PART III - THE LAST WEEK
The Passover Powder Keg
We enter history during the week of
Passover, the highest holiday in Judaism. Thousands are pouring into Jerusalem
and squeezing into the thirty-five acre Temple complex to purchase their lambs
for the family Passover dinner. As we stand to the side of the entrance gate we
can’t help but notice the Roman soldiers – they surround the entrance, they
patrol all the streets and alleys, they are rude and menacing. As we look up,
the walls of the Temple are HUGE as they rise above us. But wait, looming over
the walls of the Temple is another structure! This stone walled watch tower
extends along the side of this sacred Temple, glaring down with hostility and
superiority. Here the Roman army stands guard commanding an unobstructed view
into the most holy of ground for the Jews, the place they believe God Himself
touches the Earth.
As we surreptitiously snap our
cameras, notice the faces in the crowds jostling to enter the Temple grounds.
They quickly glance at the soldiers and move on, then, they glance up at the
abomination of the Roman tower that watches and waits. You can feel the Jewish
anger and growing seeds of rebellion that will eventually explode a short
twenty-five years in the future when violence results in the burning and
destruction of the whole Temple. But, for now, our cameras pick up the glowing
embers of revolt in the hearts of the thousands who must practice their faith
and live in their own country under the grinding hob nailed boots of the Roman
soldiers.
Stay together now, as we are pushed
into the Temple courtyards. We catch a glimpse of the High Priest, Caiaphas. We
can almost smell the overwhelming stress he feels. The Sanhedrin, seventy priests
and Jewish elders, must keep the crowds orderly and respectful of the religious
Law using their own police force. The Sanhedrin must also act as go-betweens
with the Roman authorities and the Jewish nation and is the only barrier
between the Jews and the weight of Roman law and its repercussions. These
overworked priests and elders are seen as money grabbing collaborators. Yet
without their delicate political dance, chaos and bloodshed, destruction and
annihilation would follow.
As we shuffle back to the streets, and
move toward the entrance gate to the city, we notice a small crowd dancing and
waving their arms as they follow a figure. Take some quick snapshots of that
simply robed figure riding into town on a donkey for the high holiday. . . he is
soon to enter the roiling masses of the sacred, and the sacrilegious mayhem . .
.
Questions to Contemplate and Discuss
2. The High Priests and Caiaphas have always been portrayed as the bad guys in the story of Jesus. Does this section’s look at history change your viewpoint at all and why?
3. What would you feel if you were actually in the courtyard of the Temple surrounded by Roman soldiers?
Check here for the next exciting chapter and to find the whole book, 'Looking for Jesus, His Life and Times' visit:
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