It was not usual to remove bodies
from the cross immediately after their death.
They were allowed to hang, exposed to the weather,
till they rotted and fell to pieces; or they might
be torn by birds or beasts; and at last a fire was
perhaps kindled beneath the cross to rid the place
of the remains. Such was the Roman custom; but
among the Jews there was more scrupulosity.
In their law there stood this provision: “If
a man have committed a sin worthy of death, and he
be put to death, and thou hang him on a tree, his
body shall not remain all night upon the tree, but
thou shalt in any wise bury him that day (for he that
is hanged is accursed of God); that thy land be not
defiled which the Lord thy God giveth thee for an inheritance.”
Whether or not the Jews always tried to get this
provision observed in executions carried out in their
midst by their Roman masters, we cannot tell; but
it was natural that they should do so in reference
to executions carried out in the neighbourhood of
the holy city and at Passover time. In the present
instance there was the additional reason, that the
morrow of the execution of Jesus was a high day-it
was the Sabbath of the Passover-a kind of
double Sabbath, which would have been desecrated by
any unclean thing, like an unburied corpse, exposed
to view. The Jews were extremely sensitive about
such points. At any time they regarded themselves
as unclean if they touched a dead body, and they had
to go through a process of purgation before their
sense of sanctity was restored. But on the occasion
of a Passover Sabbath they would have felt it to be
a desecration if any dead thing had even met their
eyes or rested uncovered on the soil of their city.
Therefore their representatives went to the Roman governor
and begged that the three crucified men should be
put to death by clubbing and their bodies buried before
the Sabbath commenced.
The suggestion has often been made
that, behind this pretended scrupulosity, their real
aim was to inflict additional pain and indignity on
Jesus. The breaking of the bones of the body,
by smashing them with clubs, was a peculiarly horrible
form of punishment sometimes inflicted by the Romans.
It was nearly as cruel and degrading as crucifixion
itself; and it was an independent punishment, not conjoined
with crucifixion. But the Jews in this case attempted
to get them united, that Jesus, besides being crucified,
might, so to speak, die yet another death of the most
revolting description. The Evangelist, however,
throws no doubt on the motive which they put forward-namely,
that the Passover Sabbath might be saved from desecration-and,
although their insatiable hatred may have made them
suggest clubbing as the mode by which His death should
be hastened, we need not question that their scruples
were genuine. It is an extraordinary instance
of the game of self-deception which the human conscience
can play. Here were people fresh from the greatest
crime ever committed-their hands still
reeking, one might say, with the blood of the Innocent-and
their consciences, while utterly untouched with remorse
for this crime, are anxious about the observance of
the Sabbath and the ceremonial defilement of the soil.
It is the most extraordinary illustration which history
records of how zeal for what may be called the body
of religion may be utterly destitute of any connection
with its spirit. It is surely a solemn warning
to make sure that every outward religious act is accompanied
by the genuine outgoing of the heart to God, and a
warning that, if we love not our brother, whom we have
seen, neither can we be lovers of God, whom we have
not seen.
Pilate hearkened to the request of
the Jews, and orders were given to the soldiers to
act accordingly. Then the ghastly work began.
They broke the legs of the malefactor on the one
side of Jesus, and then those of the other on the
opposite side. The penitent thief was not spared;
but what a difference his penitence made! To
his companion this was nothing but an additional indignity;
to him it was the knocking-off of the fetters, that
his spirit might the sooner wing its way to Paradise,
where Christ had trysted to meet him.
Then came the turn of Jesus.
But, when the soldiers looked at Him, they saw that
their work was unnecessary: death had been before
them; the drooping head and pallid frame were those
of a dead man. Only, to make assurance doubly
sure, one of them thrust his spear into the body,
making a wound so large that Jesus, when He was risen,
could invite the doubting Thomas to thrust his hand
into it; and, as the weapon was drawn forth again,
there came out after it blood and water.
St. John, who was on the spot and
saw all this taking place, seems to have perceived
in the scene an unusual importance; for he adds to
his report these words of confirmation, as if he were
sealing an official document, “And he that saw
it bare record; and his record is true; and he knoweth
that he saith true, that ye might believe.”
Why should he interrupt the flow of his narrative
to add these words of assurance?
Some have thought that he was moved
to do so by a heresy which sprang up in the early
Church to the effect that Christ was not really human:
His body, it was said, was only a phantom body, and
therefore His death was only an apparent death.
In opposition to such a notion St. John directs attention
to the realistic details, which prove so conclusively
that this was a real man and that He died a real death.
Of course that ancient heresy has long ceased to
trouble; there are none now who deny that Jesus was
a man. Yet it is curious how the tendency ever
and anon reappears to evaporate the facts of His life.
At the present hour there are eminent Christian teachers
in Europe who are treating the resurrection of the
Lord in very much the same way as these early Docetae
treated His death-as a kind of figure of
speech, not to be understood too literally.
Against such the Church must lift up the crude facts
of the resurrection as St. John did those of the death
of the Saviour. In our generation teachers of
every kind are appealing to Christ and putting Him
in the centre of theology; but we must ask them, What
Christ? Is it the Christ of the Scriptures:
the Christ who in the beginning was with God; who
was incarnated; who died for the sins of the world;
who was raised from the dead and reigns for evermore?
We must not delude ourselves with words: only
the Christ of the Scriptures could have brought us
the salvation of the Scriptures.
What excited the wonder of St. John
is supposed by others to have been the fulfilment
of two passages of the Old Testament Scripture which
he quotes. It appeared to be a matter of mere
chance that the soldiers, contrary to the intention
of the Jews, refrained from breaking the bones of
Jesus; yet a sacred word, of which they knew nothing,
written hundreds of years before, had said, “A
bone of Him shall not be broken.” It seemed
the most casual circumstance that the soldier plunged
the spear into the side of Jesus, to make sure that
He was dead; yet an ancient oracle, of which he knew
nothing, had said, “They shall look on Him whom
they pierced.” Thus, by the overruling
providence of God, the soldiers, going with rude unconcern
about their work, were unconsciously fulfilling the
Scriptures; and those who both saw what they had done
and knew the Scriptures recognised the Divine finger
pointing out Jesus as the Sent of God.
The first of these texts is generally
supposed to be taken from the account in Exodus
of the institution of the Passover, and originally
it refers to the paschal lamb, which was to be eaten
whole, the breaking of its bones being forbidden.
St. John’s idea is that Christ was to be the
paschal lamb of the New Dispensation, and that therefore
Providence took care that nothing should be done to
destroy His resemblance to the type, as would have
happened if His bones had been broken. The Passover
was the great event of the year in all the generations
of Jewish history. It was intended to carry
the minds of God’s people back to the wonderful
scenes of divine grace and power in which their existence
as a nation had begun, when God liberated them from
their bondage and led them out of Egypt with a mighty
hand. The centre of the solemnity was the slaying
and eating of the paschal lamb. This reminded
them of how in Egypt the blood of this lamb, sprinkled
on the lintels and doorposts of their huts, saved
them from the visit of the destroying angel, who was
passing through the land; and how, at the same time,
the flesh of the lamb was eaten by the people, with
their loins girt and staves in their hands, and supplied
them with strength for their adventurous journey.
Thus through all ages it impressed on them two things-that
the sins of the past required to be expiated, and
that strength had to be obtained from above for the
new stage of their history on which at the annual
Passover they might be supposed to be entering.
In the same way, in the New Dispensation, are our
minds ever to revert to the marvellous revelation
of the grace and saving power of God in which Christianity
originated; and in the very midst is the Lamb slain,
who is both the expiation of the sins that are past
and the strength requisite for the conflict and the
pilgrimage. “If we walk in the light,
as He is in the light, we have fellowship one with
another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth
us from all sin.”
The other words of prophecy which
appeared to St. John to be fulfilled on this occasion
were, “They shall look on Him whom they pierced.”
They are from a passage in Zechariah, which is so remarkable
that it may be quoted in full-“And
I will pour out on the house of David and upon the
inhabitants of Jerusalem the spirit of grace and of
supplications, and they shall look upon Me whom
they have pierced, and they shall mourn for Him, as
one mourneth for his only son, and shall be in bitterness
for Him, as one that is in bitterness for his firstborn.”
Jéhovah speaks figuratively of the opposition shown
to Himself and His servants as piercing Him with pain,
just as we say of an insult that it cuts to the heart.
But in the death of Jesus the figure became a fact:
against the sacred person of the Son of God the spear
was lifted up, and it was driven home without compunction.
Evidently St. John thinks of this rather as the act
of the Jewish people than of the Roman soldier.
But the prophecy speaks not only of the people piercing
God, but of their looking at their own work with shame
and tears. At Pentecost this began to be fulfilled;
and in every age since there have been members of
the Jewish race who have acknowledged their guilt
in the transaction. The full acknowledgment,
however, still lingers; but the conversion of God’s
ancient people, when it comes, must begin with this.
Indeed, every human being to whom his own true relation
to Christ is revealed must make the same acknowledgment.
It was the heart not of a few soldiers or of the
representatives of a single people, but of the human
race, that hardened itself against Him. It was
the sin of the world that nailed Him to the tree and
shed His blood. Every sinner may therefore feel
that he had a hand in it; and it is only when we see
our own sin as aiming at the very existence of God
in the death of His Son that we comprehend it in all
its enormity.
There have been many who have found
the reason for St. John’s wonder in the fact
that out of the wounded side there flowed blood and
water.
From a corpse, when it is pierced-at
least, if it has been some time dead-it
is not usual for anything to flow. But whether
St. John reflected on this or not we cannot tell.
What fascinated him was simply the fact that the
piercing of the body of the Saviour made it a fountain
out of which sprang this double outflow. When
the rock in the wilderness was smitten with the rod
of Moses, there issued from it a stream which was
life to the perishing multitude; but in the double
stream coming from the side of Jesus St. John saw something
better even than that; because to him the blood symbolized
the atonement, and the water the Spirit of Christ;
and in these two all our salvation lies. So we
sing in the most precious of all our hymns,-
Let the water and the blood
From Thy living side which flowed
Be of sin the double cure-
Cleanse me from its guilt and power.
Although, however, St. John did not
perhaps speculate on the reason why this double outflow
took place from the wounded side, others have occupied
themselves with the question.
Some have considered the phenomenon
altogether abnormal, and endeavoured to explain it
from the peculiarity of our Lord’s humanity.
Though He died. He was not, like other men, to
see corruption; His body was to escape in a few hours,
transfigured and glorious, from the grasp of death.
This transforming process, which issued in His resurrection,
began as soon as He was dead; and the spear-thrust,
breaking in on it, so to speak, revealed something
altogether unique in the constitution of His body.
Others, keeping within the limits
of ascertained fact, have given a totally different
yet a peculiarly interesting explanation. They
have directed attention to the suddenness of Christ’s
death. It was usual for crucified persons to
linger for days; but He did not survive more than
six hours. Yet immediately before dying He again
and again cried with a loud voice, as if His bodily
force were by no means exhausted. Suddenly, however,
with a loud cry His life terminated. To what
could this be due? It is said that sometimes,
under the pressure of intense mental and physical
agony, the heart bursts; there is a shriek, and of
course death is instantaneous. We speak of people
dying of a broken heart-using the phrase
only figuratively-but sometimes it can be
used literally: the heart is actually ruptured
with grief. Now, it is said that, when this
takes place, the blood contained in the heart is poured
into a sac by which it is surrounded; and there it
separates into two substances-a clotty
substance of the colour of blood and a pure, colourless
substance like water. And, if the sac, when in
this condition, were pierced by a spear or any other
instrument, there would flow out a large quantity
of both substances, which would by an unscientific
spectator be described as blood and water.
It was by an English medical man that
this theory was first propounded fifty years ago,
and it has been adopted by other medical men, equally
famous for their scientific eminence and Christian
character, such as the late Professor Begbie and Sir
James Simpson. The latter well brings out the
point and the pathos of this view of the Saviour’s
death in these words: “It has always appeared-to
my medical mind at least-that this view
of the mode by which death was produced in the human
body of Christ intensifies all our thoughts and ideas
regarding the immensity of the sacrifice which He
made for our sinful race upon the cross. Nothing
can be more striking and startling than the passiveness
with which, for our sakes, God as man submitted His
incarnate body to the horrors and tortures of the crucifixion.
But our wonderment at the stupendous sacrifice increases
when we reflect that, whilst thus enduring for our
sins the most cruel and agonising form of corporeal
death, He was ultimately slain, not by the effects
of the anguish of His corporeal frame, but by the
effects of the mightier anguish of His mind; the fleshly
walls of His heart-like the veil, as it
were, in the temple of His body-becoming
rent and riven, as for us He poured out His soul unto
death-the travail of His soul in that awful
hour thus standing out as unspeakably more bitter and
dreadful than even the travail of His body.”
In this chapter we have been moving
somewhat in the region of speculation and conjecture,
and we have not rigidly ascertained what is logically
tenable and what is not. This is a place of mystery,
where dim yet imposing meanings peep out on us in
whatever direction we turn. We have called the
scene the Dead Christ. But who does not see that
the dead Christ is so interesting and wonderful because
He is also the living Christ? He lives; He is
here; He is with us now. Yet the converse is
also true-that the living Christ is to us
so wonderful and adorable because He was dead.
The fact that He is alive inspires us with strength
and hope; but it is by the memory of His death that
He is commended to the trust of our burdened consciences
and the love of our sympathetic hearts.