CHAPTER VII. THE END.
144. At length the third year of His ministry verged towards its close,
and the revolving seasons brought round the great annual feast of the
Passover. It is said that as many as two or three millions of strangers
were gathered in Jerusalem on such an occasion. They not only flocked
from every part of Palestine, but came over sea and land from all the
countries in which the seed of Abraham were dispersed, in order to celebrate
the event in which their national history began. They were brought together
by very various motives. Some came with the solemn thoughts and deep religious
joy of minds responsive to the memories of the venerable occasion. Some
looked forward chiefly to reunion with relatives and friends who had been
long parted from them by residence in distant places. Not a few of the
baser sort brought with them the darling passions of their race, and were
chiefly intent on achieving in so great a concourse some important stroke
of business. But this year the minds of tens of thousands were full of
an unusual excitement, and they came up to the capital expecting to see
something more remarkable than they had ever witnessed there before. They
hoped to see Jesus at the feast, and entertained many vague forebodings
as to what might happen in connection with Him. His name was the word
oftenest passing from mouth to mouth among the pilgrim bands that crowded
along the highways and among the Jewish groups that talked together on
the decks of the ships coming from Asia Minor and Egypt. Nearly all His
own disciples no doubt were there, and were ardently cherishing the hope
that at last in this concourse of the nation He would throw off the guise
of humility which concealed His glory, and in some irresistible way demonstrate
His Messiahship. There must have been thousands from the southern portions
of the country, in which He had recently been spending His time, who came
full of the same enthusiastic views about Him as were entertained in Galilee
at the close of His first year there; and no doubt there were multitudes
of the Galileans themselves who were favorably disposed towards Him and
ready to take the deepest interest in any new development of His affairs.
Tens of thousands from more distant parts, who had heard of Him but never
seen Him, arrived in the capital in the hope that He might be there, and
that they might enjoy the opportunity of seeing a miracle or listening
to the words of the new prophet. The authorities in Jerusalem, too, awaited
His coming with very mingled feelings. They hoped that some turn of events
might give them the chance of at last suppressing Him; but they could
not help fearing that He might appear at the head of a provincial following
which would place them at His mercy.
145. The Final Breach with the Nation. --Six days before
the Passover began, He arrived in Bethany, the village of His friends
Martha, Mary, and Lazarus, which lay half an hour from the city on the
other side of the summit of the Mount of Olives. It was a convenient place
to lodge in during the feast, and He took up His quarters with His friends.
The solemnities were to begin on a Thursday, so that it was on the previous
Friday He arrived there. He had been accompanied the last twenty miles
of His journey by an immense multitude of the pilgrims, to whom He was
the centre of interest. They had seen Him healing blind Bartimaeus at
Jericho, and the miracle had produced among them extraordinary excitement.
When they reached Bethany the village was ringing with the recent resurrection
of Lazarus, and they carried on the news to the crowds who had already
arrived from all quarters in Jerusalem, that Jesus had come.
Christ's triumphal entry into Jerusalem.
146. Accordingly, when, after resting over the Sabbath in Bethany, He
came forth on the Sunday morning to proceed to the city, He found the
streets of the village and the neighboring roads thronged with a vast
crowd, consisting partly of those who had accompanied Him on the Friday,
partly of other com-panies who had come up behind Him from Jericho and
heard of the miracles as they came along, and partly of those who, having
heard that He was at hand, had flocked out from Jerusalem to see Him.
They welcomed Him with enthusiasm, and began to shout, 'Hosanna to the
Son of David! Blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord! Hosanna
in the highest!' It was a Messianic demonstration such as He had formerly
avoided. But now He yielded to it. Probably He was satisfied with the
sincerity of the homage paid to Him; and the hour had come when no considerations
could permit Him any longer to conceal from the nation the character in
which He presented Himself and the claim He made on its faith. But, in
yielding to the desires of the multitude that He should assume the style
of a king, He made it unmistakable in what sense He accepted the honor.
He sent for an ass-colt and, His disciples having spread their garments
on it, rode at the head of the crowd. Not armed to the teeth or bestriding
a war-horse did He come, but as the King of simplicity and peace. The
procession swept over the brow of Olivet and down the mountain-side; it
crossed the Kedron and, mounting the slope which led to the gate of the
city, passed on through the streets to the temple. It swelled as it went,
great numbers hurrying from every quarter to join it; the shouts rang
louder and more loud; the processionists broke off twigs from the palms
and olives, as they passed, and waved them in triumph. The citizens of
Jerusalem ran to their doors and bent over their balconies to look, and
asked, 'Who is this?' to which the processionists replied with provincial
pride, 'This is Jesus, the prophet of Nazareth.' It was, in fact, an entirely
provincial demonstration. The Jerusalemites took no part in it, but held
coldly aloof. The authorities knew only too well what it meant, and beheld
it with rage and dread. They came to Jesus and ordered Him to bid His
followers hold their peace, hinting no doubt that, if He did not do so,
the Roman garrison, which was stationed in the immediate vicinity, would
pounce on Him and them, and punish the city for an act of treason to Caesar.
147. There is no point in the life of Jesus at which we are more urged
to ask, What would have happened if His claim had been conceded--if the
citizens of Jerusalem had been carried away with the enthusiasm of the
provincials, and the prejudices of priests and scribes had been borne
down before the torrent of public approval? Would Jesus have put Himself
at the head of the nation and inaugurated an era of the world's history
totally different from that which followed? These questions very soon
carry us beyond our depth, yet no intelligent reader of the Gospels can
help asking them.
148. Jesus had formally made offer of Himself to the capital and the
authorities of the nation, but met with no response. The provincial recognition
of His claims was insufficient to carry a national assent. He accepted
the decision as final. The multitude expected a signal from Him, and in
their excited mood would have obeyed it, whatever it might have been.
But He gave them none, and, after looking round about Him for a little
in the temple, left them and returned to Bethany.
149. Doubtless the disappointment of the multitude was extreme, and an
opportunity was offered to the authorities which they did not fail to
make use of. The Pharisees needed no stimulus; but even the Sadducees,
those cold and haughty friends of order, espied danger to the public peace
in the state of the popular mind, and leagued themselves with their bitter
enemies in the resolution to suppress Him.
150. On Monday and Tuesday He appeared again in the city and engaged
in His old work of healing and teaching. But on the second of these days
the authorities interposed. Pharisees, Sadducees and Herodians, high priests,
priests and scribes were for once combined in a common cause. They came
to Him, as He taught in the temple, and demanded by what authority He
did such things. In all the pomp of official costume, of social pride
and popular renown, they set themselves against the simple Galilean, while
the multitudes looked on. They entered into a keen and prolonged controversy
with Him on points selected beforehand, putting forward their champions
of debate to entangle Him in His talk, their distinct object being, either
to discredit Him with the audience or to elicit something from His lips
in the heat of argument which might form a ground of accusation against
Him before the civil authority. Thus, for example, they asked Him if it
was lawful to give tribute to Caesar. If He answered Yes, they knew that
His popularity would perish on the instant, for it would be a complete
contradiction of the popular Messianic ideas. If, on the contrary, He
answered No, they would accuse Him of treason before the Roman governor.
But Jesus was far more than a match for them. Hour by hour He steadfastly
met the attack. His straightforwardness put their duplicity to shame,
and His skill in argument turned every spear which they directed at Him
round to their own breasts. At last He carried the war into their own
territory, and convicted them of such ignorance or lack of candor as completely
put them to shame before the onlookers. Then, when He had silenced them,
He let loose the storm of His indignation and delivered against them the
philippic [invective], which is recorded in the twenty-third chapter of
Matthew. Giving unrestrained expression to the pent-up criticism of a
lifetime, He exposed their hypocritical practices in sentences that fell
like strokes of lightning and made them a scorn and laughing-stock, not
only to the hearers then, but to all the world since.
151. It was the final breach between Him and them. They had been utterly
humiliated before the whole people, over whom they were set in authority
and honor. They felt it to be intolerable, and resolved not to lose an
hour in seeking their revenge. That very evening the Sanhedrim met in
passionate mood to devise a plan for making away with Him. Nicodemus and
Joseph of Arimathea may have raised a solitary protest against their precipitate
proceedings; but they indignantly silenced them, and were unanimously
of opinion that He should forthwith be put to death. But circumstances
checked their cruel haste. At least the forms of justice would have to
be gone through; and besides, Jesus evidently enjoyed an immense popularity
among the strangers who filled the city. What might not the idle crowd
do if He were arrested before their eyes? It was necessary to wait till
the mass of the pilgrims had left the city. They had just with great reluctance
arrived at this conclusion, when they received a most unexpected and gratifying
surprise. One of His own disciples appeared and offered to betray Him
for a price.
152. Judas Iscariot is the byword of the human race. In his Vision of
Hell Dante has placed him in the lowest of the circles of the damned,
as the sole sharer with Satan himself of the very uttermost punishment;
and the poet's verdict is that of mankind. Yet he was not such a monster
of iniquity as to be utterly beyond comprehension or even sympathy. The
history of his base and appalling lapse is perfectly intelligible. He
had joined the discipleship of Jesus, as the other apostles also did,
in the hope of taking part in a political revolution and occupying a distinguished
place in an earthly kingdom. It is inconceivable that Jesus would have
made him an apostle if there had not at one time been in him some noble
enthusiasm and some attachment to Himself. That he was a man of superior
energy and administrative ability may be inferred from the fact, that
he was made the purse-bearer of the apostolic company. But there was a
canker at the root of his character, which gradually absorbed all that
was excellent in him and became a tyrannical passion. It was the love
of money. He fed it by the petty speculations which he practiced on the
small sums which Jesus received from His friends for the necessities of
His company and for distribution among the poor with whom He was daily
mingling. He hoped to give it unrestrained gratification when he became
chancellor of the exchequer in the new kingdom. The views of the other
apostles were perhaps as worldly to begin with as his. But the history
of their intercourse with their Master was totally different. They became
ever more spiritual, he ever more worldly. They never, indeed, as long
as Jesus lived, rose to the idea of a spiritual kingdom apart from an
earthly one; but the spiritual elements which their Master had taught
them to add to their material conception grew more and more prominent,
till the earthly heart was eaten out of it, and merely the empty shell
was left, to be in due time crushed and blown away. But Judas' earthly
views became more and more engrossing, and were more and more divested
of every spiritual adjunct. He grew impatient for their realization. Preaching
and healing seemed to him waste of time; the purity and unworldliness
of Jesus irritated him; why did He not bring on the kingdom at once, and
then preach as much as He chose afterwards! At last he began to suspect
that there was to be no kingdom such as he had hoped for at all. He felt
that he had been deceived, and began not only to despise but even hate
his Master. The failure of Jesus to take advantage of the disposition
of the people on Palm Sunday finally convinced him that it was useless
to hold on to the cause any longer. He saw that the ship was sinking and
resolved to get out of it. He carried out his resolution in such a way
as both to gratify his master-passion and secure the favor of the authorities.
His offer came to them just at the right moment. They closed with it greedily,
and, having arranged the price with the miserable man, sent him away to
find a convenient opportunity for the betrayal. He found it sooner than
they expected--on the next night but one after the dastardly bargain had
been concluded.
158. Jesus in the Prospect of Death.--Christianity has
no more precious possession than the memory of Jesus during the week when
He stood face to face with death. Unspeakably great as He always was,
it may be reverently said that He was never so great as during those days
of direst calamity. All that was grandest and all that was most tender,
the most human and the most divine aspects of His character, were brought
out as they had never been before.
154. He came to Jerusalem well aware that He was about to die. For a
whole year the fact had been staring Him constantly in the face, and the
long-looked-for had come at last. He knew it was His Father's will, and,
when the hour arrived, He bent His steps with sublime fortitude to the
fatal spot. It was not, however, without a terrible conflict of feelings;
the ebb and flow of the most diverse emotions--anguish and ecstasy, the
most prolonged and crushing depression, the most triumphant joy and the
most majestic peace--swayed hither and thither within Him like the moods
of a vast ocean.
155. Some have hesitated to attribute to Him aught of that shrinking
from death which is natural to man; but surely without good reason. It
is an instinct perfectly innocent; and perhaps the very fact that His
bodily organism was pure and perfect may have made it stronger in Him
than it is in us. Remember how young He was--only three-and-thirty; the
currents of life were powerful in Him; He was full of the instincts of
action. To have these strong currents rolled back and the light and warmth
of life quenched in the cold waters of death must have been utterly repugnant
to Him. An incident which happened on the Monday caused Him a great shock
of this instinctive pain. Some Greeks who had come to the feast expressed
through two of the apostles their desire for an interview with Him. There
were many heathens in different parts of the Greek-speaking world who
at this period had found refuge from the atheism and disgusting immorality
of the times in the religion of the Jews settled in their midst, and had
accordingly become proselytes of the worship of Jehovah. To this class
these inquirers belonged. But their application shook Him with thoughts
which they little dreamt of. Only two or three times in the course of
His ministry does He seem to have been brought into contact with representatives
of the world lying outside the limits of His own people, His mission being
exclusively to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. But on every such
occasion He met with a faith, a courtesy and nobility, which He Himself
contrasted with the unbelief, rudeness and pettiness of the Jews. How
could He help longing to pass beyond the narrow bounds of Palestine and
visit nations of such simple and generous disposition? He must often have
seen visions of a career like that afterwards achieved by Paul, when he
bore the glad tidings from land to land, and evangelized Athens, Rome
and the other great centers of the west. What joy such a career would
have caused to Jesus, who felt within Himself the energy and overflowing
benevolence which it would have exactly suited! But death was at hand
to extinguish all. The visit of the Greeks caused a great wave of such
thoughts to break over Him. Instead of responding to their request, He
became abstracted, His face darkened, and His frame was shaken with the
tremor of an inward conflict. But He soon recovered Himself, and gave
expression to the thoughts on which in those days He was steadying up
His soul: 'Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth
alone; but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit;' 'And I, if I be lifted
up from the earth, will draw all men unto Me.' He could see beyond death,
terrible and absorbing as the prospect of it was, and assure Himself that
the effect of His self-sacrifice would be infinitely grander and more
extensive than that of a personal mission to the heathen world could ever
have been. Besides, death was what His Father had appointed for Him. This
was the last and deepest consolation with which He soothed His humble
and trustful soul on this as on every similar occasion: 'Now is My soul
troubled; and what shall I say? Father, save Me from this hour: but for
this cause came I unto this hour. Father, glorify Thyself.'
156. Death approached Him with every terrible accompaniment. He was to
fall a victim to the treachery of a follower of His own, whom He had chosen
and loved. His life was to be taken by the hands of His own nation, in
the city of His heart. He had come to exalt His nation to heaven, and
had loved her with a devotion nourished by the most intelligent and sympathetic
acquaintance with her past history and with the great men who had loved
her before Him, as well as by the sense of all which He Himself was able
to do for her. But His death would bring down the blight of a thousand
curses on Palestine and Jerusalem. How clearly He foresaw what was coming
was shown by the memorable prophetic discourse of the twenty-fourth of
Matthew, which He spoke on Tuesday afternoon to His disciples, sitting
on the side of Mount Olivet, with the doomed city at His feet. How bitter
was the anguish it caused Him was shown on the Sunday, when, even in His
hour of triumph, as the joyful multitude bore Him down the mountain road,
He stopped at the point where the city burst upon the view, and with tears
and lamentations predicted its fate. It ought to have been the fair city's
bridal day, when she should have been married to the Son of God; but the
pallor of death was on her face. He who would have taken her to His heart,
as the hen gathers her chickens under her wings, saw the eagles already
in the air flying fast to rend her in pieces.
157. In the evenings of this week He went out to Bethany, but in all
probability He spent most of the nights alone in the open air. He wandered
about in the solitude of the hill-top, and among the olive-groves and
gardens with which the sides of the mount were covered; many a time, perhaps,
going along the same road down which the procession had passed and, as
He looked across the valley, from the point where He had stopped before,
at the city sleeping in the moonlight, startling the night with cries
more bitter than the lamentation which overawed the multitude; many a
time repeating to His lonely heart the great truths He had uttered in
the presence of the Greeks.
158. He was terribly alone. The whole world was against Him--Jerusalem
panting for His life with passionate hate, the tens of thousands from
the provinces turned from Him in disappointment. Not one even of His apostles,
not even John, was in the least aware of the real situation, or able to
be the confidant of His thoughts. This was one of the bitterest drops
in His cup. He felt as no other person has ever felt the necessity of
living on in the world after death. The cause He had inaugurated must
not die. It was for the whole world, and was to endure through all generations
and visit every part of the globe. But after His departure it would be
left in the hands of His apostles, who were now showing themselves so
weak, unsympathetic and ignorant. Were they fit for the task? Had not
one of them turned out a traitor? Would not the cause, when He was gone--so
perhaps the tempter whispered--go to wreck, and all His far-reaching plans
for the regeneration of the world vanish like the baseless fabric of a
vision?
159. Yet He was not alone. Among the deep shadows of the gardens and
upon the summits of Olivet, He sought the unfailing resource of other
and less troubled days, and found it still in His dire need. His Father
was with Him; and, pouring out supplications with strong crying and tears,
He was heard in that He feared. He hushed His spirit with the sense that
His Father's perfect love and wisdom were appointing all that was. happening
to Him, and that He was glorifying His Father and fulfilling the work
given Him to do. This could banish every' fear and fill Him with a joy
unspeakable and full of glory.
The Last Supper.
160. At last the end drew very near. The Thursday evening arrived, when
in every house in Jerusalem the Passover was. eaten. Jesus also with the
Twelve sat down to eat it. He knew that it was His last night on earth,
and that this was His farewell meeting with His own. Happily there has
been preserved to us a full account of it, with which every Christian
mind is familiar. It was the greatest evening of His life. His soul overflowed
in indescribable tenderness and grandeur. Some shadows, indeed, fell across
His spirit in the earlier hours of the evening. But they soon passed:
and throughout the scenes of the washing of the disciples' feet, the eating
of the Passover, the institution of the Lord's Supper, the farewell address,
and the great high-priestly prayer, the whole glory of His character shone
out. He completely resigned Himself to the genial impulses of friendship,
His love to His own flowing forth without limit; and, as if He had forgotten
all their imperfections, He rejoiced in the anticipation of their future
successes and the triumph of His cause. Not a shadow intercepted His view
of the face of His Father or dimmed the satisfaction with which He looked
on His own work just about to be completed. It was as if the Passion were
already past, and the glory of His Exaltation were already break-ing around
Him.
161. But the reaction came very soon. Rising from the table at midnight
they passed through the streets and out of the town by the eastern gate
of the city and, crossing the Kedron, reached a well-known haunt of His
at the foot of Olivet, the garden of Gethsemane. Here ensued the awful
and memorable Agony. It was the final access of the mood of depression
which had been struggling all the week with the mood of joy and trust
whose culmination had been reached at the supper table. It was the final
onset of temptation, from which His life had never been free. But we fear
to analyze the elements of the scene. We know that any conception of ours
must be utterly unable to exhaust its meaning. How, above all, can we
estimate in the faintest degree the chief element in it--the crushing,
scorching pressure of the sin of the world, which He was then expiating?
162. But the struggle ended in a complete victory. While the poor disciples
were sleeping away the hours of preparation for the crisis which was at
hand, He had thoroughly equipped Himself for it; He had fought down the
last remnants of tempta-tion; the bitterness of death was past; and He
was able to go through the scenes which followed with a calmness which
nothing could ruffle and a majesty which converted His trial and cruci-fixion
into the pride and glory of humanity.
Chapter 6 Part B
Chapter 7 Part B
This text is from James Stalker's Life of Christ. New York, London, Edinburgh, etc.: Fleming H. Revell Co., 1909. Transcribed by David Ash. Used by permission of David Ash, 2 March 2005. David Ash, pastor of Shiloh
Baptist Church, has placed several worthwhile texts online. View his list here. Images are from the CHI archives.