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- <text id=94TT0348>
- <title>
- Apr. 04, 1994: Why Was Christ Crucified?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 04, 1994 Deep Water
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RELIGION, Page 72
- Why Was Christ Crucified
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A new book by a Catholic expert expounds on the complex reasons
- why Jewish leaders sought his death
- </p>
- <p>By Richard N. Ostling
- </p>
- <p> Of all the trials in human history, none has had greater consequences.
- In Jerusalem, in April of either the year 30 or 33, Jesus of
- Nazareth was arrested, hauled before a religious court, tried
- by a Roman governor, sentenced to death and crucified. And what
- did that come to mean? That, explained the Apostle Paul, "God
- shows his love for us in that while we were yet sinners, Christ
- died for us...We are now justified by his blood." And thus
- it began.
- </p>
- <p> The resulting visions of redemption would be tainted by the
- search for blame in the death of the Redeemer. According to
- Matthew, a Jewish mob cried, "His blood be on us and on our
- children" while demanding the death of Jesus. And centuries
- of Christians would oblige them with massacres and persecutions,
- pogroms and expulsions of "Christ killers" and the depredations
- of the Inquisition, laying groundwork for the unspeakable horrors
- of the Holocaust. Anti-Jewish passions came not only from misinterpreters
- of faith but from the spiritual authorities themselves, from
- John Chrysostom, from Thomas Aquinas--both saints of Christendom--indeed, from Martin Luther, who turned against the Jews after
- they spurned his reformed Christianity.
- </p>
- <p> In the past century, the politically correct way to attach blame
- was to pin it on a vanished empire--the Rome of the Caesars
- and its representative in Judea, Pontius Pilate. But a new,
- two-volume study by one of the Roman Catholic Church's most
- prominent experts on the Gospels dismisses that approach. "You
- can't just say there was no Jewish involvement in the death
- of Jesus," says Father Raymond E. Brown, author of The Death
- of the Messiah (Doubleday; 1,608 pages; $75), which re-examines
- this and dozens of other issues on the crucifixion. "Jesus was
- a Jew and he dealt with Jewish leaders. So the easy solution
- that it was an entirely Roman affair doesn't work." He argues,
- however, that careful examination of the Gospels can provide
- understanding, even enlightenment: "Christians have misused
- the crucifixion to blame Jews and to persecute Jews. Therefore,
- to many Jews the crucifixion is a horrible thing because they've
- been beaten over the head with it. If we are to live together
- in the world, I think it's helpful for both sides to see the
- extent to which the intervening history has shaped the way the
- crucifixion is seen."
- </p>
- <p> Brown begins by carefully defining the Jewish role in the death
- of Jesus. "In a context of hostile inter-Jewish feelings," he
- says, "how can one dismiss as unthinkable a desire on the part
- of some fellow Jews for severe action against Jesus, a troubling
- religious figure?" He stresses that many ordinary Jews sympathized
- with Jesus, and that only the leaders were responsible for the
- death sentence. "I'm not talking about guilt," he says, merely
- "responsibility." Explains Brown: "Those who contribute to the
- execution of an accused are responsible for that death. They
- are guilty only if they know that the accused is undeserving."
- And while the leaders condemned Jesus, Brown says, there were
- religious and political reasons behind this decision.
- </p>
- <p> A number of historians, however, have proposed detailed theories
- that minimize Jewish involvement--including that of the Jewish
- religious leadership. Ellis Rivkin of Hebrew Union College in
- Cincinnati, Ohio, contends that real religious courts were separate
- from the Sanhedrin, the council of Jewish functionaries that
- dealt with Jesus after his arrest. He depicts the Sanhedrin
- as a political body that collaborated with the Roman occupation
- forces and lacked any religious legitimacy. "Neither [Jesus']
- religious teachings nor his beliefs could have been on trial--only their political consequences," says Rivkin. In his book,
- though, Brown sifts the ancient documents, Jewish and pagan
- as well as Christian, to argue that the Sanhedrin was the single
- recognized Jewish panel that treated both religious and political
- matters, albeit under the Roman thumb and therefore seen as
- corrupt by Jews in later years.
- </p>
- <p> Other Jewish writers doubt the Sanhedrin trial occurred at all.
- For example, the nighttime hearing and the rushed verdict described
- in the New Testament violate religious law. But Brown says there
- is no reason to suppose that Jews of A.D. 30 would have strictly
- observed procedures not codified until two centuries later in
- the Mishnah, the rabbinical collation of oral law interpreting
- the Bible. As for those who think the Romans would not have
- contemplated an execution on the basis of Jewish religious disputes,
- Brown notes that 30 years later Jewish leaders sentenced Jesus,
- the son of Ananias, to death for prophesying that God would
- destroy the Temple. The Romans, however, found the defendant
- insane and never executed him.
- </p>
- <p> Other modern revisions of Christ's death portray the Nazarene
- as a martyred revolutionary a la Che Guevara, but Brown says
- the details do not fit that scenario, and besides, Jewish insurrections
- only arose a generation later.
- </p>
- <p> Who, then, decided that Jesus must die, and what were the reasons?
- In Brown's reading, Jesus' judges were a loosely defined group
- of Jewish aristocrats led by Caiaphas, the high priest who survived
- 18 years in the post. The Sanhedrin members were reacting to
- perceived threats to their faith--and trying to avoid trouble
- with their constituents and the Romans. "There was surely an
- admixture of insincerity, self-protective cunning, honest religious
- devotion, conscientious self-searching, and fanaticism," Brown
- concludes. Among the less-than-noble motives: Jesus had uttered
- prophecies against the Temple, which by one estimate provided
- the livelihood of 20% of Jerusalem's population.
- </p>
- <p> Brown joins those who believe Jesus' anti-Temple pronouncements
- were a factor in the death sentence. Brown deems blasphemy the
- crucial charge, not mocking God but involving Jesus' claim of
- a status that belongs to the Creator alone. Brown does not think
- Jesus or his followers used the title "Son of God" in Jesus'
- lifetime. But he considers it plausible that Jesus claimed the
- power to forgive sins, spoke of bringing about the kingdom of
- God and implied that God would judge people on how they responded
- to Jesus himself. All that would have provided ample reason
- for condemnation.
- </p>
- <p> So too, apparently, would have the title Messiah, or Christ,
- as the word has come down through time by way of Greek. Brown
- says Jesus was the first individual ever to be named as the
- Messiah by Jews. (The next so proclaimed was Bar Kokhba, during
- a Jewish revolt against Rome a century later.) Though Jesus
- responded with ambivalence when questioned about this at the
- trials, the charge presumably justified Pilate's sentence and
- the placard calling him King of the Jews.
- </p>
- <p> The Death of the Messiah deals with many matters central to
- the Christian faith, as well as iconic motifs such as the Judas
- kiss and Pilate's washing his hands. The book's scholarship
- will upset Christian traditionalists, although it fits well
- with new warnings against "fundamentalism" from the Pontifical
- Biblical Commission. Brown treats numerous familiar details
- as imaginary rather than literal (the dream of Pilate's wife,
- the darkness at noon as Christ died). And he disdains uninformed
- literal readings of Scripture. The Gospel texts, contends Brown,
- must be interpreted carefully because they were completed decades
- after Jesus' life and were shaped, for example, by tensions
- in that later period when synagogue and church were splitting
- permanently. In Brown's meticulous exegesis, the troublesome
- verse "His blood be on us and on our children" is not a self-inflicted
- curse at all but an acknowledgment in terms of scriptural law
- that this specific group of Jews was willing to be responsible
- before God for an execution that it believed to be justified.
- In Leviticus, the phrase "their blood is upon them" is used
- repeatedly when the death penalty is prescribed.
- </p>
- <p> Brown's work is emblazoned with a church imprimatur. And it
- will receive no quarrel from many Jewish religious scholars.
- From the beginning, says Judaic studies professor Shaye J.D.
- Cohen of Brown University, the Jewish tradition "had no trouble
- accepting the simple story that Jews executed Jesus as a sinner
- and a criminal, even to the extent of ignoring the role of the
- Romans." In modern times, Jews have adopted more favorable opinions
- about Jesus, just as Christians have worked to eradicate lingering
- anti-Semitism. But Cohen considers revisionism about the trial
- "pointless" because Jews cannot reasonably expect Christians
- to rewrite their Scriptures. Cohen himself thinks the Jewish
- leaders of the time did in fact decide to have Jesus killed.
- "Were their motives noble? I suppose they were. Did Jesus deserve
- to die? Probably not."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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