John 18:1-11 · Jesus Arrested
The Lions Are Shackled
John 18:1-19:42
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Nearly three decades ago, a California minister had himself nailed to a cross as a protest against crime in the streets. The Reverend Willie Dicks, of St. John’s Missionary Baptist Church in San Jose, set up a 9-foot by 12-foot wooden cross in a park in Oakland. Removing his white cotton gown, he leaned against the cross and extended his arms. Using carpenter’s nails sprayed with Bactine, an assistant affixed the pastor to the cross, hammering the nails through the skin between the third and fourth fingers of each hand, and between his first and second toes. 

While a small crowd formed, Reverend Dicks remained on the cross for ten minutes, lecturing about crime and morality. “I would like to say from this cross that I’m disgusted that our senior citizens cannot walk through the streets of the cities they helped to build without being robbed and raped,” he said. “I’m asking you here today to refrain from all crime.” 

We may question this pastor’s judgment, but it was a rather dramatic way to get his point across. 

In a related story, a man in Brazil hiked the width of that large country bearing a heavy wooden cross on his back. This was to express his feelings of thanksgiving following his fiancee’s miraculous recovery from a paralyzing illness. During his absence his fiancee married another man. (1) 

Long before C. S. Lewis published his popular children’s story, Chronicles of Narnia, John Bunyan wrote a spiritual allegory, which he called Pilgrim’s Progress. In Bunyan’s work, Christian is walking down the road toward the Celestial City. As he is going through a mountain pass he sees a pair of lions crouched beside the path. He is frightened and intimidated by them, immobilized, unable to continue his journey. Standing there in fear he hears a man calling to him from farther down the trail. The man tells him that the lions have been chained. At first it is hard for him to believe, but as he ventures closer to them he sees for himself that this is true. The lions are shackled. And although they are right by the road, ready to spring, they are restrained so that they can’t harm Christian as he makes his way on toward the Celestial City. 

The lions are shackled . . . This was Bunyan’s way of describing salvation. The lions are the forces of death and decay. They no longer have dominion over us. How did this occur? We need to go back nearly 2700 years to the Kingdom of Judah and a prophet named Isaiah. Judah was going through times of revival and rebellion. The land was threatened with destruction by Assyria and Egypt. 

More than any other prophet in the Old Testament, Isaiah focused on the salvation that will come through the Messiah. The Messiah will one day rule in justice and righteousness (Isaiah 9:7; 32:1). The reign of the Messiah will bring peace and safety (Isaiah 11:6-9). Through the Messiah, Israel will be a light to all the nations (Isaiah 42:6; 55:4-5). It is during the reign of the Messiah that God’s righteousness will be fully revealed to the world. (2) 

In a seeming paradox, Isaiah also prophesied that the Messiah would suffer. “He was despised and rejected by men, a man of sorrows, and familiar with suffering. Like one from whom men hide their faces he was despised, and we esteemed him not. Surely he took up our infirmities and carried our sorrows, yet we considered him stricken by God, smitten by him, and afflicted. But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; 

the punishment that brought us peace was upon him, and by his wounds we are healed. We all, like sheep, have gone astray, each of us has turned to his own way; and the LORD has laid on him the iniquity of us all. He was oppressed and afflicted, yet he did not open his mouth; he was led like a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is silent, so he did not open his mouth . . ."

How were the lions shackled? They were shackled by this man of sorrows bearing our infirmities, “pierced for our transgressions . . . crushed for our iniquities.”

When President Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law in the Philippines in 1972, he did more than merely take power. He seized all of the media outlets--newspaper, TV, radio--and nationalized them. During the ensuing chaos, the president of one of the television stations was kidnapped. The kidnapped man was the son of a wealthy businessman living in the U. S., a Mr. Lopez. Mr. Lopez received a phone call shortly thereafter and was given a choice: relinquish his rights to all of his Philippine holdings or his son would be killed. The old man makes his decision quickly. The assets were transferred to the Philippine government.  The son was released. (3)

Imagine receiving a telephone call like that--to give up everything you own to spare the life of one of your children. Puts things in perspective, doesn’t it? Yet that is the price God paid to shackle the lions of our destruction. “ . . . like a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is silent, so he did not open his mouth . . ."

On May 12, 1993 two slivers of an olive tree, said to have come from the cross on which Jesus was crucified, were sold for more than $18,000 in an auction in Paris. The bidding started at $1,858 and was completed ninety seconds later. A woman in the front row offered $18,587. Accompanying the two slivers of wood were two certificates from the Vatican that apparently authenticated the wood back in 1855. (4)

I hope this woman’s two slivers of wood are authentic. That’s a high price to pay for a memento, particularly if it is a fraud. But even that sum of money pales in terms of what the cross cost Christ. “ . . . the punishment that brought us peace was upon him, and by his wounds we are healed . . ."

Chuck Colson once visited Humaita Prison, in Sao Jose dos Campos in Brazil. Humaita was formerly a government prison. It is now operated by Prison Fellowship Brazil as an alternative prison, without armed guards or high-tech security. Instead, it is run on the Christian principles of love of God and respect for men.

Humaita has only two full-time staff. The rest of the work is done by the 730 inmates serving time for everything from murder to robbery and drug-related crimes.  When Colson visited this prison, he found the inmates smiling--particularly the murderer who held the keys to the gates, who let him in. Wherever he walked, Colson saw men at peace. He saw clean living areas. He saw people working industriously. The walls were decorated with motivational sayings and Scripture.

Humaita has an astonishing record. Its recidivism rate is 4 percent, compared to 75 percent in the rest of Brazil. How is that possible?

Colson saw the answer when his inmate-guide escorted him to the notorious cell once used for solitary punishment. The guide explained that now it houses only one inmate. As they reached the end of the long concrete corridor and he put the key into the lock, the inmate paused and asked, “Are you sure you want to go in?”

“Of course,” Colson replied impatiently. “I’ve been in isolation cells all over the world.”

Slowly his inmate-guide swung open the massive door, and Colson saw the prisoner in that cell: a crucifix, beautifully carved--Jesus, hanging on the cross.  “He’s doing time for the rest of us,” the guide said softly. (5)

 “ . . . he was cut off from the land of the living; for the transgression of my people he was stricken . . . He was assigned a grave with the wicked, and with the rich in his death, though he had done no violence, nor was any deceit in his mouth . . .”

The lions are shackled, but think of the cost.

An artist once painted a most unusual painting of Jesus on the cross. The background is dark, but the body of Jesus can clearly be seen. Gazing at the painting, one sees a second figure beginning to emerge from the shadows on the canvas. Behind the suffering Savior is the Heavenly Father. And the nails that pierce the hands and feet of Jesus also pierce the hands and feet of the Father. A crown of thorns that cuts into the brow of Jesus, cuts into the brow of the Father also.

It is as if the artist is reminding us of Paul’s statement: “God commandeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us” (see Rom. 5:8). (6)

That is why we are here today. To remind us of what Christ has done in our behalf. “Therefore I will give him a portion among the great, and he will divide the spoils with the strong, because he poured out his life unto death, and was numbered with the transgressors. For he bore the sin of many, and made intercession for the transgressors . . .”

The lions are shackled. You and I need not fear the grave. There is one who hung on a tree, whose body bore the scars by which we are made whole. What is our response? To pass by as if we neither see nor care? Or to make a new commitment to being all that God created us to be. The lions are shackled. Let us go forward with confidence as those for whom Christ died.


1. Bruce Felton, What Were They Thinking? (Guilford, Connecticut: The Globe Pequot Press, 2003), p. 135.

2. http://www.gotquestions.org/Book-of-Isaiah.html.

3. Mark Victor Hansen and Robert G. Allen, The One Minute Millionaire (New York: Harmony Books, 1990). 

4. Sermon Fodder, http://www.sermonfodder.com.

5. Pastor Ian Hussey, North-East Baptist Church, Brisbane, AU. http://neb.sev.com.au/sermon19.php

6. A. Dudley Dennison, Jr., Windows, Ladders, and Bridges (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing, 1976), p.  92.  

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan