Untitled Sermon (2)
Luke recorded a middle phase in all of this action. When Pilate found that Jesus was from Galilee, he sent him off to Herod Antipas, who was also in town for the Passover. But Herod only mocked Jesus and returned him to Pilate (Luke 23:6–12).
Later, Peter commented on how Jesus had handled these injustices (see 1 Peter 2:20–23).
But Jesus gave him no answer. Pilate was greatly amazed that Jesus, facing the death penalty, would not defend himself because, if Jesus did not answer, Pilate would have to judge him guilty. Recognizing the obvious plot against Jesus, Pilate wanted to let him go, but he was already under pressure from Rome to keep peace in his territory. The last thing Pilate needed was a rebellion over this quiet and seemingly insignificant man.
Secular power understands very little of real faith, and often the least effective means of teaching is to launch into elaborate sermons with fancy rhetoric and engaging illustrations. Secular governors have heard plenty of that kind of talk.
The essence of these accusations by the chief priests and elders is recorded in Luke 23:1–5. The Jewish leaders had to fabricate new accusations against Jesus when they brought him before Pilate. The charge of blasphemy would mean nothing to the Roman governor, so they accused Jesus of three other crimes: (1) encouraging the people not to pay their taxes to Rome; (2) claiming he was a king—“the King of the Jews”; and (3) causing riots all over the countryside. Tax evasion, treason, and terrorism—all these would cause Pilate to be concerned. These accusations were false, but the religious leaders were determined to have Jesus killed.
However, Pilate’s reluctance to prosecute Jesus was undoubtedly due more to his contempt for the Jews than for any particular consideration of Jesus.
Pilate could sense that the solemn rabbi standing before him was unlikely to lead a revolt against Rome. In Jesus’ eyes, Pilate did not see the hardened glare of a Zealot. Jesus was no revolutionary.
Jesus did claim to be a king—to remain silent would be like denying it (see also 26:64). But he wasn’t claiming kingship in any way that would threaten Pilate, Caesar, or the Empire. Jesus’ kingship was spiritual; a charge of treason required it to be political.
Pilate decrees the sentence, as his position required him to do (27:26): Ibis in crucem (“you will mount the cross”; Blinzler 1959:238).
Given the dangers of riots, Pilate’s acquiescence to the masses at the Passover (Mt 27:24) was likely (R. Brown 1994:722).
Pilate probably saw Jesus in the terms suggested in John 18:36–38: as one of the relatively harmless wandering philosopher-kings known to him from Greco-Roman tradition. Roman officials were generally not inclined to execute (hence, perhaps, make martyrs of) those they saw as harmless fools (compare Jos. War 6.305).
Pilate presumably thought that it was safer to release Jesus, the “so-called Christ” (vv. 17, 22), than alternatives like Barabbas, who, like those ultimately executed with Jesus, was a “robber” (vv. 38, 44; Mk 15:7), the aristocracy’s derisive title (shared by Josephus) for insurrectionists. Pilate
By Roman law, a defendant who refused to make a defense had to be assumed guilty (Lane 1974:551); yet Roman officials typically offered “a defendant three opportunities to respond before convicting by default” (France 1985:389), and Pilate offers Jesus at least two here (v. 13). It is no wonder, then, that Pilate is amazed by Jesus’ silence (v. 14). Such astonishment on the part of judges appears also in Jewish accounts of defiant martyrs who—in contrast to their judges—valued God’s kingdom more than their lives (Stanton 1974:36).
This part of Matthew’s account has less to do with Jesus than with Pilate, however: it is not Jesus but the character of Pilate that is on trial. Though Pilate knows the unjust motivation of the charges (v. 18) and receives a divine warning (v. 19), political expediency takes precedence over justice.
Pilate’s “great amazement” (27:14) appears to be mingled with respect for Jesus and antipathy for the Jewish leaders, and so he takes tentative steps to release the prisoner. Meanwhile Jesus’ silence testifies mutely to his willingness (cf. 26:53) to suffer as “a ransom for many” (20:28).
In other words, the vindicated Lord is the crucified Messiah (cf. N.A. Dahl, The Crucified Messiah [Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1974], pp. 10–36).
Spurgeon explained why Pilate marveled greatly: “He had seen in captured Jews the fierce courage of fanaticism; but there was no fanaticism in Christ. He had also seen in many prisoners the meanness which will do or say anything to escape from death; but he saw nothing of that about our Lord. He saw in him unusual gentleness and humility combined with majestic dignity. He beheld submission blended with innocence.” (Spurgeon)
i. There is a time to defend one’s cause or one’s self, but those times are rare. When we rise to our own defense, we would usually be better off to keep silent and to trust God to defend us.
The [you] in an emphatic position in verse 11 suggests this = You the King of the Jews!” (Bruce)
Of course, we can only wonder what Pilate thought when he first set eyes on Jesus, when he saw this beaten and bloodied Man before him. Jesus didn’t look especially regal or majestic as He stood before Pilate, so the Roman governor was probably sarcastic or ironic when he asked, “Are You the King of the Jews?”
Now Jesus stood before the governor: History shows us Pontius Pilate was a cruel and ruthless man, unkind to the Jews and contemptuous of almost everything but raw power. Here, he seems out of character in the way he treated Jesus. Jesus seems to have profoundly affected him.
The leaders must have said, “This man claims to be a king.” So Pilate asked if that were true. Jesus admitted that he was indeed a king, but even then Pilate knew this was a religious matter and that Jesus was innocent of treason or rebellion. So he tried to acquit him.
I suggested in an earlier study that Pilate had probably been contacted the previous night by one of the Sanhedrin, probably Caiaphas, to be sure that he would hear the case in the morning. He must have agreed to a quick pro forma trial. But when the leaders appeared the next day, they were startled to find that the governor wanted to begin a formal hearing. They seem to have been caught off guard since they did not have their charges against Jesus well thought out.
Luke refers to an apparently similar massacre in which Pilate “mixed” the blood of certain Galileans “with their sacrifices” (Luke 13:1). Pilate was not an upright nor noble man.
On another occasion he appropriated money from the sacred Corban treasury to build a fifty-mile aqueduct to the city, provoking outrage from the citizens. When the people gathered to protest the sacrilege, Pilate sent soldiers into the crowd disguised as common people who, on a prearranged signal, pulled out hidden clubs and daggers and attacked the demonstrators.
When he arrived in Judea the first time, he sent his legions to Jerusalem by night, bearing standards blazoned with the images of Tiberius, which the Jews considered idolatrous. That he did it by night shows that he knew what he was doing, but that he did it at all betrays his brutish nature.
Pilate revealed his nature by his oversight of Judea. He was the sixth procurator of that region, having assumed his post in A.D. 26. The governors who had served before him had been sensitive to Jewish sensibilities and had generally avoided acts that could offend or inflame the people. But Pilate showed no such sensitivity.
The greatest puzzle of the Roman trial is the contrast between what we know of Pilate’s character from secular sources and his conduct at the trial of Jesus as reported in the Gospels. Pilate was not a noble person. He had come from Spain, served under Germanicus in the wars on the Rhine, and had risen to his relatively minor post as governor of Judea through his marriage to Claudia Proculla, a granddaughter of the emperor Augustus. The marriage was a smart career move but a moral disgrace. Claudia’s mother, Julia, was notorious for her coarse immorality even in decadent Rome, and her daughter was like her. Augustus would refer to them saying, “Would I were wifeless or had childless died.”
Three chapters ago when we began the study of Christ’s trials, I pointed out that they present a unique situation. Jesus was tried, on the one hand, by an ecclesiastical court, seeking to apply the revealed law of God to Jesus’ case, and, on the other hand, by a civil court, seeking to apply what is generally thought to be the most highly developed law known to man. Jewish law was the most humane of legal systems. It did everything possible to preserve life and avoid executions. Roman law was known for its comprehensiveness, systematization of statutes, specification of procedures, and affixing penalties. It has been said of the ancient world that Judea gave religion, Greece gave letters, and Rome gave law.
So Pilate was greatly astonished. This was clearly not going to be the sort of trial to which he was accustomed.
In the trial before the Sanhedrin Jesus was silent when a variety of allegations were made, but he spoke when the high priest put to him a question he was perfectly entitled to put by virtue of his office. Similarly, he responded to Pilate when the governor asked the question he was bound to ask because of his office.27 But when Pilate drew attention to the accusations of these Jewish officials it was another matter; he did not reply to Pilate then.
They were not concerned with justice but with an execution.
The specific allegations did not matter; they were determined to have him executed, and to refute their accusations was irrelevant. If those charges were shown to be false, they would raise others.
Now we come to the accusation that we would expect. The Jewish leaders kept accusing him (the present infinitive points to a continuous process);25
It seems clear that Matthew is following his customary practice of abbreviating the narrative. If all that happened was that Pilate asked whether Jesus was king of the Jews and received an affirmative answer, even a hesitant one, surely the trial would have been over and Pilate would have given a sentence that would have gotten rid of this “king.” But John tells us of a discussion between Jesus and Pilate about the nature of kingship in which Jesus made it clear that he had no intention of fighting against the Romans.
“You are saying it.” Either “Yes” or “No” would have been misleading. Had he said “Yes,” Pilate would inevitably have understood that Jesus was claiming to be an earthly king and that he was indeed the rebel the Jewish leaders claimed he was (NIV’s “Yes, it is as you say” is a trifle too definite). But to say “No” would negate the fact that he was indeed King, King in the kingdom of God. So his answer means that he was indeed a king, but not in the sense that Pilate used the term.24
Clearly one sight of Jesus was enough to tell this experienced governor that this was no terrorist, no leader of a revolt aimed at overthrowing the Romans. Pilate would also have known that Jesus had no high position, no wealth, no soldiers, a preposterous position for anyone claiming to be a king.
The contrast between Jesus and his accusers is evident in every scene; the passively suffering Messiah awaits his destiny in total control. Yet if Jesus refused to answer, Pilate would have judged him guilty. At the trials of early martyrs who also maintained silence, the Roman judges allowed them three opportunities to speak up and then pronounced them guilty. However, in the context it seems clear that Pilate did not take Jesus’ silence as proof of guilt but as cause for wonder (so Davies and Allison).
The majestic dignity of Jesus is stressed in all four accounts, and it is likely Pilate is impressed in spite of himself. It may be that Jesus answered those questions that were official but refused to answer the allegations/false charges (so Morris).
Pilate does not understand his silence, and it is hard to know if he is impressed or angered, for Roman trials were built on the defendant answering the charges. Probably he is mystified and cannot understand why Jesus will not respond to such serious charges.
As in 26:62, there is here another allusion to Isa 53:7 and the suffering Servant whose silence is like a lamb led to the slaughter.
John 18:34–37 shows Jesus’ answer was actually more extensive than this and explained his true kingship more completely. Pilate does not react to this and seems aware that Jesus is no threat to Rome, no revolutionary brigand who poses any danger to his office.
And Jesus answered, “So you say” (ὁ δὲ Ἰησοῦς ἔφη, Σὺ λέγεις). Jesus’ “so you say” (σὺ λέγεις) is the third time Jesus has given this evasive answer (26:25, 64), which agrees with the statement but shows there are important differences (note that in the Sanhedrin trial Jesus went on to spell them out). Therefore, the prophecy of Judas’s betrayal (26:25), the Sanhedrin trial (26:64), and the trial before Pilate are all connected by Jesus’ answer, which shows he transcends the implications of all three.
Pilate’s initial question here shows he has already heard the charges. Roman law consisted of hearing the charges, then hearing the accused defend himself and the eyewitness testimony, followed by retiring with his advisors, considering it, and rendering the verdict, which would be carried out immediately.
There are known examples of the release of prisoners, as a means of gaining popular support, elsewhere in the ancient world, some of which are associated with festivals,27
We shall note at 28:15 that Ioudaioi in the NT sometimes has a more restricted reference to Judeans rather than to ethnic Jews generally, and a provincial reference would be especially relevant to Pilate, whose jurisdiction covered Judea and Samaria, but not Galilee and Perea with their substantial Jewish populations.
As an outsider he was perhaps unaware (like some modern preachers!) of the difference in outlook between the pilgrim group arriving at the city and the local population with whom he was now confronted. The choice between Jesus of Nazareth and Jesus Barabbas would not be difficult for a Jerusalem crowd to make, both because a Galilean would not be their natural choice, and because the type of “Messiahship” represented by this Galilean, with his talk of loving enemies, had far less popular appeal than the direct action represented by Barabbas’ “insurrection” (Mark 15:7).21
The fuller account of the Roman trial in John 18:28–19:16 provides further insights into the pressures Pilate was under, and the reasons for his ambivalent attitude to Jesus.20 He was in a no-win situation.
First, Pilate is apparently impressed by Jesus’ silence under interrogation: his “surprise” probably indicates a favorable impression (see below). Second, he has correctly assessed that the Jewish leaders’ desire to eliminate Jesus stems not from concern for Roman law and order but from their own religio-political self-interest (v. 18). And third, his wife’s dream provides a supposedly supernatural attestation to Jesus’ innocence (v. 19).
The charge which the Sanhedrin members have agreed to present to Pilate is phrased in political language: Jesus has claimed to be “the king of the Jews”. This term, which we have so far met only in 2:2 as the title used by the magi for the new-born ruler, now becomes central to the story, as the basis of Jesus’ condemnation, of his mockery by the Roman soldiers (v. 29), and of his public humiliation on the cross (v. 37), while the Jewish leaders will use their own more Jewish version of it to mock Jesus (v. 42). “King of the Jews” is used only by non-Jews—the magi, Pilate and Roman soldiers; the Jewish leaders use their preferred self-designation “Israel.” But it is the term “king” which is deliberately sensitive:16 a Roman governor dare not ignore a claim to political leadership among the Jews, whose last official “king” was Herod,17 now replaced by the direct rule of the Roman prefect of Judea. And Jesus has given the Jewish leaders a sound basis for this charge by his acceptance of the title “Messiah,” underlined by his ride up to the city proclaimed as the “son of David” (21:9), the “king” predicted in Zech 9:9–10. “King of the Jews” is thus an appropriate translation of Jesus’ messianic claim into language a Roman governor could understand and must take seriously. Pilate will, however, show in vv. 17 and 22 that he is also aware of the Jewish term: “Jesus who is known as Messiah.” We have noted earlier the ambivalence of Jesus toward messianic language (see on 16:16, 20); now we see in practice how it can be used against him.18
Peter elsewhere mentions ideas similar to the thought that Christ ‘in spirit’ preached through Noah, for in 1:11 the Spirit of Christ is said to have been active in the prophets of the Old Testament era (cf. 1 Cor. 10:4).