Psalm 51:7) becomes a silent emblem of both cleansing from sin and the removal of death’s stain.

🔩Here’s how the connections align:

1. Passover Lamb (Exodus 12:22)

Hyssop dipped in lamb’s blood applied to the wood of the doorposts. The wood pointing to the stake.

Protection from the Destroyer — not just symbolic cleansing, but covenant covering.

2. Red Heifer (Numbers 19:6)

Burned with cedar wood (a durable wood, pointing to the tree/cross), hyssop (application), and scarlet (blood imagery and thread of redemption pointing to Messiah).

Ashes mixed with living water for purification from death — especially relevant for priests dealing with sacrificial carcasses.

3. Cleansing of the Leper (Leviticus 14:4–7)

Cedar, scarlet, hyssop again — one bird slain over living water, the other set free — resurrection imagery.

The living water cannot be ordinary water. It had to be set part. The priests were dealing with dead portions of skin on a leper.

🔍Let’s examine Miryam’s leprosy:

See what Aharon said of his sister 

📖Num 12:12  “Please do not let her be as one dead when coming out of his mother's womb, with his flesh half consumed!” 

Her flesh was half consumed as lepers were treated as dead coz they were always outside the camp and were cut off. The readmission was mercy shown.

📖Num 12:13  And Mosheh cried out to יהוה, saying, “O Ěl, please heal her, please!”
📖Num 12:14  And יהוה said to Mosheh, “If her father had but spit in her face, would she not be ashamed seven days? Let her be shut out of the camp seven days, and after that let her be readmitted.”
📖Num 12:15  And Miryam was shut out of the camp seven days, and the people did not set out until Miryam was readmitted.

📖Job 18:13  It devours parts of his skin, the first-born of death devours his parts. 

The priest, in the cleansing ritual, would handle the dead skin and necrotic tissue that symbolically represented death.

This is the same defilement type that Numbers 19 addresses with the red heifer water.

Leviticus 14 and Numbers 19 share the same triple-symbol set:

Cedar wood → endurance / the “tree” (stake) / incorruptibility.

Scarlet → blood / atonement covering (thread of redemption pointing to Messiah).

Hyssop → application of cleansing to the sinner.

All three also appear in Numbers 19:6 (red heifer ashes ritual) — strongly linking the two ceremonies.

“Living water” in Torah context

Mayim chayim (“living water”) always refers to flowing, spring, or fresh water.

In purification from death, it had to be mixed with ashes of the red heifer (Numbers 19:17).

That’s why the priest in Leviticus 14 likely used the same — because he was cleansing what was regarded as “death” from the leper.

⭐Prophetic picture

Bird slain over living water → Yahusha’s death in union with the Spirit (“living water” — John 7:38–39).

Second bird set free → Resurrection and ascension.

Cedar + scarlet + hyssop → cross + blood + applied cleansing.

All done with water that had touched ashes → His death’s power applied to cleanse death from us.

4. Psalm 51:7

David’s plea: “Cleanse me with hyssop, and I will be clean” — directly invoking the red heifer and Passover cleansing imagery.


5. Impaling on stake (John 19:29)

Hyssop lifts sour wine (chometz) to Yahusha’s lips — the impurity of sin and death brought to Him, and He “takes it” so we can be cleansed.

The dust and filth around the execution site completes the picture of Him bearing our uncleanness.

When we see hyssop appear, it’s never random — it’s the covenant application tool, always bridging blood/water to the object or person being cleansed.

The “silence” in Numbers 5 bitter water of jealousy is actually prophetic subtlety — the hyssop is there by principle, even if not mentioned, because the priest is applying water for judgment/cleansing from the altar

Under the Levitical priesthood, every transfer of cleansing (whether bitter water, red heifer water, leper cleansing, or corpse purification) required a mediating implement like hyssop, cedar, or scarlet to apply the purifying water or blood, because the priest himself could be rendered unclean by direct contact. The hyssop was the “safe distance” applicator.

💖But Yahusha, as the Malchitsedeq priest (Hebrews 7:26–28), is categorically different:

He is undefilable — set apart flows outward from Him rather than being diminished by uncleanness (cf. Luke 8:43–48, the woman with the issue of blood).

When He touches a leper (Mark 1:40–42), He does not become unclean; rather, the leper becomes clean instantly.

📖Mrk 1:40  And a leper came to Him, calling upon Him, kneeling down to Him and saying to Him, “If You desire, You are able to make me clean.”
📖Mrk 1:41  And יהושע, moved with compassion, stretched out His hand and touched him, and said to him, “I desire it. Be cleansed.”
📖Mrk 1:42  And immediately the leprosy left him, and he was cleansed.

When He allows an unclean woman to touch His garment, instead of contamination passing to Him, power passes from Him to her.

Even in death (Luke 7:14–15, Jairus’s daughter; John 11:43–44, Lazarus), His touch brings life rather than incurring corpse-uncleanness.

This is prophetic reversal:

In Torah law, uncleanness is contagious, set apartness is localized.

In Yahusha, set apartness is contagious, uncleanness is powerless.

So the hyssop — the careful mediator — is no longer necessary for Him, because He Himself is the Living Water and the purifying Blood (John 19:34), applied without any instrument.

Under the Torah, a Levitical priest could not bypass the hyssop or the mediating ritual. Any contact with uncleanness (corpse, leper, issue of blood) required a cleansing process, because uncleanness was transferred to the one touching. The hyssop with blood and water (often from the red heifer mixture) was the mediator — a symbol of something external applying Yahuah’s cleansing.

But Yahusha, as the Malchitsedeq High Priest (Hebrews 7:23–28), operates on an entirely different plane:

1.He is the source of the cleansing — The Levitical priest carried clean water; Yahusha is the fountain of living waters (Jeremiah 2:13, John 7:37–39).

2.He is never defiled — Instead of uncleanness transferring to Him, His purity transfers to the unclean (Mark 1:40–42 with the leper; Luke 8:43–48 with the woman with the issue of blood). In both cases, His set apartness overpowered the defilement — reversing the Levitical flow.

3.No hyssop required — The hyssop in the Torah was a prophetic pointer to Him. On the cross, when given the sour wine on a hyssop stalk (John 19:29), the “shadow” met the “substance.” Once the true cleansing power had come, the physical plant was no longer necessary.

4.Prophetic enactment in the Gospels — Every time Yahusha touched or allowed Himself to be touched by an “unclean” person, it was a prophetic declaration that the Malchitsedeq priesthood was here — one in which the High Priest’s set-apartness is stronger than any defilement.

The imagery of the red heifer water, cedar, scarlet, and hyssop is fulfilled in Him, but the application no longer needs a branch — the branch Himself (Isaiah 11:1) applies His own cleansing directly.

Under the Torah, priestly purity was safeguarded by elaborate cleansing laws. When a priest came into contact with death, disease, or bodily emissions, they required rituals such as the sprinkling of red heifer water (Numbers 19) or the application of hyssop with blood over “living water” (Leviticus 14). These served as barriers between the holy and the unclean — both to prevent ritual defilement of the sanctuary and to teach Israel about the deadly separation caused by sin.

Yahusha, however, is not merely another Levitical priest. He is the eternal Malchitsedeq priest — one who embodies life itself and is undefilable by death or impurity. His priesthood is not dependent on the cleansing of the red heifer’s ashes, hyssop branches, or running water, because He is the fountain of living waters (Jeremiah 2:13; John 4:14). When He touches the unclean, He is not made unclean — instead, His set-apartness flows outward, cleansing the unclean.

The woman with the issue of blood for twelve years (Luke 8:43–48) illustrates this reversal perfectly. Under Torah, her touch should have made Him unclean (Leviticus 15:25–27). Yet, when she touched the kanaf (corner/hem) of His garment — a place tied to the tzitzit and the Name of Yahuah — instead of transmitting impurity, power went out from Him into her. She was healed instantly, and He remained pure.

Similarly, Yahusha touched lepers (Matthew 8:3), paralytics (John 5:8–9), and even the dead (Luke 7:14; Mark 5:41). In each case, instead of contracting ritual uncleanness, He transmitted resurrection life. This overturns the Levitical pattern: the Levitical priest is protected from impurity; the Malchitsedeq priest is the conqueror of impurity.

In this way, all the Torah rituals — the hyssop, cedar, scarlet, red heifer ashes, living water — were prophetic shadows. They were physical mediators for the Levitical priesthood, but Yahusha is the spiritual fulfillment. He does not need an external instrument to apply His own blood and water. His own person is the temple, the altar, the sacrifice, and the priest — all in one.

This is why He could sit and eat with tax collectors and sinners (Mark 2:15–17), enter the homes of the ritually unclean (Luke 19:5–7), and let unclean women touch Him — because His priesthood is not one of protection from contamination, but of purification by contact. He is not a priest who needs hyssop to sprinkle cleansing water; He is the source from which all cleansing flows.

🧮Finally gematria of azub 

1. Hyssop (אזוב = 16)

Aleph (א) = 1 → the heavenly man, the beginning.

Zayin (ז) = 7 → covenant weapon, cutting, separating between clean/unclean.

Vav (ו) = 6 → the nail, connection between heaven and earth.

Beit (ב) = 2 → the house, dwelling place.

Total = 16 → symbol of completion of becoming in the sense of cleansing or transition.

Hyssop is the tool for application of blood and water in Torah (Exodus 12:22, Psalm 51:7, John 19:29).

2. Yahuah (יהוה)

Split as Ya-huah → the second half huah (הוה) = 5 + 6 + 5 = 16.

הוה means to become, to come into being.

This is the active, creative aspect of His name — the One who causes to exist.

So, 16 is the number of becoming/manifestation from the invisible to the visible.

3. The link

Hyssop (16) is the instrument through which cleansing brings a person into the state of becoming new — manifesting the work of Yahuah’s name (huah = 16).

In Exodus, hyssop applied the Passover blood → the people became redeemed.

In purification rituals, hyssop applied water/blood to the unclean → they became clean.

In Messiah, there was no need for hyssop because He Himself is the Aleph (1) — the heavenly man — and the Yod (10), the invisible hand of power, who causes the becoming (huah = 16) by His own word and touch.

4. The first part of Yahuah’s name when Aleph is added: 

איה = א (1) + י (10) + ה (5) = 16.H346

In biblical  איה functions as the interrogative “Where?” — the searching question (e.g., “אַיֶּה” in Genesis 3:9 “Where are you?”).

It can also serve poetically as “where is Yah?” — so it fits the theme “Where is Yahuah?”

🔌The tight connection to the 16-cluster:

איה (16) — the question: “Where?” (Where is the salvation? Where is Yahuah manifested?)

אזוב (16) — the instrument: hyssop, the applicator of blood/water.

הוה (16) — the verb/act: “to become” / “to come into being” (the active sense inside Yahuah’s name).

בהובא (16) — the moment: “when it was brought” (the act of application / bringing)

The hyssop touching Yahusha’s lips is where the shadow met the Substance — the earthly emblem meeting the Heavenly Reality.”

3️⃣Here’s how the triple-16 meets Yahusha at the cross:

When they lifted the hyssop (אזוב = 16) to His lips, it was not just fulfilling a random detail — it was the shadow meeting the substance.

אהי (I will be = 16) — The eternal self-existence of the “I AM” in Exodus 3:14.

אהי (’Ehyeh) is the imperfect (or “prefix-conjugation”) form of the Hebrew verb היה (hayah, “to be”), first person singular.

That form literally means:

  • “I will be” (future sense)

  • It can also carry a present-continuous nuance in Biblical Hebrew, so in context it may mean “I am (being)” or “I will continue to be”.

It’s the same root and form used in אהיה אשר אהיה (Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh) in Shemot/Exodus 3:14 — “I will be what I will be.”

הוה (to become = 16) — The prophetic declaration that the I AM would become flesh and dwell among us.

אזוב (hyssop = 16) — The symbol of cleansing from sin and death, used in Passover, the red heifer water, and leper purification.

At that moment on the cross, the “I AM” who became flesh allowed the hyssop — the ritual instrument of cleansing — to touch His lips.

It was like heaven’s seal saying:

“I AM (אהי = 16), I have become (הוה = 16), and I cleanse (אזוב = 16).”

The priests in the shadow had to apply hyssop dipped in sacrificial blood to others.

Yahusha, the Malchitsedeq Priest, didn’t need someone else to apply it to Him — He was both the Priest and the Offering, and the hyssop in that moment testified that His blood is the true purification.

Summary

  • Hyssop in Scripture:

    • Exodus 12:22: Used to apply lamb’s blood on doorposts during Passover, protecting Israel from the Destroyer and symbolizing covenant covering.

    • Leviticus 14:4–7: Employed in the leper’s cleansing ritual with cedar wood, scarlet, and living water, signifying restoration from a state of “social death.”

    • Numbers 19:6, 18: Integral to the red heifer ritual, where hyssop applies purifying water to cleanse corpse impurity, addressing the ultimate defilement of death.

  • Symbolic Role:

    • Hyssop serves as a ritual “sprinkler,” preventing direct contact with sacred blood or water, maintaining priestly purity.

    • Represents the application of cleansing, connecting the impure to Yahuah’s provision for set-apartness.

  • Red Heifer Ritual (Numbers 19):

    • Ashes of the red heifer, mixed with living water (from Gihon Spring in Temple times), purify those defiled by death.

    • Involves a paradoxical impurity: the clean person administering the ritual becomes temporarily unclean.

    • Symbolizes Messiah’s sacrifice, cleansing from death’s defilement (Hebrews 9:13–14).

  • Prophetic Fulfillment in Yahusha:

    • John 19:29: Hyssop lifts sour wine to Yahusha’s lips at the crucifixion, uniting Passover, leper cleansing, and red heifer imagery.

    • Yahusha, as the Melchizedek Priest, is undefilable, cleansing others without needing hyssop Himself (Mark 1:40–42; Luke 8:43–48).

    • His blood and water (John 19:34) fulfill the red heifer’s purification, rendering Torah rituals obsolete.

  • Day 1–3–7 Pattern:

    • Passover: Day 1 (blood applied), Day 3 (resurrection), Day 7 (Sabbath rest, pointing to Shavuot).

    • Leper Cleansing: Day 1 (initial cleansing), Day 7 (shaving, restoration to camp), Day 8 (full covenant renewal).

    • Red Heifer: Day 1 (defilement), Day 3 (first sprinkling), Day 7 (final cleansing), symbolizing salvation and final redemption.

  • Gematria of Hyssop (אזוב = 16):

    • Aleph (1) + Zayin (7) + Vav (6) + Beit (2) = 16, symbolizing completion and becoming new.

    • Links to Yahuah’s name (הוה = 16, “to become”) and איה (16, “where is Yah?”), tying hyssop to divine manifestation.

    • At the cross, hyssop (16) meets Yahusha, the “I AM” (אהי = 16), embodying the cleansing and becoming of redemption.

  • Crucifixion Context:

    • Priests at Golgotha, near Yahusha’s body, incurred corpse defilement (Numbers 19:14–16), disqualifying them from Passover unless purified.

    • Their focus on avoiding Pilate’s hall (John 18:28) ignored the greater defilement, missing the true cleansing through Yahusha’s blood.

    • The sour wine on hyssop (John 19:29) and gall (Psalm 69:21) fulfill Torah rituals, with Yahusha bearing the “bitter water” of jealousy (Numbers 5) for His bride, YasharEL.

  • Theological Significance:

    • Hyssop’s role in Torah rituals (Passover, leper, red heifer) foreshadows Yahusha’s direct cleansing as the Melchizedek Priest.

    • His priesthood reverses Torah’s contagion of uncleanness, making set-apartness contagious (e.g., healing lepers, raising the dead).

    • The hyssop at the cross marks the moment where the shadow (ritual) meets the substance (Messiah), completing the redemptive narrative.

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