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<h2> WHO KILLED CHRIST? </h2>
<p>Without committing ourselves to a full acceptance of the Gospel story of
Christ's death, with all its monstrous miracles and absurd defiance of
Roman and Jewish legal procedure, we propose to take the story as it
stands for the purpose of discussing the question at the top of this
article.</p>
<p>The ordinary Christian will exclaim that Jesus was murdered by those
infernal Jews. Ever since they had the power of persecuting the Jews—that
is, ever since the days of Constantino—the Christians have acted on
the assumption that the countrymen of Jesus did actually cry out before
Pilate, "His blood be on our heads!" and that they and their posterity
deserved any amount of robbery and outrage until they unanimously
confessed their sin and worshipped him whom they crucified. It made no
difference that the contemporaries of Jesus Christ could not transmit
their guilt to their offspring. The Christians continued, century after
century, to act in the spirit of the sailor in the story. Coming ashore
after a long voyage, Jack attended church and heard a pathetic sermon on
the Crucifixion. On the following day he looked into the window of a
print-shop, and saw a picture of Jesus on the cross. Just then a Jew came
and looked into the window; whereupon the sailor, pointing to the picture,
asked the Hebrew gentleman whether he recognised it. "That's Jesus," said
the Jew, and the sailor immediately knocked him down. Surprised at this
treatment, the Hebrew gentleman inquired the reason. "Why," said the
sailor, "didn't you infernal Jews crucify him?" The poor son of Abraham
admitted the fact, but explained that it happened nearly two thousand
years ago. "No matter," said the sailor, "I only heard of it yesterday."</p>
<p>Now it is perfectly clear, according to the Gospels, that the Jews did <i>not</i>
kill Jesus. Unless they lynched him they had no power to put him to death.
Judæa was then a Roman province, and in every part of the Empire the
extreme penalty of the law was only inflicted by the Roman governor.
Nevertheless it maybe argued that the Jews <i>really</i> killed him,
although they did not actually shed his blood, as they clamored for his
death and terrorised Pontius Pilate into ordering a judicial murder. But
suppose we take this view of the case: does it therefore follow that they
acted without justification? Was not Jesus, in their judgment, guilty of
blasphemy, and was not that a deadly crime under the Mosaic law? "He that
blasphemeth the name of the Lord," says Leviticus xxiv. 16, "shall surely
be put to death." Were not the Jews, then, carrying out the plain
commandment of Jehovah?</p>
<p>Nor was this their only justification. In another part of the Mosaic law
(Deut. xiii. 6-10), the Jews were ordered to kill anyone, whether mother,
son, daughter, husband, or wife, who should entice them to worship other
gods. Now it is expressly maintained by the overwhelming majority of
divines that Jesus asserted his own godhead, he is reported as saying, "I
and my father are one," and, as St, Paul says, "He thought it no robbery
to be equal to God." Were not the Jews, then, bound to kill him if they
could?</p>
<p>Let it not be supposed that <i>we</i> would have killed him. We are not
excusing the Jews as men, but as observers of the Mosaic law and
worshippers of Jehovah. Their God is responsible for the death of Jesus,
and if Jesus was a portion of that very deity, he was responsible for his
own death. His worshippers had learnt the lesson so well that they killed
their own God when he came in disguise.</p>
<p>It is contended by some Christians that Pontius Pilate killed Jesus.
According to these arguers, Pilate knew that Jesus was innocent, and the
execution was therefore a murder. But is it not perfectly obvious from the
Gospel story that Pilate tried to save Jesus? Did not the obstinate
prisoner plead guilty to what was really a charge of sedition? Did he
attempt any defence? Did he call any witnesses? Was he not contumacious?
And had Pilate any alternative to sentencing him to the legal punishment
of his crime?</p>
<p>Other friends of Jesus lay the blame of his death on Judas Iscariot, But
the whole story of his "betrayal" of Jesus is a downright absurdity. How
could he <i>sell</i> his master when the commodity was common? What sense
is there in his being paid to indicate the best-known man in Jerusalem?
Even if the story were true, it appears that Jesus knew what Judas was
doing, and as he could easily have returned to Galilee, he was accessory
to his own fate. It may also be pointed out that Judas only killed Jesus
if the tragedy would not have occurred without him; in which case he was
the proximate cause of the Crucifixion, and consequently a benefactor to
all who are saved by the blood of Christ. Instead of execration,
therefore, he deserves praise, and even the statue which Disraeli
suggested as his proper reward.</p>
<p>Who killed Christ? Why himself. His brain gave way. He was demented. His
conduct at Jerusalem was that of a maniac. His very language showed a loss
of balance. Whipping the dove-sellers and moneychangers, not out of the
Temple, but out of its unsanctified precincts, was lunatic violence. Those
merchants were fulfilling a necessary, reputable function; selling doves
to women who required them as burnt offerings, and exchanging the current
Roman money for the sacred Jewish coins which alone were accepted by the
Temple priests. It is easy to call them thieves, but they were not tried,
and their evidence is unheard. If they cheated, they must have been
remarkably clever, for all their customers were Jews. Besides, there were
proper tribunals for the correction of such offences, and no one who was
not beside himself would think of going into a market and indiscriminately
whipping the traders and dashing down their stalls. Certainly any man who
did it now would be arrested, if he were not lynched on the spot, and
would either be imprisoned or detained at Her Majesty's pleasure.</p>
<p>Quite in keeping with these displays of temper was the conduct of Jesus
before Pilate. A modicum of common sense would have saved him. He was not
required to tell a lie or renounce a conviction. All that was necessary to
his release was to plead not guilty and defend himself against the charge
of sedition. His death, therefore, was rather a suicide than a martyrdom.
Unfortunately the jurisprudence of that age was less scientific than the
one which now prevails; the finer differences between sanity and insanity
were not discriminated; otherwise Jesus would have been remanded for
inquiries into his mental condition.</p>
<p>As a man Jesus died because he had not the sense to live. As a God he must
have died voluntarily. In either case it is an idle, gratuitous,
enervating indulgence in "the luxury of woe" to be always afflicting
ourselves with the story of his doom. Great and good men have suffered and
died since, and other lessons are needed than any that may be learnt at
the foot of the Cross.</p>
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