In
the stillness and ebony of night, following the keeping of the Passover
with His disciples and a period of lengthy discussions, Jesus went to
the Mount of Olives. At a place called Gethsemane, He told the tired and
weary apostles, "Sit ye here, while I go yonder and pray." He took
Peter, James, and John with Him to go a little farther into the garden.
He "began to be sore amazed, and to be very heavy"
(Mk.
14:33). His soul
was "exceeding sorrowful"
(Matt.
26:28). He went
forward a short distance and fell on His face in prayer.
In Gethsemane
The prayer of our Lord in
Gethsemane reflected His human feelings as He faced the reality of
death. "Father, if thou be willing, remove this cup from me:
nevertheless not my will, but thine, be done." Human nature shrinks
"from the dissolution of the bond that binds to soul" (Edersheim). Jesus
had taken upon Him the nature of man. He was nearing the time when He
must bear the iniquity of us all. The prospect of death brought the
deepest kind of agony to His soul. The physically exhausted disciples
had now fallen asleep. "And being in agony he prayed more earnestly: and
his sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the
ground"
(Lk.
22:44).
I confess that my mind
cannot fully fathom the horror and agonizing grief which our Master
suffered in Gethsemane. It was a foretaste of Calvary. He who was made a
little lower than the angels for the suffering of death, and was found
in fashion as a man, "offered up prayers and supplications with strong
crying tears unto him that was able to save him from death"
(Heb.
5:7).
Night, with ebon pinion,
Brooded o'er the vale; All around was silent, Save the night-wind's
wail, When Christ, the Man of Sorrows, In tears and sweat and blood,
Prostrate in the garden, Raise His voice to God. - L.H. Jameson
A mob stormed into the
garden with swords and staves, lanterns and torches. Judas positively
identified Jesus, and they laid hands on Him and took Him away. After a
brief appearance before Annas, Jesus was taken to Caiaphas, the high
priest.
Before the High Priest
John records an incident
which may have occurred before Annas or before Caiaphas. The account in
John
18:19-24 is not
clear as to which "high priest" is under consideration. Commentators are
pretty equally divided on the point. I lean to the view that this took
place before Caiaphas in a private interview. The high priest asked
Jesus about His disciples and His doctrine. Since Jesus had taught
openly in the synagogue and in the temple, not concealing His doctrine,
He responded, "Why askest thou me? ask them which heard me, what I have
said unto them: behold, they know what I said."
One of the officers of
the high priest "struck Jesus with the palm of his hand, saying,
Answerest thou the high priest so?" Perhaps this officer was not
accustomed to hearing a prisoner speak in such a forthright manner,
standing for his own rights. Jesus replied, "If I have spoken evil, bear
witness of the evil: but if well, why smitest thou me?" The slap in the
face was intended to insinuate that Jesus had not shown respect for the
high priest. The truth is that the blow was illegal. Jesus was merely
demanding that witnesses be brought if the court had a case against Him.
Hendriksen thinks the officer tried to exploit the situation for his own
selfish advantage - that he may have been dreaming about a promotion! It
is worthy of note that he was not ordered to strike the prisoner. His
action was daring and despicable.
Later, two false
witnesses were brought to testify against Jesus. Being put under oath
and commanded to state plainly whether or not He was the Christ, the Son
of God, He answered, "Thou hast said: nevertheless I say unto you,
hereafter shall ye see the Son of man sitting on the right hand of
power, and coming in the clouds of heaven."
The high priest rent his
clothes and charged Jesus with blasphemy. "Then did they spit in his
face, and buffeted him; and others smote him with the palms of their
hands, saying, Prophesy unto us, thou Christ, Who is he that smote
thee?"
(Matt.
26:67, 68). In
addition to these indignities, they covered His face
(Mk.
14:65). Luke
explains what happened in these words: "And the men that held Jesus
mocked him, and smote him. And when they had blindfolded him, they
struck him on the face, and asked him, saying, Prophesy, who is that
smote thee? And many other things blasphemously spake they against him"
(Lk.
22:63-65).
Imagine how you would
feel if you were held in custody and the men who held you began spitting
on you, beating you in a sadistic manner, and they blindfold you and
strike heavy blows, taunting, mocking, jeering! These insults and abuses
were both unjust and contrary to civilized conduct. The brutality and
vulgarity of the scene bring into sharp focus the animal instincts that
had moved the guards and servants of Caiaphas to show the utmost
contempt toward the prisoner.
After appearing before
Annas, before Caiaphas, then before the Sanhedrin, Jesus was sent to
Pilate, Judea's Roman governor. In the course of the questioning, Pilate
learned that Jesus was from Galilee, and since that was Herod's
territory, he sent Him over to Herod.
Before Herod
Herod had wanted for a
long time to meet Jesus. Having heard many things about Him, the king
hoped to see Jesus work a miracle. He questioned the Galilean prisoner
in many words, and the chief priests and scribes were there vehemently
accusing Him, but Jesus "answered him nothing."
"And Herod with his men
of war set him at nought, and mocked him, and arrayed him in a gorgeous
robe, and sent him again to Pilate"
(Lk.
23:8-11). To "set
at nought" means "to count as nothing, to treat with utter contempt, as
zero" (Robertson). The flinging of a brilliant robe around His body was
a part of the mockery and derision.
No small segment of the
pre-crucifixion suffering of the Savior was the manner in which He was
shuttled from one court to another. Visualize Him being led shackled
through the streets of Jerusalem, and He was arrayed in a gorgeous robe.
Every step was one of burning ridicule.
Before Pilate
Pilate had to do
something to appease the Jews. He hit on the idea of chastising Jesus
and releasing Him. That did not suit the accusers. When he offered to
release either Jesus or Barabbas, a noted criminal, they urged the
release of the latter, and cried out concerning the former, "Let him be
crucified." Pilate yielded to their wicked demands.
Three of the writers
report that Jesus was scourged
(Matt.
27:26; Mk. 15:15; John 19:1).
This was "a flogging with leather whips weighted with bone or metal laid
on so hard that weaker men sometimes died from it" (Culver). ". . . The
scourge of leather thongs was loaded with lead, or armed with spikes and
bones, which lacerated back, and chest, and face, till the victim
sometimes fell down before the judge a bleeding mass of torn flesh" (Edersheim).
At the Hands of Ruthless Romans
The soldiers plaited a
crown of thorns and placed it on His head
(John
19:2). This was
done after they had stripped Him and arrayed Him in a scarlet robe
(Matt.
27:28, 29).
Somewhere the soldiers found some prickly plants to use in making this
crown to press upon His head. "Rivulets of blood must have started to
run down his face, neck, and other parts of his body" (Hendriksen).
Covered with blood, torn
with stripes, and tortured with sharp thorns piercing the head, the body
of Jesus must have throbbed with pain. This was coupled with mental
cruelty. They put a reed in His right hand. A king needs a scepter. Now
that they have robed, crowned, and sceptered the "king of the Jews,"
they bow before Him in mockery, and they cry in cutting derision, "Hail,
king of the Jews!"
As though all of this is
not enough, they spat on Him, and they took the reed and smote Him on
the head with it
(Matt.
27:30; Mk. 15:19).
And, "they smote him with their hands"
(John
19:3). Probably
the soldiers took turns bowing in mockery, removing the reed from His
hand to hit Him on the head and drive the thorns deeper into His torn
flesh, spitting on Him, slapping Him, and deriding His kingship.
But the worst ordeal was
yet to come. They led Him away to crucify Him . . . .
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