Hello My Friend and Welcome.
In the recent post about togas
and how they were misused in various works of art depicting Jesus and his
disciples, I used a picture portraying him with long, flowing hair. I chose the
picture because he was wearing a toga and completely overlooked his hair. After
all, aren’t we all accustomed to seeing Jesus with shoulder length hair?
Perhaps we are used to seeing it,
but some people still question it. Another question that arises involves how
they would have cut their hair. Did they have scissors, or did they just hack
away at it with a knife?
Let’s address the second part
first. They didn’t have scissors, if by scissors you mean a two- piece device
joined at its axis by a screw. They did, however, have shears. There is a
picture of a pair of modern shears at the top of this chapter. They’re still
used to shear sheep. Clearly, one blade moves across the other just as it does
with a scissors. I’ve watched them being used and confess I don’t understand
exactly how to make them work. The mystery lies in the exact hand motion that
produces the cut. God forbid I should ever be forced to actually use them.
Modern Sheep Shears |
The word scissors derives from
the Latin word cisoria, meaning a
cutting instrument. I would guess that a wide variety of shears existed in the
First Century, coarse ones for shearing sheep, and they sheared a lot of sheep
because their clothes were mostly wool. Finer ones would have been used for
trimming hair, etc.
Egyptian Brass Sheers |
To bolster my case, I offer a
pair of Egyptian bronze shears from the Third Century BC owned by the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. Although their decoration is characteristic of the
Nile culture, they show a strong Greek influence. The shears illustrate the
high degree of craftsmanship which developed in the period following
Alexander's conquest of Egypt. Decorative male and female figures, which
complement each other on the opposing blades are formed of solid pieces of
metal inlaid in the bronze of the shears.
WHAT ABOUT THE LENGTH OF JESUS’
HAIR?
Enough of the easy stuff; now we
move on to the first, and more difficult, question: Did Jesus have long hair? If
you begin researching the topic, you’ll find a wide range of opinions. There
are occasional references to Josephus and Eusebius, but when I checked them out
I couldn’t find any useful information in either source. Next, I turned to
Alfred Edersheim’s books. A converted Jew, Edersheim wrote extensively in the
late 1800’s about Jewish life in ancient times. Nothing there either. I also
scanned Jerusalem in the Time of Jesus by the German author, Joachim Jeremias,
and came up empty again.
Several people insisted Jesus had
to have short hair because the Romans and the Greeks did. Just take a look at
their statues. This train of thought ignores the fact that the Maccabean
Rebellion in 167 BC was a response to the Hellenizing influence of the Seleucid
Empire. They didn’t want to be like the Greeks. First Century Judaic society
was also dominated by the Pharisees. Their strict adherence to the laws of the
Torah and zeal for a regulated society would have led them to resist the
prevailing cultural norms rather than copying them. Judea was known as a
particularly difficult region to govern because its people were so unbending
and noncompliant.
There were also references to the
Nazarite movement which, among its precepts, prohibited the cutting of the hair
or consuming alcoholic beverages. I found people confusing Nazarite and
Nazerean, meaning someone from Nazareth, and therefore assuming Jesus would
have had long hair. John the Baptist is often believed to have been a Nazarite,
but Jesus clearly never took the Nazarite vow.
Another surprising insight came
to me from the movie Fiddler on the Roof. It depicts Russian Jews living in a
society divorced from that of their neighbors. The Jews wear distinctive clothing,
the men have beards and their gentile neighbors don’t. Some dress in black
coats and have distinctive hair styles similar to modern Hassidic Jews. Again,
we see the Jews stubbornly resisting the dominant cultural influences.
But in the end, none of these
provides truly convincing. For this we have to turn to Jesus himself…or at
least the imprint his body left on his burial cloth. About 25 years ago I read
a book written by a physician who had analyzed the Shroud of Turin. I recall
him mentioning that the person on the shroud had his hair braided in the back,
which was the style at that time. I couldn’t find a clear enough image of the
back portion of the shroud to verify this. I did, however, find two other
pieces of evidence.
The first comes in the form of an
ancient coin minted in the realm of Herod Phillip, the son of Herod the Great
and his fifth wife, Cleopatra of Jerusalem. He was a half-brother to Herod
Antipas who divorced his wife to marry Herodias, Phillip’s former wife. You’ll
recall she’s the one who wanted John the Baptist’s head on a plate.
Coin of Herod Phillip |
Phillip had a coin minted with
his image on it. Coins from that region and era with images on them are
extremely rare because of the Torah’s injunction against graven images. Because
Phillip ruled the easternmost region of Herod’s Empire, he didn’t have to worry
as much about offending Jewish subjects. Even though the coin is a couple of
thousand years old and shows plenty of wear, it still appears to me that
Phillip has his hair braided in back.
THE IKON AND THE SHROUD
Be that as it may, my search for
shroud-based evidence took me back to the Christ Pantokrator Ikon. The image
known as Christ Pantokrator is believed to have been derived from the discovery
in 544 AD of a cloth hidden above a gate in Edessa’s city wall that bore an
image of Jesus. Six years later, an icon, the Christ Pantokrator, was produced
at St Catherine’s Monastery in the Sinai. It represented a dramatic change in
the way Jesus was portrayed. Previously on coins, frescos and mosaics he had
been shown in storybook settings as a young shepherd or modeled after the Greek
god Apollo. Suddenly he had become a living, breathing human being.
We can confirm the relationship
between the two images by digitally overlaying one on top of the other. I found
the results startling. The congruence between the two is unmistakable. Clearly
the Christ Pantokrator was derived from the Shroud of Turin in the same way
that a forensic sculptor creates the likeness of a living person from their
skull. Is it a perfect likeness? No. Hair color and eye color have to be
guessed at…although since Jesus was of Middle Eastern descent, that task is
made much easier.
Shroud of Turin overlaid on Ikon Christ Pantokrator |
My point here is not to claim
that Christ Pantokrator is an exact portrait of Jesus. Such a thing is beyond
the realm of possibility. But just as with forensic reconstruction, what we
arrive at is a generally recognizable likeness. And that likeness indicates the
person to whom it belonged had long hair.
Until next time, we wish you Peace and Blessings.
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