Tuesday, July 1, 2025

If I tell you, you will by no means believe. And if I also ask you, you will by no means answer Me or let Me go

 
 Now the men who held Jesus mocked Him and beat Him.  And having blindfolded Him, they struck Him on the face and asked Him, saying, "Prophesy!  Who is the one who struck You?"  And many other things they blasphemously spoke against Him.   As soon as it was day, the elders of the people, both chief priests and scribes, came together and led Him into their council, saying, "If You are the Christ, tell us."  But He said to them, "If I tell you, you will by no means believe.  And if I also ask you, you will by no means answer Me or let Me go.  Hereafter the Son of Man will sit on the right hand of the power of God."  Then they all said, "Are You then the Son of God?"  So He said to them, "You rightly say that I am."  and they said, "What further testimony do we need?  For we have heard it ourselves from His own mouth."
 
- Luke 22:63–71 
 
Yesterday we read that, having been betrayed by Judas, Jesus said to the chief priests, captains of the temple, and the elders who had come to Him, "Have you come out, as against a robber, with swords and clubs?  When I was with you daily in the temple, you did not try to seize Me.  But this is your hour, and the power of darkness."  Having arrested Him, they led Him and brought Him into the high priest's house.  But Peter followed at a distance.  Now when they had kindled a fire in the midst of the courtyard and sat down together, Peter sat among them.  And a certain servant girl, seeing him as he sat by the fire, looked intently at him and said, "This man was also with Him."  But he denied Him, saying, "Woman, I do not know Him."  And after a little while another saw him and said, "You also are of them."  But Peter said, "Man, I am not!"  Then after about an hour had passed, another confidently affirmed, saying, "Surely this fellow also was with Him, for he is a Galilean."  But Peter said, "Man, I do not know what you are saying!"  Immediately, while he was still speaking, the rooster crowed.  And the Lord turned and looked at Peter.  Then Peter remembered the word of the Lord, how He had said to him, "Before the rooster crows, you will deny Me three times."  So Peter went out and wept bitterly.
 
  Now the men who held Jesus mocked Him and beat Him.  And having blindfolded Him, they struck Him on the face and asked Him, saying, "Prophesy!  Who is the one who struck You?"  And many other things they blasphemously spoke against Him.   We note the cruelty and crudity of the ones who hold Jesus.  To mock and beat Him is, we can imagine, the evil one at work.  To ridicule His divinity is to mock the capacity to prophesy in this gratuitously cruel and pitifully ignorant way.  As we read in context, all of this was carried on in the night, without benefit of trial.
 
As soon as it was day, the elders of the people, both chief priests and scribes, came together and led Him into their council, saying, "If You are the Christ, tell us."  But He said to them, "If I tell you, you will by no means believe.  And if I also ask you, you will by no means answer Me or let Me go."   My study Bible comments that Jesus asked many questions of the Jewish leaders which they refused to answer because doing so would have meant confessing Him as the Christ (Luke 20:4-7; Matthew 22:41-46; Mark 3:4).  
 
"Hereafter the Son of Man will sit on the right hand of the power of God."  Then they all said, "Are You then the Son of God?"  So He said to them, "You rightly say that I am."  and they said, "What further testimony do we need?  For we have heard it ourselves from His own mouth."  My study Bible notes that by this claim ("Hereafter the Son of Man will sit on the right hand of the power of God") Jesus declares Himself to be equal with God.  
 
 We have to ask with Jesus (as reported in yesterday's reading), "Have you come out, as against a robber, with swords and clubs?  When I was with you daily in the temple, you did not try to seize Me.  But this is your hour, and the power of darkness."   For, as we observe, the seizure of Christ takes place literally in darkness, and not in the daytime.  As they hold Him overnight, He suffers cruel and ignorant mocking and beating.  Nothing about what happens in this detention and trial is in accord with the legal practices stipulated at the time.  Of note is how "darkness" correlates with all that is being done.  There is the "power of darkness" Jesus described at work here, and it is at work in many ways and in many iterations.  It's at work in the cover of darkness when these authorities seize Him, it's at work in the betrayal of Judas done under cover of night as well (and of course, in the opposition to the truth that is in Christ).  It's in the ways these men have avoided open confrontation and dialogue while Jesus was teaching daily in the temple, and have chosen this method to have Him seized and for an illegal detention and trial.  Darkness is at work in this story in many ways.  But, because this is the story of Christ, and not a conventional story on worldly terms, darkness is inherent in the narrative, because Christ has come into this world to combat the darkness.  He has come here to defeat the darkness through its own methods.  For, these methods of subterfuge and scheming, of evil that shows its hand when it is possible to underhandedly fight the truth, will all, in the end, defeat the devil in his cunning.  For this is a story about "trampling death by death" as the Orthodox Pascha (Easter) hymn proclaims.  Christ will be ruler of heaven and earth, as all power is given to Him by the Father through this mission as the Incarnate Jesus.  It is He in whose hand is the judgment of all things, visible and invisible, given to Him by the Father -- and this is the way that He will complete that mission to destroy the one (or ones) who bring the darkness, who oppress human beings, who hate the truth of God.  And this is the story we are born into in this world, and into which we are called upon by Christ to follow Him, to be His disciples, and to do as He did.  It is, perhaps, a strange story by worldly material conditions, but not by the holistic sense of our lives which include the spiritual.  In Romans 12, St. Paul writes extensively about living life in the spirit of love.  In verses 17-21, he teaches above all about avoiding revenge.  Quoting from Deuteronomy 32:35, he reminds his flock of the Lord's words, "Vengeance is Mine, I will repay."  And then quoting from Proverbs 25:21-22, he writes, "Therefore 'If your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him a drink; for in so doing you will heap coals of fire on his head.'  Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good."  We look in all things to the judgment of the Lord, for it is by the power of the Lord that darkness -- in this full sense of what that means in terms of the Scriptures -- is defeated, judged, dealt with.  Again, in the midst of a passage on love that is perhaps the greatest ever written, St. Paul says, "When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but when I became a man, I put away childish things. For now we see in a mirror, dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part, but then I shall know just as I also am known" (see 1 Corinthians 13).  From our worldly, material perspective, we might not easily understand how these things work, but in the spiritual sense, we understand that it is, in fact, the Judge who is the One standing before those who seek to judge Him.  All the evil of darkness brought against Him will not defeat Him, it did not defeat the Church, even though the Church depends upon fallible human beings.  And God's justice will not fail.  Let us understand how, precisely, to defeat darkness.  For darkness depends upon ignorance and is blind.  Let us live and walk in the light, His way, to defeat it.  In today's reading, Jesus rightly replies to these men who now are incapable of repentance, "If I tell you, you will by no means believe.  And if I also ask you, you will by no means answer Me or let Me go."  They have blinded themselves to His light.  But it is He who will have the final answer nonetheless.  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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