Up until this moment, he believed he had heard and seen every courtroom shenanigan imaginable. His position lent to it. From his seat on the judge’s bench, he’d heard every excuse and alleged defense available. Most of them were drivel. Manufactured reasons for failing to keep the law, violating one’s neighbor, or creating unrest. Rarely did a defendant stand before him in true innocence. Until today. Pilate had never seen this. Never watched the accused calmly and quietly standing before him, allowing the accusers to rail and rage, but never raising one word of defense. When asked for a response to the allegations, He said nothing. The silence was deafening. The peace etched in every line of His face spoke far more than words ever could. Jesus was innocent. Pilate’s head knew it. His heart felt it. His lips spoke it. The knowledge held Pilate in the throes of a great decision.
What was he supposed to do now? He had only one side of the story. An unconvincing list of alleged offenses appearing to have more to do with their religion than his law. It wasn’t his area of expertise. He would take tax collection and military movement over this any day of the week. Yet there they stood. Angry. Indignant. Expecting an answer, but apparently not expecting the decision to be in their favor. The chief priests and scribes had taken matters into their own hands. Effectively stacking the deck in their own favor. While Pilate contemplated his decision, the religious leaders had gone throughout the crowd spreading maliciousness and convincing the people that Jesus should not be released back into society. He was dangerous. To them. To their religion. To their way of life. And, for some reason, the people believed them.
Pilate wasn’t so certain. Nothing added up for him. Not the allegations. Not the testimony. Not the outward presentation of this allegedly dangerous man. If Jesus had been running about causing real trouble or outrage among the people, Pilate you have known about it. Someone would have come to him long before with the details. His men would have been keeping a close eye on the situation. Not one complaint had been filed. Not one concerning report had reached him. Not one of his officers had felt compelled to bring Jesus to his attention. When necessity demanded he do some research, Pilate had been only able to ascertain positive impacts of Jesus’ presence. He was busy doing good things throughout their society. Healing the sick. Delivering from demons. Teaching unarguable values. Who could condemn those actions? No one. Until today, not one person had come forward to ask that action be taken against Jesus. Today shouldn’t have been that day, either. Not by Pilate’s measure. This was a colossal waste of his time. The man was clearly innocent. He didn’t deserve death. He deserved freedom. A celebration. A medal, even. Unfortunately, no one was asking for Pilate’s opinion, they were asking for action. Or inaction.
In the midst of his discussion with the tumultuous crowd concerning who should be released at the festival, word came from his wife. She was troubled. Immensely. Sometime in the night, she had a dream, a nightmare of sorts, a terror that left her in fear for her husband. Pilate needed to extricate himself from this mess. Declare a mistrial. Decline judgment for lack of evidence. Deny the accusers their desired outcome. She didn’t really care how he did it, but he needed to wash his hands of this mess. Now. He needed to walk away. Stop the farce. Let that man go. Jesus was faultless. She knew it. Pilate knew it. There was no reason to continue the ridiculousness. Judge Him innocent and walk away. Immediately. He might have done it, too, had the voices of the chief priests, elders, and raging crowd not rang out to cover the urgency of her message. Like a riptide, those nefarious voices planted doubts, raised selfish concerns, and carried him down the path of indecision.
Standing before the agitated crowd, Pilate listened as they chose the release of a clearly guilty, convicted criminal. He couldn’t imagine such deep hate. Loathing so deep they were willing to have a criminal walk freely among them. Distaste so intense they were content to subject themselves to Barabbas destruction if it meant Jesus’ death. It was a wildly uneven trade. He shouldn’t have offered it. There shouldn’t have been options that day. No one had been able to convince Pilate that Jesus had done anything to deserve the cruelty that awaited one handed the death penalty. No one seemed able or willing to answer that question, to give him something real on which to base his decision. Stuck in the midst of his own moral conundrum, Pilate asked the crowd the question, “What am I supposed to do with Jesus?” Their chilling cry echoed back, unsurprising, yet gut-wrenching still, “Crucify Him!” And he did. (Matthew 27:11-26)
Pilate’s question begs a question of my own. Why did he even ask? Why did Pilate ask what to do with Jesus when he already knew he wasn’t going to follow his gut, his wife’s dire warning, or even his legal logic? Without evidence, proper testimony, or even real allegations, why was he even entertaining the idea of sentencing Jesus to any form of imprisonment or punishment? He didn’t have to punish Jesus at all. Pilate was in charge. He had options. He could have refused their demands. Honored his wife’s request. He didn’t. At the crowd’s urging, he doubled down. After ceremoniously washing his hands as if he could possibly forgive his own bloodguiltiness, Pilate ordered Jesus flogged and sent Him away to be crucified.
With those actions, Pilate reveals the truth. He wasn’t asking the question to gain insight, garner opinions, or gather options. None of those things would have changed the outcome. Pilate would still have followed the crowd. Why? Because Pilate lacked strength. Inner strength. Moral fortitude. The kind of courage that makes one stand up and take the proper path regardless of the naysayers, the resisters, the haters. Underneath all the voices and opinions and options, Pilate knew what to do. His heart knew. He realized within minutes of Jesus’ appearance before him that He was innocent. He knew any other judgment would be erroneous. He simply didn’t have the backbone to stand up and make that choice. He didn’t have the strength to do the right thing. He didn’t want to face the public backlash. He didn’t want the people to riot. He didn’t want his superiors asking what he was doing meddling in religious affairs when his business was enforcing Roman law. When Pontius Pilate made his decision concerning Jesus, he didn’t base it on what his heart knew to be right and true. No. He based his decision entirely on what the loudest voices around him were saying. He founded it on public opinion. He made the decision to keep the peace around him rather than finding peace within.
As churched people, we really hate Pilate. He’s the enemy. Evil. Able to stop the madness, but unwilling to do so. We know what Pilate chose to do with Jesus and feel justified in unleashing our distaste in condescending tones of ultimate superiority. We verbally eviscerate him for not being stronger, not standing up to the chief priests and elders, not making a different decision. Yet rarely do we admit that our elbows rub his as we occupy the same space, hearing the evidence for Christ, feeling the call of God, knowing the way Jesus would tell us to walk, yet hesitantly looking around the court of public opinion to ask, “What should I do with Jesus?”
We need to be so careful with that. Be cautious when asking that question. Choose carefully who you ask. Not every voice will encourage you to seek God’s kingdom first. Not every opinion will value the opinion of God. Not every answer will echo the answer your heart knows to be true. While everyone will have an opinion on the options, not every opinion deserves to land on your options list. So ask your question carefully. Hear the answers prayerfully. Search your Bible. Listen to its words. Be still and hear God speak His truth, the only truth, into your soul. Then follow it. Do what God says to do. Do right no matter what. In a world overflowing with opinions and options, consciously take a stand for truth–if everyone else is doing it, if no one else is doing it, if you gain friends and followers or if you lose them–choose to do the right thing. What good is it if you gain prosperity, popularity, and power on earth, but lose your soul in eternity? It’s nothing. Worthless. Earth is busy passing away. Only eternity is forever. As you stand at the crossroads choosing what you will do with Jesus in this current season of your life, remember this, the only court that truly matters will never be held in public opinion, it will be in the moments you spend standing before the all-knowing gaze of Almighty God answering His question. What did you do with Jesus? (II Corinthians 5:10; Psalm 1:1-6; 46:10; 119:105; Jeremiah 29:13; I Corinthians 15:33; John 6:68; James 1:5-6; Romans 14:12; Acts 5:29; Mark 8:36; Isaiah 51:6)