The Enlightenment and Modern images of Jesus

[i]

“What is most real: the image of Jesus? the historical Jesus? or the essence of Christ, the idea of spiritual reality that corresponds to the believer’s recognition of the picture and affirming utterance? Believers don’t have to choose amond these; instead they compile them in their devotional gaze. The power of visual piety consists in enhancing the imanence of the spiritual referent through the image, reifying it, and merging it with a concept of the historical Jesus.”[i]

In recent study, an emphasis has been placed on what the historical Jesus might have actually looked like. This search for “truth” says more about our modern culture than it does about the person of Jesus. For example, early Christians were more concerned with the personality of Christ and sought to edify their audience as to who Christ was and the miracles he performed on earth. Today, we would rather know what he looked like than what he acted like.

Perhaps this is because of the recent discovery that Christianity has been a white-and-western-dominated movement since it’s beginning. In this section, I will look at the history of the attempt to figure out what Jesus actually looked like. Instead of looking at one image, I will look at multiple to get a glimpse of the viewpoints for all of them.

The quest for what Jesus has actually looked like and acted like has been going on since the Enlightenment, when the idea of the historical method first came into existence.[ii] Ever since then, worshippers have wanted to know the truth about who Jesus was and various stories, pictures and scholarly methods have been found to tell it. In the Blackwell Companion to Jesus, Gowler wrote about the quest to find the historical Jesus as he relates to scripture, but what he said is still relevant because people are just as concerned with the truth about his physical appearance as they are with the truth about his actual sayings and actions. He writes

“…the Jesus for whom we look, because of our presuppositions, determines to an extent the Jesus we will find, as well as the aspects of Jesus that we overlook or even misconstrue. As we search for the historical Jesus, how and where we begin influences where we will go, and what we look for influences what we see.”[iii]

This statement, when used to refer to the quest for what Jesus actually looked like, says something about the way audience members can project their feelings onto the image. The search for finding the truth about what the historical Jesus looked like would do well to remember the same statement Gowler gives for finding what the historical Jesus acted like. If we are searching for an image of a man with certain ethnic features and without certain ethnic features, we will not be satisfied with anything else, even the truth, until we find an image that satisfies both of our criterions.

This article is concerned about the similar methods used in finding true images of Jesus, and is not interesting in passing a true or false judgment on those images.  It will look at three images of Jesus widely considered true: The shroud of Turin, Akiane’s Prince of Peace, and a computer-modeled image from a BBC production team.

Before any of the three images were popular, other images of Jesus called archeiopoietons were popular. Those images were images not made by human hands. They became popular after and during the iconoclastic period from 728 to 843. Where portraits stood as proxies of authority, Jesus had no portrait until the Acheiropoieton, the Mandylion of Edessa and the Veronica of St. Peters were discovered. Both of these images were images that had legendary backstories. The Mandylion was supposedly by St. Luke while the Veronica was a handkerchief that Jesus wiped his face on before being crucified. All of the images were highly revered during their time. The Archeiopoieton was kissed and venerated by worshippers until most of the original was lost and it had to be protected.  The Veronica was reproduced and prayed to.[iv] These images are worth mentioning because they help us generate a wider sense of the audience searching for truth and the artists in search for truth.  As we shall see the audience, when searching for the truth is concerned with proof while searching for what Jesus actually looked like. For many audience members, this concern is satisfied with miraculous occurrences surrounding the image or with legends explaining its existence. They are also often changed by the images when they believe the reality. The artists or finders, as we shall see, are concerned with truth and are satisfied with truth by the creative process taken to find or discover the image in the first place.

Shroud of Turin[ii]

The shroud of Turin is not an image, but a relic. The evidence of the shroud existing is in a letter written in 1389 by a bishop accusing clergy of trying to profit from it.[v] Throughout its history it was burned, relocated to Turin and displayed every-now-and-then. The image was a faint one until 1898, when a photographic negative displayed it in more detail than was before possible.[vi]That caused the shroud to pick up more accreditation. The shroud also has it’s story on how it changes people who believe in it. During a fire in 1997, a man that rescued the Shroud said

“…If you can be affected by the face of the shroud, which is the face of suffering, then once in a while you see a man and you are able to understand his suffering and help him…That is the extraordinary gift which the shroud can give you: the ability to understand others…The universal nature of pain in the face of others…after that I was no longer capable of harming anyone.”[vii]

The artists, or discoverers of the shroud see its veracity in two ways. In 1389, it was the burial shroud of Jesus after he had been crucified with the blood and the markings to prove it. After the photographic negative was seen, it became verified because of the hitherto unknown detail now revealed.

Akiane’s Prince of Peace [iii]

In Akiane’s Prince of Peace, the same elements can be seen. Akiane was 8 years old in 2003, when she painted the portrait after having visions from heaven even though she had had no previous experience with Christianity. The audience may see these visions as proof of the image’s veracity, but if they were not satisfied with that a 2010 New York Times Bestseller provides further proof. In Heaven is For Real, Todd Burpo describes the story of 4-year-old Colton Burpo, who went through an emergency appendectomy, survived and told his family that he had went to heaven during his surgery.  After rejecting multiple images of Jesus and not knowing anything about the background for Akiane’s Prince of Peace, Colton says that the image is right and can’t find anything wrong with it. Todd Burpo also notes the similarities Akiane and Colton use in describing Jesus.[viii]  The artist uses truth to verify her portrait by saying that she saw them in a vision. The audience verifies the image by believing the story of the vision and using a similar vision story as proof. The painting also has the power element to it: Akiane’s parents were atheists before she painted the piece and eventually began to believe in God.[ix]

BBC’s Historical Jesus

The third image discussed in this section is different from the other two because it attempts to be verified not through the miraculous or the transcendent, but through scholarly research. It also does not fit the categories of audience and audience creation. BBC as part of the Son of God series created the image in 2001.[x]  The team went to the Middle East and studied ethnic appearances of people who lived there now and Jews who lived there in the first century AD. They combined the two elements. Unlike the other two images, the artists of this image of Christ do not claim to it to be the truth, only that it may resemble the truth. This image is interesting though because it suggests that people are no longer satisfied with the contemporary accepted view of Jesus as a white man. It is also interesting because it shows us that scientists are applying their own methods in the search to find out what Jesus looked like.

The search for truth also brings controversy, a Google search of the Shroud of Turin brings many articles up on proving it false. A similar search on the historical Jesus brings up websites debating his existence at all or discussing different theories applied to the search of finding it.

In conclusion, the search for the truth goes back since the time of the Enlightenment. It has permeated the study of Christianity and our culture. Where ancient Christians evaluated an image based on its ability to edify, and later Christians used images of Jesus as proxies, we now evaluate images based on its ability to tell the truth. There are often legendary backstories to prove images true, stories describing the images existence and its power to change people. How much of these images do we believe because of our preconceived notions and how much do we not believe because of them? That is a question for the audience.


[i] David Morgan, Visual Piety, (Las Angeles: University of California Press, 1998) 43.

[ii]David B. Gowler, “The Quest for the Historical Jesus: An Overview,” In The Blackwell Companion to Jesus, edited by Delbert Burkett, 300-17, (West Sussex, UK: Blackwell Publishing Ltd., 2011) 301.

[iii] Ibid., 301.

[iv] Neil Maccgregor and Erika Langmuir, Seeing Salvation, (London: BBC Worldwide Limited and Yale University Press, 2000), 85-93.

[v] Ibid., 99.

[vi] Ibid, 101.

[vii] Ibid, 102

[viii] Todd Burpo and Lynn Vincent, Heaven is for Real, Nashville, Tennessee: Thomas Nelson, Inc., 2010.

[ix] Ibid, 143

[x] BBC Photo Library, Son of God, Computer-Modeled image, 2001. http://www.rejesus.co.uk/site/module/faces_of_jesus/P9/ Accessed June 5, 2012.


[i] “Shroud of Turin Image and Jesus image by Akiane Kramarick” August 23, 2011. Video. accessed June 5, 2012. YouTube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2I_pDGQd1kE
[ii] “Shroud of Turin” Taken from My San Antonio blog, written Angela Sealana, April 3, 2012, http://blog.mysanantonio.com/pilgrimcenter/files/2012/04/TurinShroud-211×300.jpg Accessed June 5, 2012.
[iii] Kramarik, Akiane, Prince of Peace, Paint, 2003, Taken from “Shroud of Turin” Blog, http://goo.gl/ePMUE, Accessed June 5, 2012.

The Imperial Jesus

Christ Triumphant

[i]Diocletian split the Roman Empire in 286 into Eastern and Western halves.[ii] In the Western half, Constantine converted to Christianity in 312 AD and made Christianity legal in 313. [iii] He gave high priority to the Christian faith and the leaders of it.  This necessarily changed the way Christian art was viewed because Christian art (and therefore images of Jesus) was now imperial art. During the rest of his reign as emperor, Constantine established a relationship between the church and the state that lasted through the middle ages up past the time of the crusades.

An interesting shift in the way Christians viewed images occurred during this time.  People in Constantine’s age considered the emperor’s image as a valid substitute for the actual emperor. It was as if the emperor were actually there. The general attitude toward the imperial image became the general attitude toward Christ’s image. [iv]

This section will focus on Christ Triumphant, a painting on the archiepiscopal chapel that projects Jesus no longer as a humble shepherd, but as an emperor-type figure. The painting is dated from 494 to 519 AD and can be found in Ravenna, Italy.[v] While there are other types of Jesus, this one is an important one to focus on because it is a good example of the shift that happens from image of Jesus to icon of Jesus. It is with this image that people start looking at the image to see the person rather than the person’s attributes.

In this image, Christ has a halo and is standing with his feet on a lion and snake. He holds a book in one hand and a cross in another. He is dressed in rich clothing (a general’s uniform)[vi] with a jewel on his shoulder. This image is very different from the Good Shepherd, but there are similarities in that both images display a handsome, beardless man with curly hair. When looking at this picture, the audience would have probably likened it to a portrait or statue of an emperor. This reckoning would have had similar effects on the audience, it might have meant just like an imperial image that because the portrait of Jesus was there, Jesus himself was there.

In order to better understand the new attitude to portraits of Christ, let us first try to better understand the general attitude toward images of emperors. The proxy tradition of emperors did not end with Constantine.  Emperors used their images as proxies even after acknowledging that they were not divine beings.

“The imperial image was a vital presence that commanded fear and obedience, receiving and dispensing all that was due the emperor himself. It witnessed official acts, presided over judicial hearings, enforced laws, guaranteed oaths, dispensed clemency, and accepted gifts and sacrifices.” [vii]

The above passage shows that people feared and respected the image of an emperor as much as they would the actual emperor.  In Myth and Symbolism class, we talked about how people would be reluctant to tear up a picture of someone they respected because it was someone they respected. The proxy tradition could be considered a different version to this type of respect. It might also be considered something similar to a person kissing a poster[viii] of his or her favorite icon.

Evidence that the empirical proxy tradition did not die off with the event of Constantine’s conversion can be seen in Severian of Galaba who wrote:

“Since and emperor cannot be present to all persons, it is necessary to set up the statue of the emperor in law courts, market places, public assemblies, and theaters. In every place, in face, in which an official acts, the imperial effigy must be present, so that the emperor may thus confirm what takes place. For the emperor is only a human being, and he cannot be present everywhere.”[ix]

Some Christians resisted the shift of images of Jesus into portraits. There were iconoclasts who firmly resisted it, destroying images that were around.  Iconodules who were for the images argued against the iconoclasts by suggesting, like the image of emperors, that the image of Jesus did have power. In 787 at The Council of Nicaea, they said “the honour which is paid to the image passes on to that which the image represents, and he who does worship to the image does worship to the person represented in it.”[x]

Despite adversity, this theology persisted throughout the middle ages.  The idea of the icon developed further in later 6th and 7th centuries with the legend of Kamoulianai Christ (which hasn’t survived) and the archeiropoietos icons, or images not made by human hands.[xi] The shift from the imperial-looking Jesus to a Jesus supposedly not made by human hands shows a switch from the idea that the image of Jesus is a proxy of Jesus to the idea that the image of Jesus can act on behalf of Jesus. It also acts now as proof of the power of the actual Jesus.[xii] This might also be a good place to start when looking at the theological attempt to figure out what Jesus actually looked like.

In conclusion, as can be seen by the example of Christ Triumphant, the idea of images of Jesus shifted from an image of God reminiscent of pagan hero gods, to an image of God reminiscent of a Roman emperor. Portraits of Jesus were now seen to have power in captivating the audience and to stand as proxy for the actual Jesus.  A viewer of the Christ Triumphant mosaic would have recognized the similarity to an emperor or a general, they would have still seen the similarity to pagan gods (youthfulness symbolic of immortality), but they would have noticed this Jesus no longer looks like the humble shepherd.


[i] (image) Christ Triumphant, mosaic, 494-519 AD, Ravenna: Archiepiscopal Chapel: Vestibule Mosaic, Italy. Art and Faith, Too. Site by Lisa Towers and Bill Jones. http://goo.gl/EM4tK (Accessed June 4, 2012).

[ii] ” Diocletian,” A Dictionary of World History, (Oxford University Press, 2000), 5 June 2012, http://www.oxfordreference.com/views/ENTRY.html?subview=Main&entry=t48.e1082 (accessed June 5, 2012).

[iii] Raymond Van Dam ” Constantine ” The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece and Rome. Ed. Michael Gagarin. © Oxford University Press 2010, http://www.oxford-greecerome.com/entry?entry=t294.e299 (accessed June 5, 2012).

[iv] Alain Besançon, The Forbidden Image, trans. Jane Marie Todd, (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000), 110.

[v] Christ Triumphant, mosaic, 494-519 AD, Ravenna: Archiepiscopal Chapel: Vestibule Mosaic, Italy. San Diego, University of California. ARTstor Slide Gallery. http://goo.gl/fuQFk

[vi] Eduard Syndicus, Early Christian Art,  trans. J. R. Foster, (New York: Hawthorn Books, 1962), 98.

[vii]  Robin Margaret Jensen, Face to Face. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2005), 52

[viii] “Interactive Poster that Loves Being Kissed.” March 31, 2012. Video. Accessed June 5, 2012. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xyFZl7lCz_s

[ix] Robin Margaret Jensen, Face to Face. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2005), 53

[x] Beth Williamson, Christian Art, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004), 13

[xi] Anna Kartsonis, “The Responding Icon” in Heaven on Earth, Ed. Linda Safran, (University Park, Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania Stat University Press, 1998), 65.

[xii]  Ibid. 65

From Pagan Art

Hermes as the Good Shepherd, Pagan art reinterpreted

[i] Early Christian art was influenced by early Christian theology, which was influenced by Jewish and other pre-Christian theology. Images of God were not permitted in the Jewish tradition.  Exodus 20:3 says “Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth.” Other bits of scripture show that the Jews did make images to adorn their temple, but no attempt to portray their God went unpunished.

The earliest Christians inherited this iconoclastic mindset and focused more on what Jesus did rather than what Jesus looked like. They lived in the time and place where images mattered and idol worship was commonplace. Early Christian Art says:

“According to Clement of Alexandria, God had created only one image, his Son. Of this Son there can be only living images, Christians, who grow to resemble him by their virtues.”[ii]

Pagan culture was full of images, so Pagans who converted to Christianity had been exposed to art and images. Some Pagans probably had the art in their homes. This art became imbedded with new meaning after conversion.[iii]

While some pagan art was retranslated into other Christian ideals earlier, this section will look exclusively at Hermes, who became the Good Shepherd in early Christian reinterpretation.  The Good Shepherd image is popular as it occured at least 100 times in the catacombs.[iv] Evidence for early use of the shepherd can be found in Tertullian’s De pudic where he criticizes Catholics for using cups that depicted Hermes and for emphasizing the parable of the good shepherd in their teachings.[v] Even this image though, was seen and reproduced primarily as a symbol of salvation, not as an exact representation of Jesus Christ.

“…In whatever way Jesus and his companions are depicted in the fourth-century catacomb paintings or sarcophagus reliefs, they appear more as actors in a scene than as pure portrait types. Their faces are not revealed as the visages of holy persons, and the iconography s not intended for veneration. These figures are inseparable from their specific narrative compositions, which are meant to teach or reveal some meaning found in the details of the story itself …in these earlier images Jesus’ face is more often in partial profile than facing forward…”[vi]

What else can we learn about early Christian worship and practice through looking at early Christian art, more specifically, Hermes as the Good Shepherd? By analyzing the image, we see that Jesus is depicted without a beard and with curly brown hair. This depiction of Jesus as beautiful and young ties in to pagan theology, where pagan gods are viewed as symbols of immortality and are therefore depicted as young and handsome. [vii]This pagan theology link also shows that the surrounding culture was aware of Jesus as a parallel to other Greek hero gods.

Early Christian artists depicted Jesus in such a way to put him in competition with the surrounding culture and doing so meant less emphasis on things that will matter later. Early depictions of Jesus (like the Roman Sarcophagi) show Jesus as doing miraculous acts like raising Lazarus from the dead. This is mimicking depictions of the Greek hero gods (particularly Hercules), which do the same thing. The culture was concerned with this display of action vs. personhood because this action showed the power of Jesus and his earthly work. [viii] They were less concerned with whether Jesus should be portrayed as human or divine.

Jesus portrayed as a shepherd in early Christian art can also be an attempt to reference the gospel of John’s use of Logos. The author of John began the book by saying “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.”[ix] Later in the book, Jesus makes the pronouncement of ““I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd gives His life for the sheep.”[x] He also says a few verses later “I am the good shepherd; and I know my sheep, and am known by my own.”[xi] In this case, the lamb represents humans and human nature.[xii]

Jim Forest in Beholding the Glory also had something to say in regard to early Christian art like that of Hermes and others found in the catacombs. “The catacombs bear witness that wherever Christians prayed, they sought to create a visual environment that reminded them of the Kingdom of God and helped them to pray.”[xiii]  Jensen wrote something similar when she mentioned that images at that time were created not to be worshiped, but to educate and serve as reminders of the faith. Syndicus even wrote that the earliest Christian paintings were paintings of prayers.[xiv]

In conclusion, early Christian art was influenced by pre-Christian theology. Jesus was often depicted as handsome and young, with curly hair and without a beard after the style of the Greek gods. Jesus is also frequently depicted doing miracles and otherwise displaying his power similar to the Greek god Hercules. The early representations of Jesus focus less on what Jesus may or may not have looked like and were more interested in what Jesus did and what his personality was like. The early representations of Jesus also show us that early artists wanted to create space for prayer and remind followers of their faith. Finally, the image of the good shepherd could also be an attempt to represent the  Jesus from the gospel of John.

 [xv]


[i] (image) The Good Shepherd, mosaic, 425-450 AD. Ravenna: Mausoleum of Galla Placidia, Italy. “The Patristic Age.” http://goo.gl/uqQRi(Accessed June 5, 2012).

[ii] Eduard. Syndicus, Early Christian Art, trans. J. R. Foster (New York: Hawthorn Books, 1962), 9.

[iii] Ibid, 10.

[iv] Beth Williamson, Christian Art,(New York: Oxford University Press, 2004), 4.

[v] Eduard. Syndicus, Early Christian Art, trans. J. R. Foster (New York: Hawthorn Books, 1962), 11.

[vi] Robin Margaret Jensen, Face to Face (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2005), 151.

[vii] Eduard. Syndicus, Early Christian Art,  trans. J. R. Foster (New York: Hawthorn Books, 1962), 23.

[viii] Robin Margaret Jensen, Face to Face (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2005), 153.

[ix] John 1:1 KJV

[x] John 10:11

[xi] John 10:14

[xii] Eduard. Syndicus, Early Christian Art,  trans. J. R. Foster (New York: Hawthorn Books, 1962), 22-3.

[xiii] Jim Forest, “Through Icons: Word and Image Together,” In Beholding the Glory, edited by Jeremy Begbie, 83-97 (Grand Rapids: Baker Book Housing Company, 2000), 86.

[xiv] Eduard. Syndicus, Early Christian Art, trans. J. R. Foster (New York: Hawthorn Books, 1962), 11.

[xv] “Jesus in Early Christian Art,” August 9, 2010, video, accessed May 18, 2012. YouTube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtmjwXf28Zs