History tells us that Caiaphas was the high priest of the Jewish Sanhedrin . . .
History tells us that Caiaphas was the high priest of the
Jewish Sanhedrin between the years AD 18 and 37. He was appointed by Valerius Gratus, the
Roman governor prior to Pontius Pilate; and the primary reason that Caiaphas
was able to hold on to the position for close to two decades is that he did
exactly what was expected of him.
Basically, his job was to ensure that everything continued running
as smoothly as possible: First, so that
Jews stayed out of jail and off crosses, and
second, because there were some clear advantages to cooperating with
Rome. The roads were easier to travel,
the streets safer at night, and having Roman troops on every corner obviously
kept Israel from being invaded by anybody else!
True, the taxes were terrible; and no one really enjoyed
living in an occupied territory.
However, the cost of challenging Caesar’s authority was considerably
higher than the cost of compromising with him.
You know the old saying—“If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em.”
For most of the year, this forced alliance worked just
fine. People may have grumbled about the
Romans, but they usually did so under their breath and out of earshot of the
soldiers. Passover was the only time
when things could get a little dicey, because of course, Passover was the
celebration of Israel’s dramatic release from captivity, and it never took much
to remind folks that release from captivity was still their number one
priority.
So when the high priest heard reports of a popular,
itinerant Galilean preacher named Jesus, who was stirring up the people, and
who was making his way toward Jerusalem for the Passover, Caiaphas’ mind went
into overdrive. If he ignored the
reports and simply let the agitator go on agitating, then who knows what could
happen? The flames of religious fervor
were easily stoked this time of year.
There could be rioting in the streets.
There might even be a full-scale revolt.
The result would be a swift and merciless crackdown by Rome,
with a lot of innocent people killed in the process. No matter how Caiaphas did the arithmetic, it
always came out the same—better that one person die than have an entire nation
perish! I’m not sure if Caiaphas had
anything against Jesus personally; he was just being practical. If he wanted to keep his job, he needed to
keep the peace.
The irony here is that Jesus eventually reached the same
conclusion—better for one to die than for everyone else to perish. However, Jesus’ death was not about keeping
the peace; it was about bringing peace into the world. Put another way, for Caiaphas, this was “just
business, nothing personal”—and for Jesus, it was all personal!
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