Simon39759
Master Poster
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2009
- Messages
- 2,285
[hijack]I have to call you on this one, Simon. Try retting, scutching, and hackling enough flax to hand-spin (with a drop spindle) enough linen thread to hand-weave a yard of fabric. Or reread Stave Four of A Christmas Carol, in which someone literally takes Scrooge's shirt off his corpse to sell it -- in the apparent certainty that someone would "want to wear the dirty cheap clothes of a dead guy". Before spinning and weaving were mechanized, all clothing was worn and reused and handed on and mended until it couldn't support another stitch: who had worn it before didn't matter much, so long as he or she hadn't died of smallpox or something equally noxious.
You can't really compare the two, though.
Roman soldiers would have had a salary, quite decent compared to the local standard of living, they would have had to wear their uniforms and were destined, at the end of their service, to receive a property title and live in relative prosperity.
Jesus was terribly poor, wore clothes from a different culture and style and had just spend at least a couple of years crossing the country in them.
Throw in the fact that no gospel writers could have been there to witness the event, it seem to me obvious that it is made up long after the facts to match the prediction.