
Pilate’s
Silver:
Josephus’ Account of the Passion
This is the account, given
by the 1st Century A.D. Jewish Roman historian Flavius Josephus in his book
The Jewish War, according to the Old Slavonic rendition of the Greek
original, of the Life, Passion, and Resurrection of Jesus Christ, known here as
“the Wonderworker”:
First, the statements about
the ministry of Jesus and His miracles:
“At that
time there appeared a man, if it is permissible to call him a man. His nature
and form were human, but his appearance was something more than that of a man;
notwithstanding his works were divine. He worked miracles wonderful and mighty.
Therefore it is impossible for me to call him a man; but again, if I look at the
nature, which he shared with all, I will not call him an angel. And everything
whatsoever he wrought through an invisible power, he wrought by word and
command. Some said of him, ‘Our first lawgiver [Christ] is risen from the dead
and hath performed many healings and arts, while others thought that he was sent
from God. How be it in many things he disobeyed the Law
and kept not the Sabbath according to our fathers’ customs. Yet, on the other
hand, he did nothing shameful; nor did he do anything with the aid of hands, but
by word alone did he provide everything.”[1]
Second, the statements
concerning His Trial Before Pilate and His
Passion:
“And there
assembled unto him of ministers one hundred and fifty, and a multitude of the
people. Now when they saw his power, that he accomplished whatsoever he would by
a word, and when they had made known to him their will, that he should enter
into the city and cut down the Roman troops and Pilate and rule over us, [but he
took no notice]. And when therefore knowledge of it came to the Jewish leaders,
they assembled together with the high priest and spake: ‘We are powerless and too weak to withstand the
Romans. Seeming moreover that the bow is bent, we will go and communicate to
Pilate what we have heard, and we shall be clear of trouble. ...’ And he
[Pilate] had that Wonderworker brought up, and after instituting an inquiry
concerning him, he pronounced judgement: ‘He is a
benefactor, not a malefactor, nor a rebel, nor covetous of kingship.’ And he let
him go; for he had healed his dying wife. And he went to his wonted place and
did his wonted works. And when more people again assembled round him, he
glorified himself through his actions more than all. The teachers of the Law
were overcome with envy, and gave thirty talents to Pilate, in order that
he should put him to death. And he took it and gave them liberty to execute
their will themselves. And they laid hands on him and crucified him contrary to
the law of their fathers.”[2]
Third, the statements concerning the aftermath of the Passion of Jesus Christ:
“This
curtain [of the Temple] was before this generation entire, because the people
were pious; but now it was grievous to see, for it was suddenly rent from the
top to the bottom, when they through bribery delivered to death the
benefactor of men and him who from his actions was no man. And many other
fearful signs might one tell, which happened then. And it is said that he, after
being killed and after being laid in the grave, was not found. Some indeed
profess that he had risen, others that he was stolen
away by his friends. But for my part I know not which speak more correctly. For
one that is dead cannot rise of himself, though he may do so with the help of
the prayer of another righteous man, unless he be an angel or another of the
heavenly powers, or unless God himself appears as a man and accomplishes what he
will, and walks with men and falls and lies down and rises again, as pleases his
will. But others said that it was not possible to steal him away, because
they set watchmen around his tomb, 30 Romans and 1,000 Jews.”[3]
A) Independent Verification:
Why
Josephus Matters
If we were to attempt to
find an extra-biblical historical source to confirm the happenings described in
the Gospels, there is certainly none better than that of the Jewish historian
Flavius Josephus (37–100 A.D.). There are two reasons why Josephus (who later,
due to the patronage of Vespasian, took the family name of the emperor as his
own) is such an outstanding historical source. First, he has no “interest” in
testifying to and confirming the events as described in the Gospels — as far as
we know, he never was a Christian. Second, his contacts with the Jews of the
Mediter-ranean world, including the Jews of Jerusalem,
were extensive. He himself was from
Although it is clear that
Josephus was a patriotic Jew, he quickly became impressed with the grandeur and
power of the
Josephus shows himself to
be a man caught in the very nexus of the most important events of the
time-period, when we find him returning to
It was upon his return to
B) The Passion:
A Conspiracy
Unreported?
The implications of the
passage cited above are clear. In what appears to be a text coming from the hand
of a skeptical, puzzled unbeliever, we find confirmation of the Gospel’s
explicit statements concerning the ministry and the miracles of Jesus Christ. In
passages resembling those found in his later work, The Antiquities of the
Jews XVIII, 63f, Josephus testifies to the unique nature of the mission of
Christ and the marvelous phenomenon, which even impressed this Jewish priest and
Roman collaborator. His simple statement that, “he did nothing shameful; nor did
he do anything with the aid of his hands, but by word alone did he provide
everything,” is evocative of many of the incidents reported in the Gospels
(e.g., the healing of the servant of the Centurion) in which a simple word from
Christ worked miraculous cures at a distance. This same point,
that “he accomplished whatsoever he would by a word,” is mentioned again
in the section of text which discusses the desire, on the part of the “multitude
of the people,” that he should enter into the city (
The “Wonderworker,”
“angel,” and man whose “appearance was something more than that of a man,” is
identified as a man who both violated certain “customs” concerning the Sabbath
and “did nothing shameful.” He, apparently, from the account given by Josephus,
became a grave “problem” for the leaders of the Jewish people, when His miracles
incited the people to believe that He had the divinely given power necessary to
overthrow the oppressors of Israel and restore the Davidic kingdom. Here we find
a slight variation of the account given in the Gospels, which would indicate
that its author either did not know the content of the Gospel accounts (which
appears likely) or had access to information about the political intrigue
be-tween Jewish and Roman leaders that was not
available to, or did not concern, the Evangelists. According to Josephus, the
Jewish leaders, worried about their own situation, reported the events
surrounding Christ to Pilate. Pilate, after en-gaging
in what appears to be a very violent form of crowd control, brought Christ
before him and judged him to be innocent of all charges of insurrection. After
Jesus’ dismissal, the marvels increased, again causing the Jewish leaders to
come to Pilate.
It is in this second
attempt to implicate Jesus that the Jewish leaders revealed their true
motivation and intention. With regard to this section of the text, either it is
a complete “interpolation” (a word very popular with the scholars who wish to
dismiss the statements made in the Old Slavonic text) or it provides us with
“inside” information that sheds an entirely new light upon the Trial and Passion
of Jesus Christ. There are no other possibilities. If we look at two different
translations of the same text, we find that there is still no ambiguity as to
the meaning of the passage. Thackeray renders the passage, “the teachers of the
Law were overcome with envy, and gave 30 talents to Pilate, in order that he
should put him to death. And he took it and gave them liberty to execute their
will themselves. And they laid hands on him and crucified him contrary to the
law of their fathers.”[8] In a translation of the same passage by the scholar
G.A. Williamson, who upholds the authenticity of the Old Slavonic “additions,”
we find the following: “The exponents of the Law were mad with jealousy, and
gave Pilate 30 talents to have him executed. Accept-ing the bribe, he gave them permission to carry out their
wishes themselves. So they seized him and crucified him in defiance of all
Jewish tradition.”[9] With regard to the meaning of the text, the differences
present in the translations are insignificant. Pilate has gone from an active
role, one in which he judges according to his own understanding that Jesus is
not a malefactor, to a passive role on account of a bribe. “And he took it and
gave them liberty to execute their will themselves.” The final sentence
of this section indicates that they (“they” here clearly refers to the “teachers
of the Law” — if not, the whole passage would make no sense) executed their
desires when “they laid hands on him and crucified him contrary to the law of
their fathers.”
If we truly think about
these passages, rather than just dismissing them arbitrarily as
“interpolations,” we find that this identification of the “teachers of the Law”
and native Jews in general as the proximate (i.e., immediate or “closest”) cause
of the Crucifixion of Jesus Christ, many aspects of the whole situation, along
with numerous Scriptural references and a tradition within Christianity, become
more intelligible. That Josephus should mention this singularly unique event
should not at all surprise us; it would surprise us if he did not mention it in
his first work on the Jews. References to Christ, as worker of wonders and as a
man who purportedly rose from the dead, appear in his later book entitled,
The Antiquities of the Jews. Such renowned 20th Cen-tury scholars as Thackeray, von Harnack, and Burkitt have affirmed
the references to Christ there as authentic.[10]
All the points mentioned
here, the bribery of Pilate, the fact that the Jewish leaders “laid hands” on
Christ and “crucified him contrary to the law of their fathers,” along with the
judicious and balanced historian’s horror at the injustice of the actions taken
by his fellow Jews, clearly make this an historical event which could not be
passed over in silence. I would challenge any scholar to cite a case in which
the leaders of the Jewish people are known to have turned over one of their own
countrymen to the Romans and demanded from the Romans that the man be executed
by way of crucifixion. I know of no other historical example of such an event.
Moreover, something has to explain Gospel passages such as the one in the Gospel
of St. John. First, St. John, the only known apostolic witness to the actual
events themselves, gives an account of the profoundly shocking statement of the
leaders of the Sanhedrin who denied their Messiah (“whomever” he might be) and
their very norm of governmental legitimacy by responding to Pilate’s
acknowledgement of the kingship of Christ (“Behold your king”) with the
statement, “We have no king but Caesar.” After this verbal coup d’etat, on the part of the chief priests, the Gospel of
St. John states exactly what we find in Josephus, “Then therefore he
delivered him to them to be crucified. And they took Jesus and led him
forth.”[11] In this regard, something like the political situation portrayed
by Josephus must have taken place or else the attribution of guilt to the
leaders of the Jewish people by St. Peter, St. Paul, and, even, in such early
Christian writers as St. Justin, would lack force for the people of the
time.[12] I have never read anything in Scripture, coming from the Evangelists
or from the other Apostles, in which the Romans, as a group, were condemned for
bringing about the death of Jesus Christ.
C) The Torn Curtain and the
Included in the Slavonic
“Additions” (i.e., material included in the Old Slavonic translation of The
Jewish War which is not included in the extant Greek text) are passages
concerning the aftermath of the Crucifix-ion, which confirm the “bribery”
statement, contained in the earlier citation, along with providing additional
information that is extremely intriguing. Al-though
classified by the Jewish scholar Robert Eisler as
“clearly a Chris-tian interpolation,” the text reads
like one written by a habitual skeptic and not as one written by a devoted
believer. Either there is much fakery going on or this is a text by a Jew of
pagan Greco-Roman culture who has definite and exact information concerning the
events surrounding the one, which he calls the “wonderworker.” He either saw the
sight himself or has second- or third-hand accounts of the sight. Confirming the
Gospels here in every detail, Josephus writes that, “This curtain [of the
Temple] was before this generation entire, because the people were pious; but
now it was grievous to see, for it was suddenly rent from the top to the bottom,
when they through bribery delivered to death the benefactor of men and
him who from his actions was no man [emphasis mine].” How consonant with the
passage in The Antiquities of the Jews that speaks of Christ as “a wise
man, if indeed he should be called a man. For he was a doer of
marvelous deeds.”[13] Why would the first part be an “interpolation” and
the second part of the same sentence perfectly in accord with what Josephus said
in other works?
This text clearly
identifies the Death of Christ as being the point in time when the curtain of
the
Josephus goes on to speak
about the reports of the Resurrection. He treats them here not as facts, but
simply as reports. “But for my part I know not which speak more correctly”
(i.e., those who say the body of Christ was stolen away or those who say that He
rose from the dead). At this point, he presents another singular fact that
appears to be too particular to be an “interpolation.” Josephus, in regards to
those arguing that the Resurrection had indeed taken place, says, “But others
said that it was not possible to steal him away, because they set watchmen
around his tomb, 30 Romans and 1,000 Jews.” This purported fact, unreported in
the Gospels, would be a perfectly understandable consequence of the intense
concern, on the part of the leaders of the people, that Jesus’ prophecy that he
would raise His body up after three days, would not be fulfilled. The enormous
Jewish presence at the tomb and the miniscule Roman one would reflect their
respective “interest” in the case of Jesus of Nazareth. The Jewish leaders were
so adamant that they were willing to renounce their loyalty to the House of
David, while Pilate was so, seemingly, indifferent that he was even willing to
put forward as a king one that did not have the sanction of Caesar. Moreover, if
this information about the strength of the guard at the tomb is true, then there
is no possible way that the body could have been “stolen away.” That there is no
mention of these kinds of numbers in any other source but that of Josephus
indicates that the “silver” must have flowed quite freely in the aftermath of
this incident.
Finally, in a part of the text for which I have no explanation, but which is included immediately be-fore the section which discusses the renting of the curtain, we read of the “equal pillars” present in the post-Resurrection Temple, “and upon them titles in Greek and Latin and Jewish characters,” giving warning that no foreigner should enter within; the text goes on to say, “And above these titles was hung a fourth title in the same characters, announcing that Jesus the king did not reign, but was crucified by the Jews, because he prophesied the destruction of the city and the devastation of the temple” [emphasis mine].[14] The point of interest here is that Eisler does not speak of this section as a “Christian interpolation.”
D) The Scholarship
The question of the status
of the Old Slavonic text of The Jewish War has been a contention amongst
scholars since knowledge of the text arose in the Western world due to the
translation of the Old Slavonic texts relating to
The German scholar who was
at the forefront of the research in this area of the Old Slavonic “additions,”
was Johannes Frey of the
The question then arises,
where did the author of the text get his information? As Frey asserts, he did
not get it from merely fabricating it in his imagination. He has traditional
material of some sort to go on. He is clearly setting forth what he has heard
people say. The testimony often ap-pears to trouble him exceedingly. And yet, he does
not come off as a hostile critic. In fact, he generally ap-pears to be sympathetic. He clearly believes that
Jesus was an outstanding figure who was unjustly done to death. Frey’s main
contention is that the writer of the text worked on Jewish general popular oral
sources; he had at his disposal oral traditions proximate to the occurrences. He
therefore is the greatest external source, from the 1st Century, to
confirm the accounts of the Life, Death, and Resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Notes:
1. Josephus, Vol. III, The Jewish War (Books IV-VII) in The Loeb
Classical Library, trans. H. St. J. Thackeray (
2. Ibid., p. 650.
3. Ibid., p. 658.
4. The Works of Josephus, trans. William Whiston (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 1987), p. ix.
5. Ibid.
6. Ibid.
7. Ibid.
8. Ibid., p. 650.
9. Josephus, The
Jewish War, trans. G.A. Williamson (
10. Cf. H. St. John Thackeray, Josephus, The Man and the Historian (New York, 1929), pp.
136-137.
11. Taken from the Douay-Rheims Bible,
12. For example, we read in The First Apology of St.
Justin, the Martyr, “But Jesus Christ stretched out
his hands when he was crucified by the Jews, who contradicted him and denied
that he was Christ.” Also, in the same work, St. Justin writes, “Not
withstanding this, the Jews who are in possession of the books of the prophets
did not recognize Christ even when he had come, and they hate us who declare
that he has come and show that he was crucified by them as had been
predicted” [emphasis mine]. Cf. Early Christian Fathers, translator and
editor Cyril C. Richardson (New York: Macmillan
Publishing Co., 1970), pp. 264-265.
13. Josephus, Antiquities, XVIII,
63.
14. Josephus, War, p.
657.
Reprinted
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