Baptism is a Christian concept.
Judaism doesn't have baptism, that is a strictly Christian ceremony.
No, the concepts behind baptism are completely alien to Judaism.
Jesus.
The Baptism of the Lord is celebrated on the feast: the Solemnity of the Epiphany, usually celebrated in the Roman church on 6th of January.
There is no such thing in Judaism.
Baptism is the first sacrament in the bible. With Baptism there is two ways that a person can be baptised it's either a symbolic application of water on the head or immersion of the body into water.
Baptism, Holy Communion and Reconciliation, Confirmation
Confirmation is the second half of baptism, it completes one's initiation into Christianity. It can be celebrated anytime after Baptism, in most of the Rites, it is celebrated immediately with baptism, in the Latin Rite, it has be separated and is usually given after the age of 12, the exact age is up to the local Bishop.
The concepts behind baptism directly oppose the teachings of Judaism, therefore, a Jew cannot be baptised as a Jew. There is no Jewish equivalent to baptism.
There are no forms of Jewish baptism. It doesn't exist in Judaism.Ritual immersion is for other reasons in Judaism, mainly for ritual purity after menstruation or certain illnesses.
Usually by sprinkling water on the head or by immersion in water.
Leonard F. Badia has written: 'Morality, how to live it today' -- subject- s -: Catholic authors, Christian ethics 'The Qumran baptism and John the Baptist's baptism' -- subject- s -: Baptism, Judaism, Qumran community