- Ritual purification is a feature of many religions. The aim of these rituals is to remove specifically defined uncleanliness prior to a particular type of activity, and especially prior to the worship of a deity. This ritual uncleanliness is not however identical with ordinary physical impurity, such as dirt stains; nevertheless, all body fluids are generally considered ritually unclean, and some religions have special treatment of semen and menses, which are viewed as particularly unclean.
- Most of these rituals existed long before the germ theory of disease, and figure prominently from the earliest known religious systems of the Ancient Near East. Some writers remark that similarities between cleansing actions, engaged in by obsessive compulsive disorder sufferers and those of religious purification rites, point to an ultimate origin of the rituals in the personal grooming behaviour of the primates, but others connect the rituals to primitive taboos.
Currently I am viewing detoxification’s re-emergence in popular culture as the reintroduction of the Ritual Purification to a secular audience. Unfortunately, the reintroduction is wholly devoid of the next required step of spiritual engagement and work. Why the ‘next step’ is not considered in media as a necessary option can lead to various conclusions, some conspiratorial, while others speak to the general ignorance of human development’s possibilities.