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In Pilate's Judgment Hall
In the judgment hall of Pilate, the Roman governor, Christ
stands bound as a prisoner. About Him are the guard of
soldiers, and the hall is fast filling with spectators. Just
outside the entrance are the judges of the Sanhedrin, priests,
rulers, elders, and the mob.
After condemning Jesus, the council
of the Sanhedrin had come to Pilate to have the sentence
confirmed and executed. But these Jewish officials would not
enter the Roman judgment hall. According to their ceremonial
law they would be defiled thereby, and thus prevented from
taking part in the feast of the Passover. In their blindness
they did not see that murderous hatred had defiled their
hearts. They did not see that Christ was the real Passover
lamb, and that, since they had rejected Him, the great feast
had for them lost its significance.
When the Saviour was brought into the
judgment hall, Pilate looked upon Him with no friendly eyes.
The Roman governor had been called from his bedchamber in
haste, and he determined to do his work as quickly as
possible. He was prepared to deal with the prisoner with
magisterial severity. Assuming his severest expression, he
turned to see what kind of man he had to examine, that he had
been called from his repose at so early an hour. He knew that
it must be someone whom the Jewish authorities were anxious to
have tried and punished with haste.
Pilate looked at the men who had
Jesus in charge, and then his gaze rested searchingly on
Jesus. He had had to deal with all kinds of criminals; but
never before had a man bearing marks of such goodness and
nobility been brought before him. On His face he saw no sign
of guilt, no expression of fear, no boldness or defiance. He
saw a man of calm and dignified bearing, whose countenance
bore not the marks of a criminal, but the signature of heaven.
Christ's appearance made a favorable
impression upon Pilate. His better nature was roused. He had
heard of Jesus and His works. His wife had told him something
of the wonderful deeds performed by the Galilean prophet, who
cured the sick and raised the dead. Now this revived as a
dream in Pilate's mind. He recalled rumors that he had heard
from several sources. He resolved to demand of the Jews their
charges against the prisoner.
Who is this Man, and wherefore have
ye brought Him? he said. What accusation bring ye against Him?
The Jews were disconcerted. Knowing that they could not
substantiate their charges against Christ, they did not desire
a public examination. They answered that He was a deceiver
called Jesus of Nazareth.
Again Pilate asked, "What
accusation bring ye against this Man?" The priests did
not answer his question, but in words that showed their
irritation, they said, "If He were not a malefactor, we
would not have delivered Him up unto thee." When those
composing the Sanhedrin, the first men of the nation, bring to
you a man they deem worthy of death, is there need to ask for
an accusation against him? They hoped to impress Pilate with a
sense of their importance, and thus lead him to accede to
their request without going through many preliminaries. They
were eager to have their sentence ratified; for they knew that
the people who had witnessed Christ's marvelous works could
tell a story very different from the fabrication they
themselves were now rehearsing.
The priests thought that with the
weak and vacillating Pilate they could carry through their
plans without trouble. Before this he had signed the death
warrant hastily, condemning to death men they knew were not
worthy of death. In his estimation the life of a prisoner was
of little account; whether he were innocent or guilty was of
no special consequence. The priests hoped that Pilate would
now inflict the death penalty on Jesus without giving Him a
hearing. This they besought as a favor on the occasion of
their great national festival.
But there was something in the
prisoner that held Pilate back from this. He dared not do it.
He read the purposes of the priests. He remembered how, not
long before, Jesus had raised Lazarus, a man that had been
dead four days; and he determined to know, before signing the
sentence of condemnation, what were the charges against Him,
and whether they could be proved.
If your judgment is sufficient, he
said, why bring the prisoner to me? "Take ye Him, and
judge Him according to your law." Thus pressed, the
priests said that they had already passed sentence upon Him,
but that they must have Pilate's sentence to render their
condemnation valid. What is your sentence? Pilate asked. The
death sentence, they answered; but it is not lawful for us to
put any man to death. They asked Pilate to take their word as
to Christ's guilt, and enforce their sentence. They would take
the responsibility of the result.
Pilate was not a just or a
conscientious judge; but weak though he was in moral power, he
refused to grant this request. He would not condemn Jesus
until a charge had been brought against Him.
The priests were in a dilemma. They
saw that they must cloak their hypocrisy under the thickest
concealment. They must not allow it to appear that Christ had
been arrested on religious grounds. Were this put forward as a
reason, their proceedings would have no weight with Pilate.
They must make it appear that Jesus was working against the
common law; then He could be punished as a political offender.
Tumults and insurrection against the Roman government were
constantly arising among the Jews. With these revolts the
Romans had dealt very rigorously, and they were constantly on
the watch to repress everything that could lead to an
outbreak.
Only a few days before this the
Pharisees had tried to entrap Christ with the question,
"Is it lawful for us to give tribute unto Caesar?"
But Christ had unveiled their hypocrisy. The Romans who were
present had seen the utter failure of the plotters, and their
discomfiture at His answer, "Render therefore unto Caesar
the things which be Caesar's." Luke 20:22-25.
Now the priests thought to make it
appear that on this occasion Christ had taught what they hoped
He would teach. In their extremity they called false witnesses
to their aid, "and they began to accuse Him, saying, We
found this fellow perverting the nation, and forbidding to
give tribute to Caesar, saying that He Himself is Christ a
King." Three charges, each without foundation. The
priests knew this, but they were willing to commit perjury
could they but secure their end.
Pilate saw through their purpose. He
did not believe that the prisoner had plotted against the
government. His meek and humble appearance was altogether out
of harmony with the charge. Pilate was convinced that a deep
plot had been laid to destroy an innocent man who stood in the
way of the Jewish dignitaries. Turning to Jesus he asked,
"Art Thou the King of the Jews?" The Saviour
answered, "Thou sayest it." And as He spoke, His
countenance lighted up as if a sunbeam were shining upon it.
When they heard His answer, Caiaphas
and those that were with him called Pilate to witness that
Jesus had admitted the crime with which He was charged. With
noisy cries, priests, scribes, and rulers demanded that He be
sentenced to death. The cries were taken up by the mob, and
the uproar was deafening. Pilate was confused. Seeing that
Jesus made no answer to His accusers, Pilate said to Him,
"Answerest Thou nothing? behold how many things they
witness against Thee. But Jesus yet answered nothing."
Standing behind Pilate, in view of
all in the court, Christ heard the abuse; but to all the false
charges against Him He answered not a word. His whole bearing
gave evidence of conscious innocence. He stood unmoved by the
fury of the waves that beat about Him. It was as if the heavy
surges of wrath, rising higher and higher, like the waves of
the boisterous ocean, broke about Him, but did not touch Him.
He stood silent, but His silence was eloquence. It was as a
light shining from the inner to the outer man.
Pilate was astonished at His bearing.
Does this Man disregard the proceedings because He does not
care to save His life? he asked himself. As he looked at
Jesus, bearing insult and mockery without retaliation, he felt
that He could not be as unrighteous and unjust as were the
clamoring priests. Hoping to gain the truth from Him and to
escape the tumult of the crowd, Pilate took Jesus aside with
him, and again questioned, "Art Thou the King of the
Jews?"
Jesus did not directly answer this
question. He knew that the Holy Spirit was striving with
Pilate, and He gave him opportunity to acknowledge his
conviction. "Sayest thou this thing of thyself," He
asked, "or did others tell it thee of Me?" That is,
was it the accusations of the priests, or a desire to receive
light from Christ, that prompted Pilate's question? Pilate
understood Christ's meaning; but pride arose in his heart. He
would not acknowledge the conviction that pressed upon him.
"Am I a Jew?" he said. "Thine own nation and
the chief priests have delivered Thee unto me: what hast Thou
done?"
Pilate's golden opportunity had
passed. Yet Jesus did not leave him without further light.
While He did not directly answer Pilate's question, He plainly
stated His own mission. He gave Pilate to understand that He
was not seeking an earthly throne.
"My kingdom is not of this
world," He said; "if My kingdom were of this world,
then would My servants fight, that I should not be delivered
to the Jews: but now is My kingdom not from hence. Pilate
therefore said unto Him, Art Thou a king then? Jesus answered,
Thou sayest that I am a king. To this end was I born, and for
this cause came I into the world, that I should bear witness
unto the truth. Everyone that is of the truth heareth My
voice."
Christ affirmed that His word was in
itself a key which would unlock the mystery to those who were
prepared to receive it. It had a self-commending power, and
this was the secret of the spread of His kingdom of truth. He
desired Pilate to understand that only by receiving and
appropriating truth could his ruined nature be reconstructed.
Pilate had a desire to know the
truth. His mind was confused. He eagerly grasped the words of
the Saviour, and his heart was stirred with a great longing to
know what it really was, and how he could obtain it.
"What is truth?" he inquired. But he did not wait
for an answer. The tumult outside recalled him to the
interests of the hour; for the priests were clamorous for
immediate action. Going out to the Jews, he declared
emphatically, "I find in Him no fault at all."
These words from a heathen judge were
a scathing rebuke to the perfidy and falsehood of the rulers
of Israel who were accusing the Saviour. As the priests and
elders heard this from Pilate, their disappointment and rage
knew no bounds. They had long plotted and waited for this
opportunity. As they saw the prospect of the release of Jesus,
they seemed ready to tear Him in pieces. They loudly denounced
Pilate, and threatened him with the censure of the Roman
government. They accused him of refusing to condemn Jesus,
who, they affirmed, had set Himself up against Caesar.
Angry voices were now heard,
declaring that the seditious influence of Jesus was well known
throughout the country. The priests said, "He stirreth up
the people, teaching throughout all Jewry, beginning from
Galilee to this place."
Pilate at this time had no thought of
condemning Jesus. He knew that the Jews had accused Him
through hatred and prejudice. He knew what his duty was.
Justice demanded that Christ should be immediately released.
But Pilate dreaded the ill will of the people. Should he
refuse to give Jesus into their hands, a tumult would be
raised, and this he feared to meet. When he heard that Christ
was from Galilee, he decided to send Him to Herod, the ruler
of that province, who was then in Jerusalem. By this course,
Pilate thought to shift the responsibility of the trial from
himself to Herod. He also thought this a good opportunity to
heal an old quarrel between himself and Herod. And so it
proved. The two magistrates made friends over the trial of the
Saviour.
Pilate delivered Jesus again to the
soldiers, and amid the jeers and insults of the mob He was
hurried to the judgment hall of Herod. "When Herod saw
Jesus, he was exceeding glad." He had never before met
the Saviour, but "he was desirous to see Him of a long
season, because he had heard many things of Him; and he hoped
to have seen some miracle done by Him." This Herod was he
whose hands were stained with the blood of John the Baptist.
When Herod first heard of Jesus, he was terror-stricken, and
said, "It is John, whom I beheaded: he is risen from the
dead;" "therefore mighty works do show forth
themselves in him." Mark 6:16; Matt. 14:2. Yet Herod
desired to see Jesus. Now there was opportunity to save the
life of this prophet, and the king hoped to banish forever
from his mind the memory of that bloody head brought to him in
a charger. He also desired to have his curiosity gratified,
and thought that if Christ were given any prospect of release,
He would do anything that was asked of Him.
A large company of the priests and
elders had accompanied Christ to Herod. And when the Saviour
was brought in, these dignitaries, all speaking excitedly,
urged their accusations against Him. But Herod paid little
regard to their charges. He commanded silence, desiring an
opportunity to question Christ. He ordered that the fetters of
Christ should be unloosed, at the same time charging His
enemies with roughly treating Him. Looking with compassion
into the serene face of the world's Redeemer, he read in it
only wisdom and purity. He as well as Pilate was satisfied
that Christ had been accused through malice and envy.
Herod questioned Christ in many
words, but throughout the Saviour maintained a profound
silence. At the command of the king, the decrepit and maimed
were then called in, and Christ was ordered to prove His
claims by working a miracle. Men say that Thou canst heal the
sick, said Herod. I am anxious to see that Thy widespread fame
has not been belied. Jesus did not respond, and Herod still
continued to urge: If Thou canst work miracles for others,
work them now for Thine own good, and it will serve Thee a
good purpose. Again he commanded, Show us a sign that Thou
hast the power with which rumor hath accredited Thee. But
Christ was as one who heard and saw not. The Son of God had
taken upon Himself man's nature. He must do as man must do in
like circumstances. Therefore He would not work a miracle to
save Himself the pain and humiliation that man must endure
when placed in a similar position.
Herod promised that if Christ would
perform some miracle in his presence, He should be released.
Christ's accusers had seen with their own eyes the mighty
works wrought by His power. They had heard Him command the
grave to give up its dead. They had seen the dead come forth
obedient to His voice. Fear seized them lest He should now
work a miracle. Of all things they most dreaded an exhibition
of His power. Such a manifestation would prove a deathblow to
their plans, and would perhaps cost them their lives. Again
the priests and rulers, in great anxiety, urged their
accusations against Him. Raising their voices, they declared,
He is a traitor, a blasphemer. He works His miracles through
the power given Him by Beelzebub, the prince of the devils.
The hall became a scene of confusion, some crying one thing
and some another.
Herod's conscience was now far less
sensitive than when he had trembled with horror at the request
of Herodias for the head of John the Baptist. For a time he
had felt the keen stings of remorse for his terrible act; but
his moral perceptions had become more and more degraded by his
licentious life. Now his heart had become so hardened that he
could even boast of the punishment he had inflicted upon John
for daring to reprove him. And he now threatened Jesus,
declaring repeatedly that he had power to release or to
condemn Him. But no sign from Jesus gave evidence that He
heard a word.
Herod was irritated by this silence.
It seemed to indicate utter indifference to his authority. To
the vain and pompous king, open rebuke would have been less
offensive than to be thus ignored. Again he angrily threatened
Jesus, who still remained unmoved and silent.
The mission of Christ in this world
was not to gratify idle curiosity. He came to heal the
brokenhearted. Could He have spoken any word to heal the
bruises of sin-sick souls, He would not have kept silent. But
He had no words for those who would but trample the truth
under their unholy feet.
Christ might have spoken words to
Herod that would have pierced the ears of the hardened king.
He might have stricken him with fear and trembling by laying
before him the full iniquity of his life, and the horror of
his approaching doom. But Christ's silence was the severest
rebuke that He could have given. Herod had rejected the truth
spoken to him by the greatest of the prophets, and no other
message was he to receive. Not a word had the Majesty of
heaven for him. That ear that had ever been open to human woe,
had no room for Herod's commands. Those eyes that had ever
rested upon the penitent sinner in pitying, forgiving love had
no look to bestow upon Herod. Those lips that had uttered the
most impressive truth, that in tones of tenderest entreaty had
pleaded with the most sinful and the most degraded, were
closed to the haughty king who felt no need of a Saviour.
Herod's face grew dark with passion.
Turning to the multitude, he angrily denounced Jesus as an
impostor. Then to Christ he said, If You will give no evidence
of Your claim, I will deliver You up to the soldiers and the
people. They may succeed in making You speak. If You are an
impostor, death at their hands is only what You merit; if You
are the Son of God, save Yourself by working a miracle.
No sooner were these words spoken
than a rush was made for Christ. Like wild beasts, the crowd
darted upon their prey. Jesus was dragged this way and that,
Herod joining the mob in seeking to humiliate the Son of God.
Had not the Roman soldiers interposed, and forced back the
maddened throng, the Saviour would have been torn in pieces.
"Herod with his men of war set
Him at nought, and mocked Him, and arrayed Him in a gorgeous
robe." The Roman soldiers joined in this abuse. All that
these wicked, corrupt soldiers, helped on by Herod and the
Jewish dignitaries, could instigate was heaped upon the
Saviour. Yet His divine patience failed not.
Christ's persecutors had tried to
measure His character by their own; they had represented Him
as vile as themselves. But back of all the present appearance
another scene intruded itself,--a scene which they will one
day see in all its glory. There were some who trembled in
Christ's presence. While the rude throng were bowing in
mockery before Him, some who came forward for that purpose
turned back, afraid and silenced. Herod was convicted. The
last rays of merciful light were shining upon his sin-hardened
heart. He felt that this was no common man; for divinity had
flashed through humanity. At the very time when Christ was
encompassed by mockers, adulterers, and murderers, Herod felt
that he was beholding a God upon His throne.
Hardened as he was, Herod dared not
ratify the condemnation of Christ. He wished to relieve
himself of the terrible responsibility, and he sent Jesus back
to the Roman judgment hall.
Pilate was disappointed and much
displeased. When the Jews returned with their prisoner, he
asked impatiently what they would have him do. He reminded
them that he had already examined Jesus, and found no fault in
Him; he told them that they had brought complaints against
Him, but they had not been able to prove a single charge. He
had sent Jesus to Herod, the tetrarch of Galilee, and one of
their own nation, but he also had found in Him nothing worthy
of death. "I will therefore chastise Him," Pilate
said, "and release Him."
Here Pilate showed his weakness. He
had declared that Jesus was innocent, yet he was willing for
Him to be scourged to pacify His accusers. He would sacrifice
justice and principle in order to compromise with the mob.
This placed him at a disadvantage. The crowd presumed upon his
indecision, and clamored the more for the life of the
prisoner. If at the first Pilate had stood firm, refusing to
condemn a man whom he found guiltless, he would have broken
the fatal chain that was to bind him in remorse and guilt as
long as he lived. Had he carried out his convictions of right,
the Jews would not have presumed to dictate to him. Christ
would have been put to death, but the guilt would not have
rested upon Pilate. But Pilate had taken step after step in
the violation of his conscience. He had excused himself from
judging with justice and equity, and he now found himself
almost helpless in the hands of the priests and rulers. His
wavering and indecision proved his ruin.
Even now Pilate was not left to act
blindly. A message from God warned him from the deed he was
about to commit. In answer to Christ's prayer, the wife of
Pilate had been visited by an angel from heaven, and in a
dream she had beheld the Saviour and conversed with Him.
Pilate's wife was not a Jew, but as she looked upon Jesus in
her dream, she had no doubt of His character or mission. She
knew Him to be the Prince of God. She saw Him on trial in the
judgment hall. She saw the hands tightly bound as the hands of
a criminal. She saw Herod and his soldiers doing their
dreadful work. She heard the priests and rulers, filled with
envy and malice, madly accusing. She heard the words, "We
have a law, and by our law He ought to die." She saw
Pilate give Jesus to the scourging, after he had declared,
"I find no fault in Him." She heard the condemnation
pronounced by Pilate, and saw him give Christ up to His
murderers. She saw the cross uplifted on Calvary. She saw the
earth wrapped in darkness, and heard the mysterious cry,
"It is finished." Still another scene met her gaze.
She saw Christ seated upon the great white cloud, while the
earth reeled in space, and His murderers fled from the
presence of His glory. With a cry of horror she awoke, and at
once wrote to Pilate words of warning.
While Pilate was hesitating as to
what he should do, a messenger pressed through the crowd, and
handed him the letter from his wife, which read:
"Have thou nothing to do with
that just Man: for I have suffered many things this day in a
dream because of Him."
Pilate's face grew pale. He was
confused by his own conflicting emotions. But while he had
been delaying to act, the priests and rulers were still
further inflaming the minds of the people. Pilate was forced
to action. He now bethought himself of a custom which might
serve to secure Christ's release. It was customary at this
feast to release some one prisoner whom the people might
choose. This custom was of pagan invention; there was not a
shadow of justice in it, but it was greatly prized by the
Jews. The Roman authorities at this time held a prisoner named
Barabbas, who was under sentence of death. This man had
claimed to be the Messiah. He claimed authority to establish a
different order of things, to set the world right. Under
satanic delusion he claimed that whatever he could obtain by
theft and robbery was his own. He had done wonderful things
through satanic agencies, he had gained a following among the
people, and had excited sedition against the Roman government.
Under cover of religious enthusiasm he was a hardened and
desperate villain, bent on rebellion and cruelty. By giving
the people a choice between this man and the innocent Saviour,
Pilate thought to arouse them to a sense of justice. He hoped
to gain their sympathy for Jesus in opposition to the priests
and rulers. So, turning to the crowd, he said with great
earnestness, "Whom will ye that I release unto you?
Barabbas, or Jesus which is called Christ?"
Like the bellowing of wild beasts
came the answer of the mob, "Release unto us Barabbas!"
Louder and louder swelled the cry, Barabbas! Barabbas!
Thinking that the people had not understood his question,
Pilate asked, "Will ye that I release unto you the King
of the Jews?" But they cried out again, "Away with
this Man, and release unto us Barabbas"! "What shall
I do then with Jesus which is called Christ?" Pilate
asked. Again the surging multitude roared like demons. Demons
themselves, in human form, were in the crowd, and what could
be expected but the answer, "Let Him be crucified"?
Pilate was troubled. He had not
thought it would come to that. He shrank from delivering an
innocent man to the most ignominious and cruel death that
could be inflicted. After the roar of voices had ceased, he
turned to the people, saying, "Why, what evil hath He
done?" But the case had gone too far for argument. It was
not evidence of Christ's innocence that they wanted, but His
condemnation.
Still Pilate endeavored to save Him.
"He said unto them the third time, Why, what evil hath He
done? I have found no cause of death in Him: I will therefore
chastise Him, and let Him go." But the very mention of
His release stirred the people to a tenfold frenzy.
"Crucify Him, crucify Him," they cried. Louder and
louder swelled the storm that Pilate's indecision had called
forth.
Jesus was taken, faint with weariness
and covered with wounds, and scourged in the sight of the
multitude. "And the soldiers led Him away into the hall,
called Praetorium, and they call together the whole band. And
they clothed Him with purple, and platted a crown of thorns,
and put it about His head, and began to salute Him, Hail, King
of the Jews! And they . . . did spit upon Him, and bowing
their knees worshiped Him." Occasionally some wicked hand
snatched the reed that had been placed in His hand, and struck
the crown upon His brow, forcing the thorns into His temples,
and sending the blood trickling down His face and beard.
Wonder, O heavens! and be astonished,
O earth! Behold the oppressor and the oppressed. A maddened
throng enclose the Saviour of the world. Mocking and jeering
are mingled with the coarse oaths of blasphemy. His lowly
birth and humble life are commented upon by the unfeeling mob.
His claim to be the Son of God is ridiculed, and the vulgar
jest and insulting sneer are passed from lip to lip.
Satan led the cruel mob in its abuse
of the Saviour. It was his purpose to provoke Him to
retaliation if possible, or to drive Him to perform a miracle
to release Himself, and thus break up the plan of salvation.
One stain upon His human life, one failure of His humanity to
endure the terrible test, and the Lamb of God would have been
an imperfect offering, and the redemption of man a failure.
But He who by a command could bring the heavenly host to His
aid--He who could have driven that mob in terror from His
sight by the flashing forth of His divine majesty--submitted
with perfect calmness to the coarsest insult and outrage.
Christ's enemies had demanded a
miracle as evidence of His divinity. They had evidence far
greater than any they had sought. As their cruelty degraded
His torturers below humanity into the likeness of Satan, so
did His meekness and patience exalt Jesus above humanity, and
prove His kinship to God. His abasement was the pledge of His
exaltation. The blood drops of agony that from His wounded
temples flowed down His face and beard were the pledge of His
anointing with "the oil of gladness" (Heb. 1:9.) as
our great high priest.
Satan's rage was great as he saw that
all the abuse inflicted upon the Saviour had not forced the
least murmur from His lips. Although He had taken upon Him the
nature of man, He was sustained by a godlike fortitude, and
departed in no particular from the will of His Father.
When Pilate gave Jesus up to be
scourged and mocked, he thought to excite the pity of the
multitude. He hoped they would decide that this was sufficient
punishment. Even the malice of the priests, he thought, would
now be satisfied. But with keen perception the Jews saw the
weakness of thus punishing a man who had been declared
innocent. They knew that Pilate was trying to save the life of
the prisoner, and they were determined that Jesus should not
be released. To please and satisfy us, Pilate has scourged
Him, they thought, and if we press the matter to a decided
issue, we shall surely gain our end.
Pilate now sent for Barabbas to be
brought into the court. He then presented the two prisoners
side by side, and pointing to the Saviour he said in a voice
of solemn entreaty, "Behold the Man!" "I bring
Him forth to you, that ye may know that I find no fault in
Him."
There stood the Son of God, wearing
the robe of mockery and the crown of thorns. Stripped to the
waist, His back showed the long, cruel stripes, from which the
blood flowed freely. His face was stained with blood, and bore
the marks of exhaustion and pain; but never had it appeared
more beautiful than now. The Saviour's visage was not marred
before His enemies. Every feature expressed gentleness and
resignation and the tenderest pity for His cruel foes. In His
manner there was no cowardly weakness, but the strength and
dignity of long-suffering. In striking contrast was the
prisoner at His side. Every line of the countenance of
Barabbas proclaimed him the hardened ruffian that he was. The
contrast spoke to every beholder. Some of the spectators were
weeping. As they looked upon Jesus, their hearts were full of
sympathy. Even the priests and rulers were convicted that He
was all that He claimed to be.
The Roman soldiers that surrounded
Christ were not all hardened; some were looking earnestly into
His face for one evidence that He was a criminal or dangerous
character. From time to time they would turn and cast a look
of contempt upon Barabbas. It needed no deep insight to read
him through and through. Again they would turn to the One upon
trial. They looked at the divine sufferer with feelings of
deep pity. The silent submission of Christ stamped upon their
minds the scene, never to be effaced until they either
acknowledged Him as the Christ, or by rejecting Him decided
their own destiny.
Pilate was filled with amazement at
the uncomplaining patience of the Saviour. He did not doubt
that the sight of this Man, in contrast with Barabbas, would
move the Jews to sympathy. But he did not understand the
fanatical hatred of the priests for Him, who, as the Light of
the world, had made manifest their darkness and error. They
had moved the mob to a mad fury, and again priests, rulers,
and people raised that awful cry, "Crucify Him, crucify
Him." At last, losing all patience with their unreasoning
cruelty, Pilate cried out despairingly, "Take ye Him, and
crucify Him: for I find no fault in Him."
The Roman governor, though familiar
with cruel scenes, was moved with sympathy for the suffering
prisoner, who, condemned and scourged, with bleeding brow and
lacerated back, still had the bearing of a king upon his
throne. But the priests declared, "We have a law, and by
our law He ought to die, because He made Himself the Son of
God."
Pilate was startled. He had no
correct idea of Christ and His mission; but he had an
indistinct faith in God and in beings superior to humanity. A
thought that had once before passed through his mind now took
more definite shape. He questioned whether it might not be a
divine being that stood before him, clad in the purple robe of
mockery, and crowned with thorns.
Again he went into the judgment hall,
and said to Jesus, "Whence art Thou?" But Jesus gave
him no answer. The Saviour had spoken freely to Pilate,
explaining His own mission as a witness to the truth. Pilate
had disregarded the light. He had abused the high office of
judge by yielding his principles and authority to the demands
of the mob. Jesus had no further light for him. Vexed at His
silence, Pilate said haughtily:
"Speakest Thou not unto me?
knowest Thou not that I have power to crucify Thee, and have
power to release Thee?"
Jesus answered, "Thou couldest
have no power at all against Me, except it were given thee
from above: therefore he that delivered Me unto thee hath the
greater sin."
Thus the pitying Saviour, in the
midst of His intense suffering and grief, excused as far as
possible the act of the Roman governor who gave Him up to be
crucified. What a scene was this to hand down to the world for
all time! What a light it sheds upon the character of Him who
is the Judge of all the earth!
"He that delivered Me unto
thee," said Jesus, "hath the greater sin." By
this Christ meant Caiaphas, who, as high priest, represented
the Jewish nation. They knew the principles that controlled
the Roman authorities. They had had light in the prophecies
that testified of Christ, and in His own teachings and
miracles. The Jewish judges had received unmistakable evidence
of the divinity of Him whom they condemned to death. And
according to their light would they be judged.
The greatest guilt and heaviest
responsibility belonged to those who stood in the highest
places in the nation, the depositaries of sacred trusts that
they were basely betraying. Pilate, Herod, and the Roman
soldiers were comparatively ignorant of Jesus. They thought to
please the priests and rulers by abusing Him. They had not the
light which the Jewish nation had so abundantly received. Had
the light been given to the soldiers, they would not have
treated Christ as cruelly as they did.
Again Pilate proposed to release the
Saviour. "But the Jews cried out, saying, If thou let
this man go, thou art not Caesar's friend." Thus these
hypocrites pretended to be jealous for the authority of
Caesar. Of all the opponents of the Roman rule, the Jews were
most bitter. When it was safe for them to do so, they were
most tyrannical in enforcing their own national and religious
requirements; but when they desired to bring about some
purpose of cruelty, they exalted the power of Caesar. To
accomplish the destruction of Christ, they would profess
loyalty to the foreign rule which they hated.
"Whosoever maketh himself a
king," they continued, "speaketh against
Caesar." This was touching Pilate in a weak point. He was
under suspicion by the Roman government, and he knew that such
a report would be ruin to him. He knew that if the Jews were
thwarted, their rage would be turned against him. They would
leave nothing undone to accomplish their revenge. He had
before him an example of the persistence with which they
sought the life of One whom they hated without reason.
Pilate then took his place on the
judgment seat, and again presented Jesus to the people,
saying, "Behold your King!" Again the mad cry was
heard, "Away with Him, crucify Him." In a voice that
was heard far and near, Pilate asked, "Shall I crucify
your King?" But from profane, blasphemous lips went forth
the words, "We have no king but Caesar."
Thus by choosing a heathen ruler, the
Jewish nation had withdrawn from the theocracy. They had
rejected God as their king. Henceforth they had no deliverer.
They had no king but Caesar. To this the priests and teachers
had led the people. For this, with the fearful results that
followed, they were responsible. A nation's sin and a nation's
ruin were due to the religious leaders.
"When Pilate saw that he could
prevail nothing, but that rather a tumult was made, he took
water, and washed his hands before the multitude, saying, I am
innocent of the blood of this just Person: see ye to it."
In fear and self-condemnation Pilate looked upon the Saviour.
In the vast sea of upturned faces, His alone was peaceful.
About His head a soft light seemed to shine. Pilate said in
his heart, He is a God. Turning to the multitude he declared,
I am clear of His blood. Take ye Him, and crucify Him. But
mark ye, priests and rulers, I pronounce Him a just man. May
He whom He claims as His Father judge you and not me for this
day's work. Then to Jesus he said, Forgive me for this act; I
cannot save You. And when he had again scourged Jesus, he
delivered Him to be crucified.
Pilate longed to deliver Jesus. But
he saw that he could not do this, and yet retain his own
position and honor. Rather than lose his worldly power, he
chose to sacrifice an innocent life. How many, to escape loss
or suffering, in like manner sacrifice principle. Conscience
and duty point one way, and self-interest points another. The
current sets strongly in the wrong direction, and he who
compromises with evil is swept away into the thick darkness of
guilt.
Pilate yielded to the demands of the
mob. Rather than risk losing his position, he delivered Jesus
up to be crucified. But in spite of his precautions, the very
thing he dreaded afterward came upon him. His honors were
stripped from him, he was cast down from his high office, and,
stung by remorse and wounded pride, not long after the
crucifixion he ended his own life. So all who compromise with
sin will gain only sorrow and ruin. "There is a way which
seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of
death." Prov. 14:12.
When Pilate declared himself innocent
of the blood of Christ, Caiaphas answered defiantly, "His
blood be on us, and on our children." The awful words
were taken up by the priests and rulers, and echoed by the
crowd in an inhuman roar of voices. The whole multitude
answered and said, "His blood be on us, and on our
children."
The people of Israel had made their
choice. Pointing to Jesus they had said, "Not this man,
but Barabbas." Barabbas, the robber and murderer, was the
representative of Satan. Christ was the representative of God.
Christ had been rejected; Barabbas had been chosen. Barabbas
they were to have. In making this choice they accepted him who
from the beginning was a liar and a murderer. Satan was their
leader. As a nation they would act out his dictation. His
works they would do. His rule they must endure. That people
who chose Barabbas in the place of Christ were to feel the
cruelty of Barabbas as long as time should last.
Looking upon the smitten Lamb of God,
the Jews had cried, "His blood be on us, and on our
children." That awful cry ascended to the throne of God.
That sentence, pronounced upon themselves, was written in
heaven. That prayer was heard. The blood of the Son of God was
upon their children and their children's children, a perpetual
curse.
Terribly was it realized in the
destruction of Jerusalem. Terribly has it been manifested in
the condition of the Jewish nation for eighteen hundred
years,--a branch severed from the vine, a dead, fruitless
branch, to be gathered up and burned. From land to land
throughout the world, from century to century, dead, dead in
trespasses and sins!
Terribly will that prayer be
fulfilled in the great judgment day. When Christ shall come to
the earth again, not as a prisoner surrounded by a rabble will
men see Him. They will see Him then as heaven's King. Christ
will come in His own glory, in the glory of His Father, and
the glory of the holy angels. Ten thousand times ten thousand,
and thousands of thousands of angels, the beautiful and
triumphant sons of God, possessing surpassing loveliness and
glory, will escort Him on His way. Then shall He sit upon the
throne of His glory, and before Him shall be gathered all
nations. Then every eye shall see Him, and they also that
pierced Him. In the place of a crown of thorns, He will wear a
crown of glory,--a crown within a crown. In place of that old
purple kingly robe, He will be clothed in raiment of whitest
white, "so as no fuller on earth can white them."
Mark 9:3. And on His vesture and on His thigh a name will be
written, "King of kings, and Lord of lords." Rev.
19:16. Those who mocked and smote Him will be there. The
priests and rulers will behold again the scene in the judgment
hall. Every circumstance will appear before them, as if
written in letters of fire. Then those who prayed, "His
blood be on us, and on our children," will receive the
answer to their prayer. Then the whole world will know and
understand. They will realize who and what they, poor, feeble,
finite beings, have been warring against. In awful agony and
horror they will cry to the mountains and rocks, "Fall on
us, and hide us from the face of Him that sitteth on the
throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb: for the great day of
His wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand?" Rev.
6:16, 17.
The Desire of Ages (1898) pp.723 - 739
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