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Chronology of the Life of Jesus Christ
In the following paragraphs we shall endeavour to establish the absolute and relative chronology of our Lord's life, i.e. we shall show first how certain facts connected with the history of Jesus Christ fit in with the course of universal history, and secondly how the rest of the life of Jesus must be arranged according to the inter-relation of its single elements.
I. ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
The incidents whose absolute chronology may be determined with more or less probability are the year of Christ's nativity, of the beginning of His public life, and of His death. As we cannot fully examine the data entering into these several problems, the reader ought to compare what has been said on these points in the article BIBLICAL CHRONOLOGY.
A. The Nativity
St. Matthew (2:1) tells us that Jesus was born in the days of King Herod
.
Josephus (Ant., XVII, viii, 1) informs us that Herod died after ruling thirty
four years de facto, thirty seven years de jure. Now Herod was made rightful
king of Judea A.U.C. 714, while he began his actual rule after taking Jerusalem
A.U.C. 717. As the Jews reckoned their years from Nisan to Nisan, and counted
fractional parts as an entire year, the above data will place the death of Herod
in A.U.C. 749, 750, 751. Again, Josephus tells us from that an eclipse of the
moon occurred not long before Herod's death; such an eclipse occurred from 12 to
13 March, A.U.C. 750, so that Herod must have died before the Passover of that
year which fell on 12 April (Josephus, Ant
., iv, 4; viii, 4). As Herod killed
the children up to two years old, in order to destroy the new born King of the
Jews, we are led to believe that Jesus may have been born A.U.C. 747, 748, 749.
The enrollment under Cyrinus mentioned by St. Luke in connection with the
nativity of Jesus Christ, and the remarkable astronomical conjunction of Mars,
Jupiter, and Saturn in Pisces, in the spring of A.U.C. 748, will not lead us to
any more definite result.
B. Beginning of the Public Ministry
The date of the beginning of Christ's ministry may be calculated from three
different data found respectively in Luke 3:23; Josephus, Bel. Jud.
I, xxi, 1;
or Ant.
, XV, ii, 1; and Luke 3:1.
The first of these passages reads: And Jesus himself was beginning about the
age of thirty years
. The phrase was beginning
does not qualify the following
expression about the age of thirty years
, but rather indicates the
commencement of the public life. As we have found that the birth of Jesus falls
within the period 747-749 A.U.C., His public life must begin about 777-779 A.U.C.
Second, when, shortly before the first Pasch of His public life, Jesus had
cast the buyers and sellers out of the Temple, the Jews said: Six and forty
years was this temple in building
(John 2:20). Now, according to the testimony
of Josephus (loc. cit.), the building of the Temple began in the fifteenth year
of Herod's actual reign or in the eighteenth of his reign de jure, i.e. 732
A.U.C.; hence, adding the forty six years of actual building, the Pasch of
Christ's first year of public life must have fallen in 778 A.U.C.
Third, the Gospel of St. Luke (3:1) assigns the beginning of St. John the
Baptist's mission to the fifteenth year of the Tiberius Caesar
. Augustus, the
predecessor of Tiberius, died 19 August, 767 A.U.C., so that the fifteenth year
of Tiberius's independent reign is 782 A.U.C.; but then Tiberius began to be
associate of Augustus in A.U.C. 764, so that the fifteenth year reckoned from
this date falls in A.U.C. 778. Jesus Christ's public life began a few months
later, i.e. about A.U.C. 779.
C. The Year of the Death of Christ
According to the Evangelists, Jesus suffered under the high priest Caiphas (A.U.C. 772-90, or A.D. 18-36), during the governorship of Pontius Pilate A.U.C. 780-90). But this leaves the time rather indefinite. Tradition, the patristic testimonies for which have been collected by Patrizi (De Evangeliis), places the death of Jesus in the fifteenth (or sixteenth) year of Tiberius, in the consulship of the Gemini, forty-two years before the destruction of Jerusalem, and twelve years before the preaching of the Gospel to the Gentiles. We have already seen that the fifteenth year of Tiberius is either 778 or 782, according to its computation from the beginning of Tiberius's associate or sole reign; the consulship of the Gemini (Fufius and Rubellius) fell in A.U.C. 782; the forty second year before the destruction of Jerusalem is A.D. 29, or A.U.C. 782, twelve years before the preaching of the Gospel to the Gentiles brings us to the same year, A.D. 29 or A.U.C. 782, since the conversion of Cornelius, which marks the opening of the Gentile missions, fell probably in A.D. 40 or 41.
D. The Day of the Death of Christ
Jesus died on Friday, the fifteenth day of Nisan. That He died on Friday is
clearly stated by Mark (xv, 42), Luke (xxiii, 54), and John (xix, 31). The few
writers who assign another day for Christ's death are practically lost in the
multitude of authorities who place it on Friday. What is more, they do not even
agree among themselves: Epiphanius, e.g., places the Crucifixion on Tuesday;
Lactantius, on Saturday; Westcott, on Thursday; Cassiodorus and Gregory of Tours,
not on Friday. The first three Evangelists are equally clear about the date of
the Crucifixion. They place the Last Supper on the fourteenth day of Nisan, as
may be seen from Matt., xxvi, 17, 20; Mark, xiv, 12 17; Luke, xxii, 7 14. Nor
can there be any doubt about St. John's agreement with the Synoptic Evangelists
on the question of the Last Supper and the Crucifixion. The supper was held
before the festival day of the Pasch
(John, xiii, 1), i. e. on 14 Nisan, as
may be seen from Matt., xxii, 7-14. Nor can there be any doubt about St. John's
agreement with the Synoptic Evangelists on the question of the Last Supper and
the Crucifixion. The Supper was held before the festival day of the pasch
(John, xiii, 1), i.e. on 14 Nisan, since the sacrificial day was computed
according to the Roman method (Jovino, 123 sqq., 139 sqq.). Again, some
disciples thought that Judas left the supper table because Jesus had said to
him: Buy those things which we have need of for the festival day: or that he
should give something to the poor
(John, xiii, 29). If the Supper had been held
on 13 Nisan this belief of the disciples can hardly be understood, since Judas
might have made his purchases and distributed his alms on 14 Nisan; there would
have been no need for his rushing into the city in the middle of the night. On
the day of Christ's Crucifixion the Jews went not into the hall, that they
might not be defiled, but that they might eat the pasch
(John, xviii, 28). The
pasch which the Jews wished to eat could not have been the paschal lamb, which
was eaten on 14 Nisan, for the pollution contracted by entering the hall would
have ceased at sundown, so that it would not have prevented them from sharing in
the paschal supper. The pasch which the Jews had in view must have been the
sacrificial offerings (Chagighah), which were called also pasch and were eaten
on 15 Nisan. Hence this passage places the death of Jesus Christ on the
fifteenth day of Nisan. Again, Jesus is said to have suffered and died on the
parasceve of the pasch
, or simply on the parasceve
(John, xix, 14, 31); as
parasceve
meant Friday, the expression parasceve
denotes Friday on which the
pasch happened to fall, not the before the pasch. Finally, the day following the
parasceve on which Jesus died is called a great sabbath day
(John, xix, 31),
either to denote its occurrence in the paschal week or to distinguish it from
the preceding pasch, or day of minor rest.
II. RELATIVE CHRONOLOGY
No student of the life of Jesus will question the chronological order of its principal divisions: infancy, hidden life, public life, passion, glory. But the order of events in the single divisions is not always clear beyond dispute.
A. The Infancy of Jesus
The history of the infancy, for instance, is recorded only in the First Gospel and in the Third. Each Evangelist contents himself with five pictures:
- St. Matthew describes the birth of Jesus, the adoration of the Magi, the flight into Egypt, the slaughter of the Holy Innocents, and the return to Nazareth.
- St. Luke gives a sketch of the birth, of the adoration of the shepherds, of the circumcision, of the purification of the Virgin, and of the return to Nazareth.
The two Evangelists agree in the first and the last of these two series of incidents (moreover, all scholars place the birth, adoration of the shepherds, and the circumcision before the Magi), but how are we to arrange the intervening three events related by St. Matthew with the order of St. Luke? We indicate a few of the many ways in which the chronogical sequence of these facts has been arranged.
1. The birth, the adoration of the shepherds, the circumcision, the adoration of the Magi, the flight into Egypt, the slaughter of the Innocents, the purification, the return to Nazareth. This order implies that either the purification was delayed beyond the fortieth day, which seems to contradict Luke, ii, 22 sqq., or that Jesus was born shortly before Herod's death. so that the Holy Family could return from Egypt within forty days after the birth of Jesus. Tradition does not seem to favour this speedy return.
2. The birth, the adoration of the shepherds, the circumcision, the adoration of the Magi, the purification, the flight into Egypt, the slaughter of the Innocents, the return to Nazareth. According to this order the Magi either arrived a few days before the purification or they came on 6 January; but in neither case can we understand why the Holy Family should have offered the sacrifice of the poor, after receiving the offeings of the Magi. Moreover, the firsr Evangelist intimates that the angel appeared to St. Joseph soon after the departure of the Magi, and it is not at all probable that Herod should have waited long before inquiring concerning the whereabouts of the new born king. The difficulties are not overcome by placing the adoration of the Magi on the day before the purification; it would be more unlikely in that case that the Holy Family should offer the sacrifice of the poor.
3. As Luke 2:39 appears to exclude the possibility of placing the adoration of the Magi between the presentation and return to Nazareth, there are interpreters who have located the advent of the wise men, the flight to Egypt, the slaughter of the Innocents, and the return from Egypt after the events as told in St. Luke. They agree in the opinion that the Holy Family returned to Nazareth after the purification, and then left Nazareth in order to make their home in Bethlehem. Eusebius, Epiphanius, and some other ancient writers are willing to place the adoration of the Magi about two years after Christ's birth; Paperbroch and his followers allow about a year and thirteen days between the birth and the advent of the Magi; while Patrizi agrees with those who fix the advent of the Magi at about two weeks after the purification . The text of Matt., ii, 1, 2, hardly permits an interval of more than a year between the purification and the coming of the wise men; Patrizi's opinion appears to satisfy all the data furnished by the gospels, while it does not contradict the particulars added by tradition.
B. The Hidden Life of Jesus
It was in the seclusion of Nazareth that Jesus spent the greatest part of His
earthly life. The inspired records are very reticent about this period: Luke,
2:40-52; Mark 6:3; John 6:42; 7:15, are about the only passages which refer to
the hidden life. Some of them give us a general view of Christ's life: The
child grew, and grew in strength and wisdom; and the grace of God was in him
is
the brief summary of the years following the return of the Holy Family after the
ceremonial purification in the Temple. Jesus advanced in wisdom, and age, and
grace with God and men
, and He was subject to them
form the inspired outline
of Christ's life in Nazareth after He had attained the age of twelve. When he
was twelve years old
Jesus accompanied His parents to Jerusalem, 'according to
the custom of the feast'; When they returned, the child Jesus remained in
Jerusalem; and his parents knew it not. After three days, they found him in the
Temple, sitting in the midst of the doctors, hearing them, and asking them
questions. It was on this occasion that Jesus spoke the only words that have
come down from the period of His hidden life: How is it that you sought me? Did
you not know, that I must be about my Father's business [or,
The Jews tell us that Jesus had not passed through the training of he
Rabbinic schools: in my father's
house
]?How doth this man know letters, having never learned?
. The
same question is asked by the people of Nazareth, who add, Is not this the
carpenter?
St. Justin is authority for the statement that Jesus specially made
ploughs and yokes' (Contra Tryph., 88). Though it is not certain that at the
time of Jesus elementary schools existed in the Jewish villlages, it may be
inferred from the Gospels that Jesus knew how to read (Luke 4:16) and write
(John 8:6). At an early age He must have learned the so called Shema (Deut. 6:4),
and the Hallel, or Psalms 113-118 (Hebr.); He must have been familiar with the
other parts of the Scriptures too, especially the Psalms and the Prophetic Books,
as He constantly refers to them in His public life. It is also asserted that
Palestine at the time of Jesus Christ was practically bilingual, so that Christ
must have spoken Aramaic and Greek; the indications that He was acquainted with
Hebrew and Latin are rather slight. The public teaching of Jesus shows that He
was a close observer of the sights and sounds of nature, and of the habits of
all classes of men. For these are the usual sources of His illustrations. To
conclude the hidden life of Jesus extending through thirty years is far
different from what one should have expected in the case of a Person Who is
adored by His followers as their God and revered as their Saviour; this is an
indirect proof for the credibility of the Gospel story.
C. The Public Life of Jesus: Its Duration
The chronology of the public life offers a number of problems to the interpreter; we shall touch upon only two, the duration of the public life, and the successive journeys it contains.
There are two extreme views as to the length of the ministry of Jesus: St.
Irenaeus (Contra Haer., II, xxii, 3-6) appears to suggest a period of fifteen
years; the prophetic phrases, the year of recompenses
, the year of my
redemption
(Is., xxxiv, 8; lxiii, 4), appear to have induced Clement of
Alexandria, Julius Africanus, Philastrius, Hilarion, and two or three other
patristic writers to allow only one year for the public life. This latter
opinion has found advocates among certain recent students: von Soden, for
instance, defends it in Cheyne's Encyclopaedia Biblica
. But the text of the
Gospels demands a more extensive duration. St. John's Gospel distinctly mentions
three distinct paschs in the history of Christ's ministry (ii, 13; vi, 4; xi,
55). The first of the three occurs shortly after the baptism of Jesus, the last
coincides with His Passion, so that at least two years must have intervened
between the two events to give us the necessary room for the passover mentioned
in vi, 4. Westcott and Hort omit the expression the pasch
in vi, 4 to compress
the ministry of Jesus within the space of one year; but all the manuscripts, the
versions, and nearly all the Fathers testify for the reading En de eggysto
pascha heeorteton Ioudaion
: Now the pasch, the festival day of the Jews, was
near at hand
. Thus far then everything tends to favour the view of those
writers and more recent commentators who extend the period of Christ's ministry
a little over two years.
But a comparison of St. John's Gospel with the Synoptic Evangelists seems to
introduce another pasch, indicated in the Fourth Gospel, into Christ's public
life. John, iv, 45, relates the return of Jesus into Galilee after the first
pasch of His public life in Jerusalem, and the same event is told by Mark, i, 14,
and Luke iv, 14. Again the pasch mentioned in John, vi, 4 has its parallel in
the green grass
of Mark, vi, 39, and in the multiplication of loaves as told
in Luke, ix, 12 sqq. But the plucking of ears mentioned in Mark, ii, 23, and
Luke, vi, 1, implies another paschal season intervening between those expressly
mentioned in John, ii, 13, and vi, 4. This shows that the public life of Jesus
must have extended over four paschs, so that it must have lasted three years and
a few months. Though the Fourth Gospel does not indicate this fourth pasch as
clearly as the other three, it is not wholly silent on the question. The
festival day of the Jews
mentioned in John, v, 1, has been identified with the
Feast of Pentecost, the Feast of Tabernacles, the Feast of Expiation, the Feast
of the New Moon, the Feast of Purim, the Feast of Dedication, by various
commentators; others openly confess that they cannot determine to which of the
Jewish feasts this festival day refers. Nearly all difficulties will disappear
if the festival day be regarded as the pasch, as both the text (heorte) and John,
iv, 35 seem to demand (cf. Dublin Review, XXIII, 351 sqq.).
D. The Public Life of Jesus: His Journeys
The journeys made during His public life may be grouped under nine heads: the first six were mainly performed in Galilee and had Capharnaum for their central point; the last three bring Jesus into Judea without any pronounced central point. We cannot enter into the disputed questions connected with the single incidents of the various groups.
1. First Journey.
December, A.U.C. 778 - Spring, 779. (Cf. John, i, ii; Matthew, iii, iv;
Mark, i; Luke, iii, iv.)
Jesus abandons His hidden life in Nazareth, and goes to Bethania across
the Jordan, where He is baptized by John and receives the Baptist's first
testimony to His Divine mission. He then withdraws into the desert of Judea,
where He fasts for forty days and is tempted by the devil. After this He dwells
in the neighbourhood of the Baptist's ministry, and receives the latter's second
and third testimony; here too He wins His first disciples, with whom He journeys
to the wedding feast at Cana in Galilee, where He performs His first miracle.
Finally He transfers His residence, so far as there can be question of a
residence in His public life, to Capharnaum, one of the principal thoroughfares
of commerce and travel in Galilee.
2. Second Journey.
Passover, A.U.C. 779 - about Pentecost, 780. (Cf. John, ii-v; Mark, i-iii;
Luke, iv-vii; Matt., iv-ix.)
Jesus goes from Capharnaum to Jerusalem for the Feast of the Passover;
here he expels the buyers and sellers from the Temple, and is questioned by the
Jewish authorities. Many believed in Jesus, and Nicodemus came to converse with
Him during the night. After the festival days He remained in Judea till about
the following December, during which period He received the fourth testimony
from John who was baptizing at Ennon (A.V. Aenon). When the Baptist had been
imprisoned in Machaerus, Jesus returned to Galilee by way of Samaria where He
met the Samaritan woman at Jacob's well near Sichar; He delayed two days in this
place, and many believed in Him. Soon after His return into Galilee we find
Jesus again in Cana, where He heard the prayer who pleaded for the recovery of
his dying son in Capharnaum. The rejection of Jesus by the people of Nazareth,
whether at this time as, St. Luke intimates, or at a later period, as St. Mark
seems to demand, or again both now and about eight months later, is an
exegetical problem we cannot solve here. At any rate, shortly afterwards Jesus
is mostly actively engaged in Capharnaum in teaching and healing the sick,
restoring among others Peter's mother-in-law and a demoniac. On this occasion He
called Peter and Andrew, James and John. Then followed a missionary tour through
Galilee during which Jesus cured a leper; soon he again taught in Capharnaum,
and was surrounded by such a multitude that a man sick of the palsy had to be
let down through the roof in order to reach the Sacred Presence. After calling
Matthew to the Apostleship, He went to Jerusalem for the second pasch occurring
during His public life, it was on this occasion that He healed the man who been
sick for thirty-eight years near the pool at Jerusalem. The charge of violating
the Sabbath and Christ's answer were the natural effects of the miracle. The
same charge is repeated shortly after the pasch; Jesus had returned to Galilee,
and the disciples plucked some ripe ears in the corn fields. The question became
more acute in the immediate future; Jesus had returned to Capharnaum, and there
healed on the Sabbath day a man who had a withered hand. The Pharisees now make
common cause with the Herodians in order to destroy him
. Jesus withdraws first
to the Sea of Galilee, where He teaches and performs numerous miracles; then
retires to the Mountain of Beatitudes, where He prays during the night, chooses
His Twelve Apostles in the morning, and preaches the Sermon on the Mount. He is
brought back to Capharnaum by the prayers of the centurion who asks and obtains
the of his servant.
3. Third Journey.
About Pentecost, A.U.C. 780- Autumn, 780. (Cf. Luke, vii, viii; Mark, iii,
iv; Matt., iv, viii, ix, xii, xiii.)
Jesus makes another missionary tour through Galilee; He resuscitates the
son of the widow at Naim, and shortly afterwards receives the messengers sent by
John from his prison in Machaerus. Then follows the scene of the merciful
reception of the sinful woman who anoints the feet of the Lord while He rests at
table in Magdala or perhaps in Capharnaum; for the rest of His missionary tour
Jesus is followed by a band of pious women who minister to the wants of the
Apostles. After returning to Capharnaum, Jesus expels the mute devil, is charged
by the Pharisees with casting out devils by the prince of devils, and encounters
the remonstrances of His kinsmen. Withdrawing to the sea, He preaches what may
be called the Lake Sermon
, consisting of seven parables.
4. Fourth Journey.
Autumn, A.U.C. 780- about Passover, 781. (Cf. Luke, viii, ix; Mark, iv-vi;
Matt., viii, ix, x, xiii, xiv.)
After a laborious day of ministry in the city of Capharnaum and on the
lake, Jesus with His Apostles crosses the waters. As a great storm overtakes
them, the frightened Apostles awaken their sleeping Master, Who commands the
winds and the waves. Towards morning they meet in the country of the Gerasens,
on the east of the lake, two demoniacs. Jesus expels the evil spirits, but
allows them to enter into a herd of swine. The beasts destroy themselves in the
waters of the lake, and frightened inhabitants beg Jesus not to remain among
them. After returning to Capharnaum he heals the woman who had touched the hem
of His garment, resuscitates the daughter of Jairus, and gives sight to two
blind men. The second Gospel places here Christ's last visit to and rejection by
the people of Nazareth. Then follows the ministry of the Apostles who are sent
two by two, while Jesus Himself makes another missionary tour through Galilee.
It seems to have been the martyrdom of John the Baptist that occasioned the
return of the Apostles and their gathering around the Master in Capharnaum. But,
however depressing this event may have been, it did not damp the enthusiasm of
the Apostles over their success.
5. Fifth Journey.
Spring, A.U.C. 781. (Cf. John, vi; Luke, ix; Mark, vi; and Matt., xiv.)
Jesus invites the Apostles, tired out from their missionary labours, to
rest awhile. They cross the northern part of the Sea of Galilee, but, instead of
finding the desired solitude, they are met by multitudes of people who had
preceded them by land or by boat, and who were eager for instruction. Jesus
taught them throughout the day, and towards evening did not wish to dismiss them
hungry. On the other hand, there were only five loaves and two fishes at the
disposal of Jesus; after His blessing, these scanty supplies satisfied the
hunger of five thousand men, besides women and children, and remnants filled
twelve baskets of fragments. Jesus sent the Apostles back to their boats, and
escaped from the enthusiastic multitudes, who wished to make Him king, into the
mountain where He prayed till far into the night. Meanwhile the Apostles were
facing a contrary wind till the fourth watch in the morning, when they saw Jesus
walking upon the waters. The Apostles first fear, and then recognize Jesus;
Peter walks upon the water as long as his confidence lasts; the storm ceases
when Jesus has entered the boat. The next day brings Jesus and His Apostles to
Capharnaum, where He speaks to the assembly about the Bread of Life and promises
the Holy Eucharist, with the result that some of His followers leave Him, while
the faith of His true disciples is strenghened.
6. Sixth Journey.
About May, A.U.C. 781- Sept., 781. (Cf. Lk., ix; Mk., vii-ix; Matt., xiv-
xviii; John, vii.)
It may be owing to the enmity stirred up against Jesus by His Eucharistic
discourse in Capharnaum that He began now a more extensive missionary tour than
He had made in the preceding years of His life. Passing through the country of
Genesar, He expressed His disapproval of the Pharisaic practices of legal purity.
Within the boarders of Tyre and Sidon He exorcized the daughter of the
Syrophoenician woman. From here Jesus travelled first towards the north, then
towards the east, then south-eastward through the northern part of Decapolis,
probably along the foot of the Labanon, till He came to the eastern part of
Galilee. While in Decapolis Jesus healed a deaf-mute, employing a ceremonial
more elaborate than He had used at any of His previous miracles; in the eastern
part of Galilee, probably not far from Dalmanutha and Magedan, He fed four
thousand men, besides children and women, with seven loaves and a few little
fishes, the remaining fragments filling seven baskets. The multitudes had
listened for three days to the teaching of Jesus, previously to the miracle. In
spite of the many cures performed by Jesus, during this journey, on the blind,
the dumb, the lame, the maimed, and on many others, the Pharisees and Sadduces
asked Him for a sign from heaven, tempting Him. He promised them the sign of
Jonas the Prophet. After Jesus and the Apostles had crossed the lake, He warned
them to beware of the leaven of the Pharisees; then they passed through
Bethsaida Julias where Jesus gave sight to a blind man. Next we find Jesus in
the confines of Caesarea Philippi, where Peter professes his faith in Christ,
the Son of the living God, and in his turn receives from Jesus the promise of
the power of the keys. Jesus here predicts His passion, and about a week later
is transfigured before Peter, James, and John, probably on the top of Mt. Thabor.
On descending from the mountain, Jesus exorcizes the mute devil whom His
disciples had not been able to expel. Bending his way towards Capharnaum, Jesus
predicts His Passion for the second time, and in the city pays the tribute-money
for Himself and Peter. This occasions the discussion as to the greater in the
kingdom of heaven, and the allied discourses. Finally, Jesus refuses His
brethren's invitation to go publicly to the Feast of Tabernacles in Jerusalem.
7. Seventh Journey.
Sept., A.U.C. 781- December, 781. (Cf. Luke, ix-xiii; Mark, x; Matt., vi,
vii, viii, x, xi, xii, xxiv; John, vii-x.)
Jesus now steadfastly set His face to go Jerusalem
, and as the
Samaritans refused Him hospitality, He had to take the east of the Jordan. While
still in Galilee, He refused the discipleship of several half-hearted candidates,
and about the same time He sent other seventy-two, two by two, before His face
into every city and place whither He Himself was to come. Probably in the lower
part of Peraea, the seventy-two returned with joy, rejoicing in the miraculous
power that had been exercised by them. It must have been in the vicinity of
Jericho that Jesus answered the lawer's question, Who is my neighbour?
by the
parable of the Good Samaritan. Next Jesus was received in the hospitable home of
Mary and Martha, where He declares Mary to have chosen the better part. From
Bethania went to Jerusalem for the Feast of Tabernacles, where he became
involved in discussions with the Jews. The Scribes and Pharisees endeavoured to
catch Him in the sentence which they asked Him to pronounce in the case of the
woman taken in adultary. When Jesus had avoided this snare, He continued His
discussions with the hostile Jews. Their enmity was intensified because Jesus
restored sight to a blind man on the Sabbath day. Jesus appears to have His stay
in Jerusalem with the beautiful discourse on the Good Shepherd. A little later
He teaches His Apostles the Our Father, probably somewhere on Mt. Olivet. On a
subsequent missionary tour through Judea and Peraea He defends Himself against
the charges of Pharisees, and reproves their hypocrisy. On the same journey
Jesus warned against hypocrisy, covetousness, worldly care; He exhorted to
watchfulness, patience under contradictions, and to penance. About this time,
too, He healed the woman who had the spirit of infirmity.
8. Eighth Journey.
December, A.U.C. 781-February, 782. (Cf. Luke, xiii-xvii; John, x, xi.)
The Feast of Dedication brought Jesus again to Jerusalem, and occasioned
another discussion with the Jews. This is followed by another missionary tour
through Peraea, during which Jesus explained a number of important points of
doctrine: the number of the elect, the choice of one's place at table, the
guests to be invited, the parable of the great supper, resoluteness in the
service of God, the parables of the hundred sheep, the lost groat, and the
prodigal son, of the unjust steward, of Dives and Lazarus, of the unmerciful
servant, besides the duty of fraternal correction, and the efficacy of faith.
During this period, too, the Pharisees attempted to frighten Jesus with the
menance of Herod's persecution; on his part, Jesus healed a man who had drospy,
on a Sabbath day, while at table in the house of a certain prince of the
Pharisees. Finally Mary and Martha send messengers to Jesus, asking Him to come
and cure their brother Lazarus; Jesus went after two days, and resuscitated His
friend who had been several days in the grave. The Jews are exasperated over
this miracle, and they decree Jesus must die for the people. Hence He withdrew
into a country near the desert, unto a city that is called Ephrem
.
9. Ninth Journey.
February, A.U.C. 782- Passover, 782. (Cf. Luke, xvii-xxii; Mark., x, xiv;
Matt., xix-xxvi; John, xi, xii.)
This last journey took Jesus from Ephrem northward through Samaria, then
eastward along the border of Galilee into Peraea, then southward through Peraea,
westward across the Jordan, through Jericho, Bethania on Mt. Olivet, Bethphage,
and finally to Jerusalem. While in the most northern part of the journey, He
cured ten lepers; a little later, He answered the questions raised by the
Pharisees concerning the kingdom of God. Then He urged the need of incessant
prayer by proposing the parable of the unjust judge; here too belong the parable
of the Pharisee and Publican, the discourse on marriage, on the attitude of the
Church towards the children, on the right use of riches as illustrated by the
story of the rich young ruler, and the parable of the labourers in the vineyard.
After beginning His route towards Jerusalem, He predicted His Passion for the
third time; James and John betray their ambition, but they are taught the true
standard of greatness in the Church. At Jericho Jesus heals two blind men, and
receives the repentance of Zacheus the publican; here He proposed also the
parable of the pounds entrusted to the servants by the master. Six days before
the pasch we find Jesus at Bethania on Mt. Olivet, as the guest of Simon the
leper; Mary anoints His feet, and the disciples at the instigation of Judas are
indignant at this seeming waste of ointment. A great multitude assembles at
Bethania, not to see Jesus only but also Lazarus; hence the chief priests think
of killing Lazarus too. On the following day Jesus solemnly entered Jerusalem
and was received by the Hosanna cries of all classes of people. In the afternoon
He met a delegation of Gentiles in the court of the Temple. On Monday Jesus
curses the barren fig tree, and during the morning He drives the buyers and
sellers from the Temple. On Tuesday the wonder of the disciples at the sudden
withering of the fig tree provokes their Master's instruction on the efficacy of
faith. Jesus answers the enemies' questions as to His authority; then He
proposes the parable of the two sons, of the wicked husbandmen, and of the
marriage feast. Next follows a triple snare: the politicians ask whether it is
lawful to pay tribute to Caesar; the scoffers inquire whose wife a woman, who
has had several husbands, will be after ressurection; the Jewish theologians
propose the question: Which is the first commandment, the great commandment of
the law? Then Jesus proposes His last question to the Jews: What think you of
Christ? whose son is he?
This is followed by the eightfold woe against the
Scribes and Pharisees, and by the denunciation of Jerusalem. The last words of
Christ in the Temple were expressions of praise for the poor widow who had made
an offering of two mites in spite of her poverty. Jesus ended this day by
uttering the prophecies concerning the destruction of Jerusalem, His second
coming, and the future judgement; these predictions are interrupted by the
parable of the ten virgins and the talents. On Wednesday Jesus again predicted
His Passion; probably it was on the same day that Judas made his agreement with
the Jews to betray Jesus.
E. The Passion of Jesus: Its Preparation
Jesus prepares His disciples for the Passion, He prepares Himself for the ordeal and His enemies prepare themselves for the destruction of Jesus.
1. Preparation of the Apostles. Jesus prepares His Apostles for the Passion by the eating of the paschal lamb, the institution of the Holy Eucharist, the concomitant ceremonies, and His lengthy discourses held during and after the Last Supper. Special mention should be made of the prediction of the Passion, and of the betrayal one of the Apostles and the denial by another. Peter, james, and John are prepared in a more particular manner by witnessing the sorrow of Jesus on Mt. Olivet.
2. Preparation of Jesus. Jesus must have found an indirect preparation in all He did and said to strengthen His Apostles. But the preparation that was pecularly His own consisted in His prayer in the grotto of His Agony where the angel came to strengthen Him. The sleep of His favoured Apostles during the hours of His bitter struggle must have prepared Him too for the complete abandonment He was soon to experience.
3. Preparation of the Enemies. Judas leaves the Master during the Last Supper. The chief priests and Pharisees hastily collect a detachment of the Roman cohort stationed in the castle of Antonia, of the Jewish temple-watch, and of the officials of the Temple. To these are added a number of the servants and dependents of the high-priest, and a miscellaneous multitude of fanatics with lanterns and torches, with swords and clubs, who were to follow the leadership of Judas. They took Christ, bound Him, and led Him to the high-priest's house.
F. The Passion of Jesus: The Trial
Jesus was tried first before an ecclesiastical and then before a civil tribunal.
1. Before Ecclesiastical Court. The ecclesiastical trial includes Christ's appearance before Annas, before Caiphas, and again before Caiphas, who appears to have acted in each case as head of the Sanhedrin. The Jewish court found Jesus guilty of blasphemy, and condemned Him to death, though its proceedings were illegal from more than one point of view. During the trial took place Peter's triple denial of Jesus; Jesus is insulted and mocked, especially between the second and third session; and after His final condemnation Judas despaired and met his tragic death.
2. Before the Civil Court. The civil trial, too, comprised three sessions, the first before Pilate, the second before Herod, the third again before Pilate. Jesus is not charged with blasphemy before the court of Pilate, but with stirring up the people, forbidding to give tribute to Caesar, and claiming to be Christ the king. Pilate ignores the first two charges; the third he finds harmless when he sees that Jesus does not claim royalty in the Roman sense of the word. But in order not to incur the odium of the Jewish leaders, the Roman governor sends his prisoner to Herod. As Jesus did not humour the curiosity of Herod, He was mocked and set at naught by the Tetrarch of Galilee and his court, and sent back to Pilate. The Roman procurator declares the prisoner innocent for the second time, but, instead of setting Him free, gives the people the alternative to choose either Jesus or Barabbas for their paschal freedman. Pilate pronounced Jesus innocent for the third time with the more solemn ceremony of washing his hands; he had recourse to a third scheme of ridding himself of the burden of pronouncing an unjust sentence against his prisoner. He had the prisoner scourged, thus annihilating, as far as human means could do so, any hope that Jesus could ever attain to the royal dignity. But even this device miscarried, and Pilate allowed his political ambition to prevail over his sense of evident justice; he condemned Jesus to be crucified.
G. The Passion of Jesus: His Death
Jesus carried His Cross to the place of execution. Simon of Cyrene is forced
to assist Him in bearing the heavy burden. On the way Jesus addresses his last
words to the weeping women who sympathized with His suffering. He is nailed to
the Cross, his garments are divided, and an inscription is placed over His head.
While His enemies mock Him, He pronounces the well-known Seven Words
. Of the
two robbers crucified with Jesus, one was converted, and the other died
impenitent. The sun was darkened, and Jesus surrendered His soul into the hands
of His Father. The veil of the Temple was rent into two, the earth quaked, the
rocks were riven, and many bodies of the saints that had slept arose and
appeared to many. The Roman centurion testified that Jesus was indeed the Son of
God. The Heart of Jesus was pierced so as to make sure of His death. The Sacred
Body was taken from the Cross by Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus, and was
buried in the new sepulchre of Joseph, and the Sabbath drew near.
H. The Glory of Jesus
After the burial of Jesus, the Holy women returned and prepared spices and ointments. The next day, the chief priests and Pharisees made the sepulchre secure with guards, sealing the stone. When the Sabbath was passed, the Holy women brought sweet spices that they might anoint Jesus. But Jesus rose early the first day of the week, and there was a great earthquake, and an angel descended from heaven, and rolled back the stone. The guards were struck with terror, and became as dead men. On arriving at the sepulchre the holy women found the grave empty; Mary Magdalen ran to tell the Apostles Peter and John, while the other women were told by an angel that the Lord had arisen from the dead. Peter and John hasten to the sepulchre, and find everything as Magdalen has reported. Magdalen too returns, and, while weeping at the sepulchre, is approached by the arisen Saviour Who appears to her and speaks with her. On the same day Jesus appeared to the other Holy Women, to Peter, to the two disciples on their way to Emmaus, and to all the Apostles excepting Thomas. A week later He appeared to all the Apostles, Thomas included; later still He appeared in Galilee near the Lake of Genesareth to seven disciples, on a mountain in Galilee to a multitude of disciples, to James, and finally to His disciples on the Mount Olivet whence He ascended into heaven. But these apparitions do not exhaust the record of the Gospels, according to which Jesus showed Himself alive after His Passion by many proofs, for forty days appearing to the disciples and speaking of the kingdom of God.
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