Showing posts with label King of the Jews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label King of the Jews. Show all posts

Thursday, September 4, 2025

Hail, King of the Jews!

 
 Pilate answered and said to them again, "What then do you want me to do with Him whom you call the King of the Jews?"  So they cried out again, "Crucify Him!"  Then Pilate said to them, "Why, what evil has He done?"  But they cried out all the more, "Crucify Him!"  So Pilate, wanting to gratify the crowd, released Barabbas to them; and he delivered Jesus, after he had scourged Him, to be crucified. 
 
 Then the soldiers led Him away into the hall called Praetorium, and they called together the whole garrison.  And they clothed Him with purple; and they twisted a crown of thorns, put it on His head, and began to salute Him, "Hail, King of the Jews!'  Then they struck Him on the head with a reed and spat on Him; and bowing the knee, they worshiped Him.  And when they had mocked Him, they took the purple off Him, put His own clothes on Him, and led Him out to crucify Him.
 
Then they compelled a certain man, Simon a Cyrenian, the father of Alexander and Rufus, as he was coming out of  the country and passing by, to bear His cross.
 
- Mark 15:12-21 
 
Yesterday we read that, immediately, in the morning following the illegal night trial in which Jesus was condemned for blasphemy, the chief priests held a consultation with the elders and scribes and the whole council; and they bound Jesus, led Him away, and delivered Him to Pilate.  Then Pilate asked Him, "Are You the King of the Jews?"  He answered and said to him, "It is as you say."  And the chief priests accused Him of many things, but He answered nothing.  Then Pilate asked Him again, saying, "Do You answer nothing?  See how many things they testify against You!"  But Jesus still answered nothing, so that Pilate marveled.  Now at the feast he was accustomed to releasing one prisoner to them, whomever they requested.  And there was one named Barabbas, who was chained with his fellow rebels; they had committed murder in the rebellion.  Then the multitude, crying aloud, began to ask him to do just as he had always done for them.  But Pilate answered them, saying, "Do you want me to release to you the King of the Jews?"  For he knew that the chief priests had handed Him over because of envy.  But the chief priests stirred up the crowd, so that he should rather release Barabbas to them.  
 
Pilate answered and said to them again, "What then do you want me to do with Him whom you call the King of the Jews?"  So they cried out again, "Crucify Him!"  Then Pilate said to them, "Why, what evil has He done?"  But they cried out all the more, "Crucify Him!"  So Pilate, wanting to gratify the crowd, released Barabbas to them; and he delivered Jesus, after he had scourged Him, to be crucified.  Perhaps partially because of his wife's admonition (see Matthew 27:19) Pilate knows that Jesus is innocent (see yesterday's reading, in which we're told that Pilate knew that the chief priests had handed Him over because of envy), and so makes an effort to save Him by repeatedly questioning the crowds regarding Jesus. But eventually he seeks to gratify the crowd.   Here my study Bible comments that Pilate's sin was less than that of the Jewish leaders who delivered Christ to him (John 19;11), for the Jews had the Law and the prophets to instruct them, and Pilate did not.  Pilate was not without sin in that, because of his desire to gratify the crowd, he knowingly sent an innocent Man to death. 
 
  Then the soldiers led Him away into the hall called Praetorium, and they called together the whole garrison.  And they clothed Him with purple; and they twisted a crown of thorns, put it on His head, and began to salute Him, "Hail, King of the Jews!'  Then they struck Him on the head with a reed and spat on Him; and bowing the knee, they worshiped Him.  And when they had mocked Him, they took the purple off Him, put His own clothes on Him, and led Him out to crucify Him.  My study Bible notes here that every king is proclaimed by his soldiers.  Although the intention here is to mock and ridicule, it remains prophetic that Jesus is crowned and hailed as King by soldiers of the governor.  For a similar example of unwitting prophecy, see John 11:49-51, where Caiaphas prophecies, despite his intention, of Christ's redemptive work.  The mockery here in today's reading portrays Jesus as despised and rejected by human beings, who bears the iniquity of all of us (see Isaiah 53:3-9).  Christ is clothed in a royal purple; the Greek word for this color is πορφύρα/porphyra, a color which appeared as a deep maroon red.  My study Bible comments that it represents both Christ's royalty and the sins of humanity which He has taken upon Himself.  
 
 Then they compelled a certain man, Simon a Cyrenian, the father of Alexander and Rufus, as he was coming out of  the country and passing by, to bear His cross.  My study Bible notes the mention of Simon as the father of Alexander and Rufus, and comments that St. Mark likely asserts this here as they were still living and possibly known to contemporary hearers of the time.  It comments that there is a spiritual message here, in that we, like Simon (whose name means "obedience"), are not simply called to carry the cross which Christ sets upon us, but seeing Christ in others, we are also called to bear one another's burdens as well (Galatians 6:2). 
 
In recent readings, we have commented on the "upside down" nature of many of the events surrounding Christ's Crucifixion -- particularly in the efforts to have Him put to death and be rid of Him and His ministry.  Today's reading is no exception that series of observations.  Christ will be put to death quite literally and officially by the Romans and by sentence of Pilate, and yet it is Pilate who knows He is innocent, and even seeks to save Him.  Jesus is here called "the King of the Jews" and yet it is the Jewish religious leaders who seek to be rid of Him, to put Him to death and thus vanquish Him from among their midst.  Even Pilate asks specifically, "Why, what evil has He done?" when the people shout, "Crucify Him!"   But they don't answer, goaded on ("stirred up") by the high priests.  They simply demand, "Crucify Him!" crying out all the more.  Of course, the irony and "upside-down" nature of the treatment of Jesus by the soldiers cries out itself with great obviousness to us.  He is draped in the royal purple of the time, crowned with an improvised crown of thorns to spike and harm Him the more -- mimicking for ridicule the treatment of a worldly king.  He is struck with a reed; a reed is a weak image of a king's scepter, meant for use as a symbol of power, and here reduced to weakness in order to further humiliate Christ.  They even bowed the knee and worshiped Him.  This is again in mocking imitation of the courtly attire and treatment of a worldly king, but little do they know that it is only God who should be worshiped -- and that it is God who stands before them, and whom they treat with such contempt and debased behavior, even spitting on Him to degrade Him as much as possible.  The One who deserves our worship is the One who is silently receiving the hatred of people who don't know Him, and perhaps more importantly, whom He will forgive from the Cross, if they but accept the salvation only He can offer to the world.  What looks to worldly eyes like destruction and vanquishing is in fact the victory of Christ, and will be turned into the deepest victory possible via the power of God from the Cross, in which even death and evil will be defeated.  Human beings can mock and defeat their enemies all they want to, but spiritual reality has its own power and authority, and it will be upheld by God after all things are said and done.  Christ, we mustn't forget, is also the ultimate and first Witness -- the Faithful and True Witness, as it says in Revelation 3:14, and so ultimately is both Witness and Judge.  When we think we see a great defeat and humiliation in the world, we should remember this scene, and know that we may watch lies unfold before us, manipulated by those who hate truth, and seek to destroy the work of God for their own purposes.  We must remember that the "worldly" outlook is capable of great deception, telling us that what is priceless is actually worthless -- and upholding worthless behavior as somehow just and deserved by its victims.  Let us remember this scene and Christ as Witness, for nothing we do is missed by God, nothing is exempt from the awareness of Christ who now has experience as incarnate human being of all that we do and live through, even the effects of evil and lying in our lives, the abuses of power, the cruelty that is useless except to cause harm without meaning.  Christ is witness to it all, and He is truly King above it all, and it is to that truth we must cling, no matter what we think we see, for we also must witness in His name as well. 
 
 
 

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Do you want me to release to you the King of the Jews?

 
 Immediately, in the morning, the chief priests held a consultation with the elders and scribes and the whole council; and they bound Jesus, led Him away, and delivered Him to Pilate.  Then Pilate asked Him, "Are You the King of the Jews?"  He answered and said to him, "It is as you say."  And the chief priests accused Him of many things, but He answered nothing.  Then Pilate asked Him again, saying, "Do You answer nothing?  See how many things they testify against You!"  But Jesus still answered nothing, so that Pilate marveled. 
 
Now at the feast he was accustomed to releasing one prisoner to them, whomever they requested.  And there was one named Barabbas, who was chained with his fellow rebels; they had committed murder in the rebellion.  Then the multitude, crying aloud, began to ask him to do just as he had always done for them.  But Pilate answered them, saying, "Do you want me to release to you the King of the Jews?"  For he knew that the chief priests had handed Him over because of envy.  But the chief priests stirred up the crowd, so that he should rather release Barabbas to them.  
 
- Mark 15:1–11 
 
Yesterday we read that, as Peter was below in the courtyard of the high priest, while Jesus was on trial inside the home, one of the servant girls of the high priest came.  And when she saw Peter warming himself, she looked at him and said, "You also were with Jesus of Nazareth."  But he denied it, saying, "I neither know nor understand what you are saying."  And he went out on the porch, and a rooster crowed.  And the servant girl saw him again, and began to say to those who stood by, "This is one of them."  But he denied it again.  And a little later those who stood by said to Peter again, "Surely you are one of them; for you are a Galilean, and your speech shows it."  Then he began to curse and swear, "I do not know this Man of whom you speak!"  A second time the rooster crowed.  Then Peter called to mind the word that Jesus had said to him, "Before the rooster crows twice, you will deny Me three times."  And when he thought about it, he wept.
 
 Immediately, in the morning, the chief priests held a consultation with the elders and scribes and the whole council; and they bound Jesus, led Him away, and delivered Him to Pilate.  My study Bible tells us that while the Jewish religious law dictated the death penalty for blasphemers (Leviticus 24:16), of which the chief priests have convicted Jesus in an illegal night trial, under Roman occupation the Jews were prohibited form carrying out an execution.  So therefore, they must get a sentence issued by Pilate, the Roman governor.  
 
 Then Pilate asked Him, "Are You the King of the Jews?"  He answered and said to him, "It is as you say."  Pilate's question comes from the political charges that have been made against Jesus.  Pilate would not execute a person over religious matters, so therefore the chief priests have come up with a political crime that would guarantee the death penalty.  They accused Jesus of making Himself an earthly king, which would be treason against Caesar (see John 19:7-12).  
 
 And the chief priests accused Him of many things, but He answered nothing.  Then Pilate asked Him again, saying, "Do You answer nothing?  See how many things they testify against You!"  But Jesus still answered nothing, so that Pilate marveled.  My study Bible says that Christ's silence (He answered nothing) fulfills the prophecy of Isaiah 53:7, in which the Messiah is portrayed as silent while He is led "as a sheep to the slaughter."
 
 Now at the feast he was accustomed to releasing one prisoner to them, whomever they requested.  And there was one named Barabbas, who was chained with his fellow rebels; they had committed murder in the rebellion.  Then the multitude, crying aloud, began to ask him to do just as he had always done for them.  But Pilate answered them, saying, "Do you want me to release to you the King of the Jews?"  For he knew that the chief priests had handed Him over because of envy.  But the chief priests stirred up the crowd, so that he should rather release Barabbas to them.  Pilate is hoping to release Jesus, as he knows He is innocent (he knew that the chief priests had handed Him over because of envy; see also Mark 15:14; John 18:38, 19:4-6).  Therefore, he turns to the crowd for support, hoping they will ask for Jesus despite the accusation of the chief priests.  But the chief priests stirred up the crowd, so that he should rather release Barabbas to them.
 
In yet another aspect of the "upside down" nature of the events surrounding Jesus' Crucifixion, my study Bible has a note regarding Barabbas.  It says that the name Barabbas means "son of the father."  But we know that Jesus is the true Son of the Father.  Ironically, therefore, these crowds are given a choice between one Son of the Father and the other.  As the chief priests influence the crowds to choose Barabbas, so they also indicate to which father they belong -- the devil (John 8:44).  This illustrates for us perhaps the power of choosing, and unintended consequences for decisions we make that may not be central to a bad outcome or choice (such as the condemnation and Crucifixion of Christ), and yet nonetheless we participate in a secondary way, through the repercussions generated that affect others.  This crowd is not responsible for trying Jesus in an overnight (and therefore illegal) trial; they're not responsible for the many false witnesses who testified against Jesus.  They're not members of the Sanhedrin, nor are they scribes or elders.  But they are stirred up by the chief priests, and manipulated in a way so as to also participate in the same choices and "energies" of this bad act intended against Christ.  It illustrates for us how even our most small and tangential-seeming choices have meaning, for we choose whether we will participate in what ostensibly serves the good, or what is not good.  Jesus teaches us to be watchful, and to pray always, and such moments of decision are reasons for that admonition.  See Mark 13:37; 14:38.  In the illustration of the name of Barabbas, at this time when Jesus is on trial before Pilate, we have what is possibly a unique example of what heresy is.  For a heresy is something which is not necessarily obviously a lie.  As Jesus gives us the parable of the Wheat and the Tares, the tares are a type of weed that closely resembles wheat, and they grow side-by-side, so that it takes discernment to know the difference, and one can't necessarily be taken out without disturbing the other.  So heresy is something that seems to resemble the truth, but it is counterfeit in one way or another, and this is why we need watchfulness, and the knowledge the discern the truth.  It is why the Church has historically held Councils to deliberate and identify heresy, and to give us the truth of Christ and identify for us what is false.  While this crowd may be thinking they are doing something correct by following the chief priests, or perhaps they simply are there to be roused one way or another at the spectacle of this trial before Pilate, Barabbas is a counterfeit hero -- one who claims boldness and daring in seeking to deliver the people from the Romans.  But it is Jesus who is the true Deliverer, and who offers the true salvation for Israel and for all people; He is the Savior.  If we look closely in our lives, we also may be able to identify moments in which things seem upside down, what is taken as true in fact is false, skillful lies and half-truths serving the opposite of the good.  Let us therefore take Christ's advice to be watchful always, and to learn and grow in our faith so that we are aware of what we are about, and not prey for skillful manipulators with their own agendas.  Let us not just follow the crowds, but always follow our Lord.  Pilate offers to release Jesus, but the crowd turns him down.  Let us consider what we choose, and whom we follow, at all times. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Wednesday, July 2, 2025

Are You the King of the Jews?

 
 Then the whole multitude of them arose and led Him to Pilate.  And they began to accuse Him, saying, "We found this fellow perverting the nation, and forbidding to pay taxes to Caesar, saying that He Himself is Christ, a King."  Then Pilate asked Him, saying, "Are You the King of the Jews?"  He answered him and said, "It is as you say."  So Pilate said to the chief priests and the crowd, "I find no fault in this Man."  But they were the more fierce, saying, "He stirs up the people, teaching throughout all Judea, beginning from Galilee to this place."  
 
When Pilate heard of Galilee, he asked if the Man were a Galilean.  And as soon as he knew that He belonged to Herod's jurisdiction, he sent Him to Herod, who was also in Jerusalem at this time.  Now when Herod saw Jesus, he was exceedingly glad; for he had desired for a long time to see Him, because he had heard many things about Him, and he hoped to see some miracle done by Him.  Then he questioned Him with many words, but He answered him nothing.  And the chief priests and scribes stood and vehemently accused Him.  Then Herod, with his men of war, treated Him with contempt and mocked Him, arrayed Him in a gorgeous robe, and sent Him back to Pilate.  That very day Pilate and Herod became friends with each other, for previously they had been at enmity with each other.
 
- Luke 23:1–12 
 
Yesterday we read that, after Christ's betrayal and arrest, 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."
 
  Then the whole multitude of them arose and led Him to Pilate.  And they began to accuse Him, saying, "We found this fellow perverting the nation, and forbidding to pay taxes to Caesar, saying that He Himself is Christ, a King."  Then Pilate asked Him, saying, "Are You the King of the Jews?"  He answered him and said, "It is as you say."  So Pilate said to the chief priests and the crowd, "I find no fault in this Man."  But they were the more fierce, saying, "He stirs up the people, teaching throughout all Judea, beginning from Galilee to this place."   My study Bible tells us that the religious accusations against Jesus (Luke 22:66-71) would not be enough to justify a death sentence under Roman occupation.  So, therefore, the chief priests invent false (Luke 20:20-26) and politically charged accusations in order to persuade Pilate to put Jesus to death.  Pilate's question ("Are You the King of the Jews?") is more a mockery of the accusation itself than of Jesus.  Clearly, he doesn't take the political charges seriously ("I find no fault in this Man").  The answer Jesus gives, "It is as you say," can also be translated more ambiguously, "You say so."
 
 When Pilate heard of Galilee, he asked if the Man were a Galilean.  And as soon as he knew that He belonged to Herod's jurisdiction, he sent Him to Herod, who was also in Jerusalem at this time.  Now when Herod saw Jesus, he was exceedingly glad; for he had desired for a long time to see Him, because he had heard many things about Him, and he hoped to see some miracle done by Him.  Then he questioned Him with many words, but He answered him nothing.  And the chief priests and scribes stood and vehemently accused Him.  Then Herod, with his men of war, treated Him with contempt and mocked Him, arrayed Him in a gorgeous robe, and sent Him back to Pilate.  That very day Pilate and Herod became friends with each other, for previously they had been at enmity with each other.  My study Bible comments that Herod sees Jesus as a novelty.  (Perhaps this is the way he had also viewed St. John the Baptist; see Mark 6:20.)  Christ's silence in this instance before Herod is an act of compassion.  To reveal divine mysteries in the face of such blasphemy would have brought Herod even greater condemnation.  According to St. Ambrose of Milan, says my study Bible, Herod is a figure who represents all unrighteous people who, if they don't recognize Jesus as the Christ, will never understand His words nor recognize His miracles.  
 
In terms of the "darkness" which we read about over the past few readings and those to come (see But this is your hour, and the power of darkness, Monday's reading), we see that darkness expressed in certain ways in today's reading as well.  There are first of all the deliberate falsehoods told to Pilate in order to extricate from him the death penalty for Jesus.  This is one level of darkness indeed, in which malice, spite, and envy play a great part in this devious behavior.  Note also that the chief priests and scribes offer to Herod the same false accusations.  There's the particular darkness of Pilate, who in fact can see that Jesus is innocent and that the accusations are preposterous, but who doesn't know nor understand Jesus.  And then there is the peculiar darkness of Herod, a Jew in some sense only by "training" in order to rule as tetrarch.  He knew John was a holy man, Mark's Gospel told us, and he delighted in asking questions and treating John as a sort of curiosity he had in his court for a while.  Here, Herod once again delights in being able to see Jesus, someone who is different and extraordinary, about whom we know he has heard much (Luke 9:9).  We're told that when Herod saw Jesus, he was exceedingly glad; for he had desired for a long time to see Him, because he had heard many things about Him, and he hoped to see some miracle done by Him.  Then he questioned Him with many words, but He answered him nothing.  Perhaps because he's been rebuffed by Jesus, who is not a pleasing plaything or curiosity as He answers nothing, and perhaps feeling justified through the vehement accusations of the chief priests and scribes, Herod, with his men of war, treated Him with contempt and mocked Him, arrayed Him in a gorgeous robe, and sent Him back to Pilate.  Luke's Gospel here witnesses the same mocking and humiliating behavior given to Jesus at His detention overnight in the home of the high priest (see yesterday's reading, above).   Jesus, responding to this kind of "darkness," which is based in a type of ignorance, answers nothing.  St. Ambrose, as noted in my study Bible, categorizes unrighteous people such as Herod as those who will never understand His words or even comprehend his miracles because they don't recognize Him as the Christ to begin with.  Perhaps it would be more clear to say that, because of their own blindness, they cannot.  There is a blindness (or darkness) which is born of not simply ignorance but a preference for a kind of brutality, a sheerly material outlook, one characterized by the kind of indulgence we can observe of Herod throughout the Gospels.  This is a man who cares for power and what he gets thereby, more interested in pleasing his men of war and his own sense of "honor" before them than the things which are God's.  It's a very interesting note that Luke adds for us to this passage: that very day Pilate and Herod became friends with each other, for previously they had been at enmity with each other.  Those familiar with any sort of hierarchy or bureaucracy can recognize such a friendship, based as it is on a kind of complement or courtesy of power, in that Pilate sent Jesus to Herod in what might be interpreted among the powerful as a gracious gesture of acknowledgment of his authority.  But there also might be a deeper sense here, also part of the darkness of the time, in that shared guilt or responsibility for injustice also seems to act as a kind of bind, even enslavement between people, a pact that ensures conspiracy when desired.  There are plenty of public scandals today which testify to this phenomenon at work among the powerful.  But let us consider here the grace of Jesus which stands alone among this darkness, mockery, lies, and injustice.  We -- especially in the modern Western world -- may be conditioned by our secular political perspectives to believe that it is always proper to speak out.  But Jesus knows something different, something better, and a deeper truth.  That not only would revealing more of the truth about Himself deliver an even greater condemnation to these men when they reject it, as they are bound to do (for it is judgment that is at work, the Judge who is standing before them), but that there is no purpose in delivering truth to those who cannot and will not see.  As He tried so hard to save Judas by any means available, so no doubt He would also try to save these others, if it were at all possible.  He gives us this touch -- a hint of wisdom, if we can but see it -- that there are times when it is proper not to speak, but to withdraw.  And so He does.  Midst the indignities, He holds His dignity, but the ignorant, in their darkness, cannot likely see it.  And so, this also explains His answer to Pilate, which might be translated, "You say so."   There is no point to answer what will not be clearly understood.  Perhaps it is Christ's humble demeanor which Pilate can easily read, for he's a shrewd man who's reached a position of authority in the Roman hierarchy.  Let us consider the time, and consider also what we might see around us in our own.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Monday, July 29, 2024

Hail, King of the Jews!

 
 When Pilate saw that he could not prevail at all, but rather that a tumult was rising, he took water and washed his hands before the multitude, saying, "I am innocent of the blood of this just Person.  You see to it."  And all the people answered and said, "His blood be on us and on our children."  Then he released Barabbas to them; and when he had scourged Jesus, he delivered Him to be crucified.  

Then the soldiers of the governor took Jesus into the Praetorium and gathered the whole garrison around Him.  And they stripped Him and put a scarlet robe on Him.  When they had twisted a crown of thorns, they put it on His head, and a reed in His right hand.  And they bowed the knee before Him and mocked Him, saying, "Hail, King of the Jews!"  Then they spat on Him, and took the reed and struck Him on the head.  And when they had mocked Him, they took the robe off Him, put His own clothes on Him, and led Him away to be crucified. 
 
- Matthew 27:24-31 
 
On Saturday, we read about Jesus brought to trial before Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor of Judea.   Jesus stood before the governor.  And the governor asked Him, saying, "Are You the King of the Jews?"  Jesus said to him, "It is as you say."  And while He was being accused by the chief priests and elders, He answered nothing.  Then Pilate said to Him, "Do You not hear how many things they testify against You?"  But He answered him not one word, so that the governor marveled greatly. Now at the feast the governor was accustomed to releasing to the multitude one prisoner whom they wished.  And at that time they had a notorious prisoner called Barabbas.  Therefore, when they had gathered together, Pilate said to them, "Whom do you  want me to release to you?  Barabbas, or Jesus who is called Christ?"  For he knew that they had handed Him over because of envy.  While he was sitting on the judgment seat, his wife sent to him, saying, "Have nothing to do with that just Man, for I have suffered many things today in a dream because of Him."  But the chief priests and elders persuaded the multitudes that they should ask for Barabbas and destroy Jesus.  The governor answered and said to them, "Which of the two do you want me to release to you?"  They said, "Barabbas!"  Pilate said to them, "What then shall I do with Jesus who is called Christ?"  They all said to him, "Let Him be crucified!"  Then the governor said, "Why, what evil has He done?"  But they cried out all the more, saying, "Let Him be crucified!"   

 "When Pilate saw that he could not prevail at all, but rather that a tumult was rising, he took water and washed his hands before the multitude, saying, "I am innocent of the blood of this just Person.  You see to it."  And all the people answered and said, "His blood be on us and on our children."  Then he released Barabbas to them; and when he had scourged Jesus, he delivered Him to be crucified.  My study Bible has a comment on verse 25, regarding the people's answer, "His blood be on us and on our children."  It notes that this verse has been used by certain groups to try to justify persecuting Jews, which is a grave and terrible sin.  It notes that what was seen by many as a curse is in fact a blessing which is invoked unwittingly, for Christ's blood is the source of everyone's redemption.  These words are implicitly spoken by anyone who sins.  My study Bible adds that St. John Chrysostom teaches that even those these particular Judeans under the coercion of the religious leaders "acted with such madness, so far from confirming a sentence on them or their children, Christ instead received those who repented and counted them worthy of good things beyond number."  Additionally, St.  Chrysostom goes on to note the thousands who were converted in Jerusalem on the Day of Pentecost (Acts 2:41) as evidence of Christ's mercy.  

Then the soldiers of the governor took Jesus into the Praetorium and gathered the whole garrison around Him.  And they stripped Him and put a scarlet robe on Him.  When they had twisted a crown of thorns, they put it on His head, and a reed in His right hand.  And they bowed the knee before Him and mocked Him, saying, "Hail, King of the Jews!"  Then they spat on Him, and took the reed and struck Him on the head.  And when they had mocked Him, they took the robe off Him, put His own clothes on Him, and led Him away to be crucified.  My study Bible states that every king is proclaimed by his soldiers.  Although the intention here is mockery, it is again prophetic that Jesus should be crowned and hailed as King by soldiers of the governor (see also John 11:49-51, where Caiaphas unwittingly prophesies of Christ's redemptive work).  This mockery shows Christ as the One despised and rejected by human beings and bears the iniquity of all of us (see Isaiah 53:3-9).  My study Bible notes also that Jesus is clothed in scarlet, which represents both His royalty and also the sins of humanity which He has taken upon Himself. 

My study Bible comments on verse 25, containing the curse "His blood be on us and on our children."   First noting that it's a great and terrible sin to use this as an excuse to persecute Jews, it adds importantly that this is an unwitting blessing.  It's important, to begin with, that we understand the important thing here is not exactly who is to blame for crucifying the innocent Christ.  Pilate seeks to wash his hands of the mess, but he can't evade his responsibility as governor for this decision.  Neither can the people who shout for Christ's crucifixion nor the religious leaders who exhort them to do so, and have presented Jesus to Pilate as a kind of fait accompli to have Him executed as a criminal.  All of them know that He is, in Pilate's words, a just Person.  What becomes really important is, first of all, everyone's capacity for repentance and thereby the receipt of Christ's saving grace.  What is also strikingly notable about this passage is a sort of crazy inversion of truth -- or perhaps we might call it truth hiding in plain sight.  What is meant as a curse is actually an invocation of a blessing, an unwitting statement of the power of Christ's blood to redeem and to save, to cast away sin and grant life.  His is the blood of the Passover but magnified to an eternal and truly universal sense of saving life.   The mocking scarlet robe given to Christ, and also the soldiers' ridiculing salute, "Hail, King of the Jews!" are also examples of the strange inversion of truth.  What is meant in derision is actually profound truth, again hiding in plain sight, obscured by terribly evil circumstances.   And the horrific evil we witness, of the ultimate Innocent knowingly unjustly condemned, abandoned, and given to torture and the most heinous form of punishment, is also a kind of strange inversion of truth.  For if we take it at its face value, and without the Resurrection that will follow, then all we see is a terrible monstrous evil.  But God will use even this as the foundation for the salvation of an entire created order, a whole universe, and grace abounding in all and through all things, and for all time.  This Christ knows and so willingly has gone to His death, with full knowledge He may be a stumbling block, and knowing the free will of people to reject what He has done and so reject their salvation.  But where He goes, He goes for us -- and in so doing, He proclaims the love of God for all.




Saturday, July 27, 2024

Have nothing to do with that just Man, for I have suffered many things today in a dream because of Him

 
 Now Jesus stood before the governor.  And the governor asked Him, saying, "Are You the King of the Jews?"  Jesus said to him, "It is as you say."  And while He was being accused by the chief priests and elders, He answered nothing.  Then Pilate said to Him, "Do You not hear how many things they testify against You?"  But He answered him not one word, so that the governor marveled greatly. 
 
Now at the feast the governor was accustomed to releasing to the multitude one prisoner whom they wished.  And at that time they had a notorious prisoner called Barabbas.  
 
Therefore, when they had gathered together, Pilate said to them, "Whom do you  want me to release to you?  Barabbas, or Jesus who is called Christ?"  For he knew that they had handed Him over because of envy.  While he was sitting on the judgment seat, his wife sent to him, saying, "Have nothing to do with that just Man, for I have suffered many things today in a dream because of Him."  But the chief priests and elders persuaded the multitudes that they should ask for Barabbas and destroy Jesus.  The governor answered and said to them, "Which of the two do you want me to release to you?"  They said, "Barabbas!"  Pilate said to them, "What then shall I do with Jesus who is called Christ?"  They all said to him, "Let Him be crucified!"  Then the governor said, "Why, what evil has He done?"  But they cried out all the more, saying, "Let Him be crucified!" 
 
 - Matthew 27:11-23 
 
 When morning came, all the chief priests and elders of the people plotted against Jesus to put Him to death.  And when they had bound Him, they led Him away and delivered Him to Pontius Pilate the governor.  Then Judas, His betrayer, seeing that He had been condemned, was remorseful and brought back the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and elders, saying, "I have sinned by betraying innocent blood."  And they said, "What is that to us?  You see to it!"  Then he threw down the pieces of silver in the temple and departed, and went and hanged himself.  But the chief priests took the silver pieces and said, "It is not lawful to put them into the treasury, because they are the price of blood."  And they consulted together and bought with them the potter's field, to bury strangers in.  Therefore that field has been called the Field of Blood to this day.  Then was fulfilled what was spoken by Jeremiah the prophet, saying, "And they took the thirty pieces of silver, the value of Him who as priced, whom they of the children of Israel priced, and gave them for the potter's field, as the LORD directed me."
 
 Now Jesus stood before the governor.  And the governor asked Him, saying, "Are You the King of the Jews?"  Jesus said to him, "It is as you say."  And while He was being accused by the chief priests and elders, He answered nothing.  Then Pilate said to Him, "Do You not hear how many things they testify against You?"  But He answered him not one word, so that the governor marveled greatly.  My study Bible comments that the chief priests hide their real charge against Jesus -- the claim of equality with God -- because this would not persuade the governor to sentence Him to death.  Instead they devise to present a charge of treason, that Jesus called Himself the King of the Jews.  Such a crime would carry the death penalty, as it constitutes a challenge to Roman rule.
 
 Now at the feast the governor was accustomed to releasing to the multitude one prisoner whom they wished.  And at that time they had a notorious prisoner called Barabbas.  My study Bible comments that Jesus is the true Son of the Father, yet the name Barabbas means "son of the father."  Ironically, these crowds have to choose between one Son of the Father and the other.   My study Bible says that as they influence the crowds to choose Barabbas, these chief priests indicate to which father they belong -- the devil (John 8:44).  

Therefore, when they had gathered together, Pilate said to them, "Whom do you  want me to release to you?  Barabbas, or Jesus who is called Christ?"  For he knew that they had handed Him over because of envy.  While he was sitting on the judgment seat, his wife sent to him, saying, "Have nothing to do with that just Man, for I have suffered many things today in a dream because of Him."  But the chief priests and elders persuaded the multitudes that they should ask for Barabbas and destroy Jesus.  The governor answered and said to them, "Which of the two do you want me to release to you?"  They said, "Barabbas!"  Pilate said to them, "What then shall I do with Jesus who is called Christ?"  They all said to him, "Let Him be crucified!"  Then the governor said, "Why, what evil has He done?"  But they cried out all the more, saying, "Let Him be crucified!"   Here Pilate tries three times to release Jesus, but the chief priests and elders persuade the people that they should ask for Barabbas and destroy Jesus, thus refuting Pilate's three attempts.  In the end, my study Bible says, they are demanding the release of a rebel like themselves.
 
 Pilate tries three times to save Jesus, because it's the time of the Passover Feast, and so the occasion when the Romans would give amnesty to one of the prisoners of the Empire, giving them back to the community, so to speak.  Pilate, being an outsider to the politics of the temple, hasn't really any problem with Jesus.  Jesus is not like Barabbas, who was likely what may be called a brigand, one involved in insurrection against the Romans.  Barabbas is a kind of known quantity to Pilate, the type of man seen as a criminal because he was involved in some sort of violence against the state.  State power and order were the greatest priorities for the Romans, and so certainly for this Roman governor keeping those like Barabbas under control would have been an obvious concern.  But Jesus is another matter altogether.  Well-spoken, and meek (or gentle), Jesus is someone that a Roman official could possibly regard as possessing some kind of virtue.  Barabbas, by contrast, is here called a notorious prisoner.  Moreover, Pilate's own wife confesses to him that he'd best beware of how he treats Jesus, even sending Pilate a message:  "Have nothing to do with that just Man, for I have suffered many things today in a dream because of Him."   Among the peoples and cultures of the Mediterranean still today, and certainly then, portents and omens such as dreams have some mysterious significance.  One could possibly ignore them and regret it.  In a world such as Pilate lived, confidence and trust would be in short supply; perhaps only a wife could be trusted to confide such a message honestly (her fate, after all, rested with him as well).  But the Gospels tell us that Pilate honestly has found nothing wrong or criminal in Jesus ("Why, what evil has He done?").  Moreover, he knows that these religious leaders who want Jesus executed seem, apparently to Pilate, to want to do so out of envy.  Perhaps Jesus is a type of leader in the society that might be easier to deal with than those who favor brigands like Barabbas.  At any rate, whatever Pilate is thinking, it's his job to maintain the peace and order such as it was, or his own career would certainly be on the line.  So for all these various reasons, Pilate tries to free Jesus.  But the religious leaders are experts in coercion and manipulation, and they have determined that they are to be rid of Jesus, who seems to challenge their authority and has favor with the people.   He wants to change things, and especially He challenges the ways that they do things.  He's a threat to them in this sense.  Pilate fails to persuade the crowds, and perhaps he sees there is no sense arguing with the religious leaders; he's not going to change their minds.  But instead of asserting his authority -- which he could do as the power rests with him in these circumstances -- he won't challenge them anymore.  Perhaps he thinks he's got enough trouble on his hands with insurrections as it is; perhaps he thinks it's canny to do some horse trading and give in to the religious leadership here to stay on good terms as their cooperation is necessary to Rome.   At any rate, it is here where our reading cuts off for today, and so we must wait until Monday's reading to see the decision we know will happen, and Pilate's manner of delivering it.  But let us consider Pilate's judicial decision here as one that weighs on a scale of balance:  on one side is the Jewish nation as represented by the religious leaders and the crowd's demand for Barabbas, and on the other side is Jesus in whom Pilate can find no evil.  How would we see the balance on this scale if we were Pilate?  We know it's heavily tipped in favor of Christ, for we know His substance and who He is.  But Pilate has things he knows about these leaders such as their envy, he knows of his wife's troubling dream, he knows that rationally he has found no evil that Christ has done.  We each might find ourselves at some time in Pilate's seat, needing to make a decision between forces that are highly coercive -- people whose cooperation we might need, and the truth that seems to present itself before us.  Think about Pilate the next time such a circumstance presents itself; for we don't know who might be standing before us.  It might be one of "the least of these," a brother of Jesus.









Tuesday, February 13, 2024

What is truth?

 
 Then they led Jesus from Caiaphas to the Praetorium, and it was early morning.  But they themselves did not go into the Praetorium, and it was early morning.  But they themselves did not go into the Praetorium, lest they should be defiled, but that they might eat the Passover.  
 
Pilate then went out to them and said, "What accusation do you bring against this Man?"  They answered and said to him, "If He were not an evildoer, we would not have delivered Him up to you."  Then Pilate said to them, "You take Him and judge Him according to your law."  Therefore the Jews said to him, "It is not lawful for us to put anyone to death," that the saying of Jesus might be fulfilled which He spoke, signifying by what death He would die.  
 
Then Pilate entered the Praetorium again, called Jesus, and said to Him, "Are You the King of the Jews?"  Jesus answered him, "Are you speaking for yourself about this, or did others tell you this concerning Me?"  Pilate answered, "Am I a Jew?  Your own nation and the chief priests have delivered You to me.  What have You done?"  Jesus answered, "My kingdom is not of this world.  If My kingdom were of this world, My servants would fight, so that I should not be delivered to the Jews; but now My kingdom is not from here."  Pilate therefore said to Him, "Are You a king them?"  Jesus answered, "You say rightly that I am a king.  For this cause I was born, and for this cause I have come into the world, that I should bear witness to the truth.  Everyone who is of the truth hears My voice."  
 
Pilate said to Him, "What is truth?"  And when he had said this, he went out again to the Jews, and said to them, "I find no fault in Him at all.  But you have a custom that I should release someone to you at the Passover.  Do you therefore want me to release to you the King of the Jews?"  Then they all cried again, saying, "Not this Man, but Barabbas!"  Now Barabbas was a robber.
 
- John 18:28–40
 
Yesterday we read that, following Christ's arrest and His being taken to the home of the high priest for a night trial, Simon Peter followed Jesus, and so did another disciple.  Now that disciple was known to the high priest, and went with Jesus into the courtyard of the high priest.  But Peter stood at the door outside.  Then the other disciple, who was known to the high priest, went out and spoke to her who kept the door, and brought Peter in.  Then the servant girl who kept the door said to Peter, "You are not also one of this Man's disciples, are you?"  He said, "I am not."  Now the servants and officers who had made a fire of coals stood there, for it was cold, and they warmed themselves.  And Peter stood with them and warmed himself.  The high priest then asked Jesus about His disciples and His doctrine.  Jesus answered him, "I spoke openly to the world.  I always taught in synagogues and in the temple, where the Jews always meet, and  in secret I have said nothing.  Why do you ask Me?  Ask those who have heard Me what I said to them.  Indeed they know what I said."  And when He had said these things, one of the officers who stood by struck Jesus with the palm of his hand, saying, "Do You answer the high priest like that?"  Jesus answered him, "If I have spoken evil, bear witness of the evil; but if well, why do you strike Me?"  Then Annas sent Him bound to Caiaphas the high priest.  Now Simon Peter stood and warmed himself.  Therefore they said to him, "You are not also one of His disciples, are you?"  He denied it and said, "I am not!"  One of the servants of the high priest, a relative of him whose ear Peter cut off, said, "Did I not see you in the garden with Him?"  Peter then denied again; and immediately a rooster crowed. 
 
Then they led Jesus from Caiaphas to the Praetorium, and it was early morning.  But they themselves did not go into the Praetorium, and it was early morning.  But they themselves did not go into the Praetorium, lest they should be defiled, but that they might eat the Passover.    My study Bible cites the commentary of St. John Chrysostom here.  St. Chrysostom notes the irony that Christ's accusers apparently do not fear being defiled by condemning an innocent Man to death -- but at the same time, they would not set foot into a court of justice (they themselves did not go into the Praetorium).   
 
 Pilate then went out to them and said, "What accusation do you bring against this Man?"  They answered and said to him, "If He were not an evildoer, we would not have delivered Him up to you."    Then Pilate said to them, "You take Him and judge Him according to your law."  Therefore the Jews said to him, "It is not lawful for us to put anyone to death," that the saying of Jesus might be fulfilled which He spoke, signifying by what death He would die.  My study Bible comments that since the chief priests of the Jews had no actual crime with which to make an accusation against Jesus, Pilate here refuses to pass judgment.  When the chief priests tell him, "It is not lawful for us to put anyone to death," they are not referring to the Law of Moses.  Instead, they are referring to the laws of Roman occupation, which Pilate knows well, as the Romans reserved the right to execute people.  So, therefore, the chief priests are relying on Pilate to sentence Jesus to death.  Moreover, under Jewish law, stoning was prescribed as the usual means of execution.  But, my study Bible notes, Jesus has prophesied that He would be killed by being lifted up on the Cross (John 3:14; 8:28; 12:32-33), as He had foreknowledge that He would die, not at the hands of the Jews, but by the Roman method of crucifixion.

Then Pilate entered the Praetorium again, called Jesus, and said to Him, "Are You the King of the Jews?"  Jesus answered him, "Are you speaking for yourself about this, or did others tell you this concerning Me?"  Pilate answered, "Am I a Jew?  Your own nation and the chief priests have delivered You to me.  What have You done?"  Jesus answered, "My kingdom is not of this world.  If My kingdom were of this world, My servants would fight, so that I should not be delivered to the Jews; but now My kingdom is not from here."  Pilate therefore said to Him, "Are You a king them?"  Jesus answered, "You say rightly that I am a king.  For this cause I was born, and for this cause I have come into the world, that I should bear witness to the truth.  Everyone who is of the truth hears My voice."   My study Bible comments that it is unheard of that the accused would have to name the charges against himself in any court, as it is the captors who would be the ones to name the crime.  It says that since Pilate has to ask Jesus what the charges are, it shows that the chief priests could not name any crime He might have committed.  More importantly, this shows that Jesus was the Lord over the events of His death (see John 18:4, 8).  Even the governor has to come to Christ in order for His trial to proceed. 
 
Pilate said to Him, "What is truth?"  And when he had said this, he went out again to the Jews, and said to them, "I find no fault in Him at all.  But you have a custom that I should release someone to you at the Passover.  Do you therefore want me to release to you the King of the Jews?"  Then they all cried again, saying, "Not this Man, but Barabbas!"  Now Barabbas was a robber.   Today's lectionary reading only extends to verse 38, but I have added on the final two verses of the chapter, as they apply to my study Bible's observation.  It says that although Pilate knows Christ to be innocent of any crime, he here attempts to strike a compromise with the Jews by declaring Christ guilty, but freeing Him on account of the Passover.  In this way, the chief priests would get their official declaration of guilt, and at the same time Christ would not be unjustly punished.  

It's interesting to ponder Pilate's question, "What is truth?"  To the religious Jews of the Council, and in particular to the Pharisees, perhaps notions of truth would already have some historical religious or spiritual context or meaning.  But Pilate here is the voice of a world without the religious background of the Jews and Jewish spiritual history.  His question, perhaps, comes in the context of the classical educational understanding of the Roman and Greek world, in particular, one assumes of the philosophers, logicians, mathematicians, and even the poets and playwrights.  The question of Pilate, "What is truth?" is not something that comes out of what we now would call secular society, but in a sense it is related to our modern popular concepts of secularism.   That is, it doesn't come from the religious understanding we know that Jesus encompasses in His fullness.  However, that does not mean that our every day or "secular" notions of truth are absent from Christ's truth.  Christ embraces a deeper and fuller notion of truth, one that includes the Creator of all and things divine and spiritual -- without leaving out our common understanding of the word.  When Pilate asks, "What is truth?" it seems that we might assume the irony here is not lost at all on the original hearers of this Gospel, nor on St. John (the author of the Gospel) at all.  For Pilate's truth embraces this sort of hopeless compromise, that makes no real internal logical sense, but instead makes sense only in terms of expedience.  In that sense, it's not really a true compromise at all, because there is no internal cohesion to the logic of both condemning Christ and setting Him free.  More importantly, the truth is missing from this compromise, for Christ is neither guilty of the charges made against Him (something Pilate knows already), and neither is He embraced by the people as their King, but rather rejected by this crowd stirred up by the religious rulers.  So neither outcome would be, in fact, "true."  Neither is Christ a king in the secular sense of the Gentiles, or in the sense of those who await a Jewish Messiah in imitation of King David.  He fits none of these things in truth.  So while Pilate is coming from an entirely different perspective and cultural understanding, his own notions of truth are incomplete and even self-contradictory, an indication of something that will not stand forever (see Christ's parable of a kingdom divided against itself here).  From the point of view of the Gentile world, and those of us whose ancestors came from the pagan cultures of the Greco-Roman world and its universal influence, we should understand our early Christian forbears as those for whom the greater truth of Christ made such an astounding and transformational impact on the society, and how these great empires were to eventually become Christian.   When we encounter falsehoods cloaked in expedient solutions, half-truths, partial understanding disguised as truth, and all manner of self-contradictory things professed to us as new ideas and concepts, we, also, should remember this greater fullness of truth that so impacted the ancient world.  Even with its tremendous heritage of culture, education, art, poetry, science, and so much more, Christ became the fullness of the truth they had been reaching toward.  Modern facile assumptions that Christian holidays or celebrations simply supplanted ancient ones in order to wield influence are mistaken, particularly in their underestimation of the intelligence of our ancient peoples.   If the solstice had spiritual meaning for the ancients because of the light growing in the world, it would come to have a fuller and deeper meaning in commemorating the Light who is Christ coming into the world.  If the ancients understood truth as central to logic, truth would take on even greater dimensions in the spiritual reality of Christ as the Word or Logos.  If life was to be cherished, it would become something vastly more wealthy and productive in the Holy Spirit, the giver of life.  Greek philosophy was not abandoned, but instead used to create theology and serve the Church.  Architecture and art became even more splendid in the great cathedrals and iconography of the Church.  The literature of classical culture was preserved in monasteries where notions of heroism, of truth, of goodness, and love were deepened and expanded in the nobility and even humility of Christ -- which was offered not to a few elite, but to all of us, even to slaves.  Let us understand Pilate's question, and how it would come to be answered in Christ.  Let us observe how those of the ancient world did not simply reject the good things of their past, but rejoiced in the greater fullness of truth offered in Christ.   They would come to understand that whatever was true, or good, or beautiful served the Person who was truth.  That is, a greater truth of righteousness and grace, which embraced, enhanced, and uplifted what they knew to be true, and good, and beautiful. 


Friday, September 8, 2023

And He was numbered with the transgressors

 
 And they brought Him to the place Golgotha, which is translated, Place of a Skull.  Then they gave Him wine mingled with myrrh to drink, but He did not take it.  And when they crucified Him, they divided His garments, casting lots for them to determine what every man should take.  Now it was the third hour, and they crucified Him.  And the inscription of His accusation was written above:
THE KING OF THE JEWS.
With Him they also crucified two robbers, one of His right and the other on His left.  So the Scripture was fulfilled which says, "And He was numbered with the transgressors."  And those who passed by blasphemed Him, wagging their heads and saying, "Aha!  You who destroy the temple and build it in three days, save Yourself, and come down from the cross!"  Likewise the chief priests also, mocking among themselves with the scribes, said, "He saved others; Himself He cannot save.  Let the Christ, the King of Israel, descend now from the cross, that we may see and believe."  Even those who were crucified with Him reviled Him. 
 
- Mark 15:22–32 
 
 Yesterday we read that, as the crowd demanded the prisoner Barabbas be released to them, Pilate answered and said to them again, "What then do you want me to do with Him whom you call the King of the Jews?"  So they cried out again, "Crucify Him!"  Then Pilate said to them, "Why, what evil has He done?"  But they cried out all the more, "Crucify Him!"  So Pilate, wanting to gratify the crowd, released Barabbas to them; and he delivered Jesus, after he had scourged Him, to be crucified. Then the soldiers led Him away into the hall called Praetorium, and they called together the whole garrison.  And they clothed Him with purple; and they twisted a crown of thorns, put it on His head, and began to salute Him, "Hail, King of the Jews!"  Then they struck Him on the head with a reed and spat on Him; and bowing the knee, they worshiped Him.  And when they had mocked Him, they took the purple off Him, put His own clothes on Him, and led Him out to crucify Him.  Then they compelled a certain man, Simon a Cyrenian, the father of Alexander and Rufus, as he was coming out of the country and passing by, to bear His cross.
 
And they brought Him to the place Golgotha, which is translated, Place of a Skull.  Then they gave Him wine mingled with myrrh to drink, but He did not take it.  And when they crucified Him, they divided His garments, casting lots for them to determine what every man should take.  Now it was the third hour, and they crucified Him.  And the inscription of His accusation was written above:  THE KING OF THE JEWS.  My study Bible comments here on the inscription of His accusation that what was intended as an accusation and a mockery became instead a triumphant symbol.  Pilate's act is, in fact, prophetic, showing that those who rejected Him had risen against their own King, and the cross was the means by which Christ established His Kingdom.  The third hour is about 9:00 in the morning.
 
 With Him they also crucified two robbers, one of His right and the other on His left.  So the Scripture was fulfilled which says, "And He was numbered with the transgressors."  And those who passed by blasphemed Him, wagging their heads and saying, "Aha!  You who destroy the temple and build it in three days, save Yourself, and come down from the cross!"  Likewise the chief priests also, mocking among themselves with the scribes, said, "He saved others; Himself He cannot save.  Let the Christ, the King of Israel, descend now from the cross, that we may see and believe."  Even those who were crucified with Him reviled Him.  My study Bible notes that Christ being crucified between two robbers is not only a fulfillment of the Scripture (verse 28; Isaiah 53:12), but it shows also that He is completely identifying with sinful humanity.

We look at this scene of Christ crucified, and we cannot bear to see Him suffer.  We want to turn away from the mocking and the derision, from the taunts of those who pass by and blaspheme, and from even the chief priests and scribes.  They continue to demand proofs, even as Christ is on the Cross:  "He saved others; Himself He cannot save.  Let the Christ, the King of Israel, descend now from the cross, that we may see and believe."  So low has Christ been made, the text tells us, that even those who were crucified with Him reviled Him.  Christ is now taunted even by the others who are crucified with Him.  This is in a certain sense the great scandal.  For how can God be brought this low in human terms?  How can God be so humiliated, driven in pain and torture on the Cross, and reviled by all, even challenged by those who yet taunt Him by demanding proofs about Him?  At the same time, this scandal is the uniqueness of the Christian faith, for by observing His suffering, on all these levels of pain and humiliation, we also observe what my study Bible notes, that He has completely identified with sinful humanity.  Whatever we go through, He experiences here.  He has done nothing worthy of such treatment, but He experiences all of it, and with us.  For that is, ultimately, our God.  If we suffer in this world from effects of evil, so God also suffers with us, and has chosen to do so voluntarily.  So, we're left with the question, how can God suffer like us?  Or perhaps, why would God suffer like us, and with us?  Aside from these questions, we are given a conundrum:  why would God tolerate evil and suffering to exist at all?  In John's Gospel, we are given one clear answer written in Scripture for us, given as the word of Jesus Himself:  "And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up,  that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life. For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved" (John 3:14-17).  If we neither know nor understand anything else, we are to understand God's love, that through Christ's suffering God calls us into communion with God, for an "everlasting" life with God.  This everlasting description is meant to describe a quality of life, not a quantity or a time-period.  It teaches us about the life that remains after all else has passed, of a substance that outweighs all else, like Christ's words that will remain even though heaven and earth may pass away.  God calls us to a communion of life that is unsurpassed by anything else, because in suffering with us, so He also calls us to live fully in Him, to participate in Christ's life, even as He is also risen.  In His suffering, death, and eternal life, Christ is truly the Alpha and the Omega of all things, and there He calls us to be with Him as well.  In Revelation 22:13, Christ says, "I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End, the First and the Last."  For as He suffers with us, He also calls us to live with Him.  If the story of our first ancestors tell us that, without proper preparation, they eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, and so suffer -- then the story of Christ is the call toward the fullness of this knowledge in Him and shared with us in that sense of the eternal, that which surpasses all things, a kind of final proper destiny which Christ, our Door, opens to us.  For He is the King of all who would be saved, the One who shares life with us even to the Cross, and offers us everything in return.  For He is, above all, the God who is love.




Thursday, September 7, 2023

Crucify Him!

 
 Pilate answered and said to them again, "What then do you want me to do with Him whom you call the King of the Jews?"  So they cried out again, "Crucify Him!"  Then Pilate said to them, "Why, what evil has He done?"  But they cried out all the more, "Crucify Him!"  So Pilate, wanting to gratify the crowd, released Barabbas to them; and he delivered Jesus, after he had scourged Him, to be crucified. 

Then the soldiers led Him away into the hall called Praetorium, and they called together the whole garrison.  And they clothed Him with purple; and they twisted a crown of thorns, put it on His head, and began to salute Him, "Hail, King of the Jews!"  Then they struck Him on the head with a reed and spat on Him; and bowing the knee, they worshiped Him.  And when they had mocked Him, they took the purple off Him, put His own clothes on Him, and led Him out to crucify Him.  

Then they compelled a certain man, Simon a Cyrenian, the father of Alexander and Rufus, as he was coming out of the country and passing by, to bear His cross.
 
- Mark 15:12–21 
 
Yesterday we read that immediately, in the morning following Jesus' night trial at the home of the high priest, the chief priests held a consultation with the elders and scribes and the whole council; and they bound Jesus, led Him away, and delivered Him to Pilate.  Then Pilate asked Him, "Are You the King of the Jews?"  He answered and said to him, "It is as you say."  And the chief priests accused Him of many things, but He answered nothing.  Then Pilate asked Him again, saying, "Do You answer nothing?  See how many things they testify against You!"  But Jesus still answered nothing, so that Pilate marveled.  Now at the feast he was accustomed to releasing one prisoner to them, whomever they requested.  And there was one named Barabbas, who was chained with his fellow rebels; they had committed murder in the rebellion.  Then the multitude, crying aloud, began to ask him to do just as he had always done for them.  But Pilate answered them, saying, "Do you want me to release to you the King of the Jews?"  For he knew that the chief priests had handed Him over because of envy.  But the chief priests stirred up the crowd, so that he should rather release Barabbas to them.  

 Pilate answered and said to them again, "What then do you want me to do with Him whom you call the King of the Jews?"  So they cried out again, "Crucify Him!"  Then Pilate said to them, "Why, what evil has He done?"  But they cried out all the more, "Crucify Him!"  So Pilate, wanting to gratify the crowd, released Barabbas to them; and he delivered Jesus, after he had scourged Him, to be crucified.  Pilate turns to the crowd, hoping to release Jesus (whom he knows to be innocent) in spite of the chief priests, but the crowd senselessly follows wherever they are stirred up to go.  My study Bible comments here that Pilate's sin was less than that of the Jewish leaders who delivered Christ to him (John 19:11), because the Jews had the Law and the prophets to instruct them, and Pilate did not.  Pilate was not without sin, however, for in his own desire to gratify the crowd, he knowingly sent an innocent Man to death.  
 
 Then the soldiers led Him away into the hall called Praetorium, and they called together the whole garrison.  And they clothed Him with purple; and they twisted a crown of thorns, put it on His head, and began to salute Him, "Hail, King of the Jews!"  Then they struck Him on the head with a reed and spat on Him; and bowing the knee, they worshiped Him.  And when they had mocked Him, they took the purple off Him, put His own clothes on Him, and led Him out to crucify Him.  My study Bible notes here that every king is proclaimed by his soldiers.  Although the intention here is to mock Christ, it is prophetic that Jesus should be crowned and hailed as King by soldiers of the governor.  In this understanding, see also John 11:49-51, in which Caiaphas unwittingly prophesies of Christ redemptive work.  My study Bible comments that this mockery shows Jesus as the One despised and rejected by human beings who bears the iniquity of all of us (see Isaiah 53:3-9).  Jesus is clothed with purple, a kind of deep purple-red called porphyra/πορφύρα in Greek, which represents both His royalty and the sins of humankind which He has taken upon Himself.
 
 Then they compelled a certain man, Simon a Cyrenian, the father of Alexander and Rufus, as he was coming out of the country and passing by, to bear His cross.  My study Bible notes here that Mark mentions Simon as the father of Alexander and Rufus.  It notes that this is likely so because they were still living, and therefore possibly known to Mark's hearers.  It says that the spiritual message here is that we, like Simon (whose name means "obedience"), are not simply called to carry the cross which Christ sets on us.  But we are also to see Christ in others, so we are called to bear each others burdens as well (Galatians 6:2). 

Possibly the most striking thing in today's reading is the way this crowd responds so easily to being "stirred up" by the chief priests, to demand to  put Jesus to death by crucifixion.  The crowd first demands, as is the custom, that a prisoner be released to them because of the Passover feast.  But it's as if they were simply waiting for a prompt, primed by their own mood to demand and to shout.  The crowd turns into a mob, not asking for clemency for a prisoner, but now demanding the blood of Christ in the most gruesome form of punishment reserved for the worst of criminals.  "Crucify Him!" they shout.  It is as if the worst in human nature is something the chief priests know well, and use to their advantage.  For this crowd would seek not just to release someone to freedom, but to demand that another be crucified, to demand the worst punishment for someone else.  It's not clear if this crowd knows Jesus.  It's not clear if they were present on the day of the Triumphal Entry, when Christ was welcomed into Jerusalem as Messiah.  As Jesus Himself said at His arrest at night in the garden of Gethsemane, "Have you come out, as against a robber, with swords and clubs to take Me?  I was daily with you in the temple teaching, and you did not seize Me."  But were these people in the temple, listening to Jesus dispute with the religious leaders?  Are they pilgrims to Jerusalem for the feast?  It is hard to know, but it is easy to see what their motivations are, for as Jesus has said, "by their fruits you will know them."  We can see what they demand in the end.  This crowd is a good example of why the Church has historically taught that we ought not to be driven by our passions.  It's not that we are to be depleted of passions, but that they can so often lead us astray.  Rather, our passions, in the historical view of the Church, ought to be tempered by faith, put to use given to us by God.  St. Paul writes, "And those who are Christ’s have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires" (Galatians 5:24).   The bloodlust of the crowd is a primary example of what it is we don't want to be led by in life, of just why we seek to "crucify the flesh with its passions and desires."  The crowd essentially is led by being stirred up by these corrupt leaders who in turn are led by their own passion of envy against Christ.  While we're never told we won't feel any of these things, we're constantly counseled to cultivate a dispassion.  That is, not to be led by our passions, but to submit them to our faith, and to the cultivation of our own mastery of ourselves in service to faith, so that we won't be slaves to them.  Does this crowd know what it is doing?  Do these people understand they are demanding the Christ be crucified?  How can they understand the magnitude of the sin when they don't see the magnitude of the light of Christ's holiness and goodness for the world?  This brings us to yet another aspect of the danger of being led by passion -- they blind us to the full reality of what we do, of the things in which we engage ourselves.  We're blinded to holiness and subject only to being led by that which does not want us to be fully aware of what we're doing, and of the holiness of God who is always present to us.  For this reason the Church has throughout history (as well as Jewish spiritual tradition before us) given us ways to cultivate our own good discipline, with practices of worship and prayer, and fasting so that we learn we are capable of mastering our own passions.  We also seek to fast from sin, and the things that lead us astray.  Let us consider, especially at this time when so many passions seem to be stirring all over the world for so many reasons, how important it is to remember what we are to be about, to follow Christ's words regarding our own watchfulness (Mark 13:33, 14:38), especially in times of tribulation and fearful sights.  Our passions are that much more likely to be stirred, and we do not wish to be misled with a crowd that only follows the crowd.  Our Lord has taught us to be aware, discerning, alert -- and to be good disciples.  Let us especially remember this today, even when so many forget to do so.










Wednesday, September 6, 2023

For he knew that the chief priests had handed Him over because of envy

 
 Immediately, in the morning, the chief priests held a consultation with the elders and scribes and the whole council; and they bound Jesus, led Him away, and delivered Him to Pilate.  Then Pilate asked Him, "Are You the King of the Jews?"  He answered and said to him, "It is as you say."  And the chief priests accused Him of many things, but He answered nothing.  Then Pilate asked Him again, saying, "Do You answer nothing?  See how many things they testify against You!"  But Jesus still answered nothing, so that Pilate marveled.  

Now at the feast he was accustomed to releasing one prisoner to them, whomever they requested.  And there was one named Barabbas, who was chained with his fellow rebels; they had committed murder in the rebellion.  Then the multitude, crying aloud, began to ask him to do just as he had always done for them.  But Pilate answered them, saying, "Do you want me to release to you the King of the Jews?"  For he knew that the chief priests had handed Him over because of envy.  But the chief priests stirred up the crowd, so that he should rather release Barabbas to them.
 
- Mark 15:1–11 
 
Yesterday we read that as Peter was below in the courtyard, one of the servant girls of the high priest came.  And when she saw Peter warming himself, she looked at him and said, "You also were with Jesus of Nazareth."  But he denied it, saying, "I neither know nor understand what you are saying."  And he went out on the porch, and a rooster crowed.  And the servant girl saw him again, and began to say to those who stood by, "This is one of them."  But he denied it again.  And a little later those who stood by said to Peter again, "Surely you are one of them; for you are a Galilean, and your speech shows it."  Then he began to curse and swear, "I do not know this Man of whom you speak!"  A second time the rooster crowed.  Then Peter called to mind the word that Jesus had said to him, "Before the rooster crows twice, you will deny Me three times."  And when he thought about it, he wept.
 
  Immediately, in the morning, the chief priests held a consultation with the elders and scribes and the whole council; and they bound Jesus, led Him away, and delivered Him to Pilate.  My study Bible comments that while the Jewish religious law dictated the death penalty for blasphemers (Leviticus 24:16), under Roman occupation the Jews were prohibited from carrying out an execution.  So, therefore, they had to get a sentence issued by Pilate, the Roman governor.  

Then Pilate asked Him, "Are You the King of the Jews?"  He answered and said to him, "It is as you say."  My study Bible notes that Pilate's question, "Are You the King of the Jews?" comes from the political charges made against Jesus. Since Pilate would not execute a man over religious matters, the chief priests had to find a political crime of which to accuse Jesus which would guarantee the death penalty.  Therefore they accuse Jesus of making Himself an earthly king, which would be considered treason against Caesar.

And the chief priests accused Him of many things, but He answered nothing.  Then Pilate asked Him again, saying, "Do You answer nothing?  See how many things they testify against You!"  But Jesus still answered nothing, so that Pilate marveled.   According to my study Bible, that the Savior answered nothing fulfills the prophecy of Isaiah 53:7, which portrays the Messiah being silent as He is led "as a sheep to the slaughter."

Now at the feast he was accustomed to releasing one prisoner to them, whomever they requested.  And there was one named Barabbas, who was chained with his fellow rebels; they had committed murder in the rebellion.  Then the multitude, crying aloud, began to ask him to do just as he had always done for them.  But Pilate answered them, saying, "Do you want me to release to you the King of the Jews?"  For he knew that the chief priests had handed Him over because of envy.  But the chief priests stirred up the crowd, so that he should rather release Barabbas to them.  Pilate seeks to release Jesus, for he knows He is innocent (Mark 15:10, 14; John 18:38, 19:4-6).  So, he turns to the crowd for support, hoping they will ask for Jesus in spite of the chief priests.  My study Bible notes also that Barabbas means "son of the father."  So, ironically, the crowds must choose between one Son of the Father and the other.  It says that by influencing the crowds to choose Barabbas, the chief priests indicate to which father they belong (see John 8:44). 
 
 It is quite interesting that Barabbas means "son of the father," and therefore -- as my study Bible points out -- the crowds must choose between one Son of the Father and the other.  It gives a type of poetic expression to something much more common than one might suspect, that the true and false are often not such glaringly obvious choices, but rather that one is a counterfeit of the other.  It is as if one poses as the other in order to mislead, and for the devil's own ends, who is himself the father of the false (see again John 8:44).  This is also illustrated quite clearly by Jesus' parable of the Wheat and the Tares (Matthew 13:24-30).  This parable is frequently called the parable of the Wheat and the Weeds, but it's important to understand that these particular "weeds" (or tares) are a plant that closely resembles wheat, a kind of false wheat that is inedible for human beings.  It's especially noteworthy that these weeds resemble closely the wheat, the crop beneficial for human beings, because this is the way we're taught that evil operates, that the devil operates.  So human beings frequently find that they have a choice not just between what's true and what's false, but rather between what is true and authentic versus what is a sham, a false presentation designed to resemble what is true but in effect presenting to us shabby and misleading goods that are not good for us at all.  This is the case with Barabbas and Christ.  One indeed is the Son of the Father, and the other is a false liberator, one in whom the people should not place their hopes.  Throughout the history of Israel, there is this basic struggle between reliance upon God, and placing faith in being like the Gentiles.  That is, faith in weaponry, wealth, and material power.  It is not that these things should not exist, but they must not come first.  When finally David is chosen as God relents and allows the people the kings they seek, it is of primary importance that David is a follower of God, one who will keep all of God's commandments.  Strict material power and prosperity does not come first.  Should David fail to do this, the kingdom will be lost.  The same lesson is given to David's successor, his son Solomon, and while Solomon begins well, other false gods -- for all kinds of reasons -- begin to creep in.  The eventual outcome is loss of the kingdom, and exile for the people.  In Matthew's Gospel, when Peter took up a sword to defend Christ at His arrest, Jesus says, "Put your sword in its place, for all who take the sword will perish by the sword" (Matthew 26:52).  But this works as a kind of warning stretching over this period in which Jesus prophesies the destruction to come in Israel, specifically at the Siege of Jerusalem in AD 70.  For faith in those like Barabbas will not ultimately save Israel nor will it save the temple.  The counterfeit always resembles the authentic and true, in order to deceive.  It is a similar analogy to heresies in the Church; they sound like the truths we know, but ultimately they deceive and lead to the wrong place.  In a world dominated by the garish and fantastic in our entertainments, and seduced by violence and manipulation, it's important to remember the nature of deceit:   that so often it takes on the costume of a phony resemblance to truths we know, a false front.  Good and evil frequently take on the characteristics of the wheat and the weeds that look so much alike, and it's only in the consumption and aftermath that we realize we've been had.  Here the chief priests stirred up the crowd for their own ends, while the true Son of God stands meekly without speaking in His own defense.  Barabbas, the "son of the father" comes as brigand and revolutionary, perhaps akin to the popular idea of a Robin Hood, but who will he save?  How will he save?  For there is one Savior here, and He is easily overlooked by those who trust in mammon before God.  How will we know true from false?  Let us put our trust first in God, and seek God's kingdom, and let all things fall in line behind that priority.  In our passions we will be misled, in our astonishment and awe for power and all the products of material achievement we can be deceived, in all the means of manipulation available to empire we may find ourselves with false information and misleading news.  Those who seek to deceive do so for their own gain and motivations, even acccusing others of things they've done themselves.  Ultimately it all depends upon where our trust is first, so that we may know the counterfeit.  Jesus warns us of false saviors, false christs, teaching us that "by their fruits you will know them" (Matthew 7:15-20).  Bad fruit and "wheat" that fails to nurture are warnings to us about the paths we choose, and in whom we will put our trust.  Let us follow Him.