
Chapter 59
Priestly Plottings

[This chapter is based on John 11:47-54.]
Bethany was so near Jerusalem that the news of the raising of Lazarus was soon carried
to the city. Through spies who had witnessed the miracle the Jewish rulers were speedily
in possession of the facts. A meeting of the Sanhedrin was at once called to decide as to
what should be done. Christ had now fully made manifest His control of death and the
grave. That mighty miracle was the crowning evidence offered by God to men that He had
sent His Son into the world for their salvation. It was a demonstration of divine power
sufficient to convince every mind that was under the control of reason and enlightened
conscience. Many who witnessed the resurrection of Lazarus were led to believe on Jesus.
But the hatred of the priests against Him was intensified. They had rejected all lesser
evidence of His divinity, and they were only enraged at this new miracle. The dead had
been raised in the full light of day, and before a crowd of witnesses. No artifice could
explain away such evidence. For this very reason the enmity of the priests grew deadlier.
They were more than ever determined to put a stop to Christ's work.
The Sadducees, though not favourable to Christ, had not been so full of malignity
toward Him as were the Pharisees. Their hatred had not been so bitter. But they were now
thoroughly alarmed. They did not
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believe in a resurrection of the dead. Producing so-called science, they had reasoned
that it would be an impossibility for a dead body to be brought to life. But by a few
words from Christ their theory had been overthrown. They were shown to be ignorant both of
the Scriptures and of the power of God. They could see no possibility of removing the
impression made on the people by the miracle. How could men be turned away from Him who
had prevailed to rob the grave of its dead? Lying reports were put in circulation, but the
miracle could not be denied, and how to counteract its effect they knew not. Thus far the
Sadducees had not encouraged the plan of putting Christ to death. But after the
resurrection of Lazarus they decided that only by His death could His fearless
denunciations against them be stopped.
The Pharisees believed in the resurrection, and they could not but see that this
miracle was an evidence that the Messiah was among them. But they had ever opposed
Christ's work. From the first they had hated Him because He had exposed their hypocritical
pretensions. He had torn aside the cloak of rigorous rites under which their moral
deformity was hidden. The pure religion that He taught had condemned their hollow
professions of piety. They thirsted to be revenged upon Him for His pointed rebukes. They
had tried to provoke Him to say or do something that would give them occasion to condemn
Him. Several times they had attempted to stone Him, but He had quietly withdrawn, and they
had lost sight of Him.
The miracles He performed on the Sabbath were all for the relief of the afflicted, but
the Pharisees had sought to condemn Him as a Sabbathbreaker. They had tried to arouse the
Herodians against Him. They represented that He was seeking to set up a rival kingdom, and
consulted with them how to destroy Him. To excite the Romans against Him, they had
represented Him as trying to subvert their authority. They had tried every pretext to cut
Him off from influencing the people. But so far their attempts had been foiled. The
multitudes who witnessed His works of mercy and heard His pure and holy teachings knew
that these were not the deeds and words of a Sabbathbreaker or blasphemer. Even the
officers sent by the Pharisees had been so influenced by His words that they could not lay
hands on Him. In desperation the Jews had finally passed an edict that any man who
professed faith in Jesus should be cast out of the synagogue.
So, as the priests, the rulers, and the elders gathered for consultation, it was their
fixed determination to silence Him who did such marvellous
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works that all men wondered. Pharisees and Sadducees were more nearly united than ever
before. Divided hitherto, they became one in their opposition to Christ. Nicodemus and
Joseph had, in former councils, prevented the condemnation of Jesus, and for this reason
they were not now summoned. There were present at the council other influential men who
believed on Jesus, but their influence prevailed nothing against that of the malignant
Pharisees.
Yet the members of the council were not all agreed. The Sanhedrin was not at this time
a legal assembly. It existed only by tolerance. Some of its number questioned the wisdom
of putting Christ to death. They feared that this would excite an insurrection among the
people, causing the Romans to withhold further favours from the priesthood, and to take
from them the power they still held. The Sadducees were united in their hatred of Christ,
yet they were inclined to be cautious in their movements, fearing that the Romans would
deprive them of their high standing.
In this council, assembled to plan the death of Christ, the Witness was present who
heard the boastful words of Nebuchadnezzar, who witnessed the idolatrous feast of
Belshazzar, who was present when Christ in Nazareth announced Himself the Anointed One.
This Witness was now impressing the rulers with the work they were doing. Events in the
life of Christ rose up before them with a distinctness that alarmed them. They remembered
the scene in the temple, when Jesus, then a child of twelve, stood before the learned
doctors of the law, asking them questions at which they wondered. The miracle just
performed bore witness that Jesus was none other than the Son of God. In their true
significance, the Old Testament Scriptures regarding Christ flashed before their minds.
Perplexed and troubled, the rulers asked, "What do we?" There was a division in
the council. Under the impression of the Holy Spirit, the priests and rulers could not
banish the conviction that they were fighting against God.
While the council was at the height of its perplexity, Caiaphas the high priest arose.
Caiaphas was a proud and cruel man, overbearing and intolerant. Among his family
connections were Sadducees, proud, bold, reckless, full of ambition and cruelty, which
they hid under a cloak of pretended righteousness. Caiaphas had studied the prophecies,
and although ignorant of their true meaning, he spoke with great authority and assurance:
"Ye know nothing at all, nor consider that it is expedient for us, that one man
should die for the people, and that the whole nation
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perish not." Even if Jesus were innocent, urged the high priest, He must be put
out of the way. He was troublesome, drawing the people to Himself, and lessening the
authority of the rulers. He was only one; it was better that He should die than that the
authority of the rulers should be weakened. If the people were to lose confidence in their
rulers, the national power would be destroyed. Caiaphas urged that after this miracle the
followers of Jesus would likely rise in revolt. The Romans will then come, he said, and
will close our temple, and abolish our laws, destroying us as a nation. What is the life
of this Galilean worth in comparison with the life of the nation? If He stands in the way
of Israel's well-being, is it not doing God a service to remove Him? Better that one man
perish than that the whole nation be destroyed.
In declaring that one man should die for the nation, Caiaphas indicated that he had
some knowledge of the prophecies, although it was very limited. But John, in his account
of this scene, takes up the prophecy, and shows its broad and deep significance. He says,
"And not for that nation only, but that also He should gather together in one the
children of God that were scattered abroad." How blindly did the haughty Caiaphas
acknowledge the Saviour's mission!
On the lips of Caiaphas this most precious truth was turned into a lie. The policy he
advocated was based on a principle borrowed from heathenism. Among the heathen, the dim
consciousness that one was to die for the human race had led to the offering of human
sacrifices. So Caiaphas proposed by the sacrifice of Jesus to save the guilty nation, not
from transgression, but in transgression, that they might continue in sin. And by his
reasoning he thought to silence the remonstrances of those who might dare to say that as
yet nothing worthy of death had been found in Jesus.
At this council Christ's enemies had been deeply convicted. The Holy Spirit had
impressed their minds. But Satan strove to gain control of them. He urged upon their
notice the grievances they had suffered on account of Christ. How little He had honoured
their righteousness. He presented a righteousness far greater, which all who would be
children of God must possess. Taking no notice of their forms and ceremonies, He had
encouraged sinners to go directly to God as a merciful Father, and make known their wants.
Thus, in their opinion, He had set aside the priesthood. He had refused to acknowledge the
theology of the rabbinical schools. He had exposed the evil practices of the priests,
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and had irreparably hurt their influence. He had injured the effect of their maxims and
traditions, declaring that though they strictly enforced the ritual law, they made void
the law of God. All this Satan now brought to their minds.
Satan told them that in order to maintain their authority, they must put Jesus to
death. This counsel they followed. The fact that they might lose the power they then
exercised, was, they thought, sufficient reason for coming to some decision. With the
exception of a few who dared not speak their minds, the Sanhedrin received the words of
Caiaphas as the words of God. Relief came to the council; the discord ceased. They
resolved to put Christ to death at the first favourable opportunity. In rejecting the
proof of the divinity of Jesus, these priests and rulers had locked themselves in
impenetrable darkness. They had come wholly under the sway of Satan, to be hurried by him
over the brink of eternal ruin. Yet such was their deception that they were well pleased
with themselves. They regarded themselves as patriots, who were seeking the nation's
salvation.
The Sanhedrin feared, however, to take rash measures against Jesus, lest the people
should become incensed, and the violence meditated toward Him should fall upon themselves.
On this account the council delayed to execute the sentence they had pronounced. The
Saviour understood the plotting of the priests. He knew that they longed to remove Him,
and that their purpose would soon be accomplished. But it was not His place to hasten the
crisis, and He withdrew from that region, taking the disciples with Him. Thus by His own
example Jesus again enforced the instruction He had given to the disciples, "When
they persecute you in this city, flee ye into another." Matt. 10:23. There was a wide
field in which to work for the salvation of souls; and unless loyalty to Him required it,
the Lord's servants were not to imperil their lives.
Jesus had now given three years of public labour to the world. His example of
self-denial and disinterested benevolence was before them. His life of purity, of
suffering and devotion, was known to all. Yet this short period of three years was as long
as the world could endure the presence of its Redeemer.
His life had been one of persecution and insult. Driven from Bethlehem by a jealous
king, rejected by His own people at Nazareth, condemned to death without a cause at
Jerusalem, Jesus, with His few faithful followers, found a temporary asylum in a strange
city. He who
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was ever touched by human woe, who healed the sick, restored sight to the blind,
hearing to the deaf, and speech to the dumb, who fed the hungry and comforted the
sorrowful, was driven from the people He had laboured to save. He who walked upon the
heaving billows, and by a word silenced their angry roaring, who cast out devils that in
departing acknowledged Him to be the Son of God, who broke the slumbers of the dead, who
held thousands entranced by His words of wisdom, was unable to reach the hearts of those
who were blinded by prejudice and hatred, and who stubbornly rejected the light.

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