By Johann Peter Lange
Edited by Rev. Marcus Dods
THE HISTORICAL DELINEATION OF THE LIFE OF JESUS.
THE TIME OF JESUS APPEARING AND DISAPPEARING AMID THE PERSECUTIONS OF HIS MORTAL ENEMIES.
SECTION VIII
accounts given by persons
returning from the feast, of the
Galileans whom Pilate had
slaughtered in the temple
(Luk 13:1-9)
Luke relates that at that time,
as Jesus was exercising His
ministry, there were present
some who told Him of a massacre
which Pilate had made of some
Galileans, just whilst they were
engaged with their sacrifices in
the temple. He had mingled their
blood with their sacrifices. To
the Israelitish mind, there was
something peculiarly horrible in
this. The sacrificer who, just
when he was himself presenting
the atoning sacrifice, had to
shed his own blood and life,
might easily be regarded as a
criminal peculiarly marked out
by God. For in Israel real crime
could not be expiated by
sacrifice, it must be atoned for
by death. And thus these
narrators appear to have accused
to Jesus, not Pilate, in spite
of his deed of violence, but
those Galileans; at least, the
answer of Jesus shows that they
were full, not of Pilate’s
guilt, but the guilt of these
Galilean people.
There is nothing further known
of this mysterious occurrence.
It is, however, known from
history, that Pilate was much
addicted to deeds of gross
violence in his government.’1
As, however, the disaster is
here related to the Lord with
the view of representing these
Galileans as great sinners, and
as the Lord addresses to the
narrators so solemn a reproof,
we are led to the supposition
that the whole communication of
the tidings to Jesus was made
with a malevolent design; nay,
we might even go further, and
suppose that the conduct of
these Galileans in the temple
had been in some way connected
by these malevolent persons with
the cause of Jesus.
When, in the summer of this
year, the news reached Galilee
that Pilate had just cut down
some Galileans whilst offering
their sacrifices, the
intelligence seems to have been
brought by travellers returning
from a recent observance of some
feast. Hence we may venture to
conjecture that this occurrence
took place at the feast of
Pentecost in the current year.
But if about this time some
sacrificing Galileans gave such
offence in the temple that
Pilate was induced to do this
savage and summary execution
upon them, it was no doubt
through complaints made by the
Jewish priesthood that he was
induced to do so. For in all
probability he only interfered
to keep order in the temple at
the request of the priesthood.
But how was it possible for the
Galileans to have fallen out so
violently with the priesthood of
the temple? Many causes might
lead to this, but none would be
more probable about this time
than the discord which had
arisen between the priesthood
and the enthusiastic admirers of
Jesus in Galilee. Galileans of
this sort might here have had to
listen to imprecations against
their honoured Jesus from the
side of the priests; they might
have had to hear words of
excommunication, to endure the
rejection of their sacrifices;
and all this, in their excited
and passionate mood, would he
calculated to mislead them to
commit acts of vengeance or of
self-assertion.2
We will not carry out this
supposition further. So much is
clear, that the Lord severely
cuts short these informants, who
appear to he relating to Him the
case of these Galileans with the
view of making them out to be
especial offenders who had
fallen under God’s judgment.3
‘Think ye,’ said He, ‘that these
Galileans were sinners above all
other Galileans? I tell you,
nay; but except ye repent, ye
shall all likewise perish.’ He
means them to understand that
the Galileans are even now
almost ripe for judgment. But He
feels Himself constrained to add
the declaration, that the
Judeans are in no better case.
This fact also He illustrates by
an example. About that time a
tower had fallen down at Siloam4
(perhaps a tower of the
city-wall, which also
encompassed the district of
Siloam), and had killed eighteen
persons. He makes mention of
this disaster by asking:
‘Suppose ye that these
unfortunates were guilty above
all men who dwell in Jerusalem?’
And then again He repeated the
declaration: ‘Except ye repent,
ye shall all likewise perish.’
Upon this He related to them the
parable of the unfruitful
fig-tree, which we have already
considered. Already, for three
years, has the owner sought in
vain for fruit from the fig-tree
in the vineyard. Therefore he
would fain cut it down. But the
gardener intercedes for the
tree. He prays the owner to let
it stand one year more. During
this year he will do all he can
with it; and if after that it
yields no fruit, he says, then
cut it down. Some would wish us
to infer from this parable a
four years’ public ministry of
Jesus.5 But from other
expressions of Jesus, we include
in the reckoning in this parable
the ministry of the Baptist.6
Therefore it was now the third
year that God was seeking in
vain for fruit on His fig-tree,
the people of Israel. And Jesus
felt that in fact the time of
His death was already come, and
with it the time of Israel’s
rejection, if He did not
withdraw and intercede for the
people. Through this
intercession He gained for it
yet another year of grace. This
parable gives us a deep insight
into the Lord’s heart.7
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1) See Winer, the article Pilate; Joseph. Antiq. 18, 3, 1; De Bello Jud. 2, 9, 2. 2) According to Josephus, Vit, 17, the Galileans were very prone to insurrection ; and he says (Antig. 17, 9, 3; 10, 2) that frequent disturbances arose in Jerusalem during the time of the feasts. See De Wette in loc. 3) Cf, Olshausen in loc. 4) The district of the well of Siloam, ‘From the fountain of Siloam Josephus also (Bell. Jud. 6, 7, 2) seems to distinguish τὸ Σιλωάμ as a particular neighbourhood.’ Winer, Lex. ii. 538. From the passage respecting it in Josephus, it would even seem to follow that the lower town reached as far as the pool of Siloam, and even enclosed it as well, See above, Part V. sec. i. note 1. 5) Comp. Sepp. Das Leben Jesu Christi, i, 193. 6) Comp. p. 221. 7) [An ancient interpretation is given in Cramer’s Catena, which makes the three years refer to the three states of man, in Eden, under the law, and in the Christian era, But in the midst of this, one of those gems occurs which compensates for much allegorizing: ‘κόπρια δὲ λέγει τὰ δάκρυα, καὶ τούς στεναγμοὺς, καί τὰς χαμευνίας, καί τὰς ἀγρυπνίας, καὶ τῆξιν ψυχῆς καὶ σώματος, κ.τ.λ.’—ED.]
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