Reflection on John 18:28-19:16
Karen-102804 03/31 5123
After the high priests and the Jewish Sanhedrin failed
to exam Jesus to find fault in Him, they didn't take the gracious opportunity
Jesus offered to them to exam themselves to check their own guilt before the
Lord. Jesus Christ is the perfect lawmaker and the lawkeeper. There is no way
for anyone on earth to prove that Jesus is a lawbreaker, since He breaks no
law. On the contrary, the Jews who captured Jesus and tried Him were
lawbreakers. They knew Jesus' innocence, but still were determined to kill Him.
At that time, the Jews were subject to Romans. The
Romans allowed them a good deal of self-government, but didn't give them the
legal right to carry out death penalty. The Jews had made many attempts to kill
Jesus illegally. However, none of these attempts succeeded because God forbade.
If the Jews had themselves been able to kill Jesus, it would have been by
stoning. But Jesus said that when He was "lifted up from the earth",
He would "draw all men to" Himself. "He said this to show the
kind of death He was going to die." Jesus' prophecy had to be fulfilled so
He had to die on the cross which the Romans commonly used to carry out death
penalty. The Jewish leaders had no choice but left it to the Romans to kill
Jesus on the cross. They had to take the trouble to do that during Passover.
"The Jews led Jesus from Caiaphas to the palace of the Roman governor. By
now it was early morning, and to avoid ceremonial uncleanliness the Jews did
not enter the palace; they wanted to be able to eat the Passover." There
was no law to forbid Jewish people to enter a gentile's house. But the Jews who
delivered Jesus to Pilate were too religious to enter the gentile governor's
palace for fear of contracting, not a legal, but only a traditional pollution
to keep them from eating "the Passover". They came along with the
prisoner, they might accuse their prisoner much more effectually if they had
gone inside the governor's palace. But they were so careful of ceremonial and
ritual cleanliness that they would not enter Pilate's palace, yet they were
busy doing everything possible to crucify the Son of God. They made no scruple
of breaking through all the laws of equity to persecute Jesus to the death.
John exposed the hypocrisy of the Jewish leaders. They had no trouble to have an
innocent Jesus murdered, yet they were afraid of ceremonial defilement.
Though the hour was early, rather than asked the Jews
to wait or demanded them to enter the residence of a Gentile, Pilate
accommodated the Jews' religious scruples and moved himself outside to meet
these conspiring religious leaders. He put the most reasonable question to them
that could be and asked the Jews, "What charges are you bringing against
this man?" The Jews had formulated their charge against Jesus was to be "blasphemy".
They knew well that Pilate would not proceed on a charge like that. They first
attempted to induce Pilate to accept their verdict and condemn Jesus upon it,
then execute Him with a trial. The Jewish leaders replied to Pilate, "If
he were not a criminal, we would not have handed him over you." They could
not have answered Pilate with more disdain. They couldn't bring a legal charge
against Jesus according to Roman's law, but they wanted Pilate to have Jesus
killed lawfully.
Pilate wasn't a total idiot. The Jews looked very rude
and uncivil to him. He didn't like the idea that the Jews reached their verdict
first and then tried to use his hands to kill a person without a legal charge.
Pilate said to the Jews, "Take him yourselves and judge him by your own
law." Pilate would rather not take the case and seemed ready to turn
Jesus' accusers away. He was unwilling to do them the service they required.
Pilate's reply forced the Jews to reveal their true intention. The Jews
objected, "But we have no right to execute anyone." Nothing but the
death of Jesus would satisfy them. "This happened so that the words Jesus
had spoken indicating the kind of death he was going to die would be
fulfilled." Jesus' death would be by crucifixion, lifted up on the cross.
No word of Jesus shall fall to the ground. He can never either deceive or be
deceived. The Jews charged Jesus as a deceiver, but they had their spirit so
directed as to help to prove Jesus' words to be true.
“Pilate then went
inside the palace, summoned Jesus and asked him, ‘Are you the king of the
Jews?’" To the Romans, "king" meant a political rival. Even
though there was nothing in the manner or attire of Jesus to a royal claimant,
Pilate was bound by his office to take care of the interests of the Roman
government. Pilate asked his first question to Jesus to determine whether Jesus
intended to set Himself up as a king against Caesar. The Gospels are unanimous
in giving this question as the first words addressed by Pilate to Jesus. There
is irony and doubt in his question. He asked it because Jesus didn't look like
a revolutionary or a criminal, the only types of people who would claim to be
the king of the Jews in the face of Rome.
Jesus answered Pilate's question with His own question
to him, "Is that your own idea, or did others talk to you about me?"
Jesus admits that He is a king, but not a political rival in the sense Pilate
thought. He asked the question to appeal to Pilate's conscience. No one could
deal with Jesus for Pilate, he must deal with Jesus himself. Jesus invited
Pilate to find truth about Himself. Pilate turned down Jesus' gracious offer by
saying, "Am I a Jew? It was your people and your chief priests who handed
you over to me. What is it you have done?" Pilate proclaimed both his complete
indifference to Jesus' true identify and that his despise of Jews. Pilate only
wanted to find out what Jesus did to make the Jews so relentless in their
hatred. If Pilate had been as inquisitive as he ought to have been in this
matter, he would have found out the Jews were outrageous against Jesus because
He did not set up a temporal kingdom in opposition to the Roman power. The Jews
would have been so far from siding with Romans against Jesus if they could have
made Jesus their king, and have fought under Him against the Romans.
In His next reply, Jesus gave a more full and direct
answer to Pilate's first question, explaining in what sense He was a king, not
a secular king, for His interest was not supported by secular methods. Jesus
said, "My kingdom is not of this world. If it were, my servants would
fight to prevent my arrest by the Jews. But now my kingdom is from another
place." Jesus answered He truly was a king with a kingdom. And Pilate
might have been relieved at Jesus' answer that His kingdom was not of this
world. Therefore Pilate said to Jesus, "You are a king, then!" This
is a half-question and half-exclamation. Our Lord chose to enlighten Pilate as
to the nature of His kingdom in His next answer to Pilate. Jesus said,
"You are right in saying I am a king. In fact, for this reason I was born,
and for this I came into the world, to testify to the truth." Jesus spoke
to Pilate of truth in its absolute sense. The secret of the universe,
exclusively revealed in and through Him who is the Truth. Jesus tells us why He
came into the world. He came to witness to the truth; He came to tell us the
truth about God, the truth about ourselves, and the truth about life. Jesus
then challenged Pilate with the choice to recognize and receive His testimony
by saying, "Everyone on the side of truth listens to me." Pilate had
the opportunity to listen to Jesus' own testimony and choose to belong to those
"on the side of truth". Pilate responded to the greatest opportunity
of his life with a good question to Jesus, "What is truth?" Sadly, he
didn't care about the answer the Truth Himself could give him. He didn't wait
for Jesus to give him an answer even he knew that Jesus was telling him truth.
Why should we assume that Pilate knew Jesus was telling the truth? Because
"he went out again to the Jews and said, ‘I find no basis for a charge
against him.’” Pilate was convinced there was no cause for death in Jesus. He
publicly declared Jesus innocent. His duty as honest judge was inescapable.
However, the Gospel of Luke records that when he learned that Jesus was from
Galilee, he sent Jesus to Herod who was the ruler of Galilee. He tried to shift
his responsibility to Herod. But Herod was unable to find guilt in Jesus and
sent him back to Pilate.
In the situation when both Herod and himself found no
guilt in Jesus, Pilate didn't have the courage to release Jesus. He was willing
to trim the matter, and please all sides. He went on to try another way of
escape from dealing directly with Jesus himself; but again that is precisely what
no one can do. The Gospel of Matthew tells us, Pilate proposed to the crowd
that had gathered, "Which one do you want me to release to you: Barabbas,
or Jesus who is called Christ?" He didn't propose this appeal to the
Jewish leaders only. "For he knew it was out of envy that they had handed
Jesus over to him." About then, Pilate's wife sent him an urgent message,
warning him, "Don't have anything to do with that innocent man, for I have
suffered a great deal today in a dream because of him." Pilate worshipped
the gods and goddess of Rome. He had ignored the opportunities of his post in
Judea to know the living God. God was merciful to Pilate and gave him many
solemn warnings and opportunities to know the truth of the unique prisoner who
was brought to him by the Jews. Even his wife's message suggested his household
knew something about Jesus. Probably Pilate had heard how Jesus had been
attended the other day with the "Hosanna" shouted by the common
crowd; he somehow looked upon Him to be the favorite of the multitude, and the
envy only of the leaders, therefore he made no doubt but the crowd would demand
the release of Jesus, and this would stop the mouth of the prosecutors. Anyway,
if Pilate had had the honesty and courage for being a judge, he would not have
named an innocent person to be competitor with a notorious criminal for this
favour. He should go straight forward to discharge Jesus.
"But the chief priests and elders persuaded the
crowd to ask for Barabbas and to have Jesus executed." "Barabbas had
taken parts in a rebellion", was "a notorious prisoner". The
crowd was ready to choose any man, however undeserving, rather than Jesus.They
shouted back, "No, not him! Give us Barabbas!" They cried all again
and again. How fierce and outrageous they were. How foolish and absurd they
were. Barabbas was a breaker of the law of God; and yet he shall be spared,
rather than the One who reproved the pride, avarice, and the tyranny of the
priests and elders. It is a strange, almost insane scene: a cruel, ruthless
Roman governor trying to spare the life of Jesus against the efforts of the
Jewish leaders and crowd. They all understood perfectly that Jesus was innocent
under Roman's law.
The crowd was inflexible. Pilate found it impossible
to go against both the Jewish leaders and the crowd. "Then Pilate took
Jesus and had him flogged. The soldiers twisted together a crown of thorns and
put it on his head. They clothed him in a purple robe and went up to him again
and again, saying, ‘Hail, king of the Jews!’ And they stuck him in the
face." Pilate seemed to think that scourging would suffice. He hoped that
the more moderate would take pity upon Jesus when they saw His scourged body,
for scourging was so cruel a punishment that the condemned person often died under
its infliction. Pilate's compromise meant Jesus suffered more than if he had
simply consented to Jesus' crucifixion. Pilate chose to put Jesus through this
added indignity to postpone that final choice and fulfilling his recognized
duty. The soldiers had no special malice against Jesus, but the Roman military
system made them hard of heart. They were trained to toture prisoners in
professional way. The occasion gave these gentile soldiers opportunity to show
their contempt for the Jews by mocking Jesus as their king.
Pilate thought that he might avoid having to give the
verdict of the cross by giving the verdict of scourging. But that is what
no man can do. Pilate went on to try what another round of appeal could do. He
led Jesus out broken by the scourging and showed Him to the crowd. Pilate said,
"Look, I am bringing him out to you to let you know that I find no basis
for a charge against him." Pilate tried to swing the balance by this
appeal to emotion and to pity. But no man can hope that appeal to others can
take the place of his own personal decision. Pilate must make his own decision.
He publicly announced Jesus' innocence for the second time, but still didn't
make the right decision to discharge Him. Pilate called attention of the crowd,
"Here is the man!" He probably hoped the terrible marks Jesus bore
might touch the stubborn hearts of the crowd. He didn't realize how
bloodthirsty Jesus' accusers were.
"As soon as the chief priests and their officials
saw" Jesus, they shouted, "Crucify! Crucify!" Pilate's
expectation came to naught, for none of the Jewish leaders ever wavered in
their demand for crucifixion. They raised their voice in full chorus for the
crucifixion of Jesus. They began by hating Jesus because they felt envy toward
Him. They finished in a great hysteria of hatred, howling like wolves,
"Crucify! Crucify!" The hatred of the leaders made them lose all
sense of proportion. Unreasonable and most absurd, they would not accept
Pilate's declaration of Jesus' innocence. They demanded Jesus to be crucified.
"But Pilate answered, ‘You take him and crucify him. As for me, I find no
basis for a charge against him.’” Pilate publicly declared Jesus' innocence for
the third time, but still he didn't let Jesus go freely. What was he armed with
power for, but to be the guard of justice? Pilate did not have enough courage
to act according to his conscience and his position.
Pilate spoke ironically since he knew the Jews could
not kill Jesus by Crucifixion. The Jews understood that Pilate was taunting
them, practically accusing them of attempting to put an innocent man to death,
they defended themselves by boasting of their law. They had indeed an excellent
law, but in vain did they boast of their law, when they abused it for such bad
purpose. They said, "We have a law, and according to that law he must die,
because he claimed to be the Son of God." They had made no mention of this
fact because Pilate was under no obligation to enforce their law; but they
mentioned it now to justify their cause. They could not incense Pilate against
Jesus by alleging that He pretended Himself a king, they urged this, that He
pretended Himself a God. The Jewish leaders' words had an unintended effect on
Pilate who was a superstitious idol worshipper. When he heard that his prisoner
allegedly claimed not only to royalty, but also to deity, "he was even
more afraid." Even natural conscience makes men afraid of being found
fighting against God. This was the last time God would plea with Pilate. Pilate
turned back into the palace for his last personal contact with Jesus. He asked
Jesus, "Where do you come from?" Pilate sought to know whether Jesus
was of heaven or of earth, but Jesus was silent, for the motive of the question
was not right. Pilate did not wish an answer that he might give or withhold
worship; but he might know how strenuously he should defend Jesus. But innocent
life is to be defended at all hazards, it matters not whether it is human or
divine. And God had already given Pilate all he needed to believe and act
honestly by acquitting Jesus. The silence of our Lord was not a sullen silence,
in contempt of the court; it was a patient silence. It should cause Pilate to
open his mind to think what the Lord said and did right in front of him. Sadly,
Jesus' silence did not cause Pilate to reconsider his position in regard to
righteousness and the fear of God. Pilate said, "Do you refuse to speak to
me? Don't you realize I have power either to free you or to crucify you?"
Pilate made decision in his pride as though the power of the Roman Empire was
all that mattered. How Pilate magnified himself, and boasted of his own
authority. But he magnified his power to an exorbitant degree when he boasted
that he had power to crucify one whom he had declared innocent.
When Pilate used his power, our Lord silently
submitted to it; but when he grew proud of it, our Lord made him know himself,
"You would have no power over me if it were not given to you from above.
Therefore the one who handed me over to you is guilty of a greater sin."
Jesus spoke with His royal dignity. Pilate had no ultimate power over Jesus.
From beginning to end, the Crucifixion of Jesus never reads like a story of a
man caught up in an inexorable web of circumstances over which he had no
control. It is the story of our Lord's last days which was a triumphant
procession towards the goal of the Cross. Those who took part in the
proceedings against Jesus were actually those who were on trial. At Jesus'
trial, the judges were judged. The scales of God's justice weighed Pilate and
Jewish leaders and found them all guilty of sin. Pilate condemned the innocent
brought before him, but the Jewish leaders searched out and arrested the
innocent that they might enjoy His Crucifixion.
By then, Pilate had made about six attempts to release
Jesus without hurting his own interest. The last effort that Pilate made to
release Jesus was recorded as "Pilate tried to set Jesus free." It
seemed Pilate's former attempts to release Jesus were nothing compared to this
last effort. As we have seen, Pilate had before this tried to win the consent
of the leaders that Jesus be released, but the last attempt was probably an
actual attempt to set Jesus free because he was completely convinced that Jesus
was innocent. But the Jewish leaders had a final weapon to use that struck fear
in Pilate's heart. They kept shouting, "If you let this man go, you are no
friend of Caesar. Anyone who claims to be a king opposes Caesar." The Jews
blackmailed Pilate into crucifying Jesus. Pilate saw at once that these envy
and murderous Jews could make out of the present occasion a charge against him,
which could cost him his position. In spite of God's solemn warning to him and
Jesus' powerful appeals to his conscience, in spite of his absolute conviction
of the complete innocence of Jesus, Pilate feared man more than God. He chose
Caesar to be his king, not Jesus Christ. "He brought Jesus out and sat
down on the judge's seat at a place known as Stone Pavement." It was still
early in the morning on the day of Preparation of Passover. Pilate mounted the
judgment-seat that he might formally reverse himself and condemn himself. He
said to the Jews, "Here is your king." As he had tried to waken the
Jews' compassion by saying, "Here is the man!" he now made a final
attempt to shame them by saying, "Here is your king!"
Pilate himself sinned against the full blaze of the
glory of God, so did the Jews. The Jews shouted, "Take him away! Take him
away! Crucify him!" Pilate asked one more time, "Shall I crucify your
king?" The chief priests answered, "We have no king but Caesar."
This was the most astonishing thing the chief priests could say. They denied every
principle they had in order to compass the death of Jesus Christ. It was a
terrible picture. In their hatred, the Jews forgot all their principles, even
their God. The multitude began by wanting Jesus as a political Messiah to
deliver them from Caesar's oppression, by the end, they rejected Jesus, and
embraced Caesar.
Pilate fully knew what was right and just, but he chose wrong. Again and again he announced publicly that Jesus was innocent. However he chose to hand Jesus over to the soldiers to be crucified. The Gospel of Matthew tells us, before Pilate announced the decision which he made in his heart, "he took water and washed his hands in front of the crowd." His guilt would not be washed away by water, only by the blood of Jesus which he was about to shed. Then He made another public announcement, "I am innocent of this man's blood, it is your responsibility!" Pilate's act was only symbolic, intended to show that he regarded the crucifixion of Jesus as a murder, and therefore meant to wash his hands of the guilt. This was indeed a wishful thinking. The Jews in their rage took upon themselves and their children all the responsibility by saying, "Let his blood be on us and on our children!" Pilate and the Jews were both guilty of the Crucifixion of the Son of God. God alone determines the extent of their responsibility, and He alone decides when their punishment shall end. But we know that it ends for all when they repentantly seek His forgiveness.