Bald
Bald
(prop. , kare’ach, naturally bare of hair on the top or back of the head; Sept. ; different was the , gibbe’ach, diseased loss of hair on forehead, Lev 13:41; Sept. ). There are two kinds of baldness, viz., artificial and natural, The latter seems to have been uncommon, since it exposed people to public derision, and is perpetually alluded to as a mark of squalor and misery (2Ki 2:23; Isa 3:24, instead of well-set hair, baldness, and burning instead of beauty.
Isa 15:2; Jer 47:5; Eze 7:18, etc.). For this reason it seems to have been included under the scab and scurf (Lev 21:20, perhaps i.q. dandruff), which were disqualifications for priesthood (Mishna, Berachoth, 7:2). In Lev 13:29 sq., very careful directions are given to distinguish the scall (, bohak’, freckled spot, Lev 13:39), described as a plague (, ne’ga, stroke) upon the head and beard (which probably is the Mentagra of Pliny, and is a sort of leprosy), from mere natural baldness which is pronounced to be clean, v. 40 (Jahn, Bibl. Arch. 189). SEE LEPROSY. But this shows that even natural baldness subjected men to an unpleasant suspicion. It was a defect with which the Israelites were by no means familiar, since the Egyptians were very rarely subject to it, according to Herodotus (in, 12); an immunity which he attributes to their constant shaving. They adopted this practice for purposes of cleanliness, and generally wore wigs, some of which have been found in the ruins of Thebes. Contrary to the general practice of the East, they only let the hair grow as a sign of mourning (Herod. 2:36), and shaved themselves on all joyous occasions; hence in Gen 41:44, we have an undesigned coincidence. The same custom obtains in China and among the modern Egyptians, who shave off all the hair except the shoosheh, a tuft on the forehead and crown of the head (Wilkinson, Anc. Egypt. 3, 359 sq.; Lane, Mod. Egypt. 1, ch. 1). Baldness was despised both among Greeks and Romans. In Homer (Il. 2:219) it is one of the defects of Thersites; Aristophanes (who was probably bald himself, Par, 767; Eq. 550) takes pride in not joining in the ridicule against it (Nub. 540). Caesar was said to have had some deformity of this sort, and he generally endeavored to conceal it (Suet. Caes. 45; comp. Dom. 18).
Artificial baldness marked the conclusion of a Nazarite’s vow (Act 18:18; Num 6:9), and was a sign of mourning (Cic. Tusc. Disp. 3, 26). It is often alluded to in Scripture, as in Mic 1:16; Amo 8:10; Jer 47:5, etc.; and in Deu 14:1, the reason for its being forbidden to the Israelites is their being a holy and peculiar people (comp. Lev 19:27, and Jer 9:26, marg.). The practices alluded to in the latter passages were adopted by heathen nations (e.g. the Arabs, etc.) in honor of various gods. The Abantes and other half-civilized tribes shaved off the forelocks, to avoid the danger of being seized by them in battle (Herod. 2:36; 1:82). SEE HAIR.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Bald
Deu 14:1 (a) Baldness in this Scripture would indicate that the people were opposed to GOD’s judgments and GOD’s dealings and would prove it to others by making themselves bald. (See also Isa 22:12).
Isa 3:24 (a) This is a sign that GOD had forsaken His people and left them to the will of their enemies. (See also Jer 47:5; Isa 15:2; Eze 7:18).
Jer 16:6 (b) This is a type of despair in sorrow for which there is no remedy.
Jer 48:37 (b) This represents great sorrow and deep grief; the loss of the hair being used as a type of long, weary lamenting.