What is Christianity Wiki

Jump to: navigation, search

"What Shall I do with Jesus?"

Revision as of 13:30, 31 October 2012 by Admin (Talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Back to Bethlehem to Olivet''' ---- <p>Pilate was in a most unenviable position. No doubt he felt <em> honoured </em>when he was made <em>procurator of Judea</em>. But ...")

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Back to Bethlehem to Olivet


Pilate was in a most unenviable position. No doubt he felt  honoured when he was made procurator of Judea. But the honour brought him a responsibility which left him weighed, and found lacking. Pilate did not know when he was roused so early that April morning—that Friday was doomsday for him! He did not know when he was going through the various stages of the trial of Jesus—that he was making such a record of infamy for himself. He would better a thousand times have missed the honour of being the governor of Judea, and thus have escaped the making of the terrible mistake he made that day.

Yet Pilate need not have failed so terribly. If he had been simply just, and had stood like a rock for what was right, the day would have become one of undying honor, and not one of everlasting obloquy for him. But the question with which Pilate met every crisis was not, "What is right?" but, "What will advance my interest?" He knew that Jesus was guilty of no wrong—and he confessed that he found no fault in Him. He knew the motive of the rulers—that for envy they had delivered Him.

But instead of directly acquitting Him, he sought in indirect ways to secure His release. He sent Him to Herod, thinking thus to get clear of the responsibility of meeting the question himself. This failing, he begged the rulers to accept Jesus, as the one prisoner to be set free at that Passover. But they refused, choosing  Barnabas , a notorious prisoner.

At this point it was that Pilate, perplexed and beaten, asked, "What then shall I do with Jesus?" Instantly came the answer,"Crucify Him!" Still Pilate pleaded, awed by something in the prisoner before him, and dreading to send Him to the cross. But the only answer he got was, "Free Barnabas! Crucify Jesus!" He still struggled hopelessly to keep Jesus from death—but he had gone too far in his temporizing. So he yielded. He delivered the innocent prisoner to their will. Then taking water, he washed his handsbefore the people, saying he was innocent of the blood of the Just Man he was giving up to crucifixion.

Pilate lost his opportunity. He is held up before the world as a judge who knew the innocence of the Man who stood before him—yet sent Him to die on a cross! An imaginative writing, describing 'life in Hell', represents Pilate as washing his hands forever, and then looking at them—only to find them still and forever stained red! They will never come clean!


Back to Bethlehem to Olivet