Just checked on the net. Rosewater is used as a toner for the skin especially for dry skin.
Skin dries out when you die. So then why would they want to hinder the skin becoming dry?
Rosewater must have been used to help preserve the skin and the vinegar could have been a way to preserve the internal organs.
Oh I just used the word embalming as a general term for what people do to dead bodies.
But in hindsight they also did some things to preserve the body. NO?
In a word, no.
Preserving the bodey is exaqctly what they do not wishe to do. They want it to go ahead and corrupt. The flesh is dust.
Baha`i's use rosewater because it smells nice. We often use rosewater to commemorate Holy Days because the frragrance is nice. It is also used in cooking in Persia and the Middle East.
From the Jewish Burial Soci9ety website:
"
We explained earlier that the earth is compared to the womb of a mother preparing a person for life. Similarly, wheat and other plants only start growing after the seeds rot completely into the earth. The earth contains the four basic forces of all life: fire, water, air and earth. From these basic forces emanate the powers of energy, heat, electricity, hydrogen, nitrogen, etc. Rot means separating the parts and particles of an object and bringing it back to its source in order to renew its growth. Burning results in destroying and demolishing the parts. Burning the seeds of a plant makes any further growth and reproduction impossible. Fertilizer which comes completely from rot gives a plant the power of growth. However, fertilizer that comes solely from ashes has had all the energy burned out of it. It cannot provide plants with nourishment for growth unless it is mixed with a rot-based fertilizer the essence of which remains intact. So it is with the burial of a persons body in the earth which is necessary preparation for the growth of new life which we will experience at the time of the Revival of the Dead."
Please, do not look for me to provide you with straws to grasp. I find your argument sillly.
Jews at the time of Jesus were njot buried in the earth at all. They were laid to rest with no embalming so the body could go ahead and decompose as expeditiously as possible. When the flesh was truly gone, the bones would be laid away in an ossuary and placed in a mausoleum. In today's world the coffin is supposed to be pierced so that decomposition can be hastened, there is no embalming and the coffin is not air or water tight to hasten decomnposition. In some localities this is not legal and Jewish burial follows the law of the land if it must--with the exception of cremation.
Regards,
Scott