The Gospel of Our Lord Jesus Christ According to Luke.
When they came to the place that is called The Skull, they crucified Jesus there with the criminals, one on his right and one on his left.
Then Jesus said, “Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing.” And they cast lots to divide his clothing. The people stood by, watching Jesus on the cross; but the leaders scoffed at him, saying, “He saved others; let him save himself if he is the Messiah of God, his chosen one!”
The soldiers also mocked him, coming up and offering him sour wine, and saying, “If you are the King of the Jews, save yourself!” There was also an inscription over him, “This is the King of the Jews.”
One of the criminals who were hanged there kept deriding him and saying, “Are you not the Messiah? Save yourself and us!” But the other rebuked him, saying, “Do you not fear God, since you are under the same sentence of condemnation? And we indeed have been condemned justly, for we are getting what we deserve for our deeds, but this man has done nothing wrong.”
Then he said, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.”
He replied, “Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in Paradise.” (Luke 23:33-43)
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How do you know a person is a king?
If a king, dressed in everyday clothes, walking down Main Street, without a retinue, without bodyguards, just walking, looking in the windows of the stores, maybe going into McDonalds for the daily special, would you know he was king?
What if you could talk to him? Ask him questions?
Like, where are you from? What do you do?
And what if he answered, “I am from another country. I rule. I am a king.”
Would you believe him?
At one time a king would wear a crown most of the time, so people would know what he was. I remember seeing the movie Henry the Fifth. The king was wearing armour, and on his helmet was a crown. Not a big fancy crown, but a slim golden circlet. A crown nevertheless.
That’s how you would know he was the king. Right?
Nowadays monarchs wear crowns only on ceremonial occasions.
You would know a king, or a Queen these days by the place they lived, by the number of bodyguards that accompanied them, and you might recognise them from having seen their picture in the paper, or from television\, or on our coins.
But does a king or a queen, or a prince or princess, have some aura, some special something, some majesty around them that you would just know, what they are?
A newspaper reporter in England managed to get himself hired as a footman in Buckingham Palace, and wrote an expose. The palace had an injunction placed on his newspaper to prevent the printing of any more stories about life in the palace. But some stories had already made it into print.
The stuff he revealed, however, was been pretty mundane.
He talked about what the Queen had for breakfast, and similar snippets of information about Prince Philip. It is all so ordinary.
As you might expect.
Away from ceremonial duties, and palace receptions for visiting dignitaries, royalty are just like anyone else; people.
The ruler, the procurator of Palestine was a man named Pilate, Pontius Pilate, who met a man who some claimed was a king.
The religious leaders had been kicking up a fuss about this man. Jesus was his name. They said he was a threat to peace and order.
He had claimed to be a king, they said.
And they wanted him dead.
He had said things about God and about the Temple that had them worried. If he were allowed to continue, then people might realise that God was available to everyone at any time, in any place, and you could talk to him just like that – in prayer – anyone could!.
You see, Jesus came into the world to witness to the truth. He came to tell the truth about God, the truth about ourselves, and the truth about life.
Instead of having to be trapped inside a matrix of rules and regulations, people would know that just asking God for forgiveness, and living a life of love – love of God, and love of neighbour – was all that was required, to be in God’s good books.
This was dangerous stuff.
If this kept up, the temple would be deserted and all those who depended on it for a living would be out of work.
The whole edifice would fall down.
Clearly this man had to be stopped. And the sooner the better.
But they couldn’t order him killed themselves. Only Pilate could sentence a man to death. But Pilate wouldn’t condemn a man to death for a religious crime.
So they told him that Jesus had said he was a king, and that he was a danger to law and order. Palestine had always been a powder keg. The people had risen up against the Romans more than once. So they figured this would get Pilate’s attention.
Yet, Pilate tried to avoid the responsibility of condemning Jesus. He told them, “You take this man and judge him according to your own laws.”
But he could not evade his responsibility. He could not evade Jesus.
No-one can evade Jesus.
He is right there in your face.
So Pilate has to examine Jesus and see if there is real cause to crucify him.
This is an interrogation. Pilate is a powerful man. He is looking on an accused person who has been scourged until his back is raw to the bone. This is a man who has been betrayed by his friends, deserted by his followers, tortured, and by all accounts should be a broken man.
And yet there is something about this Jesus.
“Are you the king of the Jews,” Pilate asks him.
Jesus asks, “Are you asking this on your own account, or did someone tell you about me?”
“Your own people brought you here,” Pilate says, “What have you done?”
Jesus answers, “My kingdom is not of this world.”
“So you are a king,” Pilate says.
There is something about this man. Isn’t there?
You see, Jesus isn’t a man caught up in a web of circumstance over which he has no control.
He isn’t being hounded to death.
His death is part of God’s cosmic plan to save humankind. Jesus is going to the cross willingly.
Out of obedience to the Father.
Later, Pilate brings Jesus out to the people and says, “See, the man.”
At first we might think he is trying to awaken compassion in the people. That he is saying, “ Look at this poor bruised, bleeding creature. Look at this wretchedness. Can you really mean to hound such a pitiful creature to death?”
But no. You can almost hear his tone change. His view of Jesus has been transformed. It is as if after his talking with Jesus, he himself wonders at the majesty of the man.
There is an aura.
There is – something.
Could this man really be a king?
Here, some scholars think, Pilate may be saying instead, “See! This is indeed a man. “
You see the story of Jesus is not the story of a man whose life is out of control. Rather it is the story of a man whose last days were a considered and triumphant march to the cross.
His will not be a kingdom of conquest, but a kingdom of love.
He told his disciples, while on their journey to Jerusalem, that when he was lifted up – crucified – he would draw people to him.
His sacrifice would be the means by which the lost would be found; the downcast lifted up; the sick in heart healed; those trapped in sin…. freed!
It would be the action of a king who loved his people.
You know, from time immemorial, armies have marched across this world, laying waste, killing, pillaging, conquering. The kingdoms they built have all but gone from memory.
When I was a little boy at school in England, we had a map of the world on the classroom wall. Most of the map was coloured red. That was the British Empire.
It was said that the sun never set on the British Empire. In other words, it stretched from one end of the world to the other, so at any time the sun shone on some part of it.
Apart from a few islands here and there, it has, over the past fifty years, all but vanished.
Empire builders have found out over millennia, that you can’t win the hearts of people by force.
Jesus would win the world by love.
There is a legend told about the return of Jesus to Heaven, after his time on earth. Even there, he still bore the marks of that cruel crucifixion.
The angel Gabriel approached him and said, ‘Master, you must have suffered terribly for people down there.”
“Yes,” said Jesus, “I did.”
“And do they know and appreciate how much you loved them and what you did for them?”
Jesus said, “Oh no! Not yet.
Right now, only a handful of people in Palestine know.”
“Gabriel was perplexed, “ Then what have you done to let everyone know about your love for them?”
“Jesus said, “I have asked Peter, James, John, and a few more friends to tell others about me. Those who are told will tell others, in turn, about me. And my story will be spread to the farthest reaches of the globe. Ultimately, all of humankind will have heard about my life and what I did for them.”
Gabriel frowned, and looked a little skeptical. He well knew what poor stuff human beings were made of. He said, “Yes, but what if Peter and James and John grow weary? What if the people who come after them, forget? What if way down in the twentieth century people just don’t tell others about you? Haven’t you made other plans?”
And Jesus answered, “I haven’t made any other plans. I am counting on them.”
Jesus was, and is counting on his followers to spread the news of his love throughout the world, into the hearts of men and women everywhere.
He is counting on you and me. Soldiers for Christ. Soldiers whose only weapon is love alone.
In the service of our king.
Amen.
