Anyone looking at photographs and portraits of clergy
in Greece, Russia, Rumania, and other Orthodox countries taken in the early
twentieth century will notice that almost without exception both the monastic
and married clergy, priests and deacons, wore untrimmed beards and hair. Only
after the First World War do we observe a new, modern look, cropped hair and
beardless clergy. This fashion has been continued among some of the clergy to
our own day. If one were to investigate this phenomenon in terms of a single
clergyman whose life spanned the greater part of our century one would probably
notice his style modernize from the first photographs up through the last.
There are two reasons given as an explanation for this
change: it is said, "One must conform with fashion, we cannot look like
peasants!" Or even more absurd, "My wife will not allow it!".
Such reasoning is the "dogmatic" line of modernists who either desire
to imitate contemporary fashion, or are ecumenically minded, not wanting to
offend clergy in denominations outside the Orthodox Church. The other reason is
based on a passage of Holy Scripture where Saint Paul states, Both not even
nature itself teach you, that, if a man have long hair, it is a shame unto him?
In answer to the first justification, Orthodox tradition directly condemns
Modernism and Ecumenism. It is necessary however to deal in more detail with
the argument that bases its premise on Holy Scripture.
Orthodox Christian piety begins in the Holy Tradition
of the Old Testament. Our relationship to the Lord God, holiness, worship, and
morality was formed in the ancient times of the Bible. At the time of the
foundation of the priesthood the Lord gave the following commandments to the
priests during periods of mourning, And ye shall not shave your head for the
dead [a pagan practice] with a baldness on the top; and they shall not shave
their beard... (Lev. 21:5), and to all men in general, Ye shall not make a
round cutting of the hair of your head, nor disfigure your beard (Lev. 19:27).
The significance of these commandments is to illustrate that the clergy are to
devote themselves completely to serving the Lord. Laymen as well are called to
a similar service though without the priestly functions. This out ward
appearance as a commandment was repeated in the law given to the Nazarene, a
razor shall not come upon his head, until the days be fulfilled which he vowed
to the Lord: he shall be holy, cherishing the long hair of the head all the
days of his vow to the Lord... (Numbers 6:5-6).
The significance of the Nazarene vow was a sign of
God's power resting on the person who made it. To cut off the hair meant to cut
off God's power as in the example of Samson. The strength of these pious
observances, transmitted to the New Testament Church, were observed without
question till our present times of willfulness and the apostasy resulting from
it. Why, one might ask, do those Orthodox clergymen, while rejecting the above
pious ordinances about hair, continue to observe the custom of granting various
head coverings to clergy, a practice which also has its roots in the ancient ordinances
of the Old Testament and the tradition of the early Church?
The Apostle Paul himself wore his hair long as we can
conclude from the passage where it is mentioned that "head bands,"
and "towels" touched to his body were placed on the sick to heal
them. The "head bands" indicate the length of his hair which had to
be tied back in order to keep it in place. The historian Egezit writes that the
Apostle James, the head of the church in Jerusalem, never cut his hair
(Christian Reading, Feb. 1898).
If the pious practice among clergy and laity in the
Christian community was to follow the example of the Old Testament, how then
are we to understand the words of Saint Paul to the Corinthians cited earlier?
Saint Paul in the cited passage is addressing men and woman who are praying.
His words in the above passages, as well as in other passages concerning head
coverings, are directed to laymen, not clergy. In other passages Saint Paul
makes an obvious distinction between the clerical and lay rank. He did not
oppose the Old Testament ordinance in regard to hair and beards since, as we
have noted above, he himself observed it, as did Our Lord Himself, Who is
depicted on all occasions with long hair and beard as the Great High Priest of
the new Christian priest hood.
In our passage noted previously, both not even nature
itself teach you, that, if a man have long hair, it is a shame unto him? Saint
Paul uses the Greek word for "hair." This particular word for hair
designates hair as an ornament (the notion of length being only secondary and suggested),
differing from thrix (the anatomical or physical term for hair). Saint Paul's
selection of words emphasizes his criticism of laymen wearing their hair in a
stylized fashion, which was contrary to pious Jewish and Christian love of
modesty. We note the same approach to hair as that of Saint Paul in the 96th
canon of the Sixth Ecumenical Council where it states: "Those therefore
who adorn and arrange their hair to the detriment of those who see them, that
is by cunningly devised intertwinings, and by this means put a bait in the way
of unstable souls."
In another source, The Eerdmans Bible Dictionary, we
read the following concerning the Old Testament practice: "To an extent,
hair style was a matter of fashion, at least among the upper classes, who were
particularly open to foreign [pagan] influence. Nevertheless, long hair appears
to have been the rule among the Hebrews, both men and women". Thus we observe
that cropped or stylized hair was the fashion among the pagans and not
acceptable, especially among the Christian clergy from most ancient times up to
our contemporary break with Holy Tradition. It is interesting to note that the
fashion of cropped or stylized hair and shaved beards found its way into the
Roman Catholic and Protestant worlds. So important had this pagan custom be
come for Roman clergy by the 11th Century that it was listed among the reasons
for the Anathema pronounced by Cardinal Humbert on July 15, 1054 against
Patriarch Michael in Constantinople which precipitated the Western Church's
final falling away from the Orthodox Church: "While wearing beards and
long hair you [Eastern Orthodox] reject the bond of brotherhood with the Roman
clergy, since they shave and cut their hair."
An excerpt from: http://orthodoxinfo.com/praxis/clergy_hair.aspx
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