Garbage – John 19: 18

There they crucified him, and with him two others—one on each side and Jesus in the middle.

As a Christian I think of Jesus as the most important person in history. He is, after all, the critical link between God, man’s creator, and man, the creation. Jesus is the Son of God. He was present at the creation of the world and was the means of creation. We owe everything that exists to this one Being.

It would seem appropriate that if the Son of God were to be crucified, it would be a Big Deal. The eyes of all the world would be focused on that moment. Mankind, in all its glory, is now going to crucify its’ creator.

Uh… no.

It wasn’t like that.

There was nothing special going on that day. Just another crucifixion. Two other men were crucified that day as well.

It was more like taking out the garbage.

The “garbage” was hung on a pole alongside the road for all to see. A warning to other would-be ne’er-do-wells. People walking along that road might turn their heads away in disgust. Others might be attracted to the sight, looking and jeering. After all, they didn’t have TV back in Jesus’ day. Watching someone die might be considered entertaining.

But Jesus was not treated any different than any other criminal that had died along that road. He was just another body on just another cross slowly dying in the heat of the desert sun.

Application: In this verse we get a sense of the depth of abandonment Jesus experienced. He was less than special. He was completely ignored by the world. Just another body on a pole, being put to death for who-knows-what bad thing he did. Ignored by all but a very few who actually knew who he was. When our efforts to do good in this world seem ignored and unnoticed, it is helpful to remember that the most amazingly good thing that was ever done for you and me was done in total ignominy.

Food for Thought: Take a few minutes and read through the entire Gospel of John. At what point in the story do you ever think it will end up like this? How does this scene add to your understanding of Christ’s humility?

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The Skull – John 19: 17

Carrying his own cross, he went out to the place of the Skull (which in Aramaic is called Golgotha).

There are any number of ways that a prisoner could be conveyed from the governor’s palace to the place of execution. They could be carried on a cart, tied to a horse, dragged, or made to walk. In Jesus’ case, he had to carry his cross.

Was he carrying the whole cross or only the top crossbar?

I don’t know. I don’t imagine that it matters. Having been flogged across the back and shoulders there would be nothing left to safely lean a piece of wood on. Any pressure would hurt. Rough wood on a torn back would be excruciatingly painful.

The soldiers would be obligated to make the process as painful as possible. The humiliation of the “criminal” was paramount. The pain would be blinding. The noise and jeers of the soldiers painful to hear. The shame of being treated like a criminal dehumanizing. In fact, the whole process de-humanized a person.

The place of the Skull is not known for certain today but we know it was close to the city and outside of the city walls. It was near a main road so that people could see what happens to those who deserve punishment. (Golgotha comes from the Aramaic word for “skull” and Calvary is derived from the Latin word for the same thing.)

Carrying his cross, Jesus walked… (Did they even let him wear sandals or was he barefoot?)

Carrying his cross, Jesus walked for what must have seemed like an eternity. Taunted, whipped, prodded by Roman soldiers, surrounded by jeering, spitting Jews. Laughter ringing in his ears.

I am reminded of what Jesus said in his Sermon on the Mount:

You have heard that it was said, ‘Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth.’ But I tell you, do not resist an evil person. If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to them the other cheek also. And if anyone wants to sue you and take your shirt, hand over your coat as well. If anyone forces you to go one mile, go with them two miles. Give to the one who asks you, and do not turn away from the one who wants to borrow from you.

(Matthew 5: 38-42)

Application: Jesus didn’t just die on the cross for us, he also carried our cross for us. He taught us to endure evil people. This is perhaps the hardest lesson of all.

Food for Thought: Sometimes crosses can be big, sometimes they can be small. How would you define the word “cross” the way I just used it?

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Just a Job – John 19: 16b

So the soldiers took charge of Jesus.

At this point in John’s gospel, the story races along. With just a few words, John tells us about the crucifixion. As I ponder this, I have to wonder what John might have been feeling as he wrote his gospel. After all, he was there, watching it all happen.

It may be that John loses track of Jesus for a while. Another possibility is that the memories are too painful to recall in detail. When Pilate is debating Jesus’ fate with the Jewish leaders, Jesus is there in plain sight for all to see. But now, Pilate has washed his hands of the whole situation and allowed the Jews to have their way. He turns Jesus over the soldiers.

The “soldiers” John refers to are not strangers to meting out punishment. This is their job. If I imagine the kind of people they were, it is easy to see the faces of myself and others I know as the faces of these soldiers. They are not scholars or deep thinkers. They are just doing a job. Like any job, a person tries to make the best of it. With them, the crucifixion wouldn’t be personal. It is just another day.

What they see before them when Jesus is handed over is not a man, but a body that doesn’t know it is dead yet. Their job is to inflict pain. Their function in society is to help maintain order. People see what happens to those who break the law. The idea is that the work the soldiers do discourages others from making the same mistake.

These men do not know Jesus is innocent. All they know is that like yesterday and the day before and the week before that the men they are told to crucify get crucified.

Application: Sometimes people who do mean things are just doing their job. The nurse that administers the injection, the dentist that pulls the tooth, the doctor that amputates a limb all do things that hurt us in the short term. In the long term, they are doing their best to help. It is doubtful that any of the soldiers wanted the job that they had. We live in a broken world. In their broken way, they were trying to do what was right. Sometimes our ways of doing things fall into that category, too.

Food for Thought: As our Lord is handed off to the executioners, how do we get our heads around the incredible sacrifice he made to redeem us from sin?

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Allegience – John 19: 13-16

When Pilate heard this, he brought Jesus out and sat down on the judge’s seat at a place known as the Stone Pavement (which in Aramaic is Gabbatha). It was the day of Preparation of the Passover; it was about noon.
“Here is your king,” Pilate said to the Jews.
But they shouted, “Take him away! Take him away! Crucify him!”
“Shall I crucify your king?” Pilate asked.
“We have no king but Caesar,” the chief priests answered.
Finally Pilate handed him over to them to be crucified.

I consider this passage to be the nadir of Jewish history. Early in their history Israel offended God when they demanded to have a human king like all the other nations. (1 Samuel 10: 19) Then, throughout the time of the kings, Israel fell away time and again. They denied God and they spurned his prophets. Throughout their history, God has always been their real king. Now they deny God altogether.

“We have no king but Caesar.”

Scripture says, “For God is the King of all the earth; sing to him a psalm of praise.” (Psalm 47:7) What must God have thought when he heard that? What did Jesus think? The statement has the effect of pledging allegiance to Caesar and at the same time denying allegiance to God.

“We have no king but Caesar.”

Really?

Application: It pays to know who you owe allegiance to. In the large scheme of things we have only two choices; God or Satan. Satan, of course, is by his nature deceptive and so he cloaks his reign in the lie that a person who serves him is somehow serving their self-interest. God, who by his nature is truthful, offers us fulfillment and peace if we serve Him because that is what we were created for. Choose wisely.

Food for Thought: In this passage we see Pilate give in to the Jews. To make that happen we see the Jews deny their God and pledge themselves to Caesar. What does the Jews’ behavior say about them? How would Pilate see the Jews in this light?

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Squeezed – John 19: 12b

…but the Jewish leaders kept shouting, “If you let this man go, you are no friend of Caesar. Anyone who claims to be a king opposes Caesar.”

The response to Pilate trying to set Jesus free is immediate and blunt. No more “Mr. Nice Guy.” The Jewish leaders start making threats and bullying. They know Pilate’s Achille’s heel. His power depends on doing a good job governing. Doing a good job governing is measured by how well he keeps the peace. The crowd threatens to tear the town up if Pilate doesn’t give them what they want.

What kind of people do this? What kind of people resort to threats, bullying, and intimidation to get what they want?

I suppose as kids we all experimented with different ways to get our wants filled. Some of us found that bullying got us into trouble. Others found that they could get away with it. Then, we all grew up.

What happens growing up today isn’t all that different than what happened two thousand years ago. Some people grew up being bullies. Some of those bullies became Jewish leaders. Some of those leaders wanted Jesus out of the way and they knew how to put the squeeze on Pilate to get what they wanted.

Application: The world wasn’t fair two thousand years ago and it is not fair today. There are still bullies in the world and they know how to pressure people to get what they want. Sometimes it can be frightening to have a child-like bully in an adult body come after you. It takes courage to stand up to the bully. It takes faith to believe that no matter what happens, God has our back.

Food for Thought: How does submitting to Christ impact our human desire to bully people to get our way?

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Power-Faux – John 19: 12a

From then on, Pilate tried to set Jesus free…

Pilate had just told Jesus, “…I have the power … to free you…” At the time he said that he was trying to coerce Jesus into answering his question about where he was from. As it turns out, Pilate did not have the power to free Jesus. If he had today’s verse would have read, “Then Pilate set Jesus free.” But it doesn’t say that. Pilate didn’t set Jesus free. Not because he did not want to, but because he could not.

Why?

What was the power that the Jews had over Pilate? How was it that the governed were able to govern the governor?

Perhaps Pilate’s success as governor depended in part on his relationship with the chief priests and Pharisees. If that were the case, then his “power” would be partially dependent on the leaders of the Jews. If he were to free Jesus in opposition to the will of the Jews they would turn the power they had against him. The result might be that he would lose his position, his wealth, and his livelihood if not his own life.

Jesus wasn’t impressed by Pilate’s claim to power because he knew exactly how much power Pilate actually had. It wasn’t much.

Application: One of Satan’s most effective tools is the lie that we are more important or powerful than we are. Woe to the person who thinks that they are indispensable and when they leave or retire they find out that things go on just as before without them. Paul puts it this way: “Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the faith God has distributed to each of you.” (Romans 12: 3b)

Food for Thought: What would have happened if Pilate had set Jesus free?

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Comfort – John 19: 11b

Therefore the one who handed me over to you is guilty of a greater sin.

Looking at life through God’s eyes offers a lot of interesting insights. Jesus is talking with the man who has just had him flogged and humiliated. The pain is fresh and intense. Most people after being whipped and humiliated would either be completely cowed or indignant and enraged. Jesus was neither.

Pilate begins to wonder who Jesus really is and where he comes from. Jesus does not answer. He is not here to convert Pilate. He is here to be crucified.

Confronted by Jesus’ silence, Pilate tries to goad Jesus into responding. He says to Jesus, “Don’t you realize I have power either to free you or to crucify you?

What is he really saying?

He says, “I have power.” That power, he says, can be used to free Jesus or crucify him. Pilate normally deals with people who will do anything to live. Jesus knows that life in a physical body is not really living. Life with God is what true living is all about.

Instead of answering Pilate’s question about where he comes from, Jesus says something amazing.

”You would have no power over me if it were not given to you from above.”

He is not taking away from Pilate’s authority here. He acknowledges his authority … with a twist. Instead of allowing that Pilate’s authority comes from Caesar, he points out that it comes from God.

Jesus again speaks as one who is not from around here. He speaks as one who knows what God sees and what God thinks. He continues:

”Therefore the one who handed me over to you is guilty of a greater sin.”

It is tempting for us to want to pass judgment on Pilate as a “bad guy.” After all, he is the one who was responsible for ordering the crucifixion of our Lord. Yet Jesus seems unconcerned. Instead, he offers comfort to Pilate. In effect, he says that what Pilate is doing (or is going to do) is not as bad as what the chief priests and Pharisees did in bringing Jesus to Pilate.

Later, on the cross, Jesus would say, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.”* Who was he asking forgiveness for? Was it the chief priests? The Jews in general? The Roman soldiers? Or was it for all mankind? All of us, even Pilate?

Application: At this point in his ministry, Jesus has become the sacrificial lamb. His job is not to beg for his life or argue with his antagonists, but to allow his Father’s will to be carried out. Even in the midst of what was already unbearable pain after the flogging, Jesus shows concern for the human judge tasked with condemning him to death. He explains that Pilate’s real power comes from God above and that whatever sin he is guilty of is less than the Jews themselves. How gracious is that? Should we be any less gracious with those whom God has put in authority over us?

Food for Thought: How does God weigh sin? Why is Pilate’s sin less than the Jews who brought Jesus to him?

*(Luke 23: 34)

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Power – John 19: 9b-11a

…but Jesus gave him no answer.  “Do you refuse to speak to me?” Pilate said. “Don’t you realize I have power either to free you or to crucify you?”
Jesus answered, “You would have no power over me if it were not given to you from above.”

Pilate is starting to wonder about who Jesus is and what he is. When asked where he comes from, Jesus simply does not answer.

Pilate is not used to being ignored. As governor in a world where life is cheap, he is used to people being afraid of him. When he asks a question he always gets an answer. But not today. Today, standing before Jesus, Pilate’s question is ignored.

John’s picture of Pilate is sketchy, but we still have quite a bit of information.

Pilate is a man who holds a high official position with the Roman government.

The chief priests and the crowd that brought Jesus came early in the morning. (Had Pilate even had his coffee yet?)

Immediately the Jews start making demands of Pilate. He doesn’t like that and he doesn’t agree with them.

Emotions are running high on both sides. Pilate is afraid.

Then Pilate finds out that Jesus might be the Son of God. Now Pilate is more afraid.

Nothing seems normal on this most unusual day. The supposed criminal is acting like the adult in the room, and the supposed adults outside are acting like criminals. Finally, Pilate lashes out in frustration, “Don’t you realize I have the power either to free you or to crucify you?”

Jesus’ answer fits in well with this most unusual day. He says, “You would have no power over me if it were not given to you from above.”

Application: In the midst of pressure from the crowds, abuse by the soldiers, incredible pain from the wounds on his body and Pilate’s questioning, Jesus gives a brilliantly rational statement of fact. Power comes from God above. Even the power to crucify his own Son. We would do well to remember that at home, at work, and in the public square. Life is better when we see it the way God sees it.

Food for Thought: Jesus tells Pilate that the power he has over himself comes from God. What were the extents of this power? Did Pilate have the power to choose not to crucify Jesus?

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Wonder – John 19: 8-9a

When Pilate heard this, he was even more afraid, and he went back inside the palace. ‘’Where do you come from?” he asked Jesus…

At this point, Pilate is starting to wrestle with the same question we have wrestled with throughout John’s gospel. Where did Jesus come from? Jesus consistently speaks as if he is not from around here. He talks about coming from the Father and going to the Father. He says that before Abraham was, “I am.” He looks at the world and the people in it as if he had traveled a long way to visit.

Now Pilate asks, ”Where do you come from?”

Pilate’s relationship with Jesus is unique. Pilate has not come to Jesus to be healed. Pilate is not interested in the arrival of the Messiah. Instead, Jesus is brought to him and presented as a man deserving punishment. The only problem is that to Pilate’s eye, Jesus does not appear to be guilty of anything. Now the Jews tell him that Jesus claims to be the Son of God.

Application: Before there can be faith, there needs to be a sense of wonder. The man who is confident that he knows everything there is to know is not open to something or someone larger than he is. In Matthew’s gospel, Jesus is recorded as saying, ”Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.” (Matthew 18: 3) A child’s mind is open to wonder. In today’s passage, we see Pilate starting to wonder. The door of his mind is opening a tiny crack to the possibility of something beyond imagination being real. Like Pilate, we need to open our minds to the wonder that is the reality of God on earth.

Food for Thought: Do you allow yourself to wonder? Do you feel wonder is safe or dangerous? Why?

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Motives and Madness – John 19: 6-7

As soon as the chief priests and their officials saw him, they shouted, “Crucify! Crucify!”
But Pilate answered, “You take him and crucify him. As for me, I find no basis for a charge against him.”
The Jewish leaders insisted, “We have a law, and according to that law he must die, because he claimed to be the Son of God.”

Finally! After all this time, the Jewish leaders let Pilate in on their secret. The real reason that they want Jesus killed. The motive for their madness.

When they first showed up at the governor’s palace they claimed that Jesus was a criminal. No crime was specified. So Pilate is left to try and figure out from the accused what, exactly, he was accused of. Pilate and Jesus talk about what it means to be “king of the Jews”. Pilate is not impressed with Jesus as a threat. He declares that there is no basis for a charge.

The Jews refused to accept this tactic. Pilate tries to negotiate using a known rebel nobody would want as a bargaining chip. Nothing. Pilate then flogs Jesus and once again tries to give him back to the Jews. Pushed into a corner, the Jews resort to the truth. They let Pilate know that Jesus “… claimed to be the Son of God.”

Jesus didn’t just “claim” to be the Son of God. If that had been the case, the Jews probably would have ignored him or locked him up themselves. The real story is that Jesus didn’t just “claim” anything. Jesus also:

  • Taught with authority
  • Healed the sick
  • Gave sight to the blind
  • Made the mute speak
  • Opened the ears of the deaf
  • Fed thousands
  • Calmed storms
  • Walked on water
  • Raised the dead
  • Forgave sins
  • Fulfilled prophecy

He did things that no other person on the planet had ever done or will ever do. He demonstrated all the traits that the Jews expected from their Messiah. Except that Jesus didn’t recognize the opinions of the chief priests and Pharisees as authoritative. Jesus knew the law of Moses better than they did. Since Jesus was the true Author of Life the priests and Pharisees should have bowed down to Him. But they didn’t. Instead, they decided to kill him.

Application: When we finally meet up with our Maker, there is a very real possibility that He won’t be what we expect Him to be. Jesus was a humble carpenter from Galilee. The Jews turned their noses up at such people because they talked funny. They were lower-class citizens. The one thing we don’t want to do is find ourselves unwilling to enter God’s mansion in heaven because we turn up our nose at the appearance of the Builder.

Food for Thought: Pilate wasn’t motivated by seeing Jesus’ miracles. As he says in verse 35, ”Am I a Jew?” Instead, he appears to be motivated by the idea that justice stands for something. If Pilate were willing to go toe to toe with the Jewish leaders to protect an innocent man, how would the news that Jesus might be the Son of God affect Pilate?

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