To most of the Christian world, Pontius Pilate is known only
for the role he played in the judgment and crucifixion of Jesus
Christ. He is generally depicted as the foremost defender of the
Galilean in his last hours. [1] But an examination of additional records
of Pilate’s life supplement the fragmentary New Testament account. [2] From
these other writings, we discover that Pilate was a ruthless,
bloodthirsty man, who sent many to their death.
A Bloody
Leader
Pontius
Pilatus was Tiberius Caesar’s second appointee as prefect of Judaea.
His predecessor, Valerius Gratus, had served for ten years, during
which time a new high priest, Joseph Caiaphas, had been designated.
One of Pilate's first acts as Prefect was to move the ensigns
of Tiberius Caesar to Jerusalem by night, in order that they might
be erected in the capital. To the Jews, these “graven images”
of a Roman emperor who claimed to be divine, surmounting the Antonia
Fortress that overlooked their temple, was sacrilege. The following
morning, upon discovery of the shocking sight, a large company
of Jewish men set out for Caesarea to confront the governor. Their
petition being refused, they lay in the streets for five days
and nights. On the sixth day, Pilate convened the assembly and,
surrounded by Roman troops with drawn swords, the Jews were threatened
with death. To Pilate's amazement, they offered their necks to
the blade, preferring death to disobedience to their sacred law.
The Romans lost the first round and the images were returned to
Caesarea.
On
a subsequent occasion, Pilate expropriated temple funds to build
an aqueduct system for Jerusalem. The Jews of Galilee were particularly
enraged by this act. They were governed by Herod Antipas, not
Pontius Pilate. As a religious obligation, they sent money to
the temple, but their contributions were now being used for the
benefit of Judea, but not of Galilee.
Pilate
knew there would be trouble at the next big festival, when Jews
from various regions would gather at the temple. As was his custom,
he brought an extra cohort of soldiers to the capital. But this
time, he took additional precautions by sending a large number
of Roman soldiers, dressed as natives, with concealed staves and
daggers hidden beneath their robes, to mingle with the crowd.
On
the day of the feast, when the (outer) Court of the Gentiles was
packed with demonstrators calling for the return of the temple
funds, Pilate could observe activities from the Antonia Fortress
overlooking the Temple compound. The crowd was not only obstructing
the Roman government, but many of them were also verbally abusing
the governor himself. Pilate ordered the assembled masses to disperse,
but they would not. The insults continued and worsened. Finally,
at Pilate's pre-arranged signal, the soldiers attacked. In their
zeal, they disobeyed orders and beat innocent bystanders as well
as the troublemakers. Many people were killed by the Romans or
trampled by the crowd rushing to the exit gates. The sedition
was short-lived. This event is thought by some scholars to be
the one referred to in Luke 13:1-3, where we read of "the
Galileans, whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices."
For Pilate:
Just Another Encounter
It
is difficult to reconcile this view of Pilate with the traditional
role of defender that Christians assign him in the case of Jesus.
What to us has become one of the most important events in history
went almost unnoted in first century Jewish and Roman records.
To Pilate, it must have been just another encounter with the Jews,
whom he must have considered troublesome. And what was the crucifixion
of one more criminal to the Roman historians?
When
Pilate saw the small crowd of chief priests and elders bringing
Jesus to him for judgment, we can be sure that he had not forgotten
his previous encounters with Jews. Perhaps annoyed by their arrival
at such an early hour, he said, "What accusation bring ye
against this man?" To this, they replied, "if he were
not a malefactor, we would not have delivered him up unto thee."
The gospel does not tell us of what they accused Jesus at that
time, but it obviously was not a case for Roman law, for Pilate
denied jurisdiction in the matter: "Take ye him, and judge
him according to your laws” (John 18:29-31).
Jesus
had already been falsely accused before the leaders of his people
as a blasphemer and had been adjudged by the high priest and his
party as worthy of death. [3]
When Pilate told them to deal with the matter, they replied, "It
is not lawful for us to put any man to death” (John 18:31). Many
have misconstrued this to mean that the Romans had taken from
the Jews the right of capital punishment. Such was not the case,
however, for Rome merely superimposed its law on the laws of native
peoples whom it conquered.
There
is clear evidence that Jews guilty of crimes meriting capital
punishment could be condemned and executed by Jewish courts, as
always. [4] Moreover, when the Jews
of the New Testament use the term "not lawful," they
refer to the law of Moses, not Roman law. [5]
Jewish law permitted execution by various methods (mostly stoning),
but not by crucifixion. [6] Moreover, they would
not execute on the preparation of the Passover,
[7] nor would they have been allowed to touch a dead
body for burial at that time. [8]
That He Might
Suffer Crucifixion
Jesus'
accusers perhaps brought him to Pilate in the hope that he would
suffer crucifixion, known to be an especially horrible way to
die. That they were referring to crucifixion when they said it
was "not lawful" for them to put a man to death is clear
from the verse that immediately follows: "That the saying
of Jesus might be fulfilled, which he spake, signifying what death
he should die" (John 18:32). Jesus had previously foretold
that he would be "lifted up." [9]
As
Roman prefect, Pilate would not have wanted to accede to the demands
of the Jewish high priest (though, at the time, the latter was
himself a Roman appointee). If Jesus were guilty of anything,
it was blasphemy, which was a crime against Jewish, but not Roman,
law. As the hearing proceeded, Jesus became a pawn in the hands
of both his accusers and Pilate. The accusation against him was
quickly changed to treason, forcing Pilate to conduct an interview
that convinced him of the falseness of the charge (Luke 23:2-4.).
Pilate's reaction only enraged Jesus' accusers, who began to recount
his supposed seditious acts while in Galilee.
At
this point, Pilate found a way out of his dilemma. Herod Antipas,
one of the sons of Herod the Great, was the tetrarch of Galilee
and was in town for the feast. Let him judge the case. Herod's
reaction did not satisfy the chief priests. The would-be monarch
was delighted, at long last, to set eyes on the miracle-worker.
Jesus, however, remained silent in the presence of the man who
had slain his cousin, John the Baptist. So Herod, after providing
him with a purple robe, returned him to Pilate with a message
of reconciliation, the text of which is not revealed in the Bible
(Luke 23:5-16). [10] What
happened subsequent to this suggests that Herod and Pilate may
have agreed to stand together in a power play against the high
priest.
Trapping
His Opponent
Pilate
began his move by trying to trap his opponents between two difficult
choices. He proposed releasing a prisoner, in honor of the festival.
"Will ye that I release unto you the king of the Jews?"
he queried. To his great surprise, they called for the release
of Barabbas, a seditious murderer. "What will ye then that
I shall do unto him whom ye call the King of the Jews?"
Pilate's words were carefully chosen. He knew that the people,
though not the chief priests, had recently proclaimed Jesus king
during his triumphal entry into Jerusalem the week before (Matthew
21:1-16). [11] If
anyone was guilty of sedition, it was the entire population, not
the silent Galilean.
The
cry for Jesus' crucifixion fell upon Pilate's ears as his wife,
following an ominous dream, sent word to have nothing to do with
the matter (Matthew 27: 19.). Pilate feigned acceptance of the
crowd's decision and set about to release Barabbas and have Jesus
scourged. In a dramatic gesture, he washed his hands of the matter
in public. "I am innocent of the blood of this just person,"
he declared, "see ye to it" (Matthew 27:24-25). He had
thus once again given them permission to execute Jesus.
During this time, Jesus was being scourged by the Roman soldiers,
who also staged a mock coronation, in which Christ was dressed
as a king (Matthew 27:24-37). Brought forth in royal attire, Jesus'
presence must have angered his persecutors all the more. Pilate
added to the show by his introduction: "Behold the man!”
(John 19:4-7). The clamor for crucifixion grew louder. "Pilate
saith unto them, Take ye him, and crucify him: for I find no fault
in him" (John 19:6). He was perhaps mocking the Jews, who
did not crucify. They parried by saying, "We have a law,
and by our law he ought to die, because he made himself the Son
of God" (John 19: 7-8).
Tables Turned
The
tables were turned. Now it was Pilate who was worried. If this
Jesus of Nazareth were indeed a divine being, then it would be
very dangerous to punish him and incur the wrath of the gods.
In Roman theology, it was believed that the gods had many sons
on the earth (it being typical of a girl pregnant out of wedlock
to say that the father of her baby was one of the gods) With his
wife's ominous dream still in mind, Pilate retired for another
interrogation session
with
Jesus (John 19:8-11).
Whether
Pilate became convinced of Jesus' divinity or not is unclear in
the text. He did learn, nevertheless, that Jesus was resigned
to the fact that he would die, and his words may have given Pilate
reason to believe that God so desired it. All we know is that
"from thenceforth Pilate sought to release him," perhaps
for fear of divine punishment (John 19:9-12).
The
contest between Prefect and priests continued as the latter "cried
out, saying, If thou let this man go, thou art not Caesar's friend:
whosoever maketh himself a king speaketh against Caesar"
(John 19:12). "When Pilate therefore heard that saying,"
he realized how he could win this game. Bringing Jesus out again,
he sat down and "he saith unto the Jews, Behold your king!"
They protested and called for crucifixion. "Shall I crucify
your king?" asked Pilate. There was but one possible reply
at this point. "The chief priests answered, We have no king
but Caesar" (John 19:13-15).
Pilate
must have been proud of his achievement. He had elicited from
the "chief priests," who, before Roman times, had ruled
as kings of the Jews for a century, [12] the admission that the Jews were subservient
to the Roman emperor. The game over—and won—Pilate lost no time
in commissioning a unit of soldiers to crucify Jesus. What was
the blood of another Jew to a man who had slain so many of them?
In
a final stroke of irony, Pilate ordered that Jesus' "accusation"
read, "Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews" (John
19:19-21). He could now claim to have put down an insurrection
led by a king who had not received his appointment from Caesar
and the Senate.
Political
Troubles
Despite
Pilate's "clean hands," he seems to have continued to
have troubles. In his tenth year as prefect, he massacred a large
number of unarmed Samaritans. Vitellius, former consul and then
governor of Syria, quickly dispatched Pilate to Rome to answer
to the emperor. Before he arrived, Tiberius died and Pilate quickly
disappeared from history, despite later Christian traditions that
associate him with the robe of Jesus.
Pontius
Pilate's ten-year rule of Judea is noted in historical records
only for his misdeeds. Early Christianity, in documents such as
the "Apostles Creed," attributed to him the responsibility
for Jesus death. Later generations blamed the Jews. Both views
ignore the facts. Not all of the Jews sought to have Jesus slain.
Indeed, a large number of them had greeted him as king on the
day of triumphal entry, while many more came to mourn at the site
of the crucifixion. Pilate, on the other hand, may not have dealt
with Jesus at all had it not been for the pressures he felt during
his confrontation with the chief priests.