We have lingered long at the judgment-seat
of Pilate. Far too long. Pilate has detained
us. He knew perfectly well, the first glance
he bestowed on the case, what it was his duty to do.
But, instead of acting at once on his conviction,
he put off. Of such delay good seldom comes.
Pilate gave temptation time to assail him. He
resisted it, indeed; he fought hard and long against
it; but he ought never to have given it the chance.
And he miserably succumbed in the end.
I.
When Pilate delivered Jesus over to
be scourged, it looked as if he had surrendered Him
to the cross; and so in all probability the Jews thought,
because scourging was the usual preliminary to crucifixion.
He, however, had not yet abandoned the hope of saving
Jesus: he was still secretly adhering to the
proposal he had made, to chastise Him and then let
Him go. Perhaps, if he retired into the palace
while the scourging was taking place, his wife may
have urged him to make a further effort on behalf
of that Just Man.
At all events he came out on the platform,
round which the Jews were still standing, and informed
them that the case was not finished; and, as Jesus,
whose scourging was now over, came forward, he turned
round and, pointing to Him, exclaimed with deep emotion,
“Behold the Man.”
It was an involuntary expression of
commiseration, an appeal to the Jews to recognize
the unreasonableness of proceeding further: Jesus
was so obviously not such an one as they had tried
to make Him out to be; at all events He had suffered
enough.
But the Christian mind has in all
ages felt in these words a sense deeper than Pilate
intended. As Caiaphas was uttering a greater
truth than he knew when he said it was expedient that
one should die for the whole people, so in uttering
this exclamation the governor was an unconscious prophet.
Preachers in every subsequent age have adopted his
words and, pointing to Jesus, cried, “Behold
the Man!” Painters have chosen this moment,
when Jesus came forth, bleeding from the cruel stripes
and wearing the purple robe and crown of thorns, as
the one in which to portray the Man of Sorrows; and
many a priceless canvas bears the title Ecce Homo.
From Pilate’s lips there fell
two words which the world will never forget-the
question, “What is truth?” and this exclamation,
“Behold the Man!” And the one may be
taken as the answer to the other. When the question,
“What is truth?” is put with deep earnestness,
what does it mean but this?-Who will make
God known to us? who will clear up the mystery of
existence? who will reveal to man his own destiny?
And to these questions is there any answer but this;
“Behold the Man”? He has shown to
the sons of men what they ought to be; His is the perfect
life, after which every human life ought to be fashioned;
He has opened the gates of immortality and revealed
the secrets of the other world. And, what is
far more important, He has not only shown us what our
life here and hereafter ought to be, but how the ideal
may be realised. He is not only the image of
perfection but the Saviour from sin. Therefore
ought the world to turn to Him and “behold the
Man.”
II.
Pilate hoped that the sight of the
sufferings of Jesus would move the hard hearts of
His persecutors, as it had moved his own. But
the only response to his appeal was, “Crucify
Him, crucify Him.” It is to be noted,
however, that these cruel words now came from “the
chief priests and officers.” Apparently
the common people were moved: they might have
yielded, if their superiors had allowed them.
But nothing could move those hard hearts; indeed,
the sight of blood only inflamed them the more; and
they felt certain that by sheer persistence they could
break down Pilate’s opposition.
He was at his wits’ end and
replied to them angrily, “Take ye Him and crucify
Him; for I find no fault in Him”; meaning probably,
that he was willing to yield the Prisoner up to their
will, if they would take the responsibility of executing
Him; if, indeed, he had in his mind any clear meaning
and was not merely uttering an exclamation of annoyance.
They perceived that the critical moment
had arrived, and at last they let out the true reason
for which they desired His death: “We have
a law, and by our law He ought to die, because He
made Himself the Son of God.”
This was the ground on which they
had condemned Him themselves, though up to this point
they had kept it concealed. They had not mentioned
it, because they thought that Pilate would jeer at
it. It had on him, however, a very different
effect. All the morning he had been feeling
uneasy; and the more he saw of Jesus the more he disliked
the part he was playing. But now at length the
mention of His claim to be the Son of God caused his
fears to take a definite and alarming shape.
It revived in his mind the stories, with which his
own pagan religion was rife, of gods or sons of the
gods who had sometimes appeared on earth in disguise.
It was dangerous to have to do with them; for any
injury inflicted on them, even unconsciously, might
be terribly avenged. He had discerned in Jesus
something mysterious and inexplicable: what if
He were the son of Jéhovah, the native deity of Palestine,
as Castor and Pollux were sons of Jupiter? and might
not Jéhovah, if He were injured, blast the man who
wronged Him with a curse? Such was the terror
that flashed through his mind; and, taking Jesus once
more inside the palace, he asked Him, with a mixture
of awe and curiosity, “Whence art Thou?”
Jesus gave him no answer, but again
retired into the majestic silence which at three points
already had marked His trial. In the whole conduct
of the Saviour in His sufferings there is nothing more
sublime than these pauses; but it is not easy at every
point to gauge the state of mind to which they were
due. Why was Jesus silent at this point?
Some have said, because it was impossible to answer
the question. He could not have said either
Yes or No; for, if He had said that God was His Father,
Pilate would have understood the statement in a grossly
pagan sense; and yet, to avoid this, He could not say
that He was not the Son of God. So it was best
to say nothing.
The true explanation, however, is
simpler. Jesus would say nothing about whether
He was the Son of God or not, because He did not wish
to be released on this ground. Not as a son
of God, but as an innocent man, which Pilate had again
and again acknowledged Him to be, was He entitled
to be set free; and His silence called upon Pilate
to act on this acknowledgment.
The judge was more than ever astonished;
and he was irritated a little at being thus treated.
“Speakest Thou not unto me?” he asked,
flushing; “knowest Thou not that I have power
to crucify Thee and have power to release Thee?”
Poor man! it was to be seen before many minutes had
passed how much power he had. And what was this
power of which he boasted? He spoke as if he
had arbitrary discretion to do whatever he pleased.
No just judge would make such a claim: justice
takes from him the power to follow his own inclination
if it be unjust. It was of this Jesus reminded
him when He now answered with quiet dignity, “Thou
couldest have no power at all against Me, unless it
were given thee from above.” He reminds
him that the power he wields is delegated by Heaven,
and therefore not to be used according to his own
caprice, but according to the dictates of justice.
Yet He added, “Therefore he that delivered
Me unto thee hath the greater sin.” He
acknowledged that Pilate was in a position in which
he was compelled to try the case: he had not
taken it up at his own hand, as the Jewish authorities
had done.
Thus Jesus recognised all the difficulties
of His judge’s position and was willing to make
for him every allowance. This was He whom Pilate
had, a few minutes before, given over to torture.
Was there ever such sublime and unselfish clemency?
Could there have been a more complete triumph over
resentment and irritation? If the silence of
Christ was sublime, no less sublime, when He did speak,
were His words.
III.
Pilate felt the greatness and the
magnanimity of his Prisoner, and came forth determined
at all hazards to set Him free. The Jews saw
it in his face. And at length they brought out
their last weapon, which they had been keeping in
reserve and Pilate had been fearing all the time:
they threatened to complain against him to the emperor;
for this was the meaning of what they now cried:
“If thou let this man go, thou art not Caesar’s
friend: whosoever maketh himself a king speaketh
against Cæsar.”
There was nothing which a Roman provincial
governor so much dreaded as a complaint lodged against
him at Rome. And in Pilate’s case such
an accusation, for more reasons than one, would have
been specially perilous. The imperial throne
was occupied at the time by one who was a most suspicious
master. Tiberius seemed to delight in humiliating
and disgracing his subordinates. Besides, at
this very period he was peculiarly dangerous.
A diseased body, the punishment of vices long indulged,
had made his mind gloomy and savage; in fact, he was
little better than a madman-morose, suspicious
and malicious. Nor was any charge so likely
to inflame him as the one which they proposed to lay
against Pilate. It was well known at Rome that
the hope of a Messiah was spread throughout the East;
and any provincial governor supposed to be favouring
or even conniving at the claims of such a pretender
would certainly be recalled, probably exiled, and
possibly executed. Amicus Caesaris, “Caesar’s
friend,” was one of the most coveted titles of
a man in Pilate’s position; and to be accused
of acting as no friend of Caesar’s could act
was the most serious of all dangers.
But there was something else which
lent point to the threat of the Jewish authorities:
Pilate well knew that his administration could not
bear the light of an investigation such as would inevitably
follow a complaint from his subjects. It is
a curious thing that in a secular writer of that age
we find an account of another occasion on which this
same threat was held over Pilate; and the writer who
mentions it adds: “He was afraid that if
a Jewish embassy were sent to Rome, they might discuss
the many maladministrations of his government, his
extortions, his unjust decrees, his inhuman punishments.”
Such had been the character of Pilate’s
past life; and now, when he was going to do a humane
and righteous act, it stayed his hand. There
is nothing which so frustrates good resolutions and
paralyzes noble efforts as the dead weight of past
sins. Those who are acquainted with secret and
discreditable chapters of a man’s history are
able, wielding this knowledge over his head, to say,
Thou shalt not do this good act which thou wishest
to do, or, Thou shalt do this evil and shameful thing
which we bid thee. There are companies in which
men cannot utter the fine, high-sounding things they
would say elsewhere, because there are present those
who know how their lives have contradicted them.
What is it that mocks the generous thought rising
in our minds, that silences the noble word on our
lips, that paralyzes the forming energy of our actions?
Is it not the internal whisper, Remember how you have
failed before? This is the curse of past sin:
it will not let us do the good we would.
But, if a man has thus committed himself
by an evil past, what is he to do? What ought
Pilate to have done? There is only one course.
It is to summon together the resources of his manhood,
defy consequences, and do the right forthwith, come
what may. One step taken in loyalty to conscience,
one word of confession spoken, and in a moment the
power of the tyranny is broken, and the spellbound
man is free to issue forth from the inglorious prison
of the past.
Alas, Pilate was not equal to any
such effort. For the sake of righteousness,
for the sake of this impressive and innocent but obscure
and friendless Galilean, to face a complaint at Rome
and run the risk of exile and poverty-the
man of the world’s philosophy could not rise
to any such height. He belonged to the world,
whose fashion and favour, pleasures and comforts were
the breath of his nostrils; and, when he heard the
menace of his subjects, he surrendered at discretion.
Thus Jewish passion and persistency
triumphed. Pilate resisted, but he was forced
to yield inch by inch. He wished to do right;
he felt the spell of Jesus; and it irritated him to
have to go against his conscience, but his subjects
compelled him to obey their wicked will. Yet
the true reason of his failure was in himself-in
the shallowness and worldliness of his own character,
which this occasion laid bare to the very foundations.
IV.
There was little more to do.
The mind of Pilate was very savage and his heart
very sore. He had been beaten and humiliated;
and he would gladly inflict some humiliation on his
opponents, if he could find a way. He ascended
the judgment-seat, “in a place that is called
the Pavement, but in the Hebrew Gabbatha”-an
act similar in significance, I suppose, with our judges’
habit, before pronouncing a death sentence, of putting
on the black cap. Pointing to Jesus, he exclaimed,
“Behold your King!” It was as much as
to say that he believed this really to be their Messiah-this
poor, bleeding, mishandled Man. He was trying
to cut them with a taunt. And he succeeded:
smarting with pain they shouted, “Away with
Him! away with Him! crucify Him!” “What,”
he proceeded, “shall I crucify your King?”
And, borne away with fury, they responded, “We
have no king but Cæsar.” What a word to
come from the representatives of a nation to which
pertained “the adoption and the glory and the
covenants and the giving of the law and the service
of God and the promises!” It was the renouncement
of their birthright, the abandonment of their destiny.
Pilate well knew what it had cost their proud hearts
thus to forswear the hopes of their fathers and acknowledge
the right of their conqueror; but to compel them to
swallow this bitter draught was some compensation
for the cup of humiliation they had compelled him
to drink. And he took them at their word.