The Birth of John the Baptist as told in the Book of
Luke in comparison to Mandaean Literature
RESEARCH DONE BY AJAE
COPYRIGHT 2000
Introduction

Names of Zechariah and Elizabeth

His parent were older and had no children

His birth was the result of a heavenly interception

The Vision and Angel Gabriel

His name will be

John the Baptist’s birth is threatened

John the Baptist is taken away
His parent were older and had no children
“And they were both righteous before God, walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless.  But they had no child, because Elizabeth was barren, and they were both well advanced in years.”  (Luke 6 and 7)

" My father," says Yahya, " was ninety and nine and my mother eighty and eight years old. 
(Mandaean Book of John)
The notion of a barren woman having a child late in life was considered a miraculous event in the Old Testament and was one of the earmarks for a Nazarite.  The Nazarites could enter into the vow voluntarily (according to Numbers) or could be born into that position. 

The first Nazarite acknowledged by the Old Testament is that of Samson who is born to a barren older woman:
Of course Samson is based on Hercules-like story of a hero which is probably more myth than reality.  But it is interesting that he is given the title of Nazarite when he breaks every Nazarite vow.  Could this be an insult to the Nazarites? That theory does not sound possible considering this is a heroic figure and most cultures do not trash their icons. More than likely the term Nazarite was attached to Samson because of their great reputation and the attempt to make sure the Nazarites are considered Jewish.

The next time we hear of a Nazarite is Samuel:
For, lo, thou shalt conceive, and bear a son; and no razor shall come on his head: for the child shall be a Nazarite unto God from the womb: and he shall begin to deliver Israel out of the hand of the Philistines.  (Judges 13:5)
…I will give him unto the LORD all the days of his life, and there shall no razor come upon his head.  (1Samuel 1:11)
Samuel, who is referred to a prophet, is the link between the pre-monarchy and the monarchy of Israel.  It is during his reign that the people demanded and king and Samuel complied:
Remember it is the Nazarites who are holy only unto God and the idea of a king in power over them is unheard of.  This idea also permeates into the Mandaean religion where the closet thing you have to a king on earth are the priest who are the representatives in a sense of the true melki (Kings) of the heavens.   This is the place where I believe any connection between that of Judaism and Mandaeaism parted company.  Israel went toward a monarchy and the Nazarites kept to themselves but over the years became a thorn in the side of religious theologians who sought to elevate their own religion had to degrade the Nazarites in the Jewish eyes in order to support their own ideas. 

This is why the Nazarites in the Old Testament were told they had to give the sin offering. When the Nazarites vow expires, sometime after thirty days, he cannot just re-enter society according to Jewish theology.   Instead the Nazarite must bring two offerings to a Jewish priest: a burn offering and a sin offering.

It is only the nazirite - and not the Jewish priest - who may not cut a single hair on his head. And after the conclusion of the nazirite vow, his entire head must be shorn, and the hair is then burned on the altar.






What is the symbolism of hair? And why let it grow long in the first place, only to have it eventually burnt on the altar? Jewish theologians’ note that the laws of the suspected adulteress (sota) immediately follow Rashi’s comment on the laws of the Nazarite (Num. 5:11-31).  This is interpreted as being a psychological affinity between these two SINS.  In the case of the adulteress after a man sees the adulteress in her shame, he will remove himself from wine, which is often the source of transgression.   In the case of the Nazarite hair, the hair itself is seen as a sexual item. The cutting of Samson’s hair is famous for it’s sexual overtones. 





The Talmud records that the high priest Simon the Righteous (or Simon the Just) had never eaten from the guilt offering of a nazirite except for one. Simon disapproved because he considered it a sin to renounce pleasures, which God created for the benefit of people. He made only one exception to this rule and of this he wrote:













The connection between the Nazarite and their long hair can also be seen in the New Testament where Paul states:




Paul in his speech to the Corinthians is insisting that all those who follow Christ would have short hair rather than the long hair, which indicates a follower of the Nazarites. 

The objective of the Jewish community is to remain within the community and elevate the holiness and purity of the community. The Nazarite actions contradict the sanctity of the community. The Nazarite cannot prepare appropriately for an upcoming holiday with the rest of the community. According to Halacha, one prepares for a holiday by cutting hair, washing clothes, and preparing festive meals. Nazarites of course do not cut their hair and that in it’s self violates Jewish traditions.

According to Rashi one should enjoy God's gifts, if not forbidden thus the Nazarite sins. Rabbi Eleazar Hakappar  states that by denying themselves the enjoyments of life which God prepares for all human beings, the Nazarite neglected the commandments of the Torah and were sinners. Simeon the Just (Righteous) and R. Simeon are also of the same opinion that a Nazarite is a sinner.





Maimonides, in the Mishneh Torah, warns against the tendency to conclude that all forms of bodily pleasure lead to sin, and therefore, should be avoided.




The Nazarites vows appear to be in conflict with the Torah and this is the basis for the debate between scholars over the Nazarite sin. 

Ramban says that the sins is in limiting the Nazirite period and  returning to a lower freer lifestyle.  Elazer concludes that a Nazarite is a saint:





To be or not to be a Nazarite is indeed as hotly debated today as it was over 2000 years ago. In essence there is agreement among these ancient Jewish teachers that some degree of self-control and moderation are desirable. But most ancient and modern Jewish theologians also agree that the absolute denial and restrictions of our physical needs is both unhealthy and unholy. 

The question is still unanswered:  why this hatred towards the Nazarites if they are of the Jewish faith introduced by Moses and given the blessing of God?
MY  THOUGHTS
Volume 12         Special Issue                Online edition
His parent were older and had not had any child:
But the thing displeased Samuel, when they said, Give us a king to judge us. And Samuel prayed unto the LORD. And the LORD said unto Samuel, Hearken unto the voice of the people in all that they say unto thee: for they have not rejected thee, but they have rejected me, that I should not reign over them.  (1 Samuel 8: 6-7)
"... shall take the hair of the head of his separation and put it in the fire which is under the sacrifice of the peace offering." Numbers 6:18
“Delilah lulled Samson to sleep with his head in her lap, and she called in a man to shave off his hair, making his capture certain. And his strength left him. “ Judges 16:19
"There once came to me a man who had beautiful curly hair and he wanted to cut his hair because he ended the period of being a Nazarite. I asked him, "My son, what made you decide to cut off your beautiful hair?" And the man answered me, "I am a shepherd for my father. Once, when I went to the spring to draw water for the cattle, I looked at my image in the water and I was tempted to be proud of my beautiful appearance and thus to lose my life through sin. So I said to myself, 'Wicked man, you are proud of something which is not yours, and you will, at any rate, turn to forms. I therefore swore to cut off this hair in honor of the Almighty.' " Simon the Just kissed the Nazarite on the head and said to him: "May there be many like you in Israel." Nazir 4b
“Isn't it obvious that it's disgraceful for a man to have long hair?” Corinthians 11:14
“If one, who afflicted himself only in respect of wine, is called a sinner: how much more so one who ascetically refrains from everything. Hence, one who fasts is called a sinner.” Nedarim 10a
"...forbids us from denying to ourselves any of the joys permitted by Torah."
"Since this Nazirite, who only denied himself one thing (wine), is called holy (6:5), he who afflicts himself, abstaining from all, is surely so!"