John 19:17-27 · The Crucifixion
The Crucified Ruler
John 19:17-27
Sermon
by Richard A. Jensen
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I must confess that my knees trembled just a bit. I had never met a king before. I would probably never meet another monarch as long as I lived. It took place many years ago when I was a missionary in Ethiopia. The King of Ethiopia at that time, Haile Selassie, invited the YMCA chorus to sing Christmas carols for him and his family at his palace. We were all excited about the opportunity. As we entered the palace, we were awestruck. It was a fabulous place. High ceilings. Marvelous light fixtures. Plush carpets. Beautiful paintings. The finest furniture. And there we stood in the midst of all this pomp, singing simple Christmas carols.

When we had finished singing, we were informed that His Majesty the Emperor would receive us individually. We lined up in single file. That is when my knees shook. It was quite an experience to shake hands with a king in such royal surroundings. I will never forget that day!

Monarchs. Rulers. Kings and Queens. Those words call up mighty and majestic images in our minds. If we were to be in the presence of this world’s rulers, we would expect to be impressed in somewhat the same way I was impressed in the presence of Haile Selassie. And then we hear again this Good Friday story from John’s Gospel. As John tells it, it is the story of the enthronement of a king. We think we know something about monarchy and their coronations, their enthronements. Nothing that we know of earthly rulers, however, prepares us for John’s story of Jesus’ pathway to his throne.

When our story opens, Jesus has come to the end of his appearance before Pilate. Pilate was the Roman ruler over Jerusalem. He was the representative of the most powerful nation of his day. He was the representative of the grand Roman Empire. The Jewish authorities wanted Jesus killed. Their own laws prevented them from such an action. They brought Jesus to Pilate, therefore, hoping he would do their bidding.

Pilate was not totally cooperative. When he did confront Jesus, he asked him a simple question. "Are you the King of the Jews?" (John 18:33b).

Jesus finally answered him saying: "My kingship is not of this world ..." (John 18:36a).

Pilate took that for a YES answer. "So you are a king," he said to Jesus. Pilate thought that the Jewish people would like to have their king released from his imprisonment. "Will you have me release for you the King of the Jews?" (John 18:39b). "Not this man, but Barabbas!" the crowd screamed back at him.

The shouts of the crowd fixed Jesus’ course. Jesus would die that day. The King would die that day. Everything about this Good Friday story, as John tells it, underscores the kingly character of Jesus. The soldiers, for example, put a mock crown of thorns on his head. they dressed him up in purple robes. "Hail, King of the Jews," they hissed with sarcasm in their voices. When Pilate finally ended the proceedings and sent Jesus off to die, bearing his own cross, Pilate put a sign on the cross. The sign said: "Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews" (John 19:19b). The sign was in three languages: Hebrew, Latin, and Greek. As best we can understand it, Pilate fixed this international proclamation of Jesus’ kingship to the cross to spite the Jews. The Jews argued with Pilate over the sign. They said: "Do not write, ‘The King of the Jews,’ but, ‘This man said, I am the King of the Jews.’ Pilate answered: ‘What I have written I have written!’ " (John 19:21b-22).

Pilate meant it all in jest. Pilate meant it all for spite. Pilate meant it in cruelty. But Pilate was right! Pilate was a prophet unaware. As the representative of the most powerful nation on earth, his sign made a proclamation to the whole world that Jesus of Nazareth was the king. It was as if he put it on the evening news or in the headlines of the daily paper. His proclamation is there for the whole world to behold. Pilate spoke the truth to the world. Jesus of Nazareth is, indeed, this world’s king. Jesus’ last words from the cross that day were, "... It is finished." He had completed his earthly mission. Now the whole world awaits the day when, "... the kingdom of this world (shall) become the Kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ ..." (Revelation 11:15).

John’s Good Friday story is a story filled with irony. Jesus was lifted on to the cross and hung out to die that day. On a lonely hill outside of Jerusalem, a man was crucified as a common criminal. It was an awful sight. It was a terrible death. The whole world stood repulsed at the sight. And there, fixed with this dying man to the cross, was the announcement of what was happening for the whole world to see. The crucifixion of this man, this Son-of-God-man, was the coronation, the enthronement, of this world’s true king.

We think we know something about rulers and monarchs. Rulers and monarchs live in splendor like Haile Selassie. Rulers and monarchs are crowned in glory. Rulers and monarchs reign in majesty. That is what we think we know. This Good Friday crucifixion story, however, turns all that we think we know about monarchs upside down and inside out. This world’s true monarch carried a cross to his own death. This world’s true monarch was crowned with thorns and nailed to the wood. This world’s true monarch began his reign as a crucified criminal.

The new ruler of this world was crowned on Golgotha. That is what happened on Good Friday. That is what John’s Good Friday story means for all who will hear its message. With the enthronement of Jesus as the true ruler of God’s world, a number of things happened. Let me mention just three. First of all, with the enthronement of Jesus as the world’s Crucified Ruler, all earthly rulers are relativized. Earthly rulers in every age have a limited role to play. At one point in Jesus’ confrontation with Pilate, Pilate claimed to have power over Jesus. Jesus quickly set Pilate straight. "You would have no power over me unless it had been given you from above ..." (John 19:11), Jesus told Pilate.

All earthly power and authority is subservient to the Crucified Ruler. Most of you are citizens of the United States of America. We have a great nation. We have much to be proud of. Our patriotism is freely given. We love our country as other people in other countries love their nations. But our country dare not become an idol for us. We cannot give our highest loyalty to our countries. We cannot give our greatest allegiance to our nations. The possibility of elevating our country or any country to our highest loyalty, to our greatest allegiance, died on Good Friday. It died when our Crucified Ruler began his reign. Good Friday’s coronation calls upon citizens of every earthly nation to bow their knees to the Crucified Ruler and to him alone.

Secondly, with the enthronement of Jesus as the world’s Crucified Ruler, a new community of people is formed. All persons on this earth who confess their faith in the Crucified One become sisters and brothers to one another. North and South, East and West, red and yellow, black and white: all believers are members of one new human community. You can easily discover how true that is. Get in an airplane and fly to some far away nation. Ask directions to the nearest Christian church. You will be welcomed as an instant member of their community. That is true whether you go to Japan or Brazil, Germany or Russia, Nigeria or Nicaragua.

The Christian church, the community of the Crucified Ruler, is the only grass roots or people’s movement in the world that cuts across every imaginable human barrier. We Christian people around the globe have the potential to be the forerunners of a world at peace. Our highest allegiance is not to our nation or to any of the things that so easily divide people. That possibility died for us on Good Friday. Our highest allegiance, rather, is to our Crucified Ruler and to those who are our sisters and brothers in the faith. Together with our sisters and brothers of every tribe and race and nation, let us be the ambassadors for peace that this world so desperately needs. Together with our sisters and brothers of every tribe and race and nation, let us smash the barriers that divide peoples and be a sign of the Kingdom that is to come in the midst of the kingdoms that now exist.

And, thirdly, with the enthronement of Jesus as the world’s Crucified Ruler, a new day of hope has dawned upon us. That hope is that the reign of the Crucified One is not confined to earthly possibilities. "My kingship is not of this world ..." Jesus told Pilate. Jesus’ reign begins in this world. It begins on Good Friday. But it does not end in this world. It ends in eternity. "The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he shall reign for ever and ever" (Revelation 11:15b). Such is the proclamation of the book of Revelation.

Those words are good news to our ears. We can so easily crumble in despair when we see what this world’s rulers bring to pass. Many people in this world, many Christian people, find themselves living under terrible oppression at the hands of present day rulers. We can so easily look at the ways of this world’s rulers and conclude that all is hopeless. Good Friday has changed all of that for us. Despair and oppression and hopelessness died on Good Friday. The Crucified Ruler began his reign on a blood-spattered cross. We believe that his reign is eternal. Our despair shall be set eternally free. Our hopelessness shall become hopefulness. The Crucified Ruler lives and reigns. The kingdoms of this world shall become, "... the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he shall reign for ever and ever."

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Crucified Ruler, The, by Richard A. Jensen