Types
of Crosses
A
cross is an upright wooden beam or post on which persons were either
tied or nailed as a means of torture and execution. A cross could
have several different shapes. The earliest was not a cross at all
but rather a simple stake or pole on which persons were impaled. This
simple stake evolved over time into more elaborate shapes with the
addition of a crossbeam that was secured to the upright stake. The
Latin cross was shaped like a t and was the type most commonly used
by the Romans. Jesus was crucified probably on a Latin cross, which
allowed for a convenient place for a sign (called a titlos in John
19:19) to be placed above his head (Matt. 27:37 pars.). Another form
of cross, now referred to as a St. Anthony’s cross, was
shaped like a T, with the crossbeam affixed at the top of the upright
beam. A cross shaped like an X, having a crisscross pattern, is also
known as a St. Andrew’s cross. Tradition holds that the
apostle Peter was crucified upside down on this type of cross. A
cross shaped like a +, the Greek cross, has the crossbeam in the
center.
Crucifixion
in Ancient Times
In
ancient times, crucifixion was a method of execution used by many
peoples, including the Assyrians, the Phoenicians, the Babylonians,
the Persians, the Medes, and the Greeks. Historically, crucifixion’s
barbaric predecessor was impalement. Victims often were beheaded
first, and then their lifeless bodies were forced onto a large stake
or spike (Gen. 40:19; 1 Sam. 31:9–10). Impalement
originally was more about triumph and exposure than execution (Deut.
21:22–23; Josh. 8:29; 10:26; 2 Sam. 4:12; 21:9–10).
But the Assyrians impaled their enemies by sticking them, still
alive, onto pointed stakes, thus utilizing impalement as a method of
execution. The book of Esther probably reflects the practice of
impalement in the Persian period by describing how the king’s
officials were executed (2:23; 5:14; KJV: “hanged”). In
these verses, the Hebrew word that some English versions translate as
“gallows” (’ets) actually means “tree,”
and a noose for hanging was not used in Persia during this period.
Impalement became a common form of execution.
Impalement
as a means of execution eventually gave way to crucifixion.
Crucifixion was especially prized by the Phoenicians, whose normal
methods of execution—drowning, immersion in boiling oil,
impalement, stoning, and burning—were seen as too quick and
easy. Wanting their victims to suffer longer, they used crucifixion,
a more severe form of execution. The Greeks also crucified victims on
a stake or a cross. Alexander the Great crucified two thousand
inhabitants of Tyre along the shoreline when he captured the city in
332 BC.
There
is no evidence that ancient Israel fastened people to a stake or a
cross as a method of execution. Instead, stoning was the preferred
method of execution in Israel and was commanded by the law (Lev.
20:2; Deut. 22:24). The law did, however, permit the public display
of an offender’s body “on a tree” or a “pole”
after being executed (Deut. 21:22). The same expression is used in
the book of Acts to describe Jesus’ crucifixion (5:30; 10:39;
13:29). In contrast to pagan nations that would leave a corpse
hanging on a cross until the flesh either rotted away or was devoured
by vultures, Israel was commanded to take the body down, not letting
it remain on the tree overnight (Deut. 21:23). This explains why the
Jews were so adamant that Jesus’ body be taken down before the
Sabbath commenced at sunset (John 19:31). Being hung on a tree was
especially abhorrent to Israel because it reflected God’s curse
upon the offender (Deut. 21:23). Jesus was accursed by God as he hung
on the cross, bearing the sins of the world (Gal. 3:13).
Crucifixion
in New Testament Times
Not
long before the Romans took over Palestine, the Jewish ruler
Alexander Jannaeus crucified about eight hundred Pharisees who
opposed him in 86 BC. This gruesome event was out of character for
the Jewish nation and was frowned upon by the Jews of the day as well
as by the later Jewish historian Josephus. But it was the Romans who
perfected crucifixion as a means of torture and execution. The Romans
called crucifixion “slaves’ punishment” because it
was intended for the lowest members of society. It became the
preferred method of execution for political crimes such as desertion,
spying, rebellion, and insurrection. Roman crucifixion was common in
NT times and extended well into the fourth century AD. The emperor
Constantine converted to Christianity in AD 312 and abolished
crucifixion altogether. The cross became a symbol of Christian
sacrifice instead of a barbarous method of torture and execution.
Roman
Crucifixion
Crucifixion
was a barbaric method of torture and execution whereby a victim was
either nailed or tied to a wooden cross and left to die a long,
agonizing death. It often was reserved for the most offensive
criminals, such as thieves (Matt. 27:38), murderers, insurrectionists
(Mark 15:7), and other political rebels. Disobedient slaves commonly
were crucified. Crucifixion was so demeaning that Roman citizens were
exempt and could be crucified only by direct decree of the emperor.
Crucifixion also was used as a triumphant sign in times of war as
victors demonstrated their conquests by hoisting their enemies upon
crosses for all to see. It was viewed as a public symbol of strength
and intimidation. Adding insult to injury, executioners stripped
their victims and crucified them alongside busy roads and in public
places where onlookers could gaze in horror.
Criminals
often were flogged severely before crucifixion in a
pseudo-compassionate effort to speed up the death process experienced
on the cross (John 19:1). The victim was stripped, tied to a post,
and then brutally beaten by several Roman torturers using whips with
sharp pieces of bone or metal at the ends of the lashes. Such
floggings were said to leave the victim’s bones and entrails
exposed. The torturers did not stop until they either exhausted
themselves or were called off by their commanding officers.
After
the flogging, the offender was forced to carry the crossbeam, often
weighing seventy-five to one hundred pounds, on his or her shoulders
to the crucifixion site (John 19:17). The main upright beam, standing
seven to nine feet tall, remained at the site of crucifixion and was
used repeatedly. The victim was then laid down with arms stretched
out across the beam and usually tied into position. Once the victim’s
arms were secured by ropes, a soldier searched for the “hollow
spot” in the wrist located just above the flexion area near the
carpal bones. The metacarpal bones of the palms were too weak to
support the weight of the body on the cross, so the wrist was a
stronger alternative. However, the use of ropes to support the arms
made the choice of little consequence. Either location was
acceptable. A hammer was used to drive five-inch nails through both
wrists, affixing the victim to the crossbeam. It was customary to
offer the victim a narcotic cocktail to help ease the pain of
crucifixion. Jesus refused this drink (Matt. 27:34; Mark 15:23).
After
the victim’s arms were nailed to the crossbeam, it was hoisted
up and secured to the upright post. This alone was very hard on the
fatigued body of the victim, who already had lost a considerable
amount of blood. This quick, upward motion caused orthostatic
hypotension—very low blood pressure caused by a rapid vertical
shift in body position. The victim’s blood pressure would drop
to half of normal, while the pulse rate doubled. Victims frequently
fainted due to the rush of blood away from the head during this
upward motion. This motion probably is the imagery behind Jesus’
“lifted up” sayings (John 3:14; 8:28; 12:32). Jesus was
quite literally lifted up onto the cross.
Next
came the nailing of the feet. The Romans had several different ways
of nailing the feet to the cross. Roman soldiers were notorious for
twisting and contorting victims into odd positions while nailing them
to the cross. Sometimes a victim’s legs were stretched
downward, feet crossed, and one nail driven through both. A support
block typically was placed behind the victim to support the weight of
the body on the cross. A heel bone of a crucified man named
“Yehohanan” (John) was discovered in an ossuary north of
Jerusalem in 1968. A single nail had been driven through the side of
the heel. Either the body was twisted so that the nail was driven
through both heels, the right above the left, or each heel was nailed
to opposite sides of the upright beam causing the victim to straddle
the cross. A piece of wood was held against the heel before the nail
was driven in, to act as a washer, preventing the foot from tearing
free. The ossuary’s inscription describes Yehohanan as “the
one hanged with knees apart.” Once nailed to the cross, the
victim often suffered for several hours, even days, exposed to the
hot sun as well as the insults of those passing by on the busy road
(cf. Matt. 27:39; Mark 15:29; Luke 23:35; John 19:20). Extreme thirst
was brought on by massive blood loss and exposure to the elements
(John 19:28).
Because
death could take several hours, it sometimes was hastened by a
crushing blow to the legs with a club. Victims were unable to push
their bodies upward to gasp for air or to keep their blood
circulating. This final blow to the legs also caused intense pain and
usually was enough to throw the body into shock, with death following
soon afterward. Jesus was already dead when the soldiers approached
to break his legs (John 19:32–33). This fulfilled what was
written in the Scriptures: “Not one of his bones will be
broken” (John 19:36; cf. Exod. 12:46; Num. 9:12; Ps. 34:20).
Instead of breaking Jesus’ legs, a soldier thrust a spear into
his side, which brought forth a sudden flow of blood and water,
indicating that he was truly dead (John 19:34). This too was to
fulfill Scripture: “They will look on the one they have
pierced” (John 19:37; cf. Zech. 12:10). Bodies often were left
on the crosses to be eaten by scavenging birds such as vultures. The
Jews demanded that the bodies of Jesus and the two thieves crucified
with him be taken down before the Sabbath that began that evening
(John 19:31).
Physical
Death by Crucifixion
Death
by crucifixion resulted from a combination of factors. The most
obvious was massive blood loss. With the nails being driven through
the extensive artery systems of the wrists and feet, the victim lost
a lot of blood. The severe flogging before being crucified also
played a role and took its toll on the body. Blood loss also led to a
depletion of oxygen supply to the vital tissues. Major organs failed
due to lack of oxygenation. Another factor leading to death was
suffocation or asphyxiation. The weight of the body hanging on the
cross was too great for the tendons and muscles in the arms, so the
victims were unable to hold themselves up in order to take in deep
breaths. The victim’s upper body continued to sink lower until
the lungs became too compressed and unable to take in large volumes
of air. Victims could force themselves upward to gasp air by using
their legs, but this was extremely painful. Preventing the victim
from pushing upward in order to breathe was another reason for
breaking the legs. The victim slowly suffocated for hours.
The
ultimate cause of death was an eventual heart rupture due to massive
blood loss and lack of oxygenation. As the pulse raced and blood
pressure increased, the heart eventually burst due to the stress.
This helps explain the reference to the “sudden flow of blood
and water” in John 19:34. In the case of heart rupture, the
right side of the heart still has some blood left in it while the sac
that surrounds the heart, the pericardium, fills with water. The
soldier’s spear pierced this sac and the heart, causing both
blood and water to flow out.
The
Meaning of Jesus’ Crucifixion
The
OT teaches that it is blood that makes atonement for sin (Lev.
17:11). Just as sacrificial lambs shed their blood on the altar for
the sins of Israel, Jesus shed his blood on the cross for the sins of
the world (John 1:29). The crucifixion of Jesus was the greatest
atoning event in history. His blood, which provided the means for a
new covenant, was poured out for many on the cross (Matt. 26:28). The
cross, as gruesome as it was, was the means through which Christ died
“for our sins” (Gal. 1:4). Jesus freely scorned the shame
of the cross so that we might be reconciled to God by his shed blood
(Col. 1:20; Heb. 12:2).
Jesus
also bore the curse of God in our place when he died on the cross.
The one who hangs on a tree is divinely cursed (Deut. 21:23). God’s
curse is a curse upon sin, death, and fallenness. Jesus took God’s
curse upon himself in order to redeem us from that curse (Gal. 3:13).
Jesus
demonstrated the humble nature of his mission and ministry by his
obedience to death, even death on the cross (Phil. 2:8). For Jesus
the cross was not simply his martyrdom, as if he simply died for a
worthy cause; it was the pinnacle example of obedience and love in
the Bible. Jesus called his followers to take up a cross and follow
his example of selfless sacrifice (Matt. 16:24). Jesus’ cross
is a symbol of his love, obedience, and selflessness.
Most
of all, the cross reveals the unconditional love of God, who offered
his Son as the atoning sacrifice for sin (John 3:16; 1 John
4:10). The brutal cross reveals the beautiful love of Jesus, who
willingly laid down his life (1 John 3:16).