Hebrew Key Terms:
Context: Leviticus 14 prescribes the ritual for cleansing a person healed from leprosy (ṣāraʿat). Significantly, the ceremony assumes healing has already occurred—the priest examines "outside the camp" and confirms the leprosy is gone (v. 3). The ritual doesn't heal; it certifies healing and restores to community. The priest commands four elements: two live clean birds, cedar wood, scarlet yarn, and hyssop (v. 4). One bird is slaughtered over fresh water in an earthen vessel; the living bird, along with cedar, scarlet, and hyssop, is dipped in the blood mixed with water (v. 6), then sprinkled seven times on the former leper before being released into the open field (v. 7). This complex ritual powerfully dramatizes cleansing, substitution (slain bird), and freedom (released bird).
OT-to-OT Development:
Connections:
Christological Connection: Hyssop applied blood mixed with living water to cleanse from leprosy—the visible picture of sin. At the cross, hyssop appeared as blood and water flowed from Christ's pierced side (John 19:29, 34), accomplishing the spiritual reality the ceremony foreshadowed. The slain bird represents Christ's death; the released bird, His resurrection setting captives free. Cedar's nobility, hyssop's humility, and scarlet's royalty all point to Christ—the King who humbled Himself, shedding royal blood to cleanse from sin's leprosy. What Leviticus 14 accomplished ceremonially and temporarily, Christ's sacrifice accomplishes spiritually and eternally. The healed leper brought to the priest finds its antitype in sinners brought to Christ, cleansed by His blood, restored to God's community.
Connection Method(s): Typology (Direct, Forward-Looking) — Hyssop applying blood-and-water for leprosy cleansing (slain bird/released bird) prefigures Christ's death and resurrection providing spiritual purification, with the blood-water mixture anticipating the blood and water flowing from Christ's pierced side (John 19:34).
Trajectory Table: 075 - Hyssop (Instrument of Blood Application)