PAPER 183
- THE BETRAYAL AND ARREST OF JESUS
After Jesus had
finally awakened Peter, James, and John, he
suggested that they go to their tents and seek sleep
in preparation for the duties of the morrow. But by
this time the three apostles were wide awake; they
had been refreshed by their short naps, and besides,
they were stimulated and aroused by the arrival on
the scene of two excited messengers who inquired for
David Zebedee and quickly went in quest of him when
Peter informed them where he kept watch.
Although eight of
the apostles were sound asleep, the Greeks who were
encamped alongside them were more fearful of
trouble, so much so that they had posted a sentinel
to give the alarm in case danger should arise. When
these two messengers hurried into camp, the Greek
sentinel proceeded to arouse all of his fellow
countrymen, who streamed forth from their tents,
fully dressed and fully armed. All the camp was now
aroused except the eight apostles. Peter desired to
call his associates, but Jesus definitely forbade
him. The Master mildly admonished them all to return
to their tents, but they were reluctant to comply
with his suggestion.
Failing to
disperse his followers, the Master left them and
walked down toward the olive press near the entrance
to Gethsemane Park. Although the three apostles, the
Greeks, and the other members of the camp hesitated
immediately to follow him, John Mark hastened around
through the olive trees and secreted himself in a
small shed near the olive press. Jesus withdrew from
the camp and from his friends in order that his
apprehenders, when they arrived, might arrest him
without disturbing his apostles. The Master feared
to have his apostles awake and present at the time
of his arrest lest the spectacle of Judas's
betraying him should so arouse their animosity that
they would offer resistance to the soldiers and
would be taken into custody with him. He feared
that, if they should be arrested with him, they
might also perish with him.
Though Jesus knew
that the plan for his death had its origin in the
councils of the rulers of the Jews, he was also
aware that all such nefarious schemes had the full
approval of Lucifer, Satan, and Caligastia. And he
well knew that these rebels of the realms would also
be pleased to see all of the apostles destroyed with
him.
Jesus sat down,
alone, on the olive press, where he awaited the
coming of the betrayer, and he was seen at this time
only by John Mark and an innumerable host of
celestial observers.
1. THE
FATHER'S WILL
There is great
danger of misunderstanding the meaning of numerous
sayings and many events associated with the
termination of the Master's career in
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the flesh. The
cruel treatment of Jesus by the ignorant servants
and the calloused soldiers, the unfair conduct of
his trials, and the unfeeling attitude of the
professed religious leaders, must not be confused
with the fact that Jesus, in patiently submitting to
all this suffering and humiliation, was truly doing
the will of the Father in Paradise. It was, indeed
and in truth, the will of the Father that his Son
should drink to the full the cup of mortal
experience, from birth to death, but the Father in
heaven had nothing whatever to do with instigating
the barbarous behavior of those supposedly civilized
human beings who so brutally tortured the Master and
so horribly heaped successive indignities upon his
nonresisting person. These inhuman and shocking
experiences which Jesus was called upon to endure in
the final hours of his mortal life were not in any
sense a part of the divine will of the Father, which
his human nature had so triumphantly pledged to
carry out at the time of the final surrender of man
to God as signified in the threefold prayer which he
indited in the garden while his weary apostles slept
the sleep of physical exhaustion.
The Father in
heaven desired the bestowal Son to finish his earth
career naturally, just as all mortals must
finish up their lives on earth and in the flesh.
Ordinary men and women cannot expect to have their
last hours on earth and the supervening episode of
death made easy by a special dispensation.
Accordingly, Jesus elected to lay down his life in
the flesh in the manner which was in keeping with
the outworking of natural events, and he steadfastly
refused to extricate himself from the cruel clutches
of a wicked conspiracy of inhuman events which swept
on with horrible certainty toward his unbelievable
humiliation and ignominious death. And every bit of
all this astounding manifestation of hatred and this
unprecedented demonstration of cruelty was the work
of evil men and wicked mortals. God in heaven did
not will it, neither did the archenemies of Jesus
dictate it, though they did much to insure that
unthinking and evil mortals would thus reject the
bestowal Son. Even the father of sin turned his face
away from the excruciating horror of the scene of
the crucifixion.
2. JUDAS
IN THE CITY
After Judas so
abruptly left the table while eating the Last
Supper, he went directly to the home of his cousin,
and then did the two go straight to the captain of
the temple guards. Judas requested the captain to
assemble the guards and informed him that he was
ready to lead them to Jesus. Judas having appeared
on the scene a little before he was expected, there
was some delay in getting started for the Mark home,
where Judas expected to find Jesus still visiting
with the apostles. The Master and the eleven left
the home of Elijah Mark fully fifteen minutes before
the betrayer and the guards arrived. By the time the
apprehenders reached the Mark home, Jesus and the
eleven were well outside the walls of the city and
on their way to the Olivet camp.
Judas was much
perturbed by this failure to find Jesus at the Mark
residence and in the company of eleven men, only two
of whom were armed for resistance. He happened to
know that, in the afternoon when they had left camp,
only Simon Peter and Simon Zelotes were girded with
swords; Judas had hoped to take Jesus when the city
was quiet, and when there was little chance of
resistance. The betrayer feared that, if he waited
for them to return to their camp, more than
threescore of devoted disciples would be
encountered, and he also knew that Simon Zelotes had
an ample store of arms in his possession. Judas
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was becoming
increasingly nervous as he meditated how the eleven
loyal apostles would detest him, and he feared they
would all seek to destroy him. He was not only
disloyal, but he was a real coward at heart.
When they failed
to find Jesus in the upper chamber, Judas asked the
captain of the guard to return to the temple. By
this time the rulers had begun to assemble at the
high priest's home preparatory to receiving Jesus,
seeing that their bargain with the traitor called
for Jesus' arrest by midnight of that day. Judas
explained to his associates that they had missed
Jesus at the Mark home, and that it would be
necessary to go to Gethsemane to arrest him. The
betrayer then went on to state that more than
threescore devoted followers were encamped with him,
and that they were all well armed. The rulers of the
Jews reminded Judas that Jesus had always preached
nonresistance, but Judas replied that they could not
depend upon all Jesus' followers obeying such
teaching. He really feared for himself and therefore
made bold to ask for a company of forty armed
soldiers. Since the Jewish authorities had no such
force of armed men under their jurisdiction, they
went at once to the fortress of Antonia and
requested the Roman commander to give them this
guard; but when he learned that they intended to
arrest Jesus, he promptly refused to accede to their
request and referred them to his superior officer.
In this way more than an hour was consumed in going
from one authority to another until they finally
were compelled to go to Pilate himself in order to
obtain permission to employ the armed Roman guards.
It was late when they arrived at Pilate's house, and
he had retired to his private chambers with his
wife. He hesitated to have anything to do with the
enterprise, all the more so since his wife had asked
him not to grant the request. But inasmuch as the
presiding officer of the Jewish Sanhedrin was
present and making personal request for this
assistance, the governor thought it wise to grant
the petition, thinking he could later on right any
wrong they might be disposed to commit.
Accordingly, when
Judas Iscariot started out from the temple, about
half after eleven o'clock, he was accompanied by
more than sixty persons--temple guards, Roman
soldiers, and curious servants of the chief priests
and rulers.
3. THE
MASTER'S ARREST
As this company of
armed soldiers and guards, carrying torches and
lanterns, approached the garden, Judas stepped well
out in front of the band that he might be ready
quickly to identify Jesus so that the apprehenders
could easily lay hands on him before his associates
could rally to his defense. And there was yet
another reason why Judas chose to be ahead of the
Master's enemies: He thought it would appear that he
had arrived on the scene ahead of the soldiers so
that the apostles and others gathered about Jesus
might not directly connect him with the armed guards
following so closely upon his heels. Judas had even
thought to pose as having hastened out to warn them
of the coming of the apprehenders, but this plan was
thwarted by Jesus' blighting greeting of the
betrayer. Though the Master spoke to Judas kindly,
he greeted him as a traitor.
As soon as Peter,
James, and John, with some thirty of their fellow
campers, saw the armed band with torches swing
around the brow of the hill, they knew that these
soldiers were coming to arrest Jesus, and they all
rushed down to near the olive press where the Master
was sitting in moonlit solitude. As the company of
soldiers approached on one side, the three apostles
and
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their associates
approached on the other. As Judas strode forward to
accost the Master, there the two groups stood,
motionless, with the Master between them and Judas
making ready to impress the traitorous kiss upon his
brow.
It had been the
hope of the betrayer that he could, after leading
the guards to Gethsemane, simply point Jesus out to
the soldiers, or at most carry out the promise to
greet him with a kiss, and then quickly retire from
the scene. Judas greatly feared that the apostles
would all be present, and that they would
concentrate their attack upon him in retribution for
his daring to betray their beloved teacher. But when
the Master greeted him as a betrayer, he was so
confused that he made no attempt to flee.
Jesus made one
last effort to save Judas from actually betraying
him in that, before the traitor could reach him, he
stepped to one side and, addressing the foremost
soldier on the left, the captain of the Romans,
said, "Whom do you seek?" The captain answered,
"Jesus of Nazareth." Then Jesus stepped up
immediately in front of the officer and, standing
there in the calm majesty of the God of all this
creation, said, "I am he." Many of this armed band
had heard Jesus teach in the temple, others had
learned about his mighty works, and when they heard
him thus boldly announce his identity, those in the
front ranks fell suddenly backward. They were
overcome with surprise at his calm and majestic
announcement of identity. There was, therefore, no
need for Judas to go on with his plan of betrayal.
The Master had boldly revealed himself to his
enemies, and they could have taken him without
Judas's assistance. But the traitor had to do
something to account for his presence with this
armed band, and besides, he wanted to make a show of
carrying out his part of the betrayal bargain with
the rulers of the Jews in order to be eligible for
the great reward and honors which he believed would
be heaped upon him in compensation for his promise
to deliver Jesus into their hands.
As the guards
rallied from their first faltering at the sight of
Jesus and at the sound of his unusual voice, and as
the apostles and disciples drew nearer, Judas
stepped up to Jesus and, placing a kiss upon his
brow, said, "Hail, Master and Teacher." And as Judas
thus embraced his Master, Jesus said, "Friend, is it
not enough to do this! Would you even betray the Son
of Man with a kiss?"
The apostles and
disciples were literally stunned by what they saw.
For a moment no one moved. Then Jesus, disengaging
himself from the traitorous embrace of Judas,
stepped up to the guards and soldiers and again
asked, "Whom do you seek?" And again the captain
said, "Jesus of Nazareth." And again answered Jesus:
"I have told you that I am he. If, therefore, you
seek me, let these others go their way. I am ready
to go with you."
Jesus was ready to
go back to Jerusalem with the guards, and the
captain of the soldiers was altogether willing to
allow the three apostles and their associates to go
their way in peace. But before they were able to get
started, as Jesus stood there awaiting the captain's
orders, one Malchus, the Syrian bodyguard of the
high priest, stepped up to Jesus and made ready to
bind his hands behind his back, although the Roman
captain had not directed that Jesus should be thus
bound. When Peter and his associates saw their
Master being subjected to this indignity, they were
no longer able to restrain themselves. Peter drew
his sword and with the others rushed forward to
smite Malchus. But before the soldiers could come to
the defense of the high priest's servant, Jesus
raised a forbidding hand to Peter and, speaking
sternly, said: "Peter, put up your sword. They who
take the sword shall perish by the sword. Do you not
understand
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that it is the
Father's will that I drink this cup? And do you not
further know that I could even now command more than
twelve legions of angels and their associates, who
would deliver me from the hands of these few men?"
While Jesus thus
effectively put a stop to this show of physical
resistance by his followers, it was enough to arouse
the fear of the captain of the guards, who now, with
the help of his soldiers, laid heavy hands on Jesus
and quickly bound him. And as they tied his hands
with heavy cords, Jesus said to them: "Why do you
come out against me with swords and with staves as
if to seize a robber? I was daily with you in the
temple, publicly teaching the people, and you made
no effort to take me."
When Jesus had
been bound, the captain, fearing that the followers
of the Master might attempt to rescue him, gave
orders that they be seized; but the soldiers were
not quick enough since, having overheard the
captain's orders to arrest them, Jesus' followers
fled in haste back into the ravine. All this time
John Mark had remained secluded in the near-by shed.
When the guards started back to Jerusalem with
Jesus, John Mark attempted to steal out of the shed
in order to catch up with the fleeing apostles and
disciples; but just as he emerged, one of the last
of the returning soldiers who had pursued the
fleeing disciples was passing near and, seeing this
young man in his linen coat, gave chase, almost
overtaking him. In fact, the soldier got near enough
to John to lay hold upon his coat, but the young man
freed himself from the garment, escaping naked while
the soldier held the empty coat. John Mark made his
way in all haste to David Zebedee on the upper
trail. When he had told David what had happened,
they both hastened back to the tents of the sleeping
apostles and informed all eight of the Master's
betrayal and arrest.
At about the time
the eight apostles were being awakened, those who
had fled up the ravine were returning, and they all
gathered together near the olive press to debate
what should be done. In the meantime, Simon Peter
and John Zebedee, who had hidden among the olive
trees, had already gone on after the mob of
soldiers, guards, and servants, who were now leading
Jesus back to Jerusalem as they would have led a
desperate criminal. John followed close behind the
mob, but Peter followed afar off. After John Mark's
escape from the clutch of the soldier, he provided
himself with a cloak which he found in the tent of
Simon Peter and John Zebedee. He suspected the
guards were going to take Jesus to the home of
Annas, the high priest emeritus; so he skirted
around through the olive orchards and was there
ahead of the mob, hiding near the entrance to the
gate of the high priest's palace.
4.
DISCUSSION AT THE OLIVE PRESS
James Zebedee
found himself separated from Simon Peter and his
brother John, and so he now joined the other
apostles and their fellow campers at the olive press
to deliberate on what should be done in view of the
Master's arrest.
Andrew had been
released from all responsibility in the group
management of his fellow apostles; accordingly, in
this greatest of all crises in their lives, he was
silent. After a short informal discussion, Simon
Zelotes stood up on the stone wall of the olive
press and, making an impassioned plea for loyalty to
the Master and the cause of the kingdom, exhorted
his fellow apostles and the other disciples to
hasten on after the mob and effect the rescue of
Jesus. The majority of the company would have been
disposed to follow his aggressive leadership had
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it not been for
the advice of Nathaniel, who stood up the moment
Simon had finished speaking and called their
attention to Jesus' oft-repeated teachings regarding
nonresistance. He further reminded them that Jesus
had that very night instructed them that they should
preserve their lives for the time when they should
go forth into the world proclaiming the good news of
the gospel of the heavenly kingdom. And Nathaniel
was encouraged in this stand by James Zebedee, who
now told how Peter and others drew their swords to
defend the Master against arrest, and that Jesus
bade Simon Peter and his fellow swordsmen sheathe
their blades. Matthew and Philip also made speeches,
but nothing definite came of this discussion until
Thomas, calling their attention to the fact that
Jesus had counseled Lazarus against exposing himself
to death, pointed out that they could do nothing to
save their Master inasmuch as he refused to allow
his friends to defend him, and since he persisted in
refraining from the use of his divine powers to
frustrate his human enemies. Thomas persuaded them
to scatter, every man for himself, with the
understanding that David Zebedee would remain at the
camp to maintain a clearinghouse and messenger
headquarters for the group. By half past two o'clock
that morning the camp was deserted; only David
remained on hand with three or four messengers, the
others having been dispatched to secure information
as to where Jesus had been taken, and what was going
to be done with him.
Five of the
apostles, Nathaniel, Matthew, Philip, and the twins,
went into hiding at Bethphage and Bethany. Thomas,
Andrew, James, and Simon Zelotes were hiding in the
city. Simon Peter and John Zebedee followed along to
the home of Annas.
Shortly after
daybreak, Simon Peter wandered back to the
Gethsemane camp, a dejected picture of deep despair.
David sent him in charge of a messenger to join his
brother, Andrew, who was at the home of Nicodemus in
Jerusalem.
Until the very end
of the crucifixion, John Zebedee remained, as Jesus
had directed him, always near at hand, and it was he
who supplied David's messengers with information
from hour to hour which they carried to David at the
garden camp, and which was then relayed to the
hiding apostles and to Jesus' family.
Surely, the
shepherd is smitten and the sheep are scattered!
While they all vaguely realize that Jesus has
forewarned them of this very situation, they are too
severely shocked by the Master's sudden
disappearance to be able to use their minds
normally.
It was shortly
after daylight and just after Peter had been sent to
join his brother, that Jude, Jesus' brother in the
flesh, arrived in the camp, almost breathless and in
advance of the rest of Jesus' family, only to learn
that the Master had already been placed under
arrest; and he hastened back down the Jericho road
to carry this information to his mother and to his
brothers and sisters. David Zebedee sent word to
Jesus' family, by Jude, to forgather at the house of
Martha and Mary in Bethany and there await news
which his messengers would regularly bring them.
This was the
situation during the last half of Thursday night and
the early morning hours of Friday as regards the
apostles, the chief disciples, and the earthly
family of Jesus. And all these groups and
individuals were kept in touch with each other by
the messenger service which David Zebedee continued
to operate from his headquarters at the Gethsemane
camp.
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5. ON THE
WAY TO THE HIGH PRIEST'S PALACE
Before they
started away from the garden with Jesus, a dispute
arose between the Jewish captain of the temple
guards and the Roman captain of the company of
soldiers as to where they were to take Jesus. The
captain of the temple guards gave orders that he
should be taken to Caiaphas, the acting high priest.
The captain of the Roman soldiers directed that
Jesus be taken to the palace of Annas, the former
high priest and father-in-law of Caiaphas. And this
he did because the Romans were in the habit of
dealing directly with Annas in all matters having to
do with the enforcement of the Jewish ecclesiastical
laws. And the orders of the Roman captain were
obeyed; they took Jesus to the home of Annas for his
preliminary examination.
Judas marched
along near the captains, overhearing all that was
said, but took no part in the dispute, for neither
the Jewish captain nor the Roman officer would so
much as speak to the betrayer--they held him in such
contempt.
About this time
John Zebedee, remembering his Master's instructions
to remain always near at hand, hurried up near Jesus
as he marched along between the two captains. The
commander of the temple guards, seeing John come up
alongside, said to his assistant: "Take this man and
bind him. He is one of this fellow's followers." But
when the Roman captain heard this and, looking
around, saw John, he gave orders that the apostle
should come over by him, and that no man should
molest him. Then the Roman captain said to the
Jewish captain: "This man is neither a traitor nor a
coward. I saw him in the garden, and he did not draw
a sword to resist us. He has the courage to come
forward to be with his Master, and no man shall lay
hands on him. The Roman law allows that any prisoner
may have at least one friend to stand with him
before the judgment bar, and this man shall not be
prevented from standing by the side of his Master,
the prisoner." And when Judas heard this, he was so
ashamed and humiliated that he dropped back behind
the marchers, coming up to the palace of Annas
alone.
And this explains
why John Zebedee was permitted to remain near Jesus
all the way through his trying experiences this
night and the next day. The Jews feared to say aught
to John or to molest him in any way because he had
something of the status of a Roman counselor
designated to act as observer of the transactions of
the Jewish ecclesiastical court. John's position of
privilege was made all the more secure when, in
turning Jesus over to the captain of the temple
guards at the gate of Annas's palace, the Roman,
addressing his assistant, said: "Go along with this
prisoner and see that these Jews do not kill him
without Pilate's consent. Watch that they do not
assassinate him, and see that his friend, the
Galilean, is permitted to stand by and observe all
that goes on." And thus was John able to be near
Jesus right on up to the time of his death on the
cross, though the other ten apostles were compelled
to remain in hiding. John was acting under Roman
protection, and the Jews dared not molest him until
after the Master's death.
And all the way to
the palace of Annas, Jesus opened not his mouth.
From the time of his arrest to the time of his
appearance before Annas, the Son of Man spoke no
word. |