Paper 183
THE BETRAYAL AND ARREST OF
JESUS
1. … two excited
messengers... inquired for David Zebedee...When these two messengers hurried
into camp, the Greek sentinel proceeded to arouse all of his fellow countrymen,
who streamed forth from their tents, fully dressed and fully armed. All the
camp was now aroused except the eight apostles. Peter desired to call his
associates, but Jesus definitely forbade him... Jesus withdrew from the camp
and from his friends in order that his apprehenders, when they arrived, might
arrest him without disturbing his
apostles... He feared that, if they should be arrested with him, they might
also perish with him...Jesus sat down, alone, on the olive press, where he
awaited the coming of the betrayer, and he was seen at this time only by John
Mark and an innumerable host of celestial observers.
2. There is great danger of misunderstanding the meaning of numerous sayings and many events associated with the termination of the Master's career in the flesh... It was, indeed and in truth, the will of the Father that his Son should drink to the full the cup of mortal experience, from birth to death, but the Father in heaven had nothing whatever to do with instigating the barbarous behavior of those supposedly civilized human beings who so brutally tortured the Master and so horribly heaped successive indignities upon his nonresisting person.
3. The Father in
heaven desired the bestowal Son to finish his earth career naturally
...Accordingly, Jesus elected to lay down his life in the flesh in the manner
which was in keeping with the outworking of natural events ...And every bit of
all this astounding manifestation of hatred and this unprecedented
demonstration of cruelty was the work of evil men and wicked mortals. God in
heaven did not will it, neither did the archenemies of Jesus dictate it, though
they did much to insure that unthinking and evil mortals would thus reject the
bestowal Son. Even the father of sin turned his face away from the excruciating
horror of the scene of the crucifixion.
4. Judas expected to find Jesus still visiting with the apostles. The Master and the eleven left the home of Elijah Mark fully fifteen minutes before the betrayer and the guards arrived ...When they failed to find Jesus in the upper chamber, Judas asked the captain of the guard to return to the temple...Judas... really feared for himself and therefore made bold to ask for a company of forty armed soldiers... the Roman commander ...when he learned that they intended to arrest Jesus, he promptly refused to accede to their request and referred them to his superior officer. In this way more than an hour was consumed in going from one authority to another until they finally were compelled to go to Pilate himself in order to obtain permission to employ the armed Roman guards.
5. As soon as Peter, James, and John, with some thirty of their fellow campers, saw the armed band with torches swing around the brow of the hill, they knew that these soldiers were coming to arrest Jesus, and they all rushed down to near the olive press where the Master was sitting in moonlit solitude... It had been the hope of the betrayer that he could, after leading the guards to Gethsemane, simply point Jesus out to the soldiers, or at most carry out the promise to greet him with a kiss, and then quickly retire from the scene... But when the Master greeted him as a betrayer, he was so confused that he made no attempt to flee.
6. Jesus made one last effort to save Judas from actually betraying him in that, before the traitor could reach him, he stepped to one side and, addressing the foremost soldier on the left, the captain of the Romans, said, "Whom do you seek?". The captain answered, "Jesus of Nazareth. " Then Jesus stepped up immediately in front of the officer and, standing there in the calm majesty of the God of all this creation, said, "I am he.”…when they heard him thus boldly announce his identity, those in the front ranks fell suddenly backward.
7. As the guards
rallied from their first faltering at the sight of Jesus and at the sound of
his unusual voice, and as the apostles and disciples drew nearer, Judas stepped
up to Jesus and, placing a kiss upon his brow, said, "Hail, Master and
Teacher." And as Judas thus embraced his Master, Jesus said, "Friend,
is it not enough to do this! Would you even betray the Son of Man with a
kiss?"
8. Malchus, the Syrian
bodyguard of the high priest, stepped up to Jesus and made ready to bind his
hands behind his back, although the Roman captain had not directed that Jesus
should be thus bound. When Peter and
his associates saw their Master being subjected to this indignity, they were no
longer able to restrain themselves. Peter drew his sword and with the others
rushed forward to smite Malchus. But before the soldiers could come to the
defense of the high priest's servant, Jesus raised a forbidding hand to Peter
and, speaking sternly, said: "Peter, put up your sword. They who take the
sword shall perish by the sword. Do you not understand that it is the Father's
will that I drink this cup? And do you not further know that I could even now
command more than twelve legions of angels and their associates, who would
deliver me from the hands of these few men?"
9. When Jesus had been
bound, the captain, fearing that the followers of the Master might attempt to
rescue him, gave orders that they be seized; but the soldiers were not quick
enough since, having overheard the captain's orders to arrest them, Jesus'
followers fled in haste back into the ravine...John Mark attempted to steal out
of the shed... just as... one of the last of the returning soldiers ...was
passing... the soldier got near enough to John to lay hold upon his coat, but
the young man freed himself from the garment.
10. At about the time the eight apostles were being awakened,
those who had fled up the ravine were returning, and they all gathered together
near the olive press to debate what should be done.
1l. Simon Peter and
John Zebedee, who had hidden among the olive trees, had... gone on after the
mob of soldiers, guards, and servants, who were now leading Jesus back to
Jerusalem as they would have led a desperate criminal. John followed close
behind the mob, but Peter followed afar off.
12. Simon Zelotes stood
up on the stone wall of the olive press and, making an impassioned plea for
loyalty to the Master and the cause of the kingdom, exhorted his fellow
apostles and the other disciples to hasten on after the mob and effect the
rescue of Jesus. The majority of the company would have been disposed to follow
his aggressive leadership had it not been for the advice of Nathaniel, who
stood up the moment Simon had finished speaking and called their attention to
Jesus' oft‑repeated teachings regarding nonresistance...James
Zebedee...told how Peter and others drew their swords to defend the Master
against arrest, and that Jesus bade Simon Peter and his fellow swordsmen
sheathe their blades. Matthew and Philip also made speeches, but nothing
definite came of this discussion until Thomas, calling their attention to the
fact that Jesus had counseled Lazarus against exposing himself to death,
pointed out that they could do nothing to save their Master inasmuch as he
refused to allow his friends to defend him, and since he persisted in
refraining from the use of his divine powers to frustrate his human enemies.
Thomas persuaded them to scatter, every man for himself, with the understanding
that David Zebedee would remain at the camp to maintain a clearinghouse and
messenger headquarters for the group.
13. Until the very end of the crucifixion, John Zebedee remained, as Jesus had directed him, always near at hand, and it was he who supplied David's messengers with information from hour to hour which they carried to David at the garden camp, and which was then relayed to the hiding apostles and to Jesus' family.
14. It was shortly after daylight and just after Peter had been sent to join his brother, that Jude, Jesus' brother in the flesh, arrived in the camp, almost breathless and in advance of the rest of Jesus' family, only to learn that the Master had already been placed under arrest ...David Zebedee sent word to Jesus' family, by Jude, to forgather at the house of Martha and Mary in Bethany and there await news which his messengers would regularly bring them.
15. The captain of the temple guards gave orders that he
should be taken to Caiaphas, the acting high priest. The captain of the Roman
soldiers directed that Jesus be taken to the palace of Annas, the former high
priest and father-in‑law of Caiaphas...the orders of the Roman captain
were obeyed; they took Jesus to the home of Annas for his preliminary
examination.
16. Judas marched along near the captains, overhearing all
that was said, but took no part in the dispute, for neither the Jewish captain
nor the Roman officer would so much as speak to the betrayer—they held him in
such contempt.
17. About this time John Zebedee, remembering his Master's
instructions to remain always near at hand, hurried up near Jesus as he marched
along between the two captains. The commander of the temple guards, seeing John
come up alongside, said to his assistant: "Take, this man and bind him.
He is one of this fellow's followers." But when the Roman captain heard
this and, looking around, saw John, he gave orders that the apostle should come
over by him, and that no man should molest him.
18. Then the Roman captain said to the Jewish captain:
"This man is neither a traitor nor a coward. I saw him in the garden, and
he did not draw a sword to resist us. He has the courage to come forward to be
with his Master, and no man shall lay hands on him. The Roman law allows that
any prisoner may have at least one friend to stand with him before the judgment
bar, and this man shall not be prevented from standing by the side of his
Master, the prisoner."
19. And this explains why John Zebedee was permitted to
remain near Jesus all the way through his trying experiences this night and the
next day... in turning Jesus over to the captain of the ternp1e guards at the
gate of Annas's palace, the Roman, addressing his assistant, said: "Go
along with this prisoner and see that these Jews do not kill him without
Pilate's consent. Watch that they do not assassinate him, and see that his
friend, the Galilean, is permitted to stand by and observe all that goes on.
20. And all the way to the palace of Annas, Jesus opened not
his mouth. From the time of his arrest to the time of his appearance before
Annas, the Son of Man spoke no word.
U.B.
183: 1971‑1977
1. Why do you think
Judas and the temple guards had to go all the way up to Pilate to secure the
Roman guards?
2. Why do you think
Judas had the gall to betray Jesus with a kiss?
3. Do you think Judas
in the Mansion Worlds appreciated Jesus’ last attempt to save him from
betraying Jesus?
4. Why do you think
the New Testament account of the arrest of Jesus has Malchus’ ear being cut
off?
5. Why do Christian
fundamentalists believe Jesus did not call on the 12 legions of angels?
6. David Zebedee had
a rather elaborate messenger corps; how do you imagine these people maintained
themselves, apparently without working?
7. Was having the
Roman captain involved in Jesus’ arrest more helpful to the followers of Jesus
or the temple guards?