Tpixel.gif (807 bytes)
crdsani2.gif (10183 bytes)

x
Xenos Christian
Fellowship
Crossroads Home
Xenos
Online Journal...

index
issue 1, 2, 3, 4, 5

Xenos Summer
Institute

The Death of Truth

chapter 1
study guide
reviews

Meet the Director
Speaker's Bureau
Apologetics &
Evangelism
Resources
Postmodernism &
You
Conversation &
Cuisine


pixel.gif (810 bytes) pixel.gif (810 bytes) pixel.gif (810 bytes) pixel.gif (810 bytes) pixel.gif (810 bytes) pixel.gif (810 bytes)

Let Your Garments Always Be White
By Sam Meier

SEND SAM A COMMENT OR QUESTION

Notes

download and print:
this page

Copyright © 2000
by Sam Meier

It is axiomatic that not all communication is verbal. The wink of any eye, a vigorous handshake, a kiss - such are among the more obvious body actions which communicate beyond speech.2 On a more grand scale, the Star of David, the Crescent, or the Cross, wordlessly stir deep emotions for those whose allegiance is grounded in Judaism, Islam, or Christianity respectively.

Such symbols pose a problem. As French must be learned to communicate verbally with Parisians, so one must become sensitized to another culture's values and their corresponding representations if one wishes to comprehend with some degree of accuracy the non verbal signals of another culture. One must adjust to the frequency of the sender if one wishes to receive intelligibly. Symbols constantly acquire new significance through usage, and one unfamiliar with the custom remains an outsider. The problem in understanding or even being aware of such symbols (the domain of semiotics) increases with an individual's conceptual or temporal distance from the sending culture.

For the reader of the Old Testament, the problem is particularly acute. Even though one may through translations surmount the language problem of a text originally penned in a non Indo European language, there still remains the formidable obstacles associated with a culture thousands of years old, no longer in existence, whose sole literary3 remains are the biblical text with no human interpreter from that culture to guide our reading.

The following discussion is designed to uncover one such symbol of substantial significance in the Old Testament: clothing. By examining reflexes of the relatively stable cultural values expressed by clothes within the Old Testament (with reference as well to the New Testament and traditions elsewhere in the ancient Near East), we hope to make the reading of the biblical text more intelligible to the twentieth century reader for whom clothes and fashion are as changeable as the weather.4

One may succinctly describe clothing as an extension of the life, personality and vigor of the wearer. Apart from explicit exceptions to be noted below, there is a strict correlation between the condition of one's life and the clothes that are worn.5 Clothing often appears as a metaphor for human life in general and an image of a specific individual's life in particular.

The frequency with which mourners are bedecked with sackcloth is a ready illustration to introduce this perspective.6 Extreme tragedy provoked a change in garments. Normal clothes worn in daily life were inappropriate when normalcy was broken in one's life. The rough, abrasive, uncomfortable and unattractive sackcloth communicated eloquently an inner change in one's psyche. It is obvious that one who wore sackcloth had encountered a crisis for which the sackcloth was the concrete manifestation. But the significance of garments goes far beyond this isolated phenomenon with which most are familiar.

Sackcloth apparel was not the only visage of mourning imaged by garments; the destruction of one's own proper garment was an even more intense drama portraying an invisible reality. One might describe the deliberate tearing of one's garment as a formal enactment of the rending of oneself. The sorrow that precipitated such a violent display was often of sufficient intensity to mark the end of one's former life and its continuation (if at all) only in a modified fashion. When an individual becomes hopelessly aware of his or her own imminent death, the tearing of one's clothes is an eloquent metaphor of one's own demise.7 The loss or even anticipated loss, of a relative or loved one finds the bereaved rending their garments.8 Life had been diminished even for those who continued to live: the rape of Tamar forever changed her life, a boundary by which she marked by the tearing of her garment (2 Sam. 13:19). The leper who is cut off from the community, forced to live apart from society, is to have his clothes torn    his life is terminated while he lives (Lev. 13:45).9

The point to be emphasized is that not all bad news elicits such extreme responses as the tearing of clothes.10 Instead, it is the liminal events and significant boundaries where one's life is dramatically changed. The tearing of the garment is a picture of the irrevocable11 tearing of a life: it is a response to a tragedy which mars if not destroys the person who mourns.12

It is helpful to note that one who tore his garments often would accompany the act by the deprivation of other life-affirming symbols: refusal to eat food,13 the cutting of the hair,14 failure to bathe or anoint oneself with oil.15 Sackcloth and torn garments are simply one tangible expression of a terrible reality.

The perspective is reinforced by the fact that the priests were not to tear their clothes in mourning for deceased relatives under certain conditions (Lev. 10:6; 21:10). The wholeness which is required by one who serves in the presence of God must not be diminished, in the same way that those who are mutilated may not serve as priests (Lev. 21:17 23). The apparent callousness of this stipulation is explicable from the perspective that the rending of the garments (along with other mourning rites) genuinely represents a deterioration of the life of the officiant.

In fact, the position of the priest is made explicit in this regard, for he must wear special clothes if he wishes to enter the temple area.16 The elaborate directions for the manufacture and use of the priestly garments in Exodus and Leviticus are another manifestation of the central import of clothes in ritua1.17 The dress of the priest is not an optional feature but fraught with considerable significance: in both the Tabernacle legislation and the future Temple service envisaged by Ezekiel, the priests put on special garments when they enter the arena of the holy and they remove these garments when they leave.18

The garment is thus an objective element by which an individual's vitality and personality is displayed. The destruction or marring of one's garment is consequently a foreboding event which moves in the realm of death. When Jacob sees his son's Joseph's coat covered with blood, he exclaims: "It is my son's robe; a wild beast has devoured him; Joseph is certainly torn to pieces" (Gen. 37:33). This is a reasonably logical conclusion on the basis of the evidence, but in a larger framework it is essential that it be precisely Joseph's bloodied garment which is used to represent the misfortune of its former owner.

In the same fashion that the destruction of one's clothing marked the end of one's former life, so the renewal of garments identified the wearer as entering into a new .life. When Jacob makes the decisive move to transfer completely his allegiance from traditional gods to Yahweh alone, he orders his extended family to purify themselves and change their clothes (Gen. 35:2). Clothing stands as an extension of one's personality: renewed clothing marks a renewed orientation in life. Perhaps the donning of special clothes to enter the sacred Temple area represents one facet of such a renewal or vivification.19

Similarly, clothing which does not wear out is a sign of continued vigor under the special protection of providence. The wilderness experience of the Israelites was a forty year miracle of clothes which neither deteriorated nor required replacement, from the clothes on their backs to the shoes on

their feet (Deut. 8:4; 29:5; Neh. 9:21). This miracle was another manifestation of the charmed existence of the Israelites in the wilderness, eating manna from heaven and receiving water from the rock.

In like manner, the three Jewish men thrown into Nebuchadnezzar's furnace survived the ordeal with no real threat to their lives. The text describes their clothing in detail as they were thrown to their (apparent) doom: "Then these men were bound in their mantles, their tunics, their hats, and their other garments, and they were cast into the burning fiery furnace" (Dan 3:21). The interest in detail is curious but significant as the narrator later resumes at the climax: "The fire had not had any power over the bodies of those men; the hair of their heads was not singed, their mantles were not harmed" (Dan.3:27).

The cultural value which perceives a vigorous life as reflected in continued maintenance of one's clothing became canonized as a legal reality. Exodus 21:10 requires a husband to continue providing the basic necessities to a wife whom he by passes in favor of marrying another. Clothing is one of  these three commodities stereotypic throughout the ancient Near East20 which guarantees her continued livelihood.

We have seen so far that the mundane banality of clothes may be inadequate to account for their crucial importance at significant junctures in life. This becomes more apparent at the transfer of clothes from one party to another, for it was an act weighted with solemnity of life and death proportions. To give clothes as a gift was one of the most common benefactions of royalty.21 But on the non royal plane, it is of central import that Joseph provides his brothers with new garments after he reveals who he is (45:22). Not only is there an irony present, reversing the jealousy once stimulated by the "coat of many colors;" but the gift is a sign of new life for the brothers a new life which Joseph wishes to sponsor as a sign of full forgiveness.

However, of deeper significance was the transfer to another of clothes which were actually worn by the giver. For example, the influential royal officer Shebna, "the palace administrator" ('aser 'al habbayit Is. 22:15), is excoriated by the prophet Isaiah for abuse of his official power. Shebna's doom is eloquently foretold by the prophet, a doom which includes his demise and death in a foreign land. But more precisely for our purposes, his removal from office is described as a divestiture in favor of another person’s investiture with the same garments (Is. 22:19 21):

I will thrust you from your office, And you will be cast down from your station. In that day I will call my servant Eliakim, the son of Hilkiah, And I will clothe him with your robe, And will bind your girdle on him, And will commit your authority to his hand.

It is not accidental that such activity marked the death of the one deprived of clothes, or at least pointed to his demise or termination of his effectiveness. When the story of Aaron's death is told, we find Moses following God's directive (Num. 20:25 28):

Take Aaron and his son Eleazar, and bring them up to Mount Hor; and strip Aaron of his garments and put them on his son Eleazar. So Aaron will be gathered to his people and will die there . . . And after Moses had stripped Aaron of his garments and put them on his son Eleazar, Aaron died there on the mountain top.

The transfer of the clothes immediately prior to death is not coincidental, for the text wishes to underscore the real connection in an unbroken sequence of the spiritual unity between the first priest and his successor. The bond is achieved through the transfer of the former person’s clothes.

This deliberate orientation reappears at the death of the great prophet Elijah. His successor Elisha's initial response is to tear his own clothes when Elijah is taken away forever (2 Kgs. 2:12). But the torn clothes do not mark the final statement of Elisha's condition, for he next picks up his former master's mantle by which he is invigorated to accomplish precisely the same miracles which his master had performed before his death. As Elijah had split the Jordan (2 Kgs. 2:8), so the new bearer of the mantle can do precisely the same (v.14). The continuity between the deceased and his successor is marked by the transfer of the former person’s garment.

In addition to the transfer of authority just noted in the prophetic and priestly offices, even the kingship privilege was marked by the transfer of the royal garments. King Saul had already clothed David in his own garments and armor at a time when Saul was ineffective in leading the people (1 Sam. 18:38). Although David declines the offer as inadequate, this unwitting transfer of the royal wardrobe to the future king is affirmed as more than fortuitous when Saul's own heir, the crown prince Jonathan, also gives his own clothes to David (1 Sam 18:4). These actions adumbrate the eventual death of Saul and Jonathan, in whose place David assumes the kingship.22

It was also possible to share one's garment with another while still wearing it or at least maintaining possession. The inertia of the concept above would imply that a shared garment signifies the assimilation of the newly clothed party into the life of the one who shares the garment. Thus, in some betrothal contexts, the man is described as spreading his garment over his future wife. Ruth asks Boaz to do this to her (Ruth 3:9), and God describes himself as spreading his garment over Israel when she became his bride (Ezk. 16:8). It is not simply that "covering a woman with one's mantle signified the intention of acting as her protector,"23 but on a more fundamental level the life of the woman is now becoming joined to the life of the man, or in the words of Genesis 2:24, they become "one flesh:"

Since the garment was clearly an extension of one's life and personality, certain symbolic gestures gain clarity when seen from this vantage point. The acknowledgment of a new Israelite king was partially achieved, on at least one occasion, by individuals removing their garments and placing them at the king's feet. Clearly a symbol of submission, the garments in this context are a part which represents the whole of the person whose garment lies beneath the king. The repetition of this action in the case of Christ's entry into Jerusalem is no doubt embroidered with royal connotations (Mk. 11:8; Lk. 19:36), but the royal ritual must be seen as a part of a much larger dimension in which a garment is perceived as an extension of the wearer's life.

Another symbolic gesture appears in relation to the tearing of garments discussed earlier. Saul attempts to humbly petition an angry Samuel by grasping the hem of Samuel's garment.24 But when the cloth accidentally tears in Saul's hands, Samuel sees the action as pointing to a violent rending in the perpetrator's (Saul's) own life: the kingdom will be torn out of his hand and given to another (1 Sam. 15:27-28). The tearing of a garment with this same significance reappears later when Solomon's kingdom is fractured (1 Kgs. 11:29-31).

The potency of the garment as a legitimate extension of the wearer is the driving element in the minds of many of those who seek to be healed by Jesus and his disciples. The woman who had been sick for twelve years articulates the dynamic precisely: "If I can just touch his clothes, I shall be saved" (Mk. 5:28). This narrative is crucial, for not only is she immediately cured, but the event elicits a response from Jesus. As Mark observes (5:30):25

And at once aware of the power that had gone out from him, Jesus turned around in the crowd and said, 'Who touched my clothes?'

The identity between clothes and wearer can be no more intimately presented, for the cloth is a vehicle and channel for expressing the vitality and life of the person. This woman's wish is not unique, for wherever Jesus went, "they laid down the sick in the open spaces, begging him to lei them touch even the fringe of his cloak" (Mk.6:56). It is consequently not surprising to find that those who follow it Jesus' footsteps are able to heal individuals by simply touching garments which are then taken to the ill as an extension of the personal power of the apostle (Acts 19:12).

On another level, garments were a reflection of a person's position or status in the community.26 Among the more obvious examples are the luxuriously splendid clothes of those either of royal status or specially privileged by royalty. Mordechai left the presence of the king bedecked in "royal robes of blue and white with a large crown of gold and a garment of fine linen and purple" (Est. 9:15). Daniel is elevated to position as third ruler in Babylon, clothed with purple and a necklace of gold (Dan. 5:26). When Joseph is elevated over all Egypt, Pharaoh bestows upon him garments of fine linen with a gold necklace (Gen. 41:42). The assumption in these stories is that clothing is a reliable indicator of status.

But it is not just the upper class who can be identified by their clothes. We are specifically told of a special garment worn by virgins in Israel (2 Sam. 13:18). Widows wore a distinctive garb according to Genesis 38:14, 19, and a harlot could be identified by what she wore (Pr. 7:10). Jesus related a parable whose climax depended upon distinctive garments which one should wear to a wedding (Mt. 22:11 12). The special garment which Jacob gave to Joseph alone among all his brothers certainly communicated a message that this son was uniquely special to his father, for it showed to them that "their father loved him more than all his brothers" (Gen. 37:4). The attire of a prophet was apparently distinctive with its hairy exterior and leather belt (Zech. 13:4; 2 Kgs. 1:8; Mt. 3:4; Mk. 1:6), a type of clothing which Jesus underscored as certainly not characteristic of a refined life style: "A man wearing fine clothes? Look, those who wear fine clothes are to be found in palaces" (Mt. 11:8 9). Clothes, therefore, could be unambiguous symbols of identification of status, social position, and relationship.27

It is appropriate that clothing should reflect the life of its wearer, for biblical texts repeatedly employ imagery which stresses the "mortality" of garments. In fact, the mortality of mankind is compared to the parallel shortcoming in garments: "Man crumbles away like rotten wood, or like a moth eaten garment" (Job 13:28). Garments are characteristically short-lived so that even the inevitable dissolution of the cosmos itself is honed to a comprehensible, narrow focus where it is compared to clothing which grows old or is vulnerable to voracious moths (Ps. 102:26; Is. 50:9; 51:6, 8).

It is easy to overstate the correlation between the clothes on the exterior and the real person whom they represent. Biblical imagery is equally emphatic that a second trajectory is also present which depicts the garment as a deceptive facade which misleads the onlooker. Examples already cited above align themselves in this direction, such as Joseph's blood stained coat presented to Jacob. Joseph is not really dead, and although the coat presented to Jacob is an accurate symbol of what amounts to Joseph's living death as a slave in a foreign land, his father is deceived as to Joseph's true condition. The deception is not inappropriate in this case and is a fitting act of poetic justice, for Jacob had earlier deceived his father by donning his brother's clothes and pretending to be Esau (Gen. 27:1 45). In like manner, Judah, who had assisted in passing off the bloodied cloak, was deceived by Tamar's deliberate disguise as a cultic prostitute (Gen. 38:1 26).

Therefore, Christ's dictum that false prophets are wolves in the guise of sheep (Mt. 7:15) is not without precedent, Joshua was fooled by the crafty Gibeonites who displayed their tattered clothes as "proof" of the great distance which they had traveled (Jos. 9:5,13). King Ahab was tricked by a prophet who disguised himself (1 Kgs. 20:37 42). And the early church succumbed to the easy but false intuition that there is a true correlation between one's clothes and one's spiritual status (James 2:2 4).

Now suppose a man comes into your assembly, well dressed and with a gold ring on and at the same time a poor man comes in, in shabby clothes, and you take notice of the well dressed man, and say, "Come this way to the best seats"; then you tell the poor man, "Stand over there" or "You can sit on the floor by my footrest" In making this distinction among yourselves have you not used a corrupt standard?

It is not true that there is always a necessary correlation between the outer garment and the inner personality. When Joel cries out, "Rend your heart and not your garments" (2:13), he is already affirming a universal human condition, as common as the lying tongue.

In fact, one could argue that there is sufficient semantic overlap between the notion of "covering" oneself with a garment and "covering up" something which one wishes to hide, an overlap which may account for the very vocabulary of clothing itself:

The connection between the ideas "cover, clothe, besmear, cover with paint or other material" on the one hand, and "deceive, mislead", etc. on the other hand is very frequent.28

What is it that clothes are designed to cover up? The testimony of the Bible is unanimous that man's natural condition of nakedness is a legitimate cause for shame. God certainly does not wish to see men's nakedness when they serve in the sacrificial ritual (Ex. 28:42 43), and precautions are taken to insure that no accidental exposure occurs: steps are not allowed at God's altar lest the raising of the leg accidentally lift one's garment (Ex. 20:26).

There is an awareness that this shame results from a former breach between God and man, for there once was a time when man walked naked in God's presence with no opprobrium, indeed, no self consciousness that he was naked (Gen. 2:25; 3:8 11). Not only does God provide cultic measures to minimize exposure of nakedness in the sacrificial service as noted above, but God himself affirmed that covering one's nakedness with clothes was a legitimate means of solving the immediate problem of shame. Although Adam and Eve initially sewed fig leaves together (Gen. 3:7), it was God who designed the first substantial garments for humankind out of animal skins (Gen. 3:21). Clothing thus is a bivalent symbol in this regard, affirming simultaneously both the tragedy of man as an incongruous rebel in creation and also his nobility as one whose shame is found worthy of resolution by the very hand of God himself. Indeed, God's gift of clothes to man and woman is an affirmation of hope that God can yet bring life where death holds sway.29

The identification of nakedness with shame is integrated with notions of death, reinforcing our observations that clothing represents an extension of the life of the wearer. It is precisely the naked who are on the verge of death if not already dead. Most obviously, one often finds that those without clothes are also lacking in nourishment (e.g. James 2:15). But in addition, before execution one is stripped naked (Hos. 2:5; Ezk. 16:39 40; cf.; Ezk. 23:26; Is. 47:2 3; Nah. 3:5 7). When Job's calamities burst over his head, he first tears his robe and then the words which leave his mouth provide the classic commentary: "Naked I came from my mother's womb, and naked shall I return" (Job. 1:20 21).30

The one who is naked is the one who is aware of his imminent mortality. It is the one without clothes who is vulnerable and in danger of perishing (Job 24:7, 10; 31:19). It is later fitting that the insane man dwells among the tombs without clothing (Lk. 8:27), but when healed by Jesus, he is found in his right mind and clothed, sitting at the feet of Jesus (Lk. 8:35).31 It is also appropriate that man's mortality in the Garden of Eden is signaled by a dawning awareness of his nakedness.

Therefore, the laws in the Pentateuch which limit certain exchanges of clothing should not be perceived as an isolated phenomenon. One is not allowed to take a widow's garment as a pledge for payment of a debt according to Deuteronomy 24:17, while Exodus 22:20 26 requires that any garments taken as pledges from the poor must be returned before sunset. That the issue is of life and death proportions is evident from the fact that abusing this stipulation moves God to personally deal with the offender (v. 27):

It is all the covering he has; it is the cloak he wraps his body in; what else will he sleep in? If he appeals to me I shall listen.

Naturally, the one who is insensitive to human lives is the one who strips others naked, pushing them to their death (Job 22:6), while it becomes a life giving act for the righteous to provide clothing for the perishing.32

In summary, when one moves into the realm of ancient Israel's culture, it is apparent that abstract concepts often donned the tangible clothing of physical substance. It is a world where spirits were birds descending from heaven, where the voice of God was heard in the thunder, where the winds were God's servants and his angels stars. It is part of this intimate integration of the physical and the spiritual realm, the abstract and the concrete, that common clothing was not so common after all. A man's garment was his life or at least an extension of it - representing his status, condition, position, personality, vulnerability. From sackcloth to splendid purple, from a widow's garb to the royal cloth, from a prophet's hairy attire to the sacred priestly clothes, from the torn garment to the gift of new clothes   the diversity of representations allowed for the fruitful development of the bond between a person and the clothes which he or she wore. The biblical narratives assume an awareness of this value system as an essential part of plot and character development. Indeed, John's care to point out that Christ's garment was not torn by the soldiers at the cross33 seems to be one such use of this symbol by which the gospel writer alluded to the fact that the cross did not mark the end of Jesus' life.

NOTES

1 I wish to dedicate this paper to Carol Anderson.

2 For gestures and body language in the specific context of the ancient Near East, see Mayer Gruber, Aspects of Non verbal Communication in the Ancient Near East (Studia Pohl 12 [2 volumes]. Rome: Biblical Institute, 1980)

3 Literary in the sense of reflective composition, not merely documentary for which one could easily cite scores of old Hebrew inscriptions.

4 We are not interested so much in the nomenclature of fashion (e.g. Roland Barthes, Systeme de la mode (Paris: Seuil, 19671) as in the signification of clothing itself. A western perspective which simply notes that "principally and fundamentally dress was intended as an added protection against climatic conditions" (L. Eichler Watson, The Customs of Mankind (Garden City, N.Y: Garden City, 19241 501) will be seen to be grossly inadequate from the oriental perspective in which the biblical world moves.

5 For this phenomenon in other cultures, see J. Frazer, The Golden Bough (3rd ed. London: Macmillan, 1913) Vol. 1 pp. 205 207.

6 E.g. when Jacob mourns Joseph (Gen. 37:34) or Hezekiah laments the humiliation before Assyria (2 Kings 19:1); see I DB IV 147.

7 So Athaliah (2 Kgs. 11:14). This and the following examples point out the inadequacy of interpretations such as the following: "by tearing his clothing and putting on sackcloth a man symbolized either his submission to the dead or his readiness to give up all his pleasures and luxuries as a result of the bereavement he had sustained" (Maurice Farbridge, Studies in Biblical and Semitic Symbolism [N.Y: E.P. Dutton, 1923] 224). Athaliah is hardly submissive. In any case, we are not concerned with the origins of these symbols as with their usage in the historical period.

8E.g., Jacob over Joseph (Gen. 37:34), Benjamin's brothers (Gen. 44:13), Jephthah over his daughter (Jud. 11:35), David over Amnon (2 Sam. 13:31)

9 This is not to deny other significances, for as with most symbols, a polyvalent orientation may be legitimately articulated by different members within the same community. With regard to torn garments specifically, it is noteworthy that the mother of the last Babylonian king, Nabonidus, specifically attributes her torn clothes to her desire to move the gods to compassion: "for calming the heart of my god and my goddess, a dress of fine wool, jewels, silver, gold, a new shift, perfumes, sweet oil I applied not to my body, but in a torn shift I went clothed" (C.J. Gadd, "The Harran Inscriptions of Nabonidus," [AnSt 8 (1958) 35 92] 46--47). The Talmud suggests that in the case of children, garments may be torn to move them to sorrow (Moe'ed Qatan 26b).

10 For later rabbinic refinements in the custom of tearing the garment and in responses to death or tragedy, see Moe'ed Qatan 22b 26b.

11 According to Moe'ed Qatan 26b, rabbinic authorities in some cases did not allow one to ever completely mend a rent garment.

12 This is the perception of the mourner. Circumstances can, of course, reverse or mitigate the tragedy as in the case of Joshua at Ai (Jos. 7:6f.).

13 2 Sam. 1:11,12; 1 Kgs. 21:27.

14 In addition to Job (Job. 1:20), Ezra also pulls out his hair (Ezra 9:3,5) while 80 men from Schechem shaved off their beards (Jer. 41:5). See Farbridge, Studies, pp. 233 239.

15 2 Sam 14:2 (although the Tekoite woman's clothes are not said to be torn); see the discussion of this verse in Moed Qatan 15b.

16 Perhaps of significance is the "keeper of the wardrobe" Isomer habbegadim 2 Kgs. 22:14) or the "super or of the chambers/wardrobe" ('Yser al hammeltahah 2 Kgs. 10:22; see KB for the problem of etymology), the latter of whom is specifically responsible for providing clothes for worshipers who enter the sacred area. The ritual requirement of special garments for those who enter the realm of the sacred is abundantly documented for Israel's neighbors as well.

17 Ex. 28:1 43; 29:5 9,21,29 30; 31:10; 35:19,21; 39:1 31,41; 40:13 14; Lev. 8:2,7 9,30; 21:10.

18 Lev. 6:10,11; 16:3 4,23 24; Ezk. 42:14; 44:17 19.

19 The miserable condition of the Poor Man of Nippur    no money, no food, no drink    is described climactically be noting that "he was clad in garments for which he had no change" (1.10); his life changes, however, when he resolves, "I will take off my garments, for which I have no change . . . I will buy a sheep" (1.12,14,43). Eventually he is richly girded by the king (1.79 82) and provided with new clothes by his enemy (1.108; O.R. Gurney, "The Sultantepe Tablets," [AnSt 6 (1956) 145 162]). The naked Enkidu becomes human in tablet II of the Gilgamesh Epic by donning clothes: "He put on clothes, (and now) he is like a man" (II.iii.27).

20 S. Paul, "Ex. 21:10. A Threefold Maintenance Clause;" (JNES 28 [1969] 48 53).

21 1 Kgs. 10:25 is a biblical example of a phenomenon well attested in the Near East at large, most abundantly at Mari and Amarna; see C. Zaccagnini, Lo Scambio dei Doni nel Vicino Oriente durante i Secoli XV--XIII (Rome: Centro per le Antichita a la Storia dell'Arte del Vicino Oriente, 1973).

22 The wearing of garments made of animal skin certainly reinforced this perception, for the transfer of the animal's skin to the man required the death of the animal (as when God clothed Adam in Gen. 3:21).

23 Farbridge, Studies, 275.

24 The fringe or hem of a garment was a frequent locus of persona identification, particularly well-attested in Mesopotamia: it could be pressed on a clay tablet or given to another (often with a lock of hair) as a testimony of personal identification in a contract, while in divorce proceedings it was cut off in a symbolic act of severance (for texts see sissiktu in CAD S 322-325). To grass the hem of another person’s garment was a gesture of intense petition attested in Akkadian, Hebrew, Aramaic and Ugaritic (Edward Greenstein, "'To Grasp the Hem' in Ugaritic Literature,” VT 32 [1982] 217-218).

25 Parallels in Mt. 9:20-22: Lk 8:43-48 .

26 For a fascinating survey of this dimension of clothing in genera, see the chapter entitled, "Le costume, signe social;" in Yvonne Deslandres' Le costume, image de l'homme (Paris: Albin Michel, 1976) 170 240.

27 The only extra biblical evidence available for pre exilic Israelite dress comes from artistic representations of Israelites by Israel's neighbors. The 37 "asiatics" depicted in the 19th century B.C. Egyptian tomb painting of Khnumhotep at Beni Hasan show a stunning array of clothing with diversity of style, design, and color for a period long antedating the period of the Israelite monarchy. For depictions of actual Judahites and Israelites from the period of the monarchy (on stone and colorless), see figures 14 42 of Markus Waffler's Nicht Assvrer neuassyrischer Darstellung (AOAT 26. Neukirchen Vluyn: Neukirchener 1975).

28 J.L. Palache Semantic Notes on the Hebrew Lexicon (Leiden: Brill 1959) 10. Palache identifies a spectrum of Semitic roots which bear this double weight: bqd, m’l, lbs, glm, hmr, kpr, t/tpl, htl, sgr, mkr, dgl, hlb.

29 29 The particular role which God plays as the bestower of clothing reappears in a Ugaritic text from Ras Ibn Hani (78/20 1.12 13): lbs il ystk ‘rm

il ystk "a garment El puts on you; a skin El puts on you" (Francesco Saracine, "Ras Ibn Hani 78/20 and Some Old Testament Connections," VT 32 (1982) pp. 338--343. See also the excerpt from the Assyrian hymn in note 32 below.

30 In Mesopotamia, the Descent of Ishtar is suggestive with the progressive disrobing of Ishtar as she enters the underworld and her progressive robing as she leaves (cf. the unidentified objects taken from Nergal in his descent [O.R. Gurney, "The Sultantepe Tablets," (AnSt 10 [1960) 105 31; 126 127). Advice to others who descend to the underworld includes not putting on clean clothes nor wearing sandals lest the underworld inhabitants easily identify the intruder as an alien (Gilgamesh XII. 14 15, 22, 33 34, 40 originally a Sumerian tradition see A. Shaffer Sumerian Sources of Tablet XII of the Epic of Gilgamesh [unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, 1963) pp. 108, 110).

31 Mark describes only his clothed state after his healing (Mk. 5:15); Matthew greatly condenses the story (Mt. 8:28 34).

32 Is. 58:7 8; Ezk. 18:7 9; Job 31:19 20; Mt. 28:63. Such activity legitimizes a king: "I provided the naked with clothing" says Esarhaddon (Borger Esarhaddon 25.27); cf. LAS 121.r3. According to passages such as Deut. 10:18 (and even Gen. 3:21 as described above), one is simply following the divine example; note the parallelism in the late Assyrian hymn: "Who covers shame with clothes, who gives life to god and man" (E. Ebeling, "Ein Loblied auf Gula Baba aus neuassyrischer Zeit;" Or 23 [1954] 346, 348 1.13). The case of Dorcas in the New Testament is particularly instructive, for though she died, it is the clothes which she made for others which is the single concrete feature of significance which precedes her being raised from he dead (Acts 9:39-40).

33 One finds that the description of the garment as seamless is often interpreted as a reflection of the high priest's garment made in similar fashion (e.g. New Jerusalem Bible p. 1787 n.i. ). But this does not explain why John insists that it was not torn.


Copyright © 2000 by Gary DeLashmutt


Top Of Page


Xenos Online Journal | Xenos Summer Institute
The Death of Truth | Meet the Director | Speaker's Bureau
Apologetics & Evangelism | Postmodernism and You
Conversation & Cuisine

Crossroads Home | Xenos Christian Fellowship

Send problems or comments to webmaster@xenos.org

pixel.gif (807 bytes)
crdslgo1.gif (941 bytes)