Comments on: Picturing Jesus — Part I: Why is Jesus holding a wand? https://mikefrost.net/picturing-jesus-part-i-why-is-jesus-holding-a-wand/ AUTHOR | SPEAKER | MISSIOLOGIST | AGITATOR Sat, 10 Aug 2024 20:16:24 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 By: Dana Cesar https://mikefrost.net/picturing-jesus-part-i-why-is-jesus-holding-a-wand/#comment-70217 Sat, 10 Aug 2024 20:16:24 +0000 https://mikefrost.net/?p=31818#comment-70217 The practice of using a wand to perform “miracles” continues today among followers of the Vedic tradition. Attendees of healing workshops conducted by the Supreme Pontiff of Hinduism, Paramahamsa Sri Nithyananda, are given a wand and instructed in its use for healing arts. I personally received one during a workshop I attended in 2009. According to Swamiji Nithyananda, “The healing wand is a sacred tool used in energy healing practices to channel and direct healing energy. It helps to focus and amplify the healer’s intentions during energy healing sessions. If you wish to learn more about healing wands or their usage, please feel free to ask for more information.” (nithyananda.ai)

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By: Neil Averitt https://mikefrost.net/picturing-jesus-part-i-why-is-jesus-holding-a-wand/#comment-57014 Thu, 12 Oct 2023 23:37:49 +0000 https://mikefrost.net/?p=31818#comment-57014 I enjoyed this provocative piece on the physical appearance of Jesus. When modern-day artists depict him with blond hair and blue eyes, are they being ethnocentric?

In fact, it’s possible that they are correct.

To be sure, Jesus came out of the Jewish community of the eastern Mediterranean, and so it’s most likely that he had the dark complexion of the region.

But this isn’t entirely certain. The key thing to note is that Jesus came from Galilee rather than from Judea, and the population of Galilee had a tremendous mix of ethnic backgrounds.

I came to this issue while working on a book, The Single Gospel, which is a consolidated version of four canonical gospels, editing them together into a single narrative in chronological order. My goal was to create a text that will be easily accessible to the ordinary reader, whether reading it as a work of faith or a work of literature. Clarity was the key. I was therefore troubled by how to translate the non-intuitive phrase “Galilee of the gentiles,” or “Galilee where so many foreigners live.”

It turns out that Galilee was a place quite distinct from Judea. It is about eighty miles north of Jerusalem, with hilly country. Over the years it had been settled by many different people, including veterans of the army of Alexander the Great. In the years 104-03 B.C., Galilee had been reconquered by the Jewish ruler Aristobulus, and its inhabitants, many of whom were gentiles, were forced to convert to Judaism. Others no doubt converted voluntarily.

This complex history means that we know nothing for sure about the physical appearance of Jesus. While he unquestionably grew up in a family that was religiously and culturally Jewish, many parts of his family tree (apart from the particular lines of descent recorded in the gospels) could have been with any of the peoples of the Mediterranean basin.

Of course, as everyone will agree, physical appearance is a secondary issue, and the most important thing about Jesus is his mission and teaching.

But it’s interesting to speculate about nonetheless . . .

Neil Averitt

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By: Eve Dominguez https://mikefrost.net/picturing-jesus-part-i-why-is-jesus-holding-a-wand/#comment-44834 Sun, 05 Mar 2023 03:02:35 +0000 https://mikefrost.net/?p=31818#comment-44834 I don’t believe it was a wand so to say. Jesus was a miraculous light worker and I believe it was a ray(wand) of LIGHT. Not like a magic wand. Depicting a wand implies he is performing magic. It’s much more that that. He used his own light from our universe

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By: Ada https://mikefrost.net/picturing-jesus-part-i-why-is-jesus-holding-a-wand/#comment-38586 Sun, 13 Mar 2022 17:07:38 +0000 https://mikefrost.net/?p=31818#comment-38586 This was fascinating! I am glad the idea of a historic, brown-skinned Jesus is picking up steam. However, like the Roman Christian depicting Christ as Roman, I assume the European artists were doing the same? And/or depicting Christ as the idealized man. Glad we’re moving away from that.

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