PAPER 184
- BEFORE THE SANHEDRIN COURT
Representatives of
Annas had secretly instructed the captain of the
Roman soldiers to bring Jesus immediately to the
palace of Annas after he had been arrested. The
former high priest desired to maintain his prestige
as the chief ecclesiastical authority of the Jews.
He also had another purpose in detaining Jesus at
his house for several hours, and that was to allow
time for legally calling together the court of the
Sanhedrin. It was not lawful to convene the
Sanhedrin court before the time of the offering of
the morning sacrifice in the temple, and this
sacrifice was offered about three o'clock in the
morning.
Annas knew that a
court of Sanhedrists was in waiting at the palace of
his son-in-law, Caiaphas. Some thirty members of the
Sanhedrin had gathered at the home of the high
priest by midnight so that they would be ready to
sit in judgment on Jesus when he might be brought
before them. Only those members were assembled who
were strongly and openly opposed to Jesus and his
teaching since it required only twenty-three to
constitute a trial court.
Jesus spent about
three hours at the palace of Annas on Mount Olivet,
not far from the garden of Gethsemane, where they
arrested him. John Zebedee was free and safe in the
palace of Annas not only because of the word of the
Roman captain, but also because he and his brother
James were well known to the older servants, having
many times been guests at the palace as the former
high priest was a distant relative of their mother,
Salome.
1.
EXAMINATION BY ANNAS
Annas, enriched by
the temple revenues, his son-in-law the acting high
priest, and with his relations to the Roman
authorities, was indeed the most powerful single
individual in all Jewry. He was a suave and politic
planner and plotter. He desired to direct the matter
of disposing of Jesus; he feared to trust such an
important undertaking wholly to his brusque and
aggressive son-in-law. Annas wanted to make sure
that the Master's trial was kept in the hands of the
Sadducees; he feared the possible sympathy of some
of the Pharisees, seeing that practically all of
those members of the Sanhedrin who had espoused the
cause of Jesus were Pharisees.
Annas had not seen
Jesus for several years, not since the time when the
Master called at his house and immediately left upon
observing his coldness and reserve in receiving him.
Annas had thought to presume on this early
acquaintance and thereby attempt to persuade Jesus
to abandon his claims and leave Palestine. He was
reluctant to participate in the murder of a good man
and had reasoned that Jesus might choose to leave
the country rather than
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to suffer death.
But when Annas stood before the stalwart and
determined Galilean, he knew at once that it would
be useless to make such proposals. Jesus was even
more majestic and well poised than Annas remembered
him.
When Jesus was
young, Annas had taken a great interest in him, but
now his revenues were threatened by what Jesus had
so recently done in driving the money-changers and
other commercial traders out of the temple. This act
had aroused the enmity of the former high priest far
more than had Jesus' teachings.
Annas entered his
spacious audience chamber, seated himself in a large
chair, and commanded that Jesus be brought before
him. After a few moments spent in silently surveying
the Master, he said: "You realize that something
must be done about your teaching since you are
disturbing the peace and order of our country." As
Annas looked inquiringly at Jesus, the Master looked
full into his eyes but made no reply. Again Annas
spoke, "What are the names of your disciples,
besides Simon Zelotes, the agitator?" Again Jesus
looked down upon him, but he did not answer.
Annas was
considerably disturbed by Jesus' refusal to answer
his questions, so much so that he said to him: "Do
you have no care as to whether I am friendly to you
or not? Do you have no regard for the power I have
in determining the issues of your coming trial?"
When Jesus heard this, he said: "Annas, you know
that you could have no power over me unless it were
permitted by my Father. Some would destroy the Son
of Man because they are ignorant; they know no
better, but you, friend, know what you are doing.
How can you, therefore, reject the light of God?"
The kindly manner
in which Jesus spoke to Annas almost bewildered him.
But he had already determined in his mind that Jesus
must either leave Palestine or die; so he summoned
up his courage and asked: "Just what is it you are
trying to teach the people? What do you claim to
be?" Jesus answered: "You know full well that I have
spoken openly to the world. I have taught in the
synagogues and many times in the temple, where all
the Jews and many of the gentiles have heard me. In
secret I have spoken nothing; why, then, do you ask
me about my teaching? Why do you not summon those
who have heard me and inquire of them? Behold, all
Jerusalem has heard that which I have spoken even if
you have not yourself heard these teachings." But
before Annas could make reply, the chief steward of
the palace, who was standing near, struck Jesus in
the face with his hand, saying, "How dare you answer
the high priest with such words?" Annas spoke no
words of rebuke to his steward, but Jesus addressed
him, saying, "My friend, if I have spoken evil, bear
witness against the evil; but if I have spoken the
truth, why, then, should you smite me?"
Although Annas
regretted that his steward had struck Jesus, he was
too proud to take notice of the matter. In his
confusion he went into another room, leaving Jesus
alone with the household attendants and the temple
guards for almost an hour.
When he returned,
going up to the Master's side, he said, "Do you
claim to be the Messiah, the deliverer of Israel?"
Said Jesus: "Annas, you have known me from the times
of my youth. You know that I claim to be nothing
except that which my Father has appointed, and that
I have been sent to all men, gentile as well as
Jew." Then said Annas: "I have been told that you
have claimed to be the Messiah; is that true?" Jesus
looked upon Annas but only replied, "So you have
said."
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About this time
messengers arrived from the palace of Caiaphas to
inquire what time Jesus would be brought before the
court of the Sanhedrin, and since it was nearing the
break of day, Annas thought best to send Jesus bound
and in the custody of the temple guards to Caiaphas.
He himself followed after them shortly.
2. PETER
IN THE COURTYARD
As the band of
guards and soldiers approached the entrance to the
palace of Annas, John Zebedee was marching by the
side of the captain of the Roman soldiers. Judas had
dropped some distance behind, and Simon Peter
followed afar off. After John had entered the palace
courtyard with Jesus and the guards, Judas came up
to the gate but, seeing Jesus and John, went on over
to the home of Caiaphas, where he knew the real
trial of the Master would later take place. Soon
after Judas had left, Simon Peter arrived, and as he
stood before the gate, John saw him just as they
were about to take Jesus into the palace. The
portress who kept the gate knew John, and when he
spoke to her, requesting that she let Peter in, she
gladly assented.
Peter, upon
entering the courtyard, went over to the charcoal
fire and sought to warm himself, for the night was
chilly. He felt very much out of place here among
the enemies of Jesus, and indeed he was out of
place. The Master had not instructed him to keep
near at hand as he had admonished John. Peter
belonged with the other apostles, who had been
specifically warned not to endanger their lives
during these times of the trial and crucifixion of
their Master.
Peter threw away
his sword shortly before he came up to the palace
gate so that he entered the courtyard of Annas
unarmed. His mind was in a whirl of confusion; he
could scarcely realize that Jesus had been arrested.
He could not grasp the reality of the
situation--that he was here in the courtyard of
Annas, warming himself beside the servants of the
high priest. He wondered what the other apostles
were doing and, in turning over in his mind as to
how John came to be admitted to the palace,
concluded that it was because he was known to the
servants, since he had bidden the gate-keeper admit
him.
Shortly after the
portress let Peter in, and while he was warming
himself by the fire, she went over to him and
mischievously said, "Are you not also one of this
man's disciples?" Now Peter should not have been
surprised at this recognition, for it was John who
had requested that the girl let him pass through the
palace gates; but he was in such a tense nervous
state that this identification as a disciple threw
him off his balance, and with only one thought
uppermost in his mind--the thought of escaping with
his life--he promptly answered the maid's question
by saying, "I am not."
Very soon another
servant came up to Peter and asked: "Did I not see
you in the garden when they arrested this fellow?
Are you not also one of his followers?" Peter was
now thoroughly alarmed; he saw no way of safely
escaping from these accusers; so he vehemently
denied all connection with Jesus, saying, "I know
not this man, neither am I one of his followers."
About this time
the portress of the gate drew Peter to one side and
said: "I am sure you are a disciple of this Jesus,
not only because one of his followers bade me let
you in the courtyard, but my sister here has seen
you in the temple with this man. Why do you deny
this?" When Peter heard the maid accuse him, he
denied all knowledge of Jesus with much cursing and
swearing, again saying,
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"I am not this
man's follower; I do not even know him; I never
heard of him before."
Peter left the
fireside for a time while he walked about the
courtyard. He would have liked to have escaped, but
he feared to attract attention to himself. Getting
cold, he returned to the fireside, and one of the
men standing near him said: "Surely you are one of
this man's disciples. This Jesus is a Galilean, and
your speech betrays you, for you also speak as a
Galilean." And again Peter denied all connection
with his Master.
Peter was so
perturbed that he sought to escape contact with his
accusers by going away from the fire and remaining
by himself on the porch. After more than an hour of
this isolation, the gate-keeper and her sister
chanced to meet him, and both of them again
teasingly charged him with being a follower of
Jesus. And again he denied the accusation. Just as
he had once more denied all connection with Jesus,
the cock crowed, and Peter remembered the words of
warning spoken to him by his Master earlier that
same night. As he stood there, heavy of heart and
crushed with the sense of guilt, the palace doors
opened, and the guards led Jesus past on the way to
Caiaphas. As the Master passed Peter, he saw, by the
light of the torches, the look of despair on the
face of his former self-confident and superficially
brave apostle, and he turned and looked upon Peter.
Peter never forgot that look as long as he lived. It
was such a glance of commingled pity and love as
mortal man had never beheld in the face of the
Master.
After Jesus and
the guards passed out of the palace gates, Peter
followed them, but only for a short distance. He
could not go farther. He sat down by the side of the
road and wept bitterly. And when he had shed these
tears of agony, he turned his steps back toward the
camp, hoping to find his brother, Andrew. On
arriving at the camp, he found only David Zebedee,
who sent a messenger to direct him to where his
brother had gone to hide in Jerusalem.
Peter's entire
experience occurred in the courtyard of the palace
of Annas on Mount Olivet. He did not follow Jesus to
the palace of the high priest, Caiaphas. That Peter
was brought to the realization that he had
repeatedly denied his Master by the crowing of a
cock indicates that this all occurred outside of
Jerusalem since it was against the law to keep
poultry within the city proper.
Until the crowing
of the cock brought Peter to his better senses, he
had only thought, as he walked up and down the porch
to keep warm, how cleverly he had eluded the
accusations of the servants, and how he had
frustrated their purpose to identify him with Jesus.
For the time being, he had only considered that
these servants had no moral or legal right thus to
question him, and he really congratulated himself
over the manner in which he thought he had avoided
being identified and possibly subjected to arrest
and imprisonment. Not until the cock crowed did it
occur to Peter that he had denied his Master. Not
until Jesus looked upon him, did he realize that he
had failed to live up to his privileges as an
ambassador of the kingdom.
Having taken the
first step along the path of compromise and least
resistance, there was nothing apparent to Peter but
to go on with the course of conduct decided upon. It
requires a great and noble character, having started
out wrong, to turn about and go right. All too often
one's own mind tends to justify continuance in the
path of error when once it is entered upon.
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Peter never fully
believed that he could be forgiven until he met his
Master after the resurrection and saw that he was
received just as before the experiences of this
tragic night of the denials.
3. BEFORE
THE COURT OF SANHEDRISTS
It was about half
past three o'clock this Friday morning when the
chief priest, Caiaphas, called the Sanhedrist court
of inquiry to order and asked that Jesus be brought
before them for his formal trial. On three previous
occasions the Sanhedrin, by a large majority vote,
had decreed the death of Jesus, had decided that he
was worthy of death on informal charges of
law-breaking, blasphemy, and flouting the traditions
of the fathers of Israel.
This was not a
regularly called meeting of the Sanhedrin and was
not held in the usual place, the chamber of hewn
stone in the temple. This was a special trial court
of some thirty Sanhedrists and was convened in the
palace of the high priest. John Zebedee was present
with Jesus throughout this so-called trial.
How these chief
priests, scribes, Sadducees, and some of the
Pharisees flattered themselves that Jesus, the
disturber of their position and the challenger of
their authority, was now securely in their hands!
And they were resolved that he should never live to
escape their vengeful clutches.
Ordinarily, the
Jews, when trying a man on a capital charge,
proceeded with great caution and provided every
safeguard of fairness in the selection of witnesses
and the entire conduct of the trial. But on this
occasion, Caiaphas was more of a prosecutor than an
unbiased judge.
Jesus appeared
before this court clothed in his usual garments and
with his hands bound together behind his back. The
entire court was startled and somewhat confused by
his majestic appearance. Never had they gazed upon
such a prisoner nor witnessed such composure in a
man on trial for his life.
The Jewish law
required that at least two witnesses must agree upon
any point before a charge could be laid against the
prisoner. Judas could not be used as a witness
against Jesus because the Jewish law specifically
forbade the testimony of a traitor. More than a
score of false witnesses were on hand to testify
against Jesus, but their testimony was so
contradictory and so evidently trumped up that the
Sanhedrists themselves were very much ashamed of the
performance. Jesus stood there, looking down
benignly upon these perjurers, and his very
countenance disconcerted the lying witnesses.
Throughout all this false testimony the Master never
said a word; he made no reply to their many false
accusations.
The first time any
two of their witnesses approached even the semblance
of an agreement was when two men testified that they
had heard Jesus say in the course of one of his
temple discourses that he would "destroy this temple
made with hands and in three days make another
temple without hands." That was not exactly what
Jesus said, regardless of the fact that he pointed
to his own body when he made the remark referred to.
Although the high
priest shouted at Jesus, "Do you not answer any of
these charges?" Jesus opened not his mouth. He stood
there in silence while all of these false witnesses
gave their testimony. Hatred, fanaticism, and
unscrupulous exaggeration so characterized the words
of these perjurers that their testimony
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fell in its own
entanglements. The very best refutation of their
false accusations was the Master's calm and majestic
silence.
Shortly after the
beginning of the testimony of the false witnesses,
Annas arrived and took his seat beside Caiaphas.
Annas now arose and argued that this threat of Jesus
to destroy the temple was sufficient to warrant
three charges against him:
1. That he was a
dangerous traducer of the people. That he taught
them impossible things and otherwise deceived them.
2. That he was a
fanatical revolutionist in that he advocated laying
violent hands on the sacred temple, else how could
he destroy it?
3. That he taught
magic inasmuch as he promised to build a new temple,
and that without hands.
Already had the
full Sanhedrin agreed that Jesus was guilty of
death-deserving transgressions of the Jewish laws,
but they were now more concerned with developing
charges regarding his conduct and teachings which
would justify Pilate in pronouncing the death
sentence upon their prisoner. They knew that they
must secure the consent of the Roman governor before
Jesus could legally be put to death. And Annas was
minded to proceed along the line of making it appear
that Jesus was a dangerous teacher to be abroad
among the people.
But Caiaphas could
not longer endure the sight of the Master standing
there in perfect composure and unbroken silence. He
thought he knew at least one way in which the
prisoner might be induced to speak. Accordingly, he
rushed over to the side of Jesus and, shaking his
accusing finger in the Master's face, said: "I
adjure you, in the name of the living God, that you
tell us whether you are the Deliverer, the Son of
God." Jesus answered Caiaphas: "I am. Soon I go to
the Father, and presently shall the Son of Man be
clothed with power and once more reign over the
hosts of heaven."
When the high
priest heard Jesus utter these words, he was
exceedingly angry, and rending his outer garments,
he exclaimed: "What further need have we of
witnesses? Behold, now have you all heard this man's
blasphemy. What do you now think should be done with
this law-breaker and blasphemer?" And they all
answered in unison, "He is worthy of death; let him
be crucified."
Jesus manifested
no interest in any question asked him when before
Annas or the Sanhedrists except the one question
relative to his bestowal mission. When asked if he
were the Son of God, he instantly and unequivocally
answered in the affirmative.
Annas desired that
the trial proceed further, and that charges of a
definite nature regarding Jesus' relation to the
Roman law and Roman institutions be formulated for
subsequent presentation to Pilate. The councilors
were anxious to carry these matters to a speedy
termination, not only because it was the preparation
day for the Passover and no secular work should be
done after noon, but also because they feared Pilate
might any time return to the Roman capital of Judea,
Caesarea, since he was in Jerusalem only for the
Passover celebration.
But Annas did not
succeed in keeping control of the court. After Jesus
had so unexpectedly answered Caiaphas, the high
priest stepped forward and smote him in the face
with his hand. Annas was truly shocked as the other
members of the court, in passing out of the room,
spit in Jesus' face, and many of them mockingly
slapped him with the palms of their hands. And thus
in disorder and
Page 1984
with such
unheard-of confusion this first session of the
Sanhedrist trial of Jesus ended at half past four
o'clock.
Thirty prejudiced
and tradition-blinded false judges, with their false
witnesses, are presuming to sit in judgment on the
righteous Creator of a universe. And these
impassioned accusers are exasperated by the majestic
silence and superb bearing of this God-man. His
silence is terrible to endure; his speech is
fearlessly defiant. He is unmoved by their threats
and undaunted by their assaults. Man sits in
judgment on God, but even then he loves them and
would save them if he could.
4. THE
HOUR OF HUMILIATION
The Jewish law
required that, in the matter of passing the death
sentence, there should be two sessions of the court.
This second session was to be held on the day
following the first, and the intervening time was to
be spent in fasting and mourning by the members of
the court. But these men could not await the next
day for the confirmation of their decision that
Jesus must die. They waited only one hour. In the
meantime Jesus was left in the audience chamber in
the custody of the temple guards, who, with the
servants of the high priest, amused themselves by
heaping every sort of indignity upon the Son of Man.
They mocked him, spit upon him, and cruelly buffeted
him. They would strike him in the face with a rod
and then say, "Prophesy to us, you the Deliverer,
who it was that struck you." And thus they went on
for one full hour, reviling and mistreating this
unresisting man of Galilee.
During this tragic
hour of suffering and mock trials before the
ignorant and unfeeling guards and servants, John
Zebedee waited in lonely terror in an adjoining
room. When these abuses first started, Jesus
indicated to John, by a nod of his head, that he
should retire. The Master well knew that, if he
permitted his apostle to remain in the room to
witness these indignities, John's resentment would
be so aroused as to produce such an outbreak of
protesting indignation as would probably result in
his death.
Throughout this
awful hour Jesus uttered no word. To this gentle and
sensitive soul of humankind, joined in personality
relationship with the God of all this universe,
there was no more bitter portion of his cup of
humiliation than this terrible hour at the mercy of
these ignorant and cruel guards and servants, who
had been stimulated to abuse him by the example of
the members of this so-called Sanhedrist court.
The human heart
cannot possibly conceive of the shudder of
indignation that swept out over a vast universe as
the celestial intelligences witnessed this sight of
their beloved Sovereign submitting himself to the
will of his ignorant and misguided creatures on the
sin-darkened sphere of unfortunate Urantia.
What is this trait
of the animal in man which leads him to want to
insult and physically assault that which he cannot
spiritually attain or intellectually achieve? In the
half-civilized man there still lurks an evil
brutality which seeks to vent itself upon those who
are superior in wisdom and spiritual attainment.
Witness the evil coarseness and the brutal ferocity
of these supposedly civilized men as they derived a
certain form of animal pleasure from this physical
attack upon the unresisting Son of Man. As these
insults, taunts, and blows fell upon
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Jesus, he was
undefending but not defenseless. Jesus was not
vanquished, merely uncontending in the material
sense.
These are the
moments of the Master's greatest victories in all
his long and eventful career as maker, upholder, and
savior of a vast and far-flung universe. Having
lived to the full a life of revealing God to man,
Jesus is now engaged in making a new and
unprecedented revelation of man to God. Jesus is now
revealing to the worlds the final triumph over all
fears of creature personality isolation. The Son of
Man has finally achieved the realization of identity
as the Son of God. Jesus does not hesitate to assert
that he and the Father are one; and on the basis of
the fact and truth of that supreme and supernal
experience, he admonishes every kingdom believer to
become one with him even as he and his Father are
one. The living experience in the religion of Jesus
thus becomes the sure and certain technique whereby
the spiritually isolated and cosmically lonely
mortals of earth are enabled to escape personality
isolation, with all its consequences of fear and
associated feelings of helplessness. In the
fraternal realities of the kingdom of heaven the
faith sons of God find final deliverance from the
isolation of the self, both personal and planetary.
The God-knowing believer increasingly experiences
the ecstasy and grandeur of spiritual socialization
on a universe scale--citizenship on high in
association with the eternal realization of the
divine destiny of perfection attainment.
5. THE
SECOND MEETING OF THE COURT
At five-thirty
o'clock the court reassembled, and Jesus was led
into the adjoining room, where John was waiting.
Here the Roman soldier and the temple guards watched
over Jesus while the court began the formulation of
the charges which were to be presented to Pilate.
Annas made it clear to his associates that the
charge of blasphemy would carry no weight with
Pilate. Judas was present during this second meeting
of the court, but he gave no testimony.
This session of
the court lasted only a half hour, and when they
adjourned to go before Pilate, they had drawn up the
indictment of Jesus, as being worthy of death, under
three heads:
1. That he was a
perverter of the Jewish nation; he deceived the
people and incited them to rebellion.
2. That he taught
the people to refuse to pay tribute to Caesar.
3. That, by
claiming to be a king and the founder of a new sort
of kingdom, he incited treason against the emperor.
This entire
procedure was irregular and wholly contrary to the
Jewish laws. No two witnesses had agreed on any
matter except those who testified regarding Jesus'
statement about destroying the temple and raising it
again in three days. And even concerning that point,
no witnesses spoke for the defense, and neither was
Jesus asked to explain his intended meaning.
The only point the
court could have consistently judged him on was that
of blasphemy, and that would have rested entirely on
his own testimony. Even concerning blasphemy, they
failed to cast a formal ballot for the death
sentence.
And now they
presumed to formulate three charges, with which to
go before Pilate, on which no witnesses had been
heard, and which were agreed upon while the accused
prisoner was absent. When this was done, three of
the Pharisees took
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their leave; they
wanted to see Jesus destroyed, but they would not
formulate charges against him without witnesses and
in his absence.
Jesus did not
again appear before the Sanhedrist court. They did
not want again to look upon his face as they sat in
judgment upon his innocent life. Jesus did not know
(as a man) of their formal charges until he heard
them recited by Pilate.
While Jesus was in
the room with John and the guards, and while the
court was in its second session, some of the women
about the high priest's palace, together with their
friends, came to look upon the strange prisoner, and
one of them asked him, "Are you the Messiah, the Son
of God?" And Jesus answered: "If I tell you, you
will not believe me; and if I ask you, you will not
answer."
At six o'clock
that morning Jesus was led forth from the home of
Caiaphas to appear before Pilate for confirmation of
the sentence of death which this Sanhedrist court
had so unjustly and irregularly decreed. |