John 2:6

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6 ησαν δε εκει λιθιναι υδριαι εξ κατα τον καθαρισμον των ιουδαιων κειμεναι χωρουσαι ανα μετρητας δυο η τρεις


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Napsal(a) Brian David

{{en|1=Jesus making water into wine, Wieliczka Salt Mine.}}

The six waterpots here represent the whole collection of facts and ideas that contained the external truth of the Jewish church. The members of that church may not have understood the spiritual meaning of their own rituals, but they did have a body of knowledge and thought that supported those rituals and their continued belief. The use of this water for the "purification of the Jews" means that the external truth was used to remove evil from those who wished to be good.

The use of "two or three" seems unremarkable on the surface, but it's actually telling. "Two," in some cases, represents a profane state that comes before a holy one; "three" generally represents a state of completeness, of a goal being met or an intended act completed. These waterpots, then, could hold "two" meaning the state before the miracle, or "three" meaning the state after the miracle.