Luke 23

Luke 23  •  8 min. read  •  grade level: 5
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WE are now going to meditate on chap. xxiii. "The whole multitude of them arose and led Him to Pilate." With what skilfulness did they adapt themselves to the moment! When He was before the Jew, they brought a charge of making Himself Son of God. Before the Roman Governor, they bring a charge of making Himself a king. He had a right to all these titles. All these claims were brought and challenged in a human court. Thus everything has been gainsaid, and everything will be vindicated. We see Him standing as challenged before man; we find Him by-and-bye vindicated before God..
Now, when Pilate revives the question, "Art Thou the king of the -Jews?" He answers, "Thou sayest." It is a beautiful thing for you to carry in a hidden shape conscious glory. He avowed Himself a king when He was asked. It was a glory He constantly carried, but was constantly hiding. We should be conscious of dignities that would outshine the glories of the world; but we find the world in such a moral condition that we cannot display them. That was the life of Jesus. He was consciously a vessel of glory, but morally under the necessity of hiding it.
How instructive it is to see the laborings of different states of soul! Nothing can be more striking than the story of Pilate. He had no enmity against Christ. He would have discharged Him, if He could at the same time have preserved his character in the world.
" The Jews' was a mere carnal enmity against God. In Pilate you see the victorious struggle that the world makes in the conscience. Now, Pilate naturally wished to rid Himself of an uneasy conscience. So " when he heard of Galilee," he thought it was a little door of escape, and at once he took advantage of it. Ah, it will not do to get out of back doors. The subtlety of the human heart in wickedness seeks them.
So Pilate sent him to Herod, and we find that before Herod, He never uttered a word. Herod was unmixedly wicked. He answered Pilate, because there was no enmity in his heart. He answered Caiaphas for the oath of God's sake, by which he adjured him (Matt. 26:6363But Jesus held his peace. And the high priest answered and said unto him, I adjure thee by the living God, that thou tell us whether thou be the Christ, the Son of God. (Matthew 26:63)); but as for Herod, He has not a word for him. He passes from before him without opening his mouth. It is a terrible thing for God to be silent. It is better He should be speaking to us by chastenings. "Be not silent to me, lest if Thou be silent to me, I become like them that go down into the pit" (Psa. 28:11<<A Psalm of David.>> Unto thee will I cry, O Lord my rock; be not silent to me: lest, if thou be silent to me, I become like them that go down into the pit. (Psalm 28:1)). The silence of God is as if you put a man into a pit. " Ephraim is joined to his idols-let him alone." The intercourse between Herod and the Lord illustrates this. " And Herod sent Him again to Pilate."
" For of necessity he must release unto them one at the feast." We are entering on a moral moment of great solemnity. Why must he release one at the Passover. There is no direct commentary on it, but my own thought about it is that they claimed from the Roman Governor a sign of the dignity that attached to this feast,-when the Lord of heaven and earth made a great deliverance for them. And in order to keep up the memorial of it, they demanded that one should be delivered to them. The Passover was a memorial of the ancient dignity of the nation. We like some little relic of bygone dignities. Now, at that time it so happened that there was a murderer in prison-one " who for a certain sedition in the city, and for murder, was cast into prison." You could not go lower in moral acting than that. Now the question arises-Will they choose such a man as that, or the Prince of Life? We find Peter in the opening of Acts making much of that. What does it tell us? It is the deep, full sifting of the heart of man, and it tells me that the heart of man in Luke 23 is exactly what it was in Gen. 3 Man in Gen. 3 preferred the lie of the serpent to the truth of God. Man here preferred a murderer to the Prince of Life; and if you do not think you are a full-grown Adam, you are deceiving yourself. I see the Jew of Luke 22 practicing the Adam of Gen. 3 The God of grace, the God of life, the God of glory, given up for the serpent. A murderer-was preferred, for " he was a murderer from the beginning." So it was here.
So Pilate "said unto them the third time, Why, what evil hath He done?" Still struggling! Those battles are not settled in a moment. Conscience loves ease too well to yield in a moment. Pilate is in a field of battle till he is conquered. In this wondrous volume we get man exposed and God revealed. Man shown to be an incurable moral ruin; God revealed as a repairer of every breach. And He will go on repairing till He turns the howling of creation into the praises of creation. He begins with the conscience. If the conscience is not restored, it is nothing to you to see creation restored; but He begins where we want Him to begin. Have I any reason to doubt that if, as a sinner, my conscience is given to bowl, He can give it the garment of praise? He is to do this in creation; by-and-bye He will turn its groans into praises; and is not my conscience as worthy of His workmanship as creation?
Then Pilate gave sentence. There is the victory.
Now, we are introduced to the daughters of Jerusalem. The daughters of Jerusalem are not the women of Galilee. How do we distinguish between them? They are distinguished. It is another instance of the vast moral variety of Scripture. We get the disciples, the women of Galilee, the daughters of Jerusalem, the centurion, and Joseph of Arimathea. Are you not conscious of like varieties in the scene around you? It may puzzle and grieve you; but what is too big for you, roll over upon Christ. I can hardly tell where light begins, and darkness ends. It is too much for me. I must leave it with God. Now, where must you put all these varieties? Do not put them anywhere. Leave them with Christ. " Shall not the judge of all the earth do right?" Do not seek to settle it. The angels will know how to clear the field by-and-bye. I converse with people everyday, and if I were asked, I should not know where to put their souls. The women of Galilee were evidently " elect according to the foreknowledge of God." But what do you say of the daughters of Jerusalem? They were not among the crucifiers. They represent, I think, the soul of the remnant by-and-bye in the first moment of awakening, " Weep not for me, but weep for yourselves and for your children." Ah, this self-forgetting character of the Lord 1 I do not know that it more wonderfully displays itself than in these last scenes. If you are in trouble, do not you feel privileged to think of yourself and to expect others to do so too? What beautiful witnesses we have here of self-forgetting love. " Woman, behold thy son;" " Daughters of Jerusalem, weep not for me;" " Father, forgive them."
Now we pass on to the Cross. What do you say about the " spirit " here (ver. 46)? Have you learned with calm conclusiveness that if the [believer's] spirit is now delivered from the body, it is with Jesus? When Stephen followed the track of his master, he did it in life and in death. If they were battering his body here, the Lord Jesus was receiving his spirit there. Paul went to Paradise simply as "a man in Christ." Men in Christ are independent, of the body. He clothes the body with immortality and the spirit with indestructible life.
In his own person, the Lord was the first to recognize the spirit going to the Father. He was the first-born among many brethren, and the first-born among many spirits.
Now we come to the confession of the centurion. Then Joseph of Arimathea seemed to get couracie by the confession. He " waited for the kingdom of God." What are we to make of him? Why had he not,.for these many years, cast in his lot with the followers of the Nazarene? Well, we do not know; we must leave him there.' He boldly goes and claims the body of Jesus. It did not cost him much trouble to go to Pilate. Pilate had no enmity. He would rather have gone with the disciples, if he could with safety to himself. I dare say he said when he gave it, " Yes, go and do what you can for it."
What a chapter! The Lord closing the old creation. The sabbath of old celebrated its perfection; the death of Jesus celebrated its close. The old creation was doomed from the beginning, and if we have not a place in the new creation, touching God we are nothing.