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Ripping this veil in two opened the gateway to Heaven

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  • Ripping this veil in two opened the gateway to Heaven

    The Times, UK
    November 16, 2013 Saturday 12:01 AM GMT


    Ripping this veil in two opened the gateway to Heaven

    BYLINE: Geoffrey Rowell



    Why are veils vexing? It seems that scarcely a month goes by without
    some discussion about hijabs, niqabs and burkas, with concern
    expressed on the one hand about the cultural and religious rights
    concerning the appropriate dress for Muslim women, and on the other
    about the anonymity of wearing such clothes in a court of law. These
    cultural clashes also play into ancient religious traditions, and the
    significance of clothing and vesture in communicating religious
    identity. Veils are only one part of the rich tapestry of clothing in
    all religious - as in all human - traditions, from black-tie dinners
    to jeans and pop culture. As has been rightly said: "Clothes have
    always a symbolic import, and continue to do so" - as fashion editors
    can attest.

    There is a pre-history to our contemporary clashes about hijabs and
    burkas. Protestant anti-Catholic polemic, in the 19th century and
    earlier, objected to the veils and habits of Christian nuns, for much
    the same reasons. Yet the nun's veil was in origin simply linked with
    the normal clothing of married women, and nuns were seen as married to
    Christ. Ritualist priests in the Church of England in the 19th century
    were prosecuted for wearing the traditional Eucharistic vestments -
    the "rags of popery" to Protestants on the one hand, and "the barest
    alphabet of reverence for so divine a mystery" to Anglo-Catholic
    priests on the other. Yet the rich chasuble has its origin in the poor
    man's poncho, an outer garment to keep him warm.

    How clothes were worn had religious and cultural significance. The
    Christians of the Ethiopian highlands traditionally wear a toga-like
    cotton shamma, which is folded and held in different ways according to
    what you are doing and to whom you are speaking. Orthodox deacons
    offer the intercessions in the Liturgy with their long stoles held at
    the end in one hand before them as they face the great icon-screen, in
    the same way in which plenipotentiaries came before the Byzantine
    emperor. The icon-screen itself is like a wall shutting off the
    sanctuary, the holy place, and in Armenian churches instead of the
    icon-screen there are great curtains which are pulled across the
    sanctuary at moments of particular solemnity in the Liturgy.

    In the Temple at Jerusalem the Holy of Holies was hidden from view by
    the Temple veil, the great curtain which hung in front of the
    sanctuary. The Jewish historian Josephus tells us that it "was a
    Babylonian curtain, embroidered with blue, and fine linen, and
    scarlet, and purple", the mixture of the colours being an image of the
    universe, representing earth, air, fire and water. The curtain was
    embroidered with "a panorama of the entire heavens". The veil marked a
    boundary - a boundary between earth and Heaven, between this world and
    the next. It was a reminder of the otherness of God, the God who is
    awesomely beyond the limitations of human language. So, we might say,
    veils always have to do with mystery - and, when worn by women, with
    modesty.

    The Gospels note that when Jesus died on the Cross, the great Temple
    veil was ripped in two from top to bottom. This means that the gateway
    to Heaven is now laid open. In Mark, the oldest of the Gospels, this
    echoes the story of the Baptism of Jesus, when the "heavens were torn
    apart" and the voice of God proclaimed Jesus as His Son. Now, as Jesus
    dies on the Cross, the Temple veil is torn in two, and the centurion
    by the foot of the Cross echoes the voice of heaven, proclaiming that,
    "Truly, this man," this crucified Jesus, "is the Son of God." The side
    of Jesus is pierced by a soldier's spear, and blood and water issue
    out, which the Church has seen as the two sacraments of Baptism and
    the Eucharist, given that we may share in the Divine life, the life of
    the new creation. The author of the Letter to the Hebrews dares to say
    that, for Christians, the veil is the flesh of Christ. As Charles
    Wesley's great Christmas hymn proclaims, "Veiled in flesh the Godhead
    see! Hail, the incarnate Deity! Life and light to all He brings, Risen
    with healing in his wings!"

    For, as St John puts it, "The Word became flesh and dwelt among us,
    and we beheld his glory." And St Paul tells us that "now, with
    unveiled faces, we behold the glory of the Lord", that we may be
    "changed into his likeness from glory to glory".

    Geoffrey Rowell was Bishop of Gibraltar in Europe from 2001 to 2013

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