Pilate's court
In the canonical gospels, Pilate's court refers to the trial of Jesus in praetorium before Pontius Pilate, preceded by the Sanhedrin Trial. In the Gospel of Luke, Pilate finds that Jesus, being from Galilee, belonged to Herod Antipas' jurisdiction, and so he decides to send Jesus to Herod. After questioning Jesus and receiving very few replies, Herod sees Jesus as no threat and returns him to Pilate. Fearing defilement, the Jews did not enter the court, and Pilate's discussion with them occurred outside the praetorium.[1]
It was noted that Pilate appears as an advocate pleading Jesus' case rather than as a judge in an official hearing.[2] In the Gospel of John (18:28-19:13), his “to-ing and fro-ing,” that is, Pilate’s back and forth movement from inside the praetorium to the outside courtyard, indicates his “wavering position.”[3]
Praetorium site
Events in the |
Life of Jesus according to the canonical gospels |
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Portals: Christianity Bible Book:Life of Jesus |
Two possible praetorium sites in Jerusalem have been proposed: the Antonia Fortress and Herod's Palace.[1] Early pilgrims to Jerusalem generally identified the praetorium with the Antonia Fortress, where the traditional Way of the Cross begins. The archaeological evidence, which dates the fortress remnants to the 2nd century AD, as well as the tense situation requiring Pilate to be near the Second Temple as the center of Passover activity, support the Herod's Palace location.[1]
The Gospel of Mark uses the word aulē ("hall", "palace") to identify the praetorium.[1] Outside the praetorium proper, there was an area called the Pavement.[Jn. 19:13] Pilate's judgement seat (Greek: bēma), in which he conversed with the Jews, was located there.[1]
Gospel narratives
Overview
The entire trial of Jesus is told in the verses Matthew 26:57–27:31, Mark 14:53–15:20, Luke 22:54–23:26, and John 18:13–19:16.[4] The trial can be subdivided into four episodes:
- the Sanhedrin trial of Jesus (before Caiaphas or Annas);
- the trial of Jesus at Pilate's court (according to Luke also briefly at the court of Herod Antipas);
- Pilate's consideration of the crowd's opinion to give Barabbas amnesty and comdemn Jesus to death; and
- the abduction of Jesus by Roman soldiers (according to John the chief priests) and the mistreatment and/or mocking of Jesus (according to Luke and John, this happened before Jesus was condemned by Pilate, according to Mark and Matthew not until after his condemnation).[4]
In all four gospels, the Denial of Peter functions as an intermission during the Sanhedrin trial, while Matthew adds an intermission during the trial before Pilate that narrates the suicide of Judas Iscariot.[4]
As the religions professed by the Jews (Second Temple Judaism) and the Romans (Religion in ancient Rome) were different,[5] and since at the time Jerusalem was part of Roman Judea, the charges of the Sanhedrin against Jesus held no power before Pilate. From the three charges brought by the Jewish leaders (perverting the nation, forbidding the payment of tribute, and sedition against the Roman Empire), Pilate picks up on the third one, asking: "Are you the King of the Jews?". Jesus replies with "You have said so".[Mt. 27:11][Mk. 15:2][Lk. 23:3] Then the hearing continues,[Jn. 18:33-38] and Pilate finally asks Jesus "What is truth?". This was said after learning that Jesus did not wish to claim any terrestrial kingdom. He was therefore not a political threat and could be seen as innocent of such a charge. [Jn. 18:36]
Stepping back outside, Pilate publicly declared that he found no basis to charge Jesus, asking them if they wanted Jesus freed, which they declined, preferring the freedom of Barabbas. This meant capital punishment for Jesus. The universal rule of the Roman Empire limited capital punishment strictly to the tribunal of the Roman governor[6] and Pilate decided to publicly wash his hands as not being privy to Jesus' death. Nevertheless, since only the Roman authority could order crucifixion and since the penalty was carried out by Roman soldiers, Pilate was responsible for Jesus' death, a judgment Reynolds Price describes as skillful backwater diplomacy.[7]
Narrative comparison
The following comparison table is primarily based on the New International Version (NIV) English translation of the New Testament.[8]
Matthew | Mark | Luke | John | |
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Sanhedrin trial before Caiaphas (Matthew, Mark, Luke) or Annas (John) | Matthew 26:57–67
|
Mark 14:53–65
|
Luke 22:54–71
|
John 18:13–28
|
Trial before Pilate (Luke: and also before Herod Antipas) | Matthew 27:1–14
|
Mark 15:1–5
|
Luke 23:1–12
|
John 18:28–38
|
Jesus versus Barabbas | Matthew 27:15–26
|
Mark 15:6–15
|
Luke 23:13–25
|
John 18:39–19:16
|
Jesus abducted for crucifixion | Matthew 27:27–31
|
Mark 15:16–20
|
Luke 23:26
|
John 19:16
|
Chronological comparison
Chronological comparison between the Jesus Passion narratives according to the Gospels of Mark and John
Notes
- Bromiley, Geoffrey W. (1995), International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. vol. K-P. p. 929.
- Bond, Helen Katharine (1998). Pontius Pilate in History and Interpretation. Cambridge University Press. p. 159. ISBN 0-521-63114-9.
- Rudolf Schnackenburg, John, vol. 3 (New York: Crossroads, 1980-90), 446 n. 5.
- Adelbert Denaux (1998). "Het lijden van Jezus Christus in het Nieuwe Testament". Kunsttijdschrift Vlaanderen (in Dutch). 47 (269): 66–68.
- See also History of the Jews in the Roman Empire
- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. vol. K-P, p. 979.
- Price, Reynolds. "So Famous, So Little Known", The New York Times, June 25, 2000
- "Online Bible – New International Version". Biblehub.com. 2011. Retrieved 4 January 2021.