Behind the Text: Unpacking #13: The Crucifixion –– We Made It Pretty. It Wasn't.
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There are a few things I want to walk you through that don’t belong in the public essay — the exegetical scaffolding, the decisions I made under the surface, and one place where I held back more than I wanted to.
The helmet question and why I kept the epistemological restraint
The honest version of this essay wanted to push harder on the helmet-of-thorns reconstruction. The historical case is stronger than I let on in the public piece. Roman paludamentum mockery — the full military parody of a conquered king — has documented precedent in Roman military culture. The repeated striking with the reed (Matthew 27:30, Mark 15:19) driving the object deeper into the scalp is more consistent with a cap structure than a circlet. The Greek text gives you no help either way, but the behavioral evidence from the scene itself leans toward something that would require repeated force to embed further.




