T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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614.1 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Rise Again! | Thu Mar 04 1993 18:34 | 8 |
| In addition to narrating "His Last Days," I've been asked to take the
role of Pilate. What do we know about Pilate? What kind of personality
do you think Pilate had? What characteristics would you assign to him
if you were called upon to do a portrayal?
Peace,
Richard
|
614.2 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Thu Mar 04 1993 19:08 | 14 |
| I've written about this before:
To me, Judas and Pilate sum up all the sin of the world: the active
bad, and the passive bad (the failure to do good).
We don't see into the mind of Pilate, and there are numerous pious and
impious legends associated with him, we're likely to read of them all
in this note before long.
Pilate thought he was avoiding a choice by letting the mob have its
choice.
Of course, it helps if you believe that both Jesus and Pilate are
historic persons and not creations of myth-authors of the 1st century.
|
614.3 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Rise Again! | Thu Mar 04 1993 19:41 | 7 |
| .2
I don't think it's quite that simple, Patrick. But thank you and
God bless you.
Richard
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614.4 | Memories of a sermon from 16 yrs ago! | MIMS::LANGDON_D | Education Cuts Never Heal | Fri Mar 05 1993 08:49 | 37 |
|
I heard a sermon 15 or 16 yrs ago that *still* speaks to me about
your question!
The minister of our church at that time gave a sermon in which he
played the role of Pilate.
Right after the congregation had reaffirmed our faith and beliefs by
reading the Apostles Creed, he came in from the rear of the sanctuary
shouting:
"NOW JUST A MINUTE!! I've been listening to this for 2000 years now
and it's getting on my nerves!--Every Sunday people all over the world
say--'suffered under Pontius Pilate..'
"well,, *I'm* Pontius Pilate,,and you people have the wrong idea ! "
He then went on to describe (with scriptural references) his attempts
to free Christ,,or to refer the case to Herod,,or at least to get
Christ to defend himself.
He described how Pilate probably felt trapped between the proverbial
rock and a hard place , with nothing against this 'madman' who had
gotten the local religious authorities in such an uproar.
'Pilate' asked the congregation what we felt he could have done in the
circumstances,,and then asked us what can you do with a person who's
only 'crime' seemed to be preaching radical ideas like 'love thy
neighbor',,and '..heal the sick',,and 'turn the other cheek'...And then
refuses to defend himself!
The sermon ended with the question "What do you *do* with someone
like this?"
I left church that day with a new feeling of compassion for Pilate,
and others in positions of power who find themselves caught up in
something they can't control.
Doug
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614.5 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Fri Mar 05 1993 11:33 | 4 |
| "...something they can't control"
That's a moral copout. Pilate had a free will, he had "control" and
made his decision and faces God's judgment for it.
|
614.6 | | BSS::VANFLEET | Helpless jello | Fri Mar 05 1993 11:35 | 10 |
| My own feelings about Pilate fall pretty much in line with yours, Doug.
I think he was caught between the political pressure from Herod to tow
a hard line with the "rabble" and the chance that if he followed the
law to the letter, he could rouse the ire of that very "rabble" he was
trying to control. And then there were his repeated attempts to get
Jesus to say something...*anything* in his own defense. Unfortunately
for Pilate, God seemed to have another agenda in mind.
Nanci
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614.7 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Notern Exposure | Fri Mar 05 1993 11:42 | 16 |
| I think Pilate did the wrong thing, but then I would bet that all of us
have done the wrong thing in difficult situations at various times in
our life. It is easy to sit back in judgment of others for having made
mistakes. Part of the Christian ethic is to understand that all of us
do make mistakes. What we can learn from Pilate is to urge ourselves
not to make the same kind of mistake, to lift ourselves from
complacency, not to wash ourselves of the matter--in other words, to
*act*. That is I have a problem with contemplative lifestyles that
practice withdrawal from the world--in a sense, that is simply a
reiteration of Pilate's sin, it is a washing of one's hands of the
world. I admire those who act and respond to every injustice that they
ever encounter in the world, but I suspect that there aren't many who
can achieve such a goal. We can both sympathize with Pilate's error
and be inspired by it not to make the same mistake.
-- Mike
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614.8 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Rise Again! | Fri Mar 05 1993 11:45 | 16 |
| .4
Thank you.
I see Pilate as a career military man who was stuck with the nasty job
of maintaining Roman order among foreigners for whom he had little
understanding or affinity.
I see Pilate as a man who was basically objective and just.
I think Pilate held no personal resentment towards Jesus, but did resent
being put in the position of having to resolve a petty, local problem.
Peace,
Richard
|
614.9 | No justice, no peace | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Fri Mar 05 1993 12:17 | 8 |
| We cannot judge Pilate because we can't examine the state of his
conscience at the time he condemned Jesus to torture and crucifixion,
or if he sought God's forgiveness for his sins.
Having said that, try to convince us that Pilate's execution of Jesus
was "just" in a moral context. Of course, it was "just" in that he had
the legal authority and military power of Rome behind him to do as he
see fit.
|
614.10 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Rise Again! | Fri Mar 05 1993 12:28 | 8 |
| > try to convince us that Pilate's execution of Jesus
> was "just" in a moral context.
I believe the death penalty is in itself immoral. Therefore, in good
conscience, I cannot defend it.
Richard
|
614.11 | Fear the right One | SALEM::RUSSO | | Fri Mar 05 1993 12:30 | 15 |
|
I'd like to point out where I feel Pilate fell short. I feel he
had too strong a fear of man. As someone in an earlier note brought
out he kept questioning Jesus. It didn't seem that he was determined
to execute him, yet fear of the people seemed to keep him for making
a just decision in this case. Luke 23:14,15 shows Pilate and Herod
both found no reason to kill Jesus based on the accusations brought
against him. Yet Pilate gave in. We need to learn from this. A main
point we can learn and strenghten ourselves with is that we need to
do what's right in Gods eyes no matter what "man" may do to us.
Luke 12:4 and PS 118:6 show we need to fear God not man. This is where
Pilate fell short.
robin
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614.12 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Notern Exposure | Fri Mar 05 1993 12:36 | 6 |
| Whether or not Pilate sought God's forgiveness for his sins is
irrelevant to whether or not we should sympathize with his situation or
forgive him for what he did. We should do both of those things because
he was a human being.
-- Mike
|
614.13 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | t/hs+ws=Formula for the future | Fri Mar 05 1993 15:50 | 13 |
|
I recently preached a sermon entitled "A Portrait of a Good
Man". It was about Pilate and the political intrigue surrounding the
events of that day. Historical records bears out the fact that Rome
was in the habit of putting their best administrators in the most
troublesome spots. Judia was one so we can infere that Pilate was well
thought of as an administrator/governor...some historical records bear
this out also. My main point was that "Man" cannot/has not made very
good religious decisions without basing them on prayerful
considerations.
Dave
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614.14 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Sat Mar 06 1993 21:52 | 17 |
| Whether or not Pilate sought God's forgiveness for his sins is very
relevant to Pilate himself. Not knowing this we are not in a position
to judge him as God has. We forgive Pilate as we forgive all those who
trespass against us.
I don't know what it means to "sympathize with his situation". Do we
do the same to Hitler or Stalin, namely "sympathize with their
situation?"
Pilate was free to choose. It's ironic that some earlier notes refer
to Pilate as "just". The word "just" was only applied to Jesus, first
by Pilate's wife and then by Pilate (Mt 27:19)
Pilate's wife is Claudia, niece to Augustus Caesar. Pilate's rule of
Judea didn't do him any credit. Judea was the place most likely to
rebel which, of course, it did, 30 years later.
|
614.15 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | t/hs+ws=Formula for the future | Sun Mar 07 1993 14:16 | 36 |
|
To me, the question begs whether Jesus was "put" to death
or did he accept it willingly. I have no doubt that Jesus had the power
to overcome the trials by Pilate. That is born out physically when at
the garden the Roman cohort called out to Jesus and he answered "I am"
and the whole cohort went right down by the power of his words.
Coupled with Pilate's continued efforts to spare Jesus leads me to
believe that all of the events were preordained. So, in my mind, if
you are looking for the true condemmer of Jesus, you must blame a world
full of sin....isn't that the ultimate reason why Jesus had to die?
Now before I get jumped on about this, let me say that I
also have no doubt that God did place the "right" people in those
positions because God knew what the outcome would be. Judus is another
good example as well as the weakness of Peter in his denial of Jesus
right after the cruxification.
Caiaphus's statement "If you let this man go then you are
no friend of Ceaser" cannot be overlooked during these trials. Pilate
had been in "hot water" with Ceaser several times before this because
of overstepping his authority in Judea. This statement was a direct
threat to Pilate so his natural leanings would be to avoid trouble and
go ahead and do what they wanted.
It is also interesting to note that the trials of Jesus
(there were three within a 24 hour period) were against the Jewish law
of the day. All sentances were to "lay" over for at least a 24 hour
period in case anyone came forth to provide new information. Also a
unanamous vote (by the Sandhedren sp) was against the law because of
the fear of "railroading" someone they didn't like. So if Pilate is to
be condemmed then these others should be also though I believe that we
are all guilty of putting Jesus to death.
Dave
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614.16 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Notern Exposure | Sun Mar 07 1993 19:50 | 42 |
| Surely forgiveness and compassion are not alien concepts to Christians.
Even if we knew for a fact that Pilate didn't seek God's forgiveness,
that would make no difference as far as our own compassion for him is
concerned. As for sympathizing with his situation, the reality is that
all of us are capable of doing wrong things, all of us make mistakes,
all of us commit errors in judgment. It is easy to take what is
essentially a holier-than-thou stance, arms symbolically folded over
chest, and condemn others for making the wrong choices in their lives.
But, as a great prophet once pointed out some 2000 years ago, stone
throwers of right ought to be without sin themselves. I don't know any
of us here is who is without sin.
Do I sympathize with Hitler's and Stalin's situation? Because I believe
in compassion for all, the answer must be yes. It is easy to hate the
Hitlers and the Stalins of the world; even the tax collectors do that.
Who knows what led those people to do what they did? And had their
life circumstances been different, who knows how their lives might have
been different. We all sin, and we all also have that of God within
us. It is our recognition of our own frailty, our capacity for error,
that inspires us to understand when make the wrong choices themselves.
I am reminded of the My Lai massacre. There were a few brave soldiers
who refused to participate, or who actively intervened to oppose what
was doing; but they were the minority. If you take college psychology
classes, you learn about a famous experiment in which individuals were
asked to administer electric shocks to another person. The shocks were
faked, but the person administering didn't know that. Even after the
"victim" screamed for the person to stop, individuals often continued
anyway, obeying the authority of the person administering the test.
The reality is that the capacity to do bad things is within all of us.
It would be nice to say that *I* wouldn't be one of those people, and
if one has such confidence in their own ability to always do the right
thing, then more power to them. But I say, and the Christian ethic
says, that such judgmentalism is unjustified. All have sinned, and
fallen short of the glory of God. To err is human, but to recognize
that others err and feel compassion for others who do, is an expression
of our compassion.
So yes, I do believe that we should sympathize with Pilate's situation.
-- Mike
|
614.17 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Sun Mar 07 1993 19:54 | 17 |
| Mike,
As always, every ready to cast a stone at those who you allege to cast
stones, and judge those who you allege to judge others.
At a fundamental level you and I disagree about the nature of sin and
the response to it.
Pilate sinned and whether or not we agree that it was a "difficult
situation". The point is that all, including Pilate and Judas are
given the grace from God to avoid sin.
What you wrote appears to be the equation of compassion with avoiding
personal accountability for ones actions.
The experiment you refer to in Stanley Millgram's Obedience to
Authority experiment.
|
614.18 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Notern Exposure | Sun Mar 07 1993 20:55 | 55 |
| Pat, I wasn't disagreeing that Pilate sinned. In fact, I stated as
much on several occasions. Nor am I in favor of avoiding personal
accountability for one's actions; on the contrary, I think all of us
have a responsibility to do the right thing at all times.
What I am referring to is compassion and understanding for others
*even* when they do the wrong thing. It means forgiving those who do
wrong to us, as Jesus taught 2000 years ago. And it means the belief
that this compassion should be universal, not just for those whom we
happen to like.
We have a moral responsibility to right wrongs and to defend what is
right and just. But we must also do so from a position that recognizes
that people are imperfect and don't always do the right things that we
urge them and ourselves to do. Thus we both urge right, and understand
that others do not always do the right thing, especially in situations
that are not as clearcut as we often claim they are. We thus do not
judge them, but instead urge them to get off their feet, we lend them a
hand if necessary. We also recognize that many issues are often
difficult, involve conflicting interests and values, and, given the
upbringing, culture, and life history of others, that others may make
decisions that we would not make or that we even find immoral. We urge
them to reach to a higher morality, we share our conscience with them,
but we also understand and sympathize with them. This stance stems
from a spirit of universal love and compassion.
As for me "casting a stone at those who allege to cast stones", that
simply is simply untrue, and misses the point entirely. You seem to be
inferring that I believe that one should never criticize wrong when
they see it, when in fact I believe just the opposite. The issue here
is not that we criticize wrongful actions, but that we criticize the
actions without condemning or judging the individual who commits the
wrongful acts. It is a long held Quaker tradition, for example, of
activism against various social evils. Quakers were at the forefront
of criticizing slavery; but in accordance with the spirit of Christ's
teachings, Quakers worked for the abolition of slavery but did so in a
way that tried to show love and understanding for the slave owner as
well. Quakers did this because it was in accordance with the spirit of
Christ's teachings. So if you believe that I am against criticizing
evil or sin when identified, then you do not understand what I am
saying.
If criticizing judgmentalism makes one judgmental, then obviously it
would be impossible to be opposed to judgmentalism. According to that
logic, if, when encountering judgmentalism, one could not criticize
judgmentalism because one would be guilty of judgmentalism; but if one
didn't criticize it in order not to be guilty of what one opposed, one
would not really be opposing it. This is nonsensical. It is one thing
to identify judgmentalism as sin; it is another to recognize that
others commit this sin and to forgive others for it. We should not
avoid our responsibility to identify an evil, but we should love others
and understand their frail human capacity to commit what we condemn,
and forgive them for it.
-- Mike
|
614.19 | Jesus paid it all, all to Him I owe. | CSC32::KINSELLA | it's just a wheen o' blethers | Mon Mar 08 1993 14:41 | 23 |
|
I was reading the end of Matthew this weekend. I was intrigued by
a phrase that repeated itself in the story.
Matt 27:3-4 When Judas, who had betrayed him, saw that Jesus was
condemned, he was seized with remorse and returned the thirty silver
coins to the chief priests and the elders. "I have sinned," he said,
"for I have betrayed innocent blood." "What is that to us?" they
replied, "That's your responsibility."
Matt 27:24 When Pilate saw that he was getting nowhere, but that
instead an uproar was starting, he took water and washed his hands
in front of the crowd. "I am innocent of this man's blood," he
said. "It is your responsibility."
The phrase "your responsibility" really stood out. Here was
Pilate giving to the people the same answer the priest and elders
had given Judas. Was it passing the buck or was it only taking
responsibility for their part in it. I'm really not sure. But I
am sure about one thing...the sign above Jesus' head could have
easily read "The buck stops here."
Jill
|
614.20 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Mon Mar 08 1993 15:23 | 6 |
| I'll have to look at the Greek and the Latin to see if 27:4 and 27:24
use the same word. What English translation has "responsibility" in
both places?
Pilate couldn't have avoided responsibility for the execution of Jesus
by merely washing his hands.
|
614.21 | | CSC32::KINSELLA | it's just a wheen o' blethers | Mon Mar 08 1993 15:38 | 11 |
|
> What English translation has "responsibility" in both places?
NIV.
>Pilate couldn't have avoided responsibility for the execution
>of Jesus by merely washing his hands.
I completely agree.
Jill
|
614.22 | | MSBCS::JMARTIN | | Thu Mar 11 1993 15:18 | 14 |
| I could be wrong but my feeling is the religious arguments the accusers
brought before Pilot were falling on deaf ears. In other words, Pilot
was probably thinking...Oooh Go away!!! What I think turned the tables
was when they brought up the false accusations of insurrection, I.E.
Jesus told the people not to pay taxes to Ceaser. Had that been true,
it probably would've been the only justification for punishment in the
eyes of Pilot.
I though Doug brought up some excellent points. The Sanhedrin actually
broke some 15 or so laws in just the trial itself. Most of the Roman
authority believed in many Gods so religious arguments meant nothing to
him.
Jack
|