John 18:28-40 · Jesus Before Pilate
The Voice of Truth
John 18:33-37
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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“What is truth?”

That is the missing question from this week’s lectionary reading. It’s an important question.

As we celebrate Reign of Christ Sunday, we find ourselves watching Jesus’ interaction with Pilate the eve before his death. The Jewish authorities have handed him to the Romans in hope they will sentence him to death, as the Priests and Pharisees had no power to do so in their own courts. This would be the only way they could remove this “dissident” from under their skin.

As Pilate reluctantly interviews Jesus, he tries to get to the bottom of what’s “truly” going on. He first asks him, “Are you King of the Jews?”

Jesus answers with a question, “Do you ask this on your own, or did others tell you this?”

Pilate replies: “I’m not a Jew, am I?” “Your own people and the chief priests have handed you over to me. So what have you done?”

Jesus answers: My kingdom does not belong to this world. If my kingdom belonged to this world, my followers would be fighting to keep me from being handed over to the Jews. But as it is, my kingdom is not from here.”

With this answer, Jesus removes the threat to Rome. Pilate tries again: “So, you are a king?”

Jesus answers definitively: “You call me a king. Here is my purpose, the reason I was born and came into the world: to testify to the truth.” 

“Everyone who belongs to the truth listens to my voice.”

And the missing piece follows, as Pilate retorts: “What is truth?”

Language and context are everything here and in most interactions in life. In the case of Jesus and Pilate, they are essentially speaking “different languages.”

The “truth” that Jesus witnesses to, testifies to with his entire being, represents as Son of God in his ministry and mission points to God as ultimate authority. For Jesus, God’s kingdom supersedes everything, and we as human beings are incapable of “knowing” that truth in its entirety. Hence, the reason for faith.

Pilate on the other hand concerns himself with a worldly kingdom, with governing a restless people, and his idea of truth comes from an Aristotelian philosophy, in which truth is a philosophical premise and in which a “philosopher-king” is someone who loves Aletheia (truth as an ethical or real goal of excellence in governing a polis or people).

Pilate’s concept of truth has to do with running a good government and using power wisely to achieve good ethical and moral decision making. 

In the Greek philosophy of Aristotle, to which the Roman leader would subscribe, truth reflects “what is” in the world. Aristotle suggests that we encounter two forms of truth: 1) theoretical truth means understanding the world’s basic principles and 2) practical truth is about the ability to make ethical decisions based on those principles.

Neither ascribes truth to a higher power.

If you were alive in the 1940s or 50s, you may have still encountered a bit of this kind of thinking when you took science class. You were probably taught that science is the pursuit of “facts” and that science can uncover truths about our world and existence. Then in 1962, Thomas Kuhn published his ground-breaking work, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.” In it, he asserted that science is not objective and that “objectivity” is a fallacy in our thinking, that we cannot assert any absolute truths, because our personal observations will always render anything we see as “subjective.” When cultural paradigms shift, so does our concept of truth.

Today, still in the midst of the Technological Revolution, we have moved as a society from a respect for authorities or specialists who “know” facts and on whom we depend for our concepts of “truth” to a society in which everyone has a voice and can cultivate their own ideas and “truths.” In the age of the internet, everyone becomes their own “authority.” Couple this with the growing and pervasive influence of social media, and we become more like pawns in a sea of “truth” concepts from which we can choose according to our needs.

For us today, truth is not just relative, it fluctuates, depending upon our needs and wants in any given time period or “paradigm.” In a sense, you could compare people today with an orchestra, in which several sections decide to use their own scales, own key signature, and play to their own rhythms. We have as a people for most part philosophically declined the idea of “absolute truth.”

In the midst of this, here comes Jesus, asking us to tune our hearts and souls to God’s “perfect pitch.”

Jesus doesn’t try to “change” Pilate. He merely states who he is and what his ministry and mission is about: to “testify” to the Truth! And that’s Truth with a capital T!  For Jesus, God is the absolute, ultimate, and only Truth. And Jesus is God’s witness, his incarnation, his God in the flesh great reveal! The Emmanuel: “God with us.” The Way, the Truth, and the Life.

For Jesus, the world can never represent truth. Human beings can never “achieve” truth. And Jesus has no interest in competing with the Roman government.

Pilate knows this. He may not understand or abide by Jesus’ concept of God as Truth. He may see Jesus’ idea of himself as representing God’s Truth as faulty or he may actually deem Jesus an ethical and worthy philosopher. In any case, Pilate actually has no interest in sentencing Jesus. A disagreement in their concept of truth was after all to be expected. After all, as Pilate says, he’s not Jewish! He has essentially no interest in Jesus and most likely is annoyed at the Jewish authorities for “wasting his time.” 

Pilate will try to pass him off. The Jewish authorities will insist. And we all know what happens from there: we not only sentence Jesus, we crucify the Truth!

Whether we subscribe to our own sense of truth about our world or our lives, whether we feel confused by the hundreds of messages about “truth” that we receive in a barrage of social media and advertising, whether we ascribe to certain philosophies, theologies, or public figures, Jesus’ witness does not change. In this we can take comfort.

That no matter how chaotic the world may get and no matter how many paradigm shifts we undergo, God’s Truth does not change. And every time we worship God, pray to God, listen for God’s call, we acknowledge and witness to that Truth as well!

For the Truth came into the world and will save us, not only from our confusion, our doubt, and our disagreements, but from the vacancy within ourselves that these create.

Our identity, our security, our foundation comes from the Truth of Jesus –a truth that serves as a sturdy rock in the storms of life and a tree of life that cannot be uprooted no matter how the winds of change blow.

God is our constant. And Jesus is our witness.

ChristianGlobe Network, Inc., by Lori Wagner