PAPER 172
- GOING INTO JERUSALEM
Jesus and the
apostles arrived at Bethany shortly after four
o'clock on Friday afternoon, March 31, A.D. 30.
Lazarus, his sisters, and their friends were
expecting them; and since so many people came every
day to talk with Lazarus about his resurrection,
Jesus was informed that arrangements had been made
for him to stay with a neighboring believer, one
Simon, the leading citizen of the little village
since the death of Lazarus's father.
That
evening, Jesus received many visitors, and the
common folks of Bethany and Bethphage did their best
to make him feel welcome. Although many thought
Jesus was now going into Jerusalem, in utter
defiance of the Sanhedrin's decree of death, to
proclaim himself king of the Jews, the Bethany
family÷Lazarus, Martha, and Mary÷more fully realized
that the Master was not that kind of a king; they
dimly felt that this might be his last visit to
Jerusalem and Bethany.
The
chief priests were informed that Jesus lodged at
Bethany, but they thought best not to attempt to
seize him among his friends; they decided to await
his coming on into Jerusalem. Jesus knew about all
this, but he was majestically calm; his friends had
never seen him more composed and congenial; even the
apostles were astounded that he should be so
unconcerned when the Sanhedrin had called upon all
Jewry to deliver him into their hands. While the
Master slept that night, the apostles watched over
him by twos, and many of them were girded with
swords. Early the next morning they were awakened by
hundreds of pilgrims who came out from Jerusalem,
even on the Sabbath day, to see Jesus and Lazarus,
whom he had raised from the dead.
1.
SABBATH AT BETHANY
Pilgrims
from outside of Judea, as well as the Jewish
authorities, had all been asking: "What do you
think? will Jesus come up to the feast?" Therefore,
when the people heard that Jesus was at Bethany,
they were glad, but the chief priests and Pharisees
were somewhat perplexed. They were pleased to have
him under their jurisdiction, but they were a trifle
disconcerted by his boldness; they remembered that
on his previous visit to Bethany, Lazarus had been
raised from the dead, and Lazarus was becoming a big
problem to the enemies of Jesus.
Six days
before the Passover, on the evening after the
Sabbath, all Bethany and Bethphage joined in
celebrating the arrival of Jesus by a public banquet
at the home of Simon. This supper was in honor of
both Jesus and Lazarus; it was tendered in defiance
of the Sanhedrin. Martha directed the serving of the
food; her sister Mary was among the women onlookers
as it was against the custom of the Jews for a woman
to sit at a public banquet. The agents of the
Sanhedrin were present, but they feared to apprehend
Jesus in the midst of his friends.
Page 1879
Jesus
talked with Simon about Joshua of old, whose
namesake he was, and recited how Joshua and the
Israelites had come up to Jerusalem through Jericho.
In commenting on the legend of the walls of Jericho
falling down, Jesus said: "I am not concerned with
such walls of brick and stone; but I would cause the
walls of prejudice, self-righteousness, and hate to
crumble before this preaching of the Father's love
for all men."
The
banquet went along in a very cheerful and normal
manner except that all the apostles were unusually
sober. Jesus was exceptionally cheerful and had been
playing with the children up to the time of coming
to the table.
Nothing
out of the ordinary happened until near the close of
the feasting when Mary the sister of Lazarus stepped
forward from among the group of women onlookers and,
going up to where Jesus reclined as the guest of
honor, proceeded to open a large alabaster cruse of
very rare and costly ointment; and after anointing
the Master's head, she began to pour it upon his
feet as she took down her hair and wiped them with
it. The whole house became filled with the odor of
the ointment, and everybody present was amazed at
what Mary had done. Lazarus said nothing, but when
some of the people murmured, showing indignation
that so costly an ointment should be thus used,
Judas Iscariot stepped over to where Andrew reclined
and said: "Why was this ointment not sold and the
money bestowed to feed the poor? You should speak to
the Master that he rebuke such waste."
Jesus,
knowing what they thought and hearing what they
said, put his hand upon Mary's head as she knelt by
his side and, with a kindly expression upon his
face, said: "Let her alone, every one of you. Why do
you trouble her about this, seeing that she has done
a good thing in her heart? To you who murmur and say
that this ointment should have been sold and the
money given to the poor, let me say that you have
the poor always with you so that you may minister to
them at any time it seems good to you; but I shall
not always be with you; I go soon to my Father. This
woman has long saved this ointment for my body at
its burial, and now that it has seemed good to her
to make this anointing in anticipation of my death,
she shall not be denied such satisfaction. In the
doing of this, Mary has reproved all of you in that
by this act she evinces faith in what I have said
about my death and ascension to my Father in heaven.
This woman shall not be reproved for that which she
has this night done; rather do I say to you that in
the ages to come, wherever this gospel shall be
preached throughout the whole world, what she has
done will be spoken of in memory of her."
It was
because of this rebuke, which he took as a personal
reproof, that Judas Iscariot finally made up his
mind to seek revenge for his hurt feelings. Many
times had he entertained such ideas subconsciously,
but now he dared to think such wicked thoughts in
his open and conscious mind. And many others
encouraged him in this attitude since the cost of
this ointment was a sum equal to the earnings of one
man for one year÷enough to provide bread for five
thousand persons. But Mary loved Jesus; she had
provided this precious ointment with which to embalm
his body in death, for she believed his words when
he forewarned them that he must die, and it was not
to be denied her if she changed her mind and chose
to bestow this offering upon the Master while he yet
lived.
Both
Lazarus and Martha knew that Mary had long saved the
money wherewith to buy this cruse of spikenard, and
they heartily approved of her doing
Page 1880
as her heart
desired in such a matter, for they were well-to-do
and could easily afford to make such an offering.
When the
chief priests heard of this dinner in Bethany for
Jesus and Lazarus, they began to take counsel among
themselves as to what should be done with Lazarus.
And presently they decided that Lazarus must also
die. They rightly concluded that it would be useless
to put Jesus to death if they permitted Lazarus,
whom he had raised from the dead, to live.
2. SUNDAY
MORNING WITH THE APOSTLES
On this
Sunday morning, in Simon's beautiful garden, the
Master called his twelve apostles around him and
gave them their final instructions preparatory to
entering Jerusalem. He told them that he would
probably deliver many addresses and teach many
lessons before returning to the Father but advised
the apostles to refrain from doing any public work
during this Passover sojourn in Jerusalem. He
instructed them to remain near him and to "watch and
pray." Jesus knew that many of his apostles and
immediate followers even then carried swords
concealed on their persons, but he made no reference
to this fact.
This
morning's instructions embraced a brief review of
their ministry from the day of their ordination near
Capernaum down to this day when they were preparing
to enter Jerusalem. The apostles listened in
silence; they asked no questions.
Early
that morning David Zebedee had turned over to Judas
the funds realized from the sale of the equipment of
the Pella encampment, and Judas, in turn, had placed
the greater part of this money in the hands of
Simon, their host, for safekeeping in anticipation
of the exigencies of their entry into Jerusalem.
After
the conference with the apostles Jesus held converse
with Lazarus and instructed him to avoid the
sacrifice of his life to the vengefulness of the
Sanhedrin. It was in obedience to this admonition
that Lazarus, a few days later, fled to Philadelphia
when the officers of the Sanhedrin sent men to
arrest him.
In a
way, all of Jesus' followers sensed the impending
crisis, but they were prevented from fully realizing
its seriousness by the unusual cheerfulness and
exceptional good humor of the Master.
3. THE
START FOR JERUSALEM
Bethany
was about two miles from the temple, and it was half
past one that Sunday afternoon when Jesus made ready
to start for Jerusalem. He had feelings of profound
affection for Bethany and its simple people.
Nazareth, Capernaum, and Jerusalem had rejected him,
but Bethany had accepted him, had believed in him.
And it was in this small village, where almost every
man, woman, and child were believers, that he chose
to perform the mightiest work of his earth bestowal,
the resurrection of Lazarus. He did not raise
Lazarus that the villagers might believe, but rather
because they already believed.
All
morning Jesus had thought about his entry into
Jerusalem. Heretofore he had always endeavored to
suppress all public acclaim of him as the Messiah,
but it was different now; he was nearing the end of
his career in the flesh, his death had been decreed
by the Sanhedrin, and no harm could come from
allowing his disciples to give free expression to
their feelings, just as might occur if he elected to
make a formal and public entry into the city.
Page 1881
Jesus
did not decide to make this public entrance into
Jerusalem as a last bid for popular favor nor as a
final grasp for power. Neither did he do it
altogether to satisfy the human longings of his
disciples and apostles. Jesus entertained none of
the illusions of a fantastic dreamer; he well knew
what was to be the outcome of this visit.
Having
decided upon making a public entrance into
Jerusalem, the Master was confronted with the
necessity of choosing a proper method of executing
such a resolve. Jesus thought over all of the many
more or less contradictory so-called Messianic
prophesies, but there seemed to be only one which
was at all appropriate for him to follow. Most of
these prophetic utterances depicted a king, the son
and successor of David, a bold and aggressive
temporal deliverer of all Israel from the yoke of
foreign domination. But there was one Scripture that
had sometimes been associated with the Messiah by
those who held more to the spiritual concept of his
mission, which Jesus thought might consistently be
taken as a guide for his projected entry into
Jerusalem. This Scripture was found in Zechariah,
and it said: "Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion;
shout, O daughter of Jerusalem. Behold, your king
comes to you. He is just and he brings salvation. He
comes as the lowly one, riding upon an ass, upon a
colt, the foal of an ass."
A
warrior king always entered a city riding upon a
horse; a king on a mission of peace and friendship
always entered riding upon an ass. Jesus would not
enter Jerusalem as a man on horseback, but he was
willing to enter peacefully and with good will as
the Son of Man on a donkey.
Jesus
had long tried by direct teaching to impress upon
his apostles and his disciples that his kingdom was
not of this world, that it was a purely spiritual
matter; but he had not succeeded in this effort.
Now, what he had failed to do by plain and personal
teaching, he would attempt to accomplish by a
symbolic appeal. Accordingly, right after the noon
lunch, Jesus called Peter and John, and after
directing them to go over to Bethphage, a
neighboring village a little off the main road and a
short distance northwest of Bethany, he further
said: "Go to Bethphage, and when you come to the
junction of the roads, you will find the colt of an
ass tied there. Loose the colt and bring it back
with you. If any one asks you why you do this,
merely say, `The Master has need of him.'" And when
the two apostles had gone into Bethphage as the
Master had directed, they found the colt tied near
his mother in the open street and close to a house
on the corner. As Peter began to untie the colt, the
owner came over and asked why they did this, and
when Peter answered him as Jesus had directed, the
man said: "If your Master is Jesus from Galilee, let
him have the colt." And so they returned bringing
the colt with them.
By this
time several hundred pilgrims had gathered around
Jesus and his apostles. Since midforenoon the
visitors passing by on their way to the Passover had
tarried. Meanwhile, David Zebedee and some of his
former messenger associates took it upon themselves
to hasten on down to Jerusalem, where they
effectively spread the report among the throngs of
visiting pilgrims about the temple that Jesus of
Nazareth was making a triumphal entry into the city.
Accordingly, several thousand of these visitors
flocked forth to greet this much-talked-of prophet
and wonder-worker, whom some believed to be the
Messiah. This multitude, coming out from Jerusalem,
met Jesus and the crowd going into the city just
after they had passed over the brow of Olivet and
had begun the descent into the city.
Page 1882
As the
procession started out from Bethany, there was great
enthusiasm among the festive crowd of disciples,
believers, and visiting pilgrims, many hailing from
Galilee and Perea. Just before they started, the
twelve women of the original women's corps,
accompanied by some of their associates, arrived on
the scene and joined this unique procession as it
moved on joyously toward the city.
Before
they started, the Alpheus twins put their cloaks on
the donkey and held him while the Master got on. As
the procession moved toward the summit of Olivet,
the festive crowd threw their garments on the ground
and brought branches from the near-by trees in order
to make a carpet of honor for the donkey bearing the
royal Son, the promised Messiah. As the merry crowd
moved on toward Jerusalem, they began to sing, or
rather to shout in unison, the Psalm, "Hosanna to
the son of David; blessed is he who comes in the
name of the Lord. Hosanna in the highest. Blessed be
the kingdom that comes down from heaven."
Jesus
was lighthearted and cheerful as they moved along
until he came to the brow of Olivet, where the city
and the temple towers came into full view; there the
Master stopped the procession, and a great silence
came upon all as they beheld him weeping. Looking
down upon the vast multitude coming forth from the
city to greet him, the Master, with much emotion and
with tearful voice, said: "O Jerusalem, if you had
only known, even you, at least in this your day, the
things which belong to your peace, and which you
could so freely have had! But now are these glories
about to be hid from your eyes. You are about to
reject the Son of Peace and turn your backs upon the
gospel of salvation. The days will soon come upon
you wherein your enemies will cast a trench around
about you and lay siege to you on every side; they
shall utterly destroy you, insomuch that not one
stone shall be left upon another. And all this shall
befall you because you knew not the time of your
divine visitation. You are about to reject the gift
of God, and all men will reject you."
When he
had finished speaking, they began the descent of
Olivet and presently were joined by the multitude of
visitors who had come from Jerusalem waving palm
branches, shouting hosannas, and otherwise
expressing gleefulness and good fellowship. The
Master had not planned that these crowds should come
out from Jerusalem to meet them; that was the work
of others. He never premeditated anything which was
dramatic.
Along
with the multitude which poured out to welcome the
Master, there came also many of the Pharisees and
his other enemies. They were so much perturbed by
this sudden and unexpected outburst of popular
acclaim that they feared to arrest him lest such
action precipitate an open revolt of the populace.
They greatly feared the attitude of the large
numbers of visitors, who had heard much of Jesus,
and who, many of them, believed in him.
As they
neared Jerusalem, the crowd became more
demonstrative, so much so that some of the Pharisees
made their way up alongside Jesus and said:
"Teacher, you should rebuke your disciples and
exhort them to behave more seemly." Jesus answered:
"It is only fitting that these children should
welcome the Son of Peace, whom the chief priests
have rejected. It would be useless to stop them lest
in their stead these stones by the roadside cry
out."
The
Pharisees hastened on ahead of the procession to
rejoin the Sanhedrin, which was then in session at
the temple, and they reported to their associates:
"Behold, all that we do is of no avail; we are
confounded by this Galilean. The people have gone
mad over him; if we do not stop these ignorant ones,
all the world will go after him."
Page 1883
There
really was no deep significance to be attached to
this superficial and spontaneous outburst of popular
enthusiasm. This welcome, although it was joyous and
sincere, did not betoken any real or deep-seated
conviction in the hearts of this festive multitude.
These same crowds were equally as willing quickly to
reject Jesus later on this week when the Sanhedrin
once took a firm and decided stand against him, and
when they became disillusioned÷when they realized
that Jesus was not going to establish the kingdom in
accordance with their long-cherished expectations.
But the
whole city was mightily stirred up, insomuch that
everyone asked, "Who is this man?" And the multitude
answered, "This is the prophet of Galilee, Jesus of
Nazareth."
4.
VISITING ABOUT THE TEMPLE
While
the Alpheus twins returned the donkey to its owner,
Jesus and the ten apostles detached themselves from
their immediate associates and strolled about the
temple, viewing the preparations for the Passover.
No attempt was made to molest Jesus as the Sanhedrin
greatly feared the people, and that was, after all,
one of the reasons Jesus had for allowing the
multitude thus to acclaim him. The apostles little
understood that this was the only human procedure
which could have been effective in preventing Jesus'
immediate arrest upon entering the city. The Master
desired to give the inhabitants of Jerusalem, high
and low, as well as the tens of thousands of
Passover visitors, this one more and last chance to
hear the gospel and receive, if they would, the Son
of Peace.
And now,
as the evening drew on and the crowds went in quest
of nourishment, Jesus and his immediate followers
were left alone. What a strange day it had been! The
apostles were thoughtful, but speechless. Never, in
their years of association with Jesus, had they seen
such a day. For a moment they sat down by the
treasury, watching the people drop in their
contributions: the rich putting much in the
receiving box and all giving something in accordance
with the extent of their possessions. At last there
came along a poor widow, scantily attired, and they
observed as she cast two mites (small coppers) into
the trumpet. And then said Jesus, calling the
attention of the apostles to the widow: "Heed well
what you have just seen. This poor widow cast in
more than all the others, for all these others, from
their superfluity, cast in some trifle as a gift,
but this poor woman, even though she is in want,
gave all that she had, even her living."
As the
evening drew on, they walked about the temple courts
in silence, and after Jesus had surveyed these
familiar scenes once more, recalling his emotions in
connection with previous visits, not excepting the
earlier ones, he said, "Let us go up to Bethany for
our rest." Jesus, with Peter and John, went to the
home of Simon, while the other apostles lodged among
their friends in Bethany and Bethphage.
5. THE
APOSTLES' ATTITUDE
This
Sunday evening as they returned to Bethany, Jesus
walked in front of the apostles. Not a word was
spoken until they separated after arriving at
Simon's house. No twelve human beings ever
experienced such diverse and inexplicable emotions
as now surged through the minds and souls of these
ambassadors of the kingdom. These sturdy Galileans
were confused and disconcerted;
Page 1884
they did not know
what to expect next; they were too surprised to be
much afraid. They knew nothing of the Master's plans
for the next day, and they asked no questions. They
went to their lodgings, though they did not sleep
much, save the twins. But they did not keep armed
watch over Jesus at Simon's house.
Andrew
was thoroughly bewildered, well-nigh confused. He
was the one apostle who did not seriously undertake
to evaluate the popular outburst of acclaim. He was
too preoccupied with the thought of his
responsibility as chief of the apostolic corps to
give serious consideration to the meaning or
significance of the loud hosannas of the multitude.
Andrew was busy watching some of his associates whom
he feared might be led away by their emotions during
the excitement, particularly Peter, James, John, and
Simon Zelotes. Throughout this day and those which
immediately followed, Andrew was troubled with
serious doubts, but he never expressed any of these
misgivings to his apostolic associates. He was
concerned about the attitude of some of the twelve
who he knew were armed with swords; but he did not
know that his own brother, Peter, was carrying such
a weapon. And so the procession into Jerusalem made
a comparatively superficial impression upon Andrew;
he was too busy with the responsibilities of his
office to be otherwise affected.
Simon
Peter was at first almost swept off his feet by this
popular manifestation of enthusiasm; but he was
considerably sobered by the time they returned to
Bethany that night. Peter simply could not figure
out what the Master was about. He was terribly
disappointed that Jesus did not follow up this wave
of popular favor with some kind of a pronouncement.
Peter could not understand why Jesus did not speak
to the multitude when they arrived at the temple, or
at least permit one of the apostles to address the
crowd. Peter was a great preacher, and he disliked
to see such a large, receptive, and enthusiastic
audience go to waste. He would so much have liked to
preach the gospel of the kingdom to that throng
right there in the temple; but the Master had
specifically charged them that they were to do no
teaching or preaching while in Jerusalem this
Passover week. The reaction from the spectacular
procession into the city was disastrous to Simon
Peter; by night he was sobered and inexpressibly
saddened.
To James
Zebedee, this Sunday was a day of perplexity and
profound confusion; he could not grasp the purport
of what was going on; he could not comprehend the
Master's purpose in permitting this wild acclaim and
then in refusing to say a word to the people when
they arrived at the temple. As the procession moved
down Olivet toward Jerusalem, more especially when
they were met by the thousands of pilgrims who
poured forth to welcome the Master, James was
cruelly torn by his conflicting emotions of elation
and gratification at what he saw and by his profound
feeling of fear as to what would happen when they
reached the temple. And then was he downcast and
overcome by disappointment when Jesus climbed off
the donkey and proceeded to walk leisurely about the
temple courts. James could not understand the reason
for throwing away such a magnificent opportunity to
proclaim the kingdom. By night, his mind was held
firmly in the grip of a distressing and dreadful
uncertainty.
John
Zebedee came somewhere near understanding why Jesus
did this; at least he grasped in part the spiritual
significance of this so-called triumphal entry into
Jerusalem. As the multitude moved on toward the
temple, and as John beheld his Master sitting there
astride the colt, he recalled hearing Jesus onetime
quote the passage of Scripture, the utterance of
Zechariah, which described the coming of the Messiah
as a man of peace and riding into Jerusalem on an
ass.
Page 1885
As John turned
this Scripture over in his mind, he began to
comprehend the symbolic significance of this
Sunday-afternoon pageant. At least, he grasped
enough of the meaning of this Scripture to enable
him somewhat to enjoy the episode and to prevent his
becoming overmuch depressed by the apparent
purposeless ending of the triumphal procession. John
had a type of mind which naturally tended to think
and feel in symbols.
Philip
was entirely unsettled by the suddenness and
spontaneity of the outburst. He could not collect
his thoughts sufficiently while on the way down
Olivet to arrive at any settled notion as to what
all the demonstration was about. In a way, he
enjoyed the performance because his Master was being
honored. By the time they reached the temple, he was
perturbed by the thought that Jesus might possibly
ask him to feed the multitude, so that the conduct
of Jesus in turning leisurely away from the crowds,
which so sorely disappointed the majority of the
apostles, was a great relief to Philip. Multitudes
had sometimes been a great trial to the steward of
the twelve. After he was relieved of these personal
fears regarding the material needs of the crowds,
Philip joined with Peter in the expression of
disappointment that nothing was done to teach the
multitude. That night Philip got to thinking over
these experiences and was tempted to doubt the whole
idea of the kingdom; he honestly wondered what all
these things could mean, but he expressed his doubts
to no one; he loved Jesus too much. He had great
personal faith in the Master.
Nathaniel, aside from the symbolic and prophetic
aspects, came the nearest to understanding the
Master's reason for enlisting the popular support of
the Passover pilgrims. He reasoned it out, before
they reached the temple, that without such a
demonstrative entry into Jerusalem Jesus would have
been arrested by the Sanhedrin officials and cast
into prison the moment he presumed to enter the
city. He was not, therefore, in the least surprised
that the Master made no further use of the cheering
crowds when he had once got inside the walls of the
city and had thus so forcibly impressed the Jewish
leaders that they would refrain from placing him
under immediate arrest. Understanding the real
reason for the Master's entering the city in this
manner, Nathaniel naturally followed along with more
poise and was less perturbed and disappointed by
Jesus' subsequent conduct than were the other
apostles. Nathaniel had great confidence in Jesus'
understanding of men as well as in his sagacity and
cleverness in handling difficult situations.
Matthew
was at first nonplused by this pageant performance.
He did not grasp the meaning of what his eyes were
seeing until he also recalled the Scripture in
Zechariah where the prophet had alluded to the
rejoicing of Jerusalem because her king had come
bringing salvation and riding upon the colt of an
ass. As the procession moved in the direction of the
city and then drew on toward the temple, Matthew
became ecstatic; he was certain that something
extraordinary would happen when the Master arrived
at the temple at the head of this shouting
multitude. When one of the Pharisees mocked Jesus,
saying, "Look, everybody, see who comes here, the
king of the Jews riding on an ass!" Matthew kept his
hands off of him only by exercising great restraint.
None of the twelve was more depressed on the way
back to Bethany that evening. Next to Simon Peter
and Simon Zelotes, he experienced the highest
nervous tension and was in a state of exhaustion by
night. But by morning Matthew was much cheered; he
was, after all, a cheerful loser.
Page 1886
Thomas
was the most bewildered and puzzled man of all the
twelve. Most of the time he just followed along,
gazing at the spectacle and honestly wondering what
could be the Master's motive for participating in
such a peculiar demonstration. Down deep in his
heart he regarded the whole performance as a little
childish, if not downright foolish. He had never
seen Jesus do anything like this and was at a loss
to account for his strange conduct on this Sunday
afternoon. By the time they reached the temple,
Thomas had deduced that the purpose of this popular
demonstration was so to frighten the Sanhedrin that
they would not dare immediately to arrest the
Master. On the way back to Bethany Thomas thought
much but said nothing. By bedtime the Master's
cleverness in staging the tumultuous entry into
Jerusalem had begun to make a somewhat humorous
appeal, and he was much cheered up by this reaction.
This
Sunday started off as a great day for Simon Zelotes.
He saw visions of wonderful doings in Jerusalem the
next few days, and in that he was right, but Simon
dreamed of the establishment of the new national
rule of the Jews, with Jesus on the throne of David.
Simon saw the nationalists springing into action as
soon as the kingdom was announced, and himself in
supreme command of the assembling military forces of
the new kingdom. On the way down Olivet he even
envisaged the Sanhedrin and all of their
sympathizers dead before sunset of that day. He
really believed something great was going to happen.
He was the noisiest man in the whole multitude. By
five o'clock that afternoon he was a silent,
crushed, and disillusioned apostle. He never fully
recovered from the depression which settled down on
him as a result of this day's shock; at least not
until long after the Master's resurrection.
To the
Alpheus twins this was a perfect day. They really
enjoyed it all the way through, and not being
present during the time of quiet visitation about
the temple, they escaped much of the anticlimax of
the popular upheaval. They could not possibly
understand the downcast behavior of the apostles
when they came back to Bethany that evening. In the
memory of the twins this was always their day of
being nearest heaven on earth. This day was the
satisfying climax of their whole career as apostles.
And the memory of the elation of this Sunday
afternoon carried them on through all of the tragedy
of this eventful week, right up to the hour of the
crucifixion. It was the most befitting entry of the
king the twins could conceive; they enjoyed every
moment of the whole pageant. They fully approved of
all they saw and long cherished the memory.
Of all
the apostles, Judas Iscariot was the most adversely
affected by this processional entry into Jerusalem.
His mind was in a disagreeable ferment because of
the Master's rebuke the preceding day in connection
with Mary's anointing at the feast in Simon's house.
Judas was disgusted with the whole spectacle. To him
it seemed childish, if not indeed ridiculous. As
this vengeful apostle looked upon the proceedings of
this Sunday afternoon, Jesus seemed to him more to
resemble a clown than a king. He heartily resented
the whole performance. He shared the views of the
Greeks and Romans, who looked down upon anyone who
would consent to ride upon an ass or the colt of an
ass. By the time the triumphal procession had
entered the city, Judas had about made up his mind
to abandon the whole idea of such a kingdom; he was
almost resolved to forsake all such farcical
attempts to establish the kingdom of heaven. And
then he thought of the resurrection of Lazarus, and
many other things, and decided to stay on with the
twelve, at least for another day. Besides, he
carried the bag, and he would not desert with the
apostolic funds in his possession. On
Page 1887
the way back to
Bethany that night his conduct did not seem strange
since all of the apostles were equally downcast and
silent.
Judas
was tremendously influenced by the ridicule of his
Sadducean friends. No other single factor exerted
such a powerful influence on him, in his final
determination to forsake Jesus and his fellow
apostles, as a certain episode which occurred just
as Jesus reached the gate of the city: A prominent
Sadducee (a friend of Judas's family) rushed up to
him in a spirit of gleeful ridicule and, slapping
him on the back, said: "Why so troubled of
countenance, my good friend; cheer up and join us
all while we acclaim this Jesus of Nazareth the king
of the Jews as he rides through the gates of
Jerusalem seated on an ass." Judas had never shrunk
from persecution, but he could not stand this sort
of ridicule. With the long-nourished emotion of
revenge there was now blended this fatal fear of
ridicule, that terrible and fearful feeling of being
ashamed of his Master and his fellow apostles. At
heart, this ordained ambassador of the kingdom was
already a deserter; it only remained for him to find
some plausible excuse for an open break with the
Master. |