I recently had the pleasure of being interviewed by Dr Ian Paul for his blog, Psephizo, which looks at all things biblical. We met this year at the British New Testament Society conference, and he had some great follow-up questions. I reproduce the interview here.
IP: Most people—both Christians and interested outsiders—appear to be fascinated by the question of what Jesus actually looked like. How has this interest been explored in recent literature? Where do you think this interest comes from?
JN: It is one of those topics which reveals a gulf between popular and scholarly interest in Jesus. Bracketing the pseudo-intellectual discussion of Jesus’ appearance in 1930s Germany, in which racist scholars took to reconstruct a ‘Nordic’ Christ, scholars have largely overlooked the question of his appearance. Yet on social media, various shorts and videos have gone viral which claim to expose what Jesus really looked like.
I think this feeds off the fact that all of us have an idea of Jesus’ appearance – typically one informed by classical art and Christian iconography – and yet we are also aware that Jesus of Nazareth was not the Caucasian man of European imagination. So, the prospect that we might uncover the real appearance of Jesus is an enticing one. One could compare it to the way that the ‘missing years’ or ‘lost Gospels’ have gripped Western imagination. Many people desire a historical truth peeled back from the institutions which have ‘covered it up’.
Thankfully, scholars have begun to take another look at Jesus’ appearance, with a critical eye towards the many modern myths which surround it. Two publications spring to mind: Joan Taylor’s marvellous book, What did Jesus Look Like? (2018) is a treasure-trove of information, which trails through different images of Jesus throughout history and arrives at a more realistic Palestinian Jewish portrait; and Isaac Soon’s JBL article, ‘The Little Messiah’ (2023), which suggests that Luke 19:3 – the famous Sunday-school story of a short Zacchaeus climbing the Sycamore tree – may be better read as a description of a short Jesus. For Soon, this enhances Luke’s characterisation of Jesus a philosopher, since Socrates and Aesop were also remembered as short. While I don’t agree with either of these contributions in every respect, I think they push the conversation forward in important ways.
My own interest in Jesus’ appearance was sparked by ancient biography. It is now very popular to see the gospels as a form of ancient life-writing. While I broadly accept that the gospels are narratives of an individual, the designation of bíoi has sat uncomfortably with me for a long time. When I read the biographies Tacitus, Suetonius or Plutarch, the gospels seem to depart from the conventions of their near-contemporary lives in some significant ways. One of those ways is their silence on Jesus’ appearance, which led me to ask how we might best account for it.
IP: It is widely recognised that, rather than being completely ‘sui generis’, literature of a unique kind, the gospels are closely related to bioi, ‘lives’ that we find in the ancient world. How did writers of such works address the question of the appearance of the subjects of their works? Why was this thought important?
Physical descriptions mattered deeply for ancient biographers. From the origins of the Greek genre in the fourth century BC all the way through to the beginning of Christian life-writing in the fourth century AD, I found that every biographer aside from the evangelists include physical descriptions in some of their lives. (This took me rather by surprise, as the topos has not been given much treatment by NT scholars!) Sometimes this is just a passing reference to one of their physical traits or a generalised description (so and so was exceedingly handsome). But in other works, like the fictional Life of Aesop or Suetonius’ Lives of the Caesars, we find much more detailed descriptions, which allow us to form a vivid portrait of a person’s whole form. This was known as an eikonismos – a full bodied ‘image’ or eikon.
To understand why physical appearance mattered so much in antiquity, we have to tune into the mindset of what classicist Elizabeth Evans calls their “physiognomic consciousness.” This is the very widespread sense in the Graeco-Roman world that a person’s nature can be read from their appearance. The roots of this idea are found in Aristotle’s theory of the soul as manifest in the body, so not everyone was on board with it. Yet at a popular level, associations between appearance and a person’s nature were very widespread. They pop up all over the place and served a range of social functions: everything from forming a witty put down and ostracising heretics to anticipating the anti-Christ and eyeing up a potential candidate for ordination – hopefully not a criterion in the Church of England today!
Interestingly, even some biographers who might have disagreed with a technical physiognomy as spelled out in various ‘physiognomic handbooks’, nevertheless employ physical description as a literary topos. I think this attests to how deeply embedded physical descriptions were for ancient biography. The reason for this close association is that biographers were concerned to expose the character (or éthos) of their subjects. Descriptions could be seen as snapshot of character.
IP: Why is it surprising that the gospels don’t include descriptions of Jesus’ physical appearance? Is this primarily about our expectations from other ‘lives’, or is there a theological issue about Jesus as fully human in the incarnation?
JN: I’m not sure it’s a theological issue so much as a literary one. It’s partly surprising because of the prevalence of descriptions in biography. But this becomes much more surprising when we consider the way Jesus is characterised in the Gospels. He is not only a royal figure – the Davidic messiah – he is also a divine man. To be a divine man, especially a king, in classical antiquity just was to be beautiful. The body revealed that a child was destined to rule. We might think of figures like Suetonius’ Augustus, Philo’s Moses or the Life of Apollonius of Tyana. In fact, kings and divine men are more routinely described than any other figures in ancient biographies.
Even if Jesus was not especially handsome, it would have been easy enough for the Gospels to describe him as such. Beauty was often in the eye of the biographer, which we can see from the highly idealised descriptions we find in ancient lives. This ‘fictionalising’ tendency of biography only makes the Gospels’ silence on Jesus’ appearance more curious. So, what is going on here? Is there something else about his characterisation which contributes to this omission? Could it be to do with the evangelists’ adaption of biography, or their treatment of appearance more widely? Without spoiling my answers, these are some of the avenues I explore in my thesis.
IP: In his commentary on Luke, Mikeal Parsons suggests that Luke’s descriptions of other characters in the gospels has physiognomic importance for Luke’s readers (and Parsons has done significant work on this). For example, the healing of the man with dropsy in Luke 14, who would have experienced intense thirst, leads into Jesus’ teaching about people’s thirst for respect and influence. Does this dynamic help us to understand why Jesus’ own appearance is not described?
Mikeal Parsons has done some really great work on this subject. In his book, Body and Character in Luke Acts, he argues that Luke ends up subverting the common physiognomic expectations of his readers. Figures whose bodies may have been perceived as physiognomically deficient – short-statured Zacchaeus, the ‘woman with a flow of blood’ and the Ethiopian Eunuch – are embraced into God’s kingdom. As Jesus’ parable of the Great Banquet in Luke 14 displays, God’s kingdom is one into which all are invited, regardless of their disability or non-disability.
For Parsons, this is a reason why Jesus’ physicality is not described. If Luke was bent on breaking the link between character and appearance, it would be somewhat counter-productive to describe his subject in glowing terms. But I am hesitant about this explanation for several reasons. One is that Luke could have described Jesus in less than conventional terms. This would arguably have been the best way to ‘break the connection’ between character and appearance, and there are many models which may have suited his purpose, including the suffering servant.
Another reason is that Luke’s message is that even those who are small, foreign or disabled can follow Jesus. His point about the inclusive nature of the Kingdom therefore depends to an extent on reinforcing the sense that certain physical traits are marginal. Luke’s treatment of physiognomy is complex, and he does not do away with it altogether.
IP: In the centuries after the gospels and the growth of the Christian community, we see the proliferation of depictions of Jesus. What were these based on? Do they provide us with good examples—or do they function as a warning for how we should or should not picture Jesus?
Intriguingly, our earliest surviving depictions of Jesus, around the turn of the third century CE, were probably not Christian at all. In the famous Alexamenos Graffito, we find a stick-figure servant saluting a crucified man with a donkey’s head. The Greek below can be translated: ‘Alexamenos (says), worship God.’ This image attests to the subversive notion that the divine Christ should be crucified, and it borrows a common anti-Jewish slur – that Jews worshipped a donkey – to do so. In a magical gemstone of the same period, we find the crucified Jesus enmeshed between a series of names (Emmanuel, Lamb of God) and non-sense syllables which suggest a magical incantation. So, this could have been a Christian, or perhaps a pagan, who is invoking the power of the cross for magical purposes.
It would take Christians themselves a little longer to picture Jesus on a cross. Some of our earliest depictions show Jesus as the Good Shepherd, and as a beautiful young god, like Apollo or Orpheus or Hermes in funerary art. I can imagine a Christian asking a pagan craftsman to depict Jesus, and him replying: ‘I am not sure about Jesus, but I can do a Hermes’ and this being quite good enough. Much of the same symbolism – for example, Hermes leading souls into the underworld – would have been quite transferable to a Christian theology. Yet we do also find some more ‘realistic’ depictions of Jesus, such as those found in the frescoes of the Dura-Europos baptistry in the third century. Here we have Jesus looking pretty much what we would expect a Palestinian Jewish man to look like.
The real “big bang” of Christian art occurs after Constantine. Here we get the Jesus who is more familiar to us today, with long hair, a big beard, and flowing robes. A Christian Rome began drawing on the iconographic palette of older deities, like Zeus and Ascelpius, to form an image of Jesus which embodied the power of Rome. Of course, this image is a far cry from Jesus of Nazareth. There is a certain irony that this Jewish teacher who criticised luxurious clothing and long flowing robes ends up being depicted in the very terms which he critiqued. This should serve as a cautionary tale: whose interests and images do our own depictions today reflect?
IP: We remain in the position of not knowing from the gospels what Jesus looks like—but still having a restless curiosity about him! How should we deal with these two realities?
JN: I think we have to take the Gospels’ silence both seriously and lightly. We have to take it seriously, because we are all doing something with it, and what we do with it is not always helpful. The global image of Jesus which became normative via Western colonialism – Jesus the European, with long flowing hair parted in the middle, strikingly handsome and, of course, non–disabled – has the potential to create a normative picture of ‘divinity’. In her essay, ‘God is not a white man,’ Chine McDonald has written well of the ‘divinisation of whiteness’ to which this image contributes, and we might speak of the divinisation of certain types of bodies as well.
We have to take it lightly, in the sense that our ideas or images of Jesus are not Jesus himself. My favourite poem of C.S. Lewis shares this sentiment: ‘Thoughts are but coins / Let me not trust, instead of / Thee, their thin worn image of thy head.’
In Shusako Endō’s novel, Silence, a Jesuit priest is invited to step on an image of Christ – the image which he has held dear through all his missionary pursuits. It is only by stepping on the image that he can save the lives of the Japanese converts. I wonder if a similar thing has to happen today. We have to let go of some of our familiar images, so that we can allow more compelling ones to take their place.
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If you would like to know more about my academic research on this topic, please consider pre-ordering my book, Jesus’ Physical Appearance (Bloomsbury, 2025).