J
jesusmademe
Guest
She! Not he!
Last schola I saw here in USA had a guy with long floppy hair to his collar leading the group and I’m pretty sure there was at least one ponytail among the rest.One of the guys, who was at some time attending SSPX Masses, told me afterwards that you can’t have long hair in the schola (I have my ponytail and like it). He said short hair is the decorum.
It seems the unspoken agreement in this thread is to pretend that St. Paul the Apostle never had anything to say on this matter. He did though. See 1 Corinthians 11:14.Long hair is very manly!
I don’t know about other byzantines, but for our actual Ruthenian men, silver hair and a hairline in retreat (not merely receding!) seems to be the norm by middle age. At which point, the Law of Conservation of Hair compels them to add the ponytail in back to conserve the total amount of hair . . .Only Byzantines can have longer hair??
Oh.The only thing I was told when joining was that I must be able to sing ok.
I am truly amazed when I see pictures of myself in school in the 70s . . . even with my mother cutting my hair, the sheer quantity that I had without it touching my collar (Jesuit school) . . . and everyone else had just as much . . .I have seen a lot of change in styles over the years.
Glad you mentioned it @Roguish. Because if no one did I was going to remind folks there’s actually a Scriptural passage about it. How to interpret the passage is the trick. However, given there is a passage I wouldn’t vilify any faithful for believing in it strictu sensu.jesusmademe:![]()
It seems the unspoken agreement in this thread is to pretend that St. Paul the Apostle never had anything to say on this matter. He did though. See 1 Corinthians 11:14.Long hair is very manly!
1 Corinthians 11:14 NABRE - Does not nature itself teach you that - Bible Gateway
Iron being the most common element on Earth would have us believe knives weren’t uncommon. Both stone sharpening and even leather stropping those tools would have been common. Also, modern technology hasn’t been able to fully reproduce Damascus steel, folks back then knew their metalpeople didn’t have easy access to barbers, or perhaps even a sharp hair cutting tool
Excavations in Egypt have unearthed solid gold and copper razors in tombs dating back to the 4th millennium BC. The Roman historian Livy reported that the razor was introduced in ancient Rome in the 6th century BC.
I don’t think this was necessarily so especially in hot climates where water wasn’t abundant.It’s my understanding that most people in Jesus’ time had their hair cut less frequently than people today
Good you mention it, I had forgotten how often razors were mentioned in the OT. I don’t think you had to pay much for a barber back then, there’d probably be one razor per family or village and the village barber probably didn’t charge much for his service. Also good that you mentioned scissors because I had never thought about them.Also, I thought Jewish men typically didn’t use razors for religious reasons