Luke 23:1-12
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| title = "Luke 23:1–12" | ||||
| date = "2023-02-15" | ||||
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| 
 | ||||
| ### [Read the passage.](https://biblia.com/bible/esv/Lk23.1-12) | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Confident that they have ample justification to kill Jesus, the entire Council | ||||
| takes Jesus to Pilate, the Roman governor of Judea, to demand His execution. | ||||
| Now, Pilate doesn't care at all about a blasphemy charge, so they have to get | ||||
| Jesus on the hook for something that will bring a capital punishment under the | ||||
| Roman code. They choose insurrection and "misleading the nation" (_v. 2_), | ||||
| whatever that means. They even claim that Jesus was encouraing the people not | ||||
| to pay the tributes, collected as tax by the Romans. They say He claimed to be | ||||
| the Christ, which they explain as a king to Pilate. But none of these charges | ||||
| are true. Jesus didn't claim for Himself the title of Christ, but He did affirm | ||||
| Peter's answer, speaking for the rest of the disciples, when He asked, "Who do | ||||
| you say that I am?" That was a private conversation; hardly a movement meant to | ||||
| throw off Roman rule. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| I think even at this point Pilate knows that the Jewish leaders are trying to | ||||
| pull one over on him. He asks Jesus if He is the King of the Jews, and Jesus | ||||
| again replies with "If you say so." With just that "interrogation" Pilate | ||||
| determines that Jesus isn't guilty of the charges. It would be comedic if this | ||||
| were any other situation, and the fate of the whole world didn't hang in the | ||||
| balance. "Are you guilty?" "No." "You see? He says he's not guilty. Case | ||||
| closed." | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Pilate then finds out that Jesus is from Galilee, so he says he doesn't have | ||||
| jurisdiction over Jesus, and tries to pass the whole situation off onto Herod | ||||
| so he can have the headache from dealing with the Sanhedrin. Herod has actually | ||||
| wanted to see Jesus for a long time, so he's glad to have the chance. Jesus | ||||
| doesn't provide any entertainment or inspiration, so Herod and his soldiers | ||||
| mock and mistreat Him instead and send Him back to Pilate in fancy clothing. | ||||
| Somehow, this makes Herod and Pilate become friends, but I can't figure out how | ||||
| that works really. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Throughout this whole drama, the Council members are lobbing accusation after | ||||
| accusation against Jesus to everyone who will listen. They probably see their | ||||
| chance to be rid of Jesus slipping away as Pilate and Herod drag their feet. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| * * * | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| We remember the prophecies of the silent lamb being led to the slaughter. All | ||||
| of these things were foreordained from the beginning to bring about salvation. | ||||
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