Paul
stayed on in Corinth for some time. Then he left the brothers and
sailed for Syria, accompanied by Priscilla and Aquila. Before he sailed,
he had his hair cut off at Cenchrea because of a vow he had taken.
//Ever wonder about this vow made by Paul? I wish Paul himself had
written about this vow, but he didn’t, so we’re left to speculate. So
speculate I shall.
“'Priests
must not shave their heads or shave off the edges of their beards or
cut their bodies,” says Leviticus 21:5. But non-priests were free to cut
their hair, and in fact, it became a way of mourning or sealing a vow
to God in times of distress. Like wearing sackcloth and ashes. To
underscore the vow, Israelites cut the hair off their head and burnt it
at the altar of the Temple in Jerusalem.
Paul
appears to have made a vow in Corinth and sealed it with a haircut at
Cenchrea. He was about to embark on a lengthy journey which would
eventually land him in Jerusalem. His purpose was to deliver a
collection of money needed by the Jews there, but his friends begged him
not to go, knowing the danger. But Paul had made a vow and wouldn’t
listen. He seemed determined to go personally to the Temple in
Jerusalem, perhaps carrying his hair to be burned.
You know the rest: He was captured, taken to Rome, and probably was never again a free man. There, in Rome, he was beheaded.
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