Although I do not subscribe wholesale to the religion, I do believe there is some historical basis for certain things covered in the bible. One of the things I happen to believe is more likely than not a fact, is that Jesus was an actual person who existed (although that is as far as I go - I sincerely doubt the miracles attributed to him).
At any rate, I ran across a drawing of what a collaboration of anthropologists and historians say is a fairly accurate portrait of what Jesus may have actually looked like - and it is nothing like the effeminate paintings many of us are accustomed to. Without further delay, feast your eyes on what is likely the most accurate visual portrayal of Jesus to date.
Well I would hope you doubt miracles. Turning water to wine, raising people from the dead, and feeding 5,000 people with a single lunch basket containing five rolls and a couple of sardines, etc. That would require an intervention in the laws of nature. And if he did exist--a big if, in that all we have is a couple of oblique references decades after the fact by Josephus (some clearly interpolated) and the Bible itself, which basically invented the man--he most certainly wasn't fair haired and light skinned.
I was raised by a pastor, and it was pointed out to me early in life that Jesus (if he indeed existed) was most likely a he-man. Scholars have taken cues from his culture, his family, his vocation, his race, ethnicity, and religion, and came up with a much better approximation of what he would have looked like than the effeminate version we usually see.
As a Middle Eastern carpenter who worked long hours in the sun, he would have had rough, leathery-looking, olive-colored skin with dark hair and eyes. He most likely would have been shorter than the average man of today, and almost certainly would have had facial hair that was often unkempt. I think he would have looked much more like the picture above than he would the paintings we're used to seeing.
@Piratefish If he existed at all, the man known as Jesus was assuredly more like the image here, than any painting, fresco or mosaic we've ever seen.
I doubt there’s any scientific proof of how he looked, but I agree that he probably did exist in real life.
I doubt anyone knows exactly what he looked like. But I'll wager the above illustration is a lot closer to actuality than the paintings of him we are used to seeing. All the artist did was make a generalization from the input of historians and anthropologists. Things like race, ethnicity, culture, vocation, family life, diet, the era and area in which he lived, his religion, etc. I don't think they meant to claim the illustration was a dead ringer for him; just a more accurate portrayal than the one we have been used to.