Jesus' Physical Appearance: Biography, Christology, Philosophy
By (Author) Dr. John D. Nelson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
11th December 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Christianity: sacred texts and revered writings
Criticism and exegesis of sacred texts
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
John Nelson presents the first full length study of the Gospels treatment of Jesus appearance, exploring precisely why, though Christs image is recognised throughout the modern world, he is not physically described in the texts. Nelson argues that while the Gospels resemble Graeco-Roman biographies in their focus on a single individual, they also frequently depart from the genres conventions; one of their most glaring omissions, picked up in recent scholarship, is their total silence on what Jesus looked like.
Nelson thus explores how the evangelists as Jewish authors might have uniquely engaged both the genre of the Gospels and the topic of Jesus physical appearance. He makes clear the distinction between two broad attitudes Jewish authors took to Greek genres: to assimilate that genres conventions, and to indigenise, or adopt the conventions of Jewish narrative prototypes in their adaption of Greek forms. Utilising genre theory, masculinity studies and post-colonial theory, Nelson consequently argues against the common view that Jewish writers simply adopted the same obsession with appearances that their gentile neighbours expressed, suggesting instead that the Gospels reticence to describe Jesus body may have been influenced by the reticence of biblical texts to describe the Lords body.
John Nelson is a teacher of Theology & Philosophy at Haberdashers Boys School, UK.