John 19:17-22
"So
they took Jesus, and he, carrying his Cross for himself, went out to the place
that is called the Place of a Skull, which is called in Hebrew
"Golgotha." They crucified him there, and with him they crucified two
others, one on either side, and Jesus in the middle. Pilate wrote a title, and
put it on the Cross. On it was written: `Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the
Jews.' Many of the Jews read this title, because the place where Jesus was
crucified was near the city; and it was written in Hebrew, in Latin and in
Greek. So the chief priests repeatedly said to Pilate: `Do not write, `The King
of the Jews.' But write, `He said I am the King of the Jews.'' Pilate answered:
`What I have written, I have written.'"
There
was no more terrible death than death by crucifixion. Even by Romans'
standards, crucifixion was regarded with horror. The Roman philosopher Cicero
declared that it was "the most cruel and horrifying death."
Crucifixion
was never used as a method of execution in Rome, but only in the provinces, and
even there only in the case of slaves. It was unthinkable that a Roman citizen
should die such a death. Cicero says: "It is a crime for a Roman citizen
to be bound; it is a worse crime for him to be beaten; it is well nigh
parricide for him to be killed; what am I to say if he be killed on a cross? A
nefarious action such as that is incapable of description by any word, for
there is none fit to describe it." It was that death, the most dreaded in
the ancient world, the death of slaves and criminals, that Jesus died.
The
routine of crucifixion was always the same. When the case had been heard and
the criminal condemned, the judge uttered the fateful sentence: "Ibis ad
crucem," "You will go to the cross." The verdict was carried out
there and then. The condemned man was placed in the centre of a quaternion, a
company of four Roman soldiers. His own cross was placed upon his shoulders.
Scourging always preceded crucifixion and it is to be remembered how terrible
scourging was. Often the criminal had to be lashed and goaded along the road,
to keep him on his feet, as he staggered to the place of crucifixion. Before
him walked an officer with a placard on which was written the crime for which
he was to die and he was led through as many streets as possible on the way to
execution, to discourage onlookers not to do what the criminal did.
There
was a double reason for that. There was the grim reason that as many as
possible should see and take warning from his fate. But there was a merciful
reason. The placard was carried before the condemned man and the long route was
chosen, so that if anyone could still bear witness in his favour, he might come
forward and do so. In such a case, the procession was halted and the case
retried. In Jerusalem the place of execution was called The Place of a
Skull, in Aramaic, "Golgotha." (Calvary is the Latin for the Place of
a Skull.) It must have been outside the city walls, for it was not lawful to
crucify a man within the boundaries of the city.
By
Roman law a criminal must hang upon his cross until he died from hunger and
thirst and exposure, a torture which sometimes lasted for days; but by Jewish
law the body must be taken down and buried by nightfall. In Roman law the
criminal's body was not buried but simply thrown away for the vultures and the
crows and the pariah dogs to dispose of; but that would have been quite illegal
under Jewish law and no Jewish place would be littered with skulls.
So
Jesus went out, bruised and bleeding, his flesh torn to ribbons by the
scourging, carrying his own Cross to the place where he was to die.
In this
passage there are two further things we must note. The inscription on Jesus'
Cross was in Hebrew, in Latin and in Greek. These were the three great
languages of the ancient world and they stood for three great nations. In the
economy of God every nation has something to teach the world; and these three
stood for three great contributions to the world and to world history. Greece
(Greek) taught the world Philosophy; Rome (Latin) taught the world law and good
government; the Hebrews (Hebrew) taught the world religion and the worship of
the true God. The consummation of all these things is seen in Jesus. In him was
the supreme Philosophy and the highest thought of God. In him was the law of
God and the kingdom of God. In him was the very image of God. All the world's
seekings and strivings found their consummation in him. It was symbolic that
the three great languages of the world should call him king.
There
is no doubt that Pilate put this inscription on the Cross of Jesus to irritate
and annoy the Jews. They had just said that they had no king but Caesar; they
had just absolutely refused to have Jesus as their king. And Pilate, by way of
a grim jest, put this inscription on his Cross. The Jewish leaders repeatedly
asked him to remove it; and Pilate refused. "What I have written," he
said, "I have written." Here is Pilate the inflexible, the man who
will not yield an inch. So very short a time before, this same man had been
weakly vacillating as to whether to crucify Jesus or to let him go; and in the
end had allowed himself to be bullied and blackmailed into giving the Jews
their will. Adamant about the inscription, he had been weak about the
crucifixion.
It is
one of the paradoxical things in life that we can be stubborn about things
which do not matter and weak about things of supreme importance. If Pilate had
only withstood the blackmailing tactics of the Jews and had refused to be
coerced into giving them their will with Jesus, he might have gone down in
history as one of its great, strong men. But because he yielded on the
important thing and stood firm on the unimportant, his name is a name of shame.
Pilate was the man who took a stand on the wrong things and too late.
On-lookers!
John
19:23-24 "When the soldiers had crucified Jesus, they took his clothes,
and they divided them into four parts, a part for each soldier; and they took
his tunic. It was a tunic which had no seam, woven throughout in one piece from
the top. They said to each other: `Don't let's cut it up, but let us cast lots
for it, and settle that way who will have it.' This happened that the passage
of scripture which says, `They divided my clothes among themselves, and they
cast lots for my raiment,' might be fulfilled. So, then, that is what the
soldiers did."
No
picture so shows the indifference of the world to Christ, then and now. There
on the Cross Jesus was dying in agony; and there at the foot of the Cross the
soldiers threw their dice as if it did not matter. There was once an artist who
painted Christ standing with nail-pierced hands outstretched in a modern city,
while the crowds surge by. Not one of them is even sparing him a look, except
only a young hospital nurse; and beneath the picture there is the question:
"Is it nothing to you all you who pass by?" (Lam.1:12).
The
tragedy is not the hostility of the world to Christ; the tragedy is the world's
indifference which treats Christ as if he does not matter.
There
are two further points which we must note in this picture. There is a legend
that Mary herself had woven the seamless tunic and given it as a last gift to
her son when he went out into the world. If that be true--and it may well be,
for it was a custom of Jewish mothers to do just that--there is a double
poignancy in the picture of these insensitive soldiers gambling for the tunic
of Jesus which was his mother's gift.
But
there is something half-hidden here. Jesus' tunic is described as being without
seam, woven in one piece from top to bottom. That is the precise description of
the linen tunic which the High Priest wore. Let us remember that the function
of the priest was to be the liaison between God and man. The Latin for this
kind of person is "pontifex," which means "bridge-builder."
No one ever did that as Jesus did. He is the perfect bridge through which we
come to God. To him be honour and glory and power and grace, forever and ever.
Amen.
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