Though in the history hitherto this evangelist
seems industriously to have declined the recording of such passages
as had been related by the other evangelists, yet, when he comes to
the sufferings and death of Christ, instead of passing them over,
as one ashamed of his Master's chain and cross, and looking upon
them as the blemishes of his story, he repeats what had been before
related, with considerable enlargements, as one that desired to
know nothing but Christ and him crucified, to glory in nothing save
in the cross of Christ. In the story of this chapter we have, I. he
remainder of Christ's trial before Pilate, which was tumultuous and
confused,
1 Then Pilate therefore took Jesus, and scourged him. 2 And the soldiers platted a crown of thorns, and put it on his head, and they put on him a purple robe, 3 And said, Hail, King of the Jews! and they smote him with their hands. 4 Pilate therefore went forth again, and saith unto them, Behold, I bring him forth to you, that ye may know that I find no fault in him. 5 Then came Jesus forth, wearing the crown of thorns, and the purple robe. And Pilate saith unto them, Behold the man! 6 When the chief priests therefore and officers saw him, they cried out, saying, Crucify him, crucify him. Pilate saith unto them, Take ye him, and crucify him: for I find no fault in him. 7 The Jews answered him, We have a law, and by our law he ought to die, because he made himself the Son of God. 8 When Pilate therefore heard that saying, he was the more afraid; 9 And went again into the judgment hall, and saith unto Jesus, Whence art thou? But Jesus gave him no answer. 10 Then saith Pilate unto him, Speakest thou not unto me? knowest thou not that I have power to crucify thee, and have power to release thee? 11 Jesus answered, Thou couldest have no power at all against me, except it were given thee from above: therefore he that delivered me unto thee hath the greater sin. 12 And from thenceforth Pilate sought to release him: but the Jews cried out, saying, If thou let this man go, thou art not Cæsar's friend: whosoever maketh himself a king speaketh against Cæsar. 13 When Pilate therefore heard that saying, he brought Jesus forth, and sat down in the judgment seat in a place that is called the Pavement, but in the Hebrew, Gabbatha. 14 And it was the preparation of the passover, and about the sixth hour: and he saith unto the Jews, Behold your King! 15 But they cried out, Away with him, away with him, crucify him. Pilate saith unto them, Shall I crucify your King? The chief priests answered, We have no king but Cæsar.
Here is a further account of the unfair trial which they gave to our Lord Jesus. The prosecutors carrying it on with great confusion among the people, and the judge with great confusion in his own breast, between both the narrative is such as is not easily reduced to method; we must therefore take the parts of it as they lie.
I. The judge abuses the prisoner, though he declares him innocent, and hopes therewith to pacify the prosecutors; wherein his intention, if indeed it was good, will by no means justify his proceedings, which were palpably unjust.
1. He ordered him to be whipped as a
criminal,
2. He turned him over to his soldiers, to
be ridiculed and made sport with as a fool (
(1.) See here the baseness and injustice of
Pilate, that he would suffer one whom he believed an innocent
person, and if so an excellent person, to be thus abused and
trampled on by his own servants. Those who are under the arrest of
the law ought to be under the protection of it; and their being
secured is to be their security. But Pilate did this, [1.] To
oblige his soldiers' merry humour, and perhaps his own too,
notwithstanding the gravity one might have expected in a judge.
Herod, as well as his men of war, had just before
done the same,
(2.) See here the rudeness and insolence of the soldiers, how perfectly lost they were to all justice and humanity, who could thus triumph over a man in misery, and one that had been in reputation for wisdom and honour, and never did any thing to forfeit it. But thus hath Christ's holy religion been basely misrepresented, dressed up by bad men at their pleasure, and so exposed to contempt and ridicule, as Christ was here. [1.] They clothe him with a mock-robe, as if it were a sham and a jest, and nothing but the product of a heated fancy and a crazed imagination. And as Christ is here represented as a king in conceit only, so is his religion as a concern in conceit only, and God and the soul, sin and duty, heaven and hell, are with many all chimeras. [2.] They crown him with thorns; as if the religion of Christ were a perfect penance, and the greatest pain and hardship in the world; as if to submit to the control of God and conscience were to thrust one's head into a thicket of thorns; but this is an unjust imputation; thorns and snares are in the way of the froward, but roses and laurels in religion's ways.
(3.) See here the wonderful condescension
of our Lord Jesus in his sufferings for us. Great and generous
minds can bear any thing better than ignominy, any toil, any pain,
any loss, rather than reproach; yet this the great and holy Jesus
submitted to for us. See and admire, [1.] The invincible patience
of a sufferer, leaving us an example of contentment and courage,
evenness, and easiness of spirit, under the greatest hardships we
may meet with in the way of duty. [2.] The invincible love and
kindness of a Saviour, who not only cheerfully and resolutely went
through all this, but voluntarily undertook it for us and for our
salvation. Herein he commended his love, that he would not only die
for us, but die as a fool dies. First, He endured the
pain; not the pangs of death only, though in the death of the
cross these were most exquisite; but, as if these were too little,
he submitted to those previous pains. Shall we complain of a thorn
in the flesh, and of being buffeted by affliction, because we need
it to hide pride from us, when Christ humbled himself to bear those
thorns in the head, and those buffetings, to save and teach us?
II. Pilate, having thus abused the
prisoner, presents him to the prosecutors, in hope that they would
now be satisfied, and drop the prosecution,
1. That he had not found any thing in him
which made him obnoxious to the Roman government (
2. That he had done that to him which would
make him the less dangerous to them and to their government,
III. The prosecutors, instead of being
pacified, were but the more exasperated,
1. Observe here their clamour and outrage. The chief priests, who headed the mob, cried out with fury and indignation, and their officers, or servants, who must say as they said, joined with them in crying, Crucify him, crucify him. The common people perhaps would have acquiesced in Pilate's declaration of his innocency, but their leaders, the priests, caused them to err. Now by this it appears that their malice against Christ was, (1.) Unreasonable and most absurd, in that they offer not to make good their charges against him, nor to object against the judgment of Pilate concerning him; but, though he be innocent, he must be crucified. (2.) It was insatiable and very cruel. Neither the extremity of his scourging, nor his patience under it, nor the tender expostulations of the judge, could mollify them in the least; no, nor could the jest into which Pilate had turned the cause, put them into a pleasant humour. (3.) It was violent and exceedingly resolute; they will have it their own way, and hazard the governor's favour, the peace of the city, and their own safety, rather than abate of the utmost of their demands. Were they so violent in running down our Lord Jesus, and in crying, Crucify him, crucify him? and shall not we be vigorous and zealous in advancing his name, and in crying, Crown him, Crown him? Did their hatred of him sharpen their endeavours against him? and shall not our love to him quicken our endeavours for him and his kingdom?
2. The check Pilate gave to their fury, still insisting upon the prisoner's innocency: "Take you him and crucify him, if he must be crucified." This is spoken ironically; he knew they could not, they durst not, crucify him; but it is as if he should say, "You shall not make me a drudge to your malice; I cannot with a safe conscience crucify him." A good resolve, if he would but have stuck to it. He found no fault in him, and therefore should not have continued to parley with the prosecutors. Those that would be safe from sin should be deaf to temptation. Nay, he should have secured the prisoner from their insults. What was he armed with power for, but to protect the injured? The guards of governors ought to be the guards of justice. But Pilate had not courage enough to act according to his conscience; and his cowardice betrayed him into a snare.
3. The further colour which the prosecutors
gave to their demand (
IV. The judge brings the prisoner again to his trial, upon this new suggestion. Observe,
1. The concern Pilate was in, when he heard
this alleged (
2. His further examination of our Lord
Jesus thereupon,
(1.) The place he chose for this examination: He went into the judgment-hall for privacy, that he might be out of the noise and clamour of the crowd, and might examine the thing the more closely. Those that would find out the truth as it is in Jesus must get out of the noise of prejudice, and retire as it were into the judgment-hall, to converse with Christ alone.
(2.) The question he put to him: Whence art thou? Art thou from men or from heaven? From beneath or from above? He had before asked directly, Art thou a King? But here he does not directly ask, Art thou the Son of God? lest he should seem to meddle with divine things too boldly. But in general, "Whence art thou? Where wast thou, and in what world hadst thou a being, before thy coming into this world?"
(3.) The silence of our Lord Jesus when he
was examined upon this head; but Jesus gave him no answer.
This was not a sullen silence, in contempt of the court, nor was it
because he knew not what to say; but, [1.] It was a patient
silence, that the scripture might be fulfilled, as a sheep
before the shearers is dumb, so he opened not his mouth,
(4.) The haughty check which Pilate gave
him for his silence (
(5.) Christ's pertinent answer to this
check,
[1.] He boldly rebukes his arrogance, and
rectifies his mistake: "Big as thou lookest and talkest, thou
couldest have no power at all against me, no power to scourge,
no power to crucify, except it were given thee from above."
Though Christ did not think fit to answer him when he was
impertinent (then answer not a fool according to his folly, lest
thou also be like him), yet he did think fit to answer him when
he was imperious; then answer a fool according to his folly,
lest he be wise in his own conceit,
[2.] He mildly excuses and extenuates his sin, in comparison with the sin of the ringleaders: "Therefore he that delivered me unto thee lies under greater guilt; for thou as a magistrate hast power from above, and art in thy place, thy sin is less than theirs who, from envy and malice, urge thee to abuse thy power."
First, It is plainly intimated that what Pilate did was sin, a great sin, and that the force which the Jews put upon him, and which he put upon himself in it, would not justify him. Christ hereby intended a hint for the awakening of his conscience and the increase of the fear he was now under. The guilt of others will not acquit us, nor will it avail in the great day to say that others were worse than we, for we are not to be judged by comparison, but must bear our own burden.
Secondly, Yet theirs that delivered
him to Pilate was the greater sin. By this it appears that all sins
are not equal, but some more heinous than others; some
comparatively as gnats, others as camels; some as motes in the
eyes, others as beams; some as pence, others as pounds. He that
delivered Christ to Pilate was either, 1. The people of the
Jews, who cried out, Crucify him, crucify him. They had seen
Christ's miracles, which Pilate had not; to them the Messiah was
first sent; they were his own; and to them, who were now enslaved,
a Redeemer should have been most welcome, and therefore it was much
worse in them to appear against him than in Pilate. 2. Or rather he
means Caiaphas in particular, who was at the head of the conspiracy
against Christ, and first advised his death,
V. Pilate struggles with the Jews to deliver Jesus out of their hands, but in vain. We hear no more after this of any thing that passed between Pilate and the prisoner; what remains lay between him and the prosecutors.
1. Pilate seems more zealous than before to
get Jesus discharged (
2. The Jews were more furious than ever, and more violent to get Jesus crucified. Still they carry on their design with noise and clamour as before; so now they cried out. They would have it thought that the commonalty was against him, and therefore laboured to get him cried down by a multitude, and it is no hard matter to pack a mob; whereas, if a fair poll had been granted, I doubt not but it would have been carried by a great majority for the releasing of him. A few madmen may out-shout many wise men, and then fancy themselves to speak the sense (when it is but the nonsense) of a nation, or of all mankind; but it is not so easy a thing to change the sense of the people as it is to misrepresent it, and to change their cry. Now that Christ was in the hands of his enemies his friends were shy and silent, and disappeared, and those that were against him were forward to show themselves so; and this gave the chief priests an opportunity to represent it as the concurring vote of all the Jews that he should be crucified. In this outcry they sought two things:—(1.) To blacken the prisoner as an enemy to Cæsar. He had refused the kingdoms of this world and the glory of them, had declared his kingdom not to be of this world, and yet they will have it that he speaks against Cæsar; antilegei—he opposes Cæsar, invades his dignity and sovereignty. It has always been the artifice of the enemies of religion to represent it as hurtful to kings and provinces, when it would be highly beneficial to both. (2.) To frighten the judge, as no friend to Cæsar: "If thou let this man go unpunished, and let him go on, thou art not Cæsar's friend, and therefore false to thy trust and the duty of thy place, obnoxious to the emperor's displeasure, and liable to be turned out." They intimate a threatening that they would inform against him, and get him displaced; and here they touched him in a sensible and very tender part. But, of all people, these Jews should not have pretended a concern for Cæsar, who were themselves so ill affected to him and his government. They should not talk of being friends to Cæsar, who were themselves such back friends to him; yet thus a pretended zeal for that which is good often serves to cover a real malice against that which is better.
3. When other expedients had been tried in
vain, Pilate slightly endeavoured to banter them out of their fury,
and yet, in doing this, betrayed himself to them, and yielded to
the rapid stream,
(1.) What it was that shocked Pilate
(
(2.) What preparation was made for a definitive sentence upon this matter: Pilate brought Jesus forth, and he himself in great state took the chair. We may suppose that he called for his robes, that he might look big, and then sat down in the judgment-seat.
[1.] Christ was condemned with all the ceremony that could be. First, To bring us off at God's bar, and that all believers through Christ, being judged here, might be acquitted in the court of heaven. Secondly, To take off the terror of pompous trials, which his followers would be brought to for his sake. Paul might the better stand at Cæsar's judgment-seat when his Master had stood there before him.
[2.] Notice is here taken of the place and time.
First, The place where Christ was condemned: in a place called the Pavement, but in Hebrew, Gabbatha, probably the place where he used to sit to try causes or criminals. Some make Gabbatha to signify an enclosed place, fenced against the insults of the people, whom therefore he did the less need to fear; others an elevated place, raised that all might see him.
Secondly, The time,
(3.) The rencounter Pilate had with the Jews, both priests and people, before he proceeded to give judgment, endeavouring in vain to stem the tide of their rage.
[1.] He saith unto the Jews, Behold your king. This is a reproof to them for the absurdity and malice of their insinuating that this Jesus made himself a king: "Behold your king, that is, him whom you accuse as a pretender to the crown. Is this a man likely to be dangerous to the government? I am satisfied he is not, and you may be so too, and let him alone." Some think he hereby upbraids them with their secret disaffection to Cæsar: "You would have this man to be your king, if he would but have headed a rebellion against Cæsar." But Pilate, though he was far from meaning so, seems as if he were the voice of God to them. Christ, now crowned with thorns, is, as a king at his coronation, offered to the people: "Behold your king, the king whom God hath set upon his holy hill of Zion;" but they, instead of entering into it with acclamations of joyful consent, protest against him; they will not have a king of God's choosing.
[2.] They cried out with the greatest
indignation, Away with him, away with him, which speaks
disdain as well as malice, aron, aron—"Take
him, he is none of ours; we disown him for our kinsman, much
more for our king; we have not only no veneration for him, but no
compassion; away with him out of our sight:" for so it was
written of him, he is one whom the nation abhors (
[3.] Pilate, willing to have Jesus released, and yet that it should be their doing, asks them, Shall I crucify your king? In saying this, he designed either, First, To stop their mouths, by showing them how absurd it was for them to reject one who offered himself to them to be their king at a time when they needed one more than ever. Have they no sense of slavery? No desire of liberty? No value for a deliverer? Though he saw no cause to fear him, they might see cause to hope for something from him; since crushed and sinking interests are ready to catch at any thing. Or, Secondly, To stop the mouth of his own conscience. "If this Jesus be a king" (thinks Pilate), "he is only kin of the Jews, and therefore I have nothing to do but to make a fair tender of him to them; if they refuse him, and will have their king crucified, what is that to me?" He banters them for their folly in expecting a Messiah, and yet running down one that bade so fair to be he.
16 Then delivered he him therefore unto them to be crucified. And they took Jesus, and led him away. 17 And he bearing his cross went forth into a place called the place of a skull, which is called in the Hebrew Golgotha: 18 Where they crucified him, and two other with him, on either side one, and Jesus in the midst.
We have here sentence of death passed upon our Lord Jesus, and execution done soon after. A mighty struggle Pilate had had within him between his convictions and his corruptions; but at length his convictions yielded, and his corruptions prevailed, the fear of man having a greater power over him than the fear of God.
I. Pilate gave judgment against
Christ, and signed the warrant for his execution,
II. Judgment was no sooner given than with all possible expedition the prosecutors, having gained their point, resolved to lose not time lest Pilate should change his mind, and order a reprieve (those are enemies to our souls, the worst of enemies, that hurry us to sin, and then leave us no room to undo what we have done amiss), and also lest there should be an uproar among the people, and they should find a greater number against them than they had with so much artifice got to be for them. It were well if we would be thus expeditious in that which is good, and not stay for more difficulties.
1. They immediately hurried away the
prisoner. The chief priests greedily flew upon the prey which they
had been long waiting for; now it is drawn into their net. Or
they, that is, the soldiers who were to attend the
execution, they took him and led him away, not to the place whence
he came, and thence to the place of execution, as is usual with us,
but directly to the place of execution. Both the priests and the
soldiers joined in leading him away. Now was the Son of man
delivered into the hands of men, wicked and unreasonable men.
By the law of Moses (and in appeals by our law) the prosecutors
were to be the executioners,
2. To add to his misery, they obliged him
as long as he was able, to carry his cross (
3. They brought him to the place of
execution: He went forth, not dragged against his will, but
voluntary in his sufferings. He went forth out of the city, for he
was crucified without the gate,
4. There they crucified him, and the other
malefactors with him (
And now let us pause awhile, and with an eye of faith look upon Jesus. Was ever sorrow like unto his sorrow? See him who was clothed with glory stripped of it all, and clothed with shame-him who was the praise of angels made a reproach of men—him who had been with eternal delight and joy in the bosom of his Father now in the extremities of pain and agony. See him bleeding, see him struggling, see him dying, see him and love him, love him and live to him, and study what we shall render.
19 And Pilate wrote a title, and put it on the cross. And the writing was, JESUS OF NAZARETH THE KING OF THE JEWS. 20 This title then read many of the Jews: for the place where Jesus was crucified was nigh to the city: and it was written in Hebrew, and Greek, and Latin. 21 Then said the chief priests of the Jews to Pilate, Write not, The King of the Jews; but that he said, I am King of the Jews. 22 Pilate answered, What I have written I have written. 23 Then the soldiers, when they had crucified Jesus, took his garments, and made four parts, to every soldier a part; and also his coat: now the coat was without seam, woven from the top throughout. 24 They said therefore among themselves, Let us not rend it, but cast lots for it, whose it shall be: that the scripture might be fulfilled, which saith, They parted my raiment among them, and for my vesture they did cast lots. These things therefore the soldiers did. 25 Now there stood by the cross of Jesus his mother, and his mother's sister, Mary the wife of Cleophas, and Mary Magdalene. 26 When Jesus therefore saw his mother, and the disciple standing by, whom he loved, he saith unto his mother, Woman, behold thy son! 27 Then saith he to the disciple, Behold thy mother! And from that hour that disciple took her unto his own home. 28 After this, Jesus knowing that all things were now accomplished, that the scripture might be fulfilled, saith, I thirst. 29 Now there was set a vessel full of vinegar: and they filled a sponge with vinegar, and put it upon hyssop, and put it to his mouth. 30 When Jesus therefore had received the vinegar, he said, It is finished: and he bowed his head, and gave up the ghost.
Here are some remarkable circumstances of Christ's dying more fully related than before, which those will take special notice of who covet to know Christ and him crucified.
I. The title set up over his head. Observe,
1. The inscription itself which Pilate
wrote, and ordered to be fixed to the top of the cross, declaring
the cause for which he was crucified,
2. The notice taken of this inscription
(
3. The offence which the prosecutors took
at it,
4. The judge's resolution to adhere to it: "What I have written I have written, and will not alter it to humour them."
(1.) Hereby an affront was put upon the chief priests, who would still be dictating. It seems, by Pilate's manner of speaking, that he was uneasy in himself for yielding to them, and vexed at them for forcing him to it, and therefore he was resolved to be cross with them; and by this inscription he insinuates, [1.] That, notwithstanding their pretences, they were not sincere in their affections to Cæsar and his government; they were willing enough to have a king of the Jews, if they could have one to their mind. [2.] That such a king as this, so mean and despicable, was good enough to be the king of the Jews; and this would be the fate of all that should dare to oppose the Roman power. [3.] That they had been very unjust and unreasonable in prosecuting this Jesus, when there was no fault to be found in him.
(2.) Hereby honour was done to the Lord
Jesus. Pilate stuck to it with resolution, that he was the king of
the Jews. What he had written was what God had first written, and
therefore he could not alter it; for thus it was written, that
Messiah the prince should be cut off,
II. The dividing of his garments among the
executioners,
III. The care that he took of his poor mother.
1. His mother attends him to his death
(
2. He tenderly provides for his mother at his death. It is probable that Joseph, her husband, was long since dead, and that her son Jesus had supported her, and her relation to him had been her maintenance; and now that he was dying what would become of her? He saw her standing by, and knew her cares and griefs; and he saw John standing not far off, and so he settled a new relation between his beloved mother and his beloved disciple; for he said to her, "Woman, behold thy son, for whom henceforward thou must have a motherly affection;" and to him, "Behold thy mother, to whom thou must pay a filial duty." And so from that hour, that hour never to be forgotten, that disciple took her to his own home. See here,
(1.) The care Christ took of his dear
mother. He was not so much taken up with a sense of his sufferings
as to forget his friends, all whose concerns he bore upon his
heart. His mother, perhaps, was so taken up with his sufferings
that she thought not of what would become of her; but he admitted
that thought. Silver and gold he had none to leave, no
estate, real or personal; his clothes the soldiers had seized, and
we hear no more of the bag since Judas, who had carried it, hanged
himself. He had therefore no other way to provide for his mother
than by his interest in a friend, which he does here. [1.] He calls
her woman, not mother, not out of any disrespect to her, but
because mother would have been a cutting word to her that was
already wounded to the heart with grief; like Isaac saying to
Abraham, My father. He speaks as one that was now no more
in this world, but was already dead to those in it that were
dearest to him. His speaking in this seemingly slight manner to his
mother, as he had done formerly, was designed to obviate and give a
check to the undue honours which he foresaw would be given to her
in the Romish church, as if she were a joint purchaser with him in
the honours of the Redeemer. [2.] He directs her to look upon John
as her son: "Behold him as thy son, who stands there by thee, and
be as a mother to him." See here, First, An instance of
divine goodness, to be observed for our encouragement. Sometimes,
when God removes one comfort from us, he raises up another for us,
perhaps where we looked not for it. We read of children which the
church shall have after she has lost the other,
(2.) The confidence he reposed in the
beloved disciple. It is to him he says, Behold thy mother,
that is, I recommend her to thy care, be thou as a son to her to
guide her (
IV. The fulfilling of the scripture, in the
giving of him vinegar to drink,
1. How much respect Christ showed to the
scripture (
(1.) It was not at all strange that he was
thirsty; we find him thirsty in a journey (
(2.) But the reason of his complaining of
it is somewhat surprising; it is the only word he spoke that looked
like complaint of his outward sufferings. When they scourged him,
and crowned him with thorns, he did not cry, O my head! or, My
back! But now he cried, I thirst. For, [1.] He would thus
express the travail of his soul,
2. See how little respect his persecutors
showed to him (
V. The dying word wherewith he breathed out
his soul (
1. What he said, and we may suppose him to
say it with triumph and exultation, Tetelestai—It
is finished, a comprehensive word, and a comfortable one. (1.)
It is finished, that is, the malice and enmity of his
persecutors had now done their worst; when he had received
that last indignity in the vinegar they gave him, he said,
"This is the last; I am now going out of their reach, where the
wicked cease from troubling." (2.) It is finished, that
is, the counsel and commandment of his Father concerning his
sufferings were now fulfilled; it was a determinate counsel,
and he took care to see every iota and tittle of it exactly
answered,
2. What he did: He bowed his head, and
gave up the ghost. He was voluntary in dying; for he was not
only the sacrifice, but the priest and the offerer; and the
animus offerentis—the mind of the offerer, was all in all
in the sacrifice. Christ showed his will in his sufferings, by
which will we are sanctified. (1.) He gave up the ghost.
His life was not forcibly extorted from him, but freely resigned.
He had said, Father, into thy hands I commit my spirit,
thereby expressing the intention of this act. I give up myself as a
ransom for many; and, accordingly, he did give up his
spirit, paid down the price of pardon and life at his Father's
hands. Father, glorify thy name. (2.) He bowed his
head. Those that were crucified, in dying stretched up their
heads to gasp for breath, and did not drop their heads till they
had breathed their last; but Christ, to show himself active in
dying, bowed his head first, composing himself, as it were,
to fall asleep. God had laid upon him the iniquity of us
all, putting it upon the head of this great sacrifice; and some
think that by this bowing of his head he would intimate his sense
of the weight upon him. See
31 The Jews therefore, because it was the preparation, that the bodies should not remain upon the cross on the sabbath day, (for that sabbath day was a high day,) besought Pilate that their legs might be broken, and that they might be taken away. 32 Then came the soldiers, and brake the legs of the first, and of the other which was crucified with him. 33 But when they came to Jesus, and saw that he was dead already, they brake not his legs: 34 But one of the soldiers with a spear pierced his side, and forthwith came there out blood and water. 35 And he that saw it bare record, and his record is true: and he knoweth that he saith true, that ye might believe. 36 For these things were done, that the scripture should be fulfilled, A bone of him shall not be broken. 37 And again another scripture saith, They shall look on him whom they pierced.
This passage concerning the piercing of Christ's side after his death is recorded only by this evangelist.
I. Observe the superstition of the Jews,
which occasioned it (
II. The dispatching of the two thieves
that were crucified with him,
III. The trial that was made whether Christ was dead or no, and the putting of it out of doubt.
1. They supposed him to be dead, and
therefore did not break his legs,
2. Because they would be sure he was dead
they made such an experiment as would put it past dispute. One
of the soldiers with a spear pierced his side, aiming at his
heart, and forthwith came there out blood and water,
(1.) The soldier hereby designed to decide the question whether he was dead or no, and by this honourable wound in his side to supersede the ignominious method of dispatch they took with the other two. Tradition says that this soldier's name was Longinus, and that, having some distemper in his eyes, he was immediately cured of it, by some drops of blood that flowed out of Christ's side falling on them: significant enough, if we had any good authority for the story.
(2.) But God had a further design herein, which was,
[1.] To give an evidence of the truth of his death, in order to the proof of his resurrection. If he was only in a trance or swoon, his resurrection was a sham; but, by this experiment, he was certainly dead, for this spear broke up the very fountains of life, and, according to all the law and course of nature, it was impossible a human body should survive such a wound as this in the vitals, and such an evacuation thence.
[2.] To give an illustration of the design
of his death. There was much of mystery in it, and its being
solemnly attested (
First, the opening of his side was
significant. When we would protest our sincerity, we wish there
were a window in our hearts, that the thoughts and intents of them
might be visible to all. Through this window, opened in Christ's
side, you may look into his heart, and see love flaming there, love
strong as death; see our names written there. Some make it an
allusion to the opening of Adam's side in innocency. When Christ,
the second Adam, was fallen into a deep sleep upon the cross, then
was his side opened, and out of it was his church taken, which he
espoused to himself. See
Secondly, The blood and water that
flowed out of it were significant. 1. They signified the two great
benefits which all believers partake of through
Christ-justification and sanctification; blood for remission, water
for regeneration; blood for atonement, water for purification.
Blood and water were used very much under the law. Guilt contracted
must be expiated by blood; stains contracted must be done away by
the water of purification. These two must always go
together. You are sanctified, you are justified,
IV. The attestation of the truth of this by
an eye-witness (
1. What a competent witness he was of the
matters of fact. (1.) What he bore record of he saw; he had it not
by hearsay, nor was it only his own conjecture, but he was an
eyewitness of it; it is what we have seen and looked upon
(
2. What care he showed in this particular instance. That we may be well assured of the truth of Christ's death, he saw his heart's blood, his life's blood, let out; and also of the benefits that flow to us from his death, signified by the blood and water which came out of his side. Let this silence the fears of weak Christians, and encourage their hopes, iniquity shall not be their ruin, for there came both water and blood out of Christ's pierced side, both to justify and sanctify them; and if you ask, How can we be sure of this? You may be sure, for he that saw it bore record.
V. The accomplishment of the scripture in
all this (
1. The scripture was fulfilled in the
preserving of his legs from being broken; therein that word was
fulfilled, A bone of him shall not be broken. (1.) There was
a promise of this made indeed to all the righteous, but
principally pointing at Jesus Christ the righteous
(
2. The scripture was fulfilled in the
piercing of his side (
38 And after this Joseph of Arimathæa, being a disciple of Jesus, but secretly for fear of the Jews, besought Pilate that he might take away the body of Jesus: and Pilate gave him leave. He came therefore, and took the body of Jesus. 39 And there came also Nicodemus, which at the first came to Jesus by night, and brought a mixture of myrrh and aloes, about a hundred pound weight. 40 Then took they the body of Jesus, and wound it in linen clothes with the spices, as the manner of the Jews is to bury. 41 Now in the place where he was crucified there was a garden; and in the garden a new sepulchre, wherein was never man yet laid. 42 There laid they Jesus therefore because of the Jews' preparation day; for the sepulchre was nigh at hand.
We have here an account of the burial of the blessed body of our Lord Jesus. The solemn funerals of great men are usually looked at with curiosity; the mournful funerals of dear friends are attended with concern. Come and see an extraordinary funeral; never was the like! Come and see a burial that conquered the grave, and buried it, a burial that beautified the grave and softened it for all believers. Let us turn aside now, and see this great sight. Here is,
I. The body begged,
II. The embalming prepared,
III. The body got ready,
IV. The grave pitched upon, in a garden which belonged to Joseph of Arimathea, very near the place where he was crucified. There was a sepulchre, or vault, prepared for the first occasion, but not yet used. Observe,
1. That Christ was buried without the city, for thus the manner of the Jews was to bury, not in their cities, much less in their synagogues, which some have thought better than our way of burying: yet there was then a peculiar reason for it, which does not hold now, because the touching of a grave contracted a ceremonial pollution: but now that the resurrection of Christ has altered the property of the grave, and done away its pollution for all believers, we need not keep at such a distance from it; nor is it incapable of a good improvement, to have the congregation of the dead in the church-yard, encompassing the congregation of the living in the church, since they also are dying, and in the midst of life we are in death. Those that would not superstitiously, but by faith, visit the holy sepulchre, must go forth out of the noise of this world.
2. That Christ was buried in a garden.
Observe, (1.) That Joseph had his sepulchre in his garden; so he
contrived it, that it might be a memento, [1.] To himself while
living; when he was taking the pleasure of his garden, and reaping
the products of it, let him think of dying, and be quickened to
prepare for it. The garden is a proper place for meditation, and a
sepulchre there may furnish us with a proper subject for
meditation, and such a one as we are loth to admit in the midst of
our pleasures. [2.] To his heirs and successors when he was gone.
It is good to acquaint ourselves with the place of our fathers'
sepulchres; and perhaps we might make our own less formidable
if we made theirs more familiar. (2.) That in a sepulchre in a
garden Christ's body was laid. In the garden of Eden death and the
grave first received their power, and now in a garden they are
conquered, disarmed, and triumphed over. In a garden Christ began
his passion, and from a garden he would rise, and begin his
exaltation. Christ fell to the ground as a corn of wheat
(
3. That he was buried in a new sepulchre. This was so ordered (1.) For the honour of Christ; he was not a common person, and therefore must not mix with common dust He that was born from a virgin-womb must rise from a virgin-tomb. (2.) For the confirming of the truth of his resurrection, that it might not be suggested that it was not he, but some other that rose now, when many bodies of saints arose; or, that he rose by the power of some other, as the man that was raised by the touch of Elisha's bones, and not by his own power. He that has made all things new has new-made the grave for us.
V. The funeral solemnized (
1. Observe here the deference which the Jews paid to the sabbath, and to the day of preparation. Before the passover-sabbath they had a solemn day of preparation. This day had been ill kept by the chief priests, who called themselves the church, but was well kept by the disciples of Christ, who were branded as dangerous to the church; and it is often so. (1.) They would not put off the funeral till the sabbath day, because the sabbath is to be a day of holy rest and joy, with which the business and sorrow of a funeral do not well agree. (2.) They would not drive it too late on the day of preparation for the sabbath. What is to be done the evening before the sabbath should be so contrived that it may neither intrench upon sabbath time, nor indispose us for sabbath work.
2. Observe the convenience they took of an adjoining sepulchre; the sepulchre they made use of was nigh at hand. Perhaps, if they had had time, they would have carried him to Bethany, and buried him among his friends there. And I am sure he had more right to have been buried in the chief of the sepulchres of the sons of David than any of the kings of Judah had; but it was so ordered that he should be laid in a sepulchre nigh at hand, (1.) Because he was to lie there but awhile, as in an inn, and therefore he took the first that offered itself. (2.) Because this was a new sepulchre. Those that prepared it little thought who should handsel it; but the wisdom of God has reaches infinitely beyond ours, and he makes what use he pleases of us and all we have. (3.) We are hereby taught not to be over-curious in the place of our burial. Where the tree falls, why should it not lie? For Christ was buried in the sepulchre that was next at hand. It was faith in the promise of Canaan that directed the Patriarch's desires to be carried thither for a burying-place; but now, since that promise is superseded by a better, that care is over.
Thus without pomp or solemnity is the body of Jesus laid in the cold and silent grave. Here lies our surety under arrest for our debts, so that if he be released his discharge will be ours. Here is the Sun of righteousness set for awhile, to rise again in greater glory, and set no more. Here lies a seeming captive to death, but a real conqueror over death; for here lies death itself slain, and the grave conquered. Thanks be to God, who giveth us the victory.