Read The Origin of Satan Online
Authors: Elaine Pagels
Tags: #Religion, #Christianity, #History, #Christian Theology, #General, #Angelology & Demonology
demonstrating anger or even impatience, “was amazed” (15:5).
Mark goes further. Claiming to know the governor’s private
assessment of the case, Mark says that Pilate “recognized that it
was out of envy that they had handed him over” (15:10). But
instead of making a decision and giving orders, Pilate takes no
action. Then, hearing shouts from the crowd outside, he goes out
to address them, asking what they want: “Do you want me to
release for you the king of the Jews?” But the crowd demands
instead the release of Barabbas, whom Mark describes as one of
the imprisoned insurrectionists, who “had committed murder in
the rebellion” (15:7). Pilate seems uncertain, wanting to refuse
but afraid to go against the crowd’s demand. As if helpless, he
again asks the crowd what to do: “What shall I do with the man
whom you call the king of the Jews?” (15:12). When the crowd
shouts for Jesus’ crucifixion, Pilate in effect pleads with his
subjects for justice: “Why, what evil has he done?” (15:14). But
the shouting continues, and Pilate, “wishing to satisfy the
crowd” (15:15), releases Barabbas and, having ordered Jesus to be
flogged, acquiesces to their demand that he be crucified. But
according to Mark, Pilate never pronounces sentence, and never
actually orders the execution. As Mark tells the story, even
inside Pilate’s own chamber, the chief priests are in charge: it is
they who make accusations and it is they who stir up the crowds,
whose vehemence forces Jesus’ execution upon a reluctant Pilate.
The Pilate who appears in the gospels, as we have noted, has
little to do with the historical Pilate—that is, with the man we
know from other first-century historical and political sources,
both Jewish and Roman, as a brutal governor. As Raymond
Brown notes in his meticulous study of the passion narratives,
except in Christian tradition, portraits of Pilate range from
bitterly hostile to negative.36 Philo, an educated, influential
member of the Jewish community in Alexandria, the capital of
Egypt, was
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Pilate's contemporary. In one of his writings, his
Embassy to
Gains
, he describes his experiences as a member of an official
delegation sent to Rome to represent the interests of the
Alexandrian Jewish community to the Roman emperor, Gaius
Caligula. In the course of his narrative, Philo, referring to the
situation of the Jewish community in Judea, describes governor
Pilate as a man of “inflexible, stubborn, and cruel disposition,”
and lists as typical features of his administration “greed,
violence, robbery, assault, abusive behavior, frequent executions
without trial, and endless savage ferocity.”37 Philo writes to
persuade Roman rulers to uphold the privileges of Jewish
communities, as he claims that the emperor Tiberius had done.
In this letter, Philo sees Pilate as the image of all that can go
wrong with Roman administration of Jewish provinces.
Philo’s testimony is partly corroborated in Josephus's history
of the same era. As we have seen, Josephus, like Philo, was a man
of considerable political experience; as former Jewish governor
of Galilee under the Romans, he writes his history under Roman
patronage in a tone sympathetic to Roman interests. Yet Josephus
records several episodes that show Pilate’s contempt for Jewish
religious sensibilities. Pilate’s predecessors, for example,
recognizing that Jews considered images of the emperor to be
idolatrous, had instituted the practice of choosing for the Roman
garrison in Jerusalem a military unit whose standards did not
carry such images. But when Pilate was appointed governor he
deliberately violated this precedent. First he ordered the existing
garrison to leave; then he led to Jerusalem a replacement unit
whose standards displayed imperial images, timing his arrival to
coincide with the Jewish high holy days, the Day of Atonement
and the Feast of Tabernacles. Pilate apparently knew that he was
committing sacrilege in the eyes of his subjects, for he took care
to arrive in Jerusalem at night, having ordered the standards to
be covered with cloth during the journey.
When the people of Jerusalem heard that Pilate and his troops
had introduced images they regarded as idolatrous into the holy
city, they gathered in the streets to protest. A great crowd
followed Pilate back to Caesarea and stood outside his residence,
THE GOSPEL OF MARK AND THE JEWISH WAR / 31
pleading with him to remove them. Since the standards always
accompanied the military unit, this amounted to a demand that
Pilate withdraw the garrison. When Pilate refused, the crowds
continued to demonstrate. After five days, Pilate, exasperated
but adamant, decided to force an end to the demonstrations.
Pretending to offer the demonstrators a formal hearing, he
summoned them to appear before him in the stadium. There
Pilate had amassed soldiers, ordered them to surround the
crowd, and threatened to massacre the demonstrators unless
they gave in. To Pilate’s surprise, the Jews declared that they
would rather die than see their law violated. At this point Pilate
capitulated and withdrew the unit. As Mary Smallwood
comments:
The Jews had won a decisive victory in the first round against
their new governor, but now they knew what sort of man they
were up against, and thereafter anything he did was liable to be
suspect. . . . But more was to follow.38
Roman authorities also respected Jewish sensitivity by
banning images considered idolatrous from coins minted in
Judea. Only during Pilate’s administration was this practice
violated: coins depicting pagan cult symbols have been found
dated 29-31 C.E. Did Pilate order the change, as the German
scholar E. Stauffer believes, “to force [his] subjects to handle
representations of pagan culture”?39 Raymond Brown suggests
that Pilate simply “underestimated Jewish sensitivity” on such
matters.40
Pilate next decided to build an aqueduct in Jerusalem. But to
finance the project, he appropriated money from the Temple
treasury, an act of sacrilege even from the Roman point of view,
since the Temple funds were, by law, regarded as sacrosanct.41
This direct assault upon the Temple and its treasury aroused
vehement opposition. When Pilate next visited Jerusalem, he
was met with larger demonstrations than ever; now the angry
crowds became abusive and threatening. Anticipating trouble,
Pilate had ordered soldiers to dress in plain clothes, conceal their
weapons, and mingle with the people. When the crowd refused
to disperse, he signaled to the soldiers to break it up with force.
Several peo-
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ple were killed, and others were trampled to death in the
stampede that followed.42 Even the gospel of Luke, which gives
an astonishingly benign portrait of Pilate in the trial narrative,
elsewhere mentions how people told Jesus about certain
Galileans “whose blood Pilate mingled with their sacrifices”
(13:1).
Late in Pilate’s tenure as governor other provocative incidents
prompted Jewish leaders to protest to the emperor Tiberius
against Pilate’s attacks on their religion. In 31 C.E. Pilate angered
his subjects by dedicating golden shields in the Herodian palace
in Jerusalem. We cannot be certain what occasioned the protest;
the scholar B. C. McGinny suggests that the shields were
dedicated to the “divine” emperor, a description that would have
incensed many Jews.43 Again Pilate faced popular protest: a
crowd assembled, led by four Herodian princes. When Pilate
refused to remove the shields, perhaps claiming he was acting
only out of respect for the emperor, Josephus says, they replied,
“Do not take [the emperor] Tiberius as your pretext for outraging
the nation; he does not wish any of our customs to be
overthrown.”44 When Pilate proved adamant, the Jewish princes
appealed to the emperor, who rebuked Pilate and ordered him to
remove the shields from Jerusalem. One recent commentator
remarks that
the bullying of Pilate by his Jewish adversaries in the case of
the shields resembles strongly the bullying of Pilate in [the
gospel of] John’s account of the passion, including the threat of
appeal to the emperor.45
Yet characterizing these protests as “bullying” seems strange;
what recourse did a subject people have to challenge the
governor’s decision, except to appeal over his head to a higher
authority? Five years later, when a Samaritan leader assembled a
large multitude, some of them armed, to gather and wait for a
sign from God, Pilate immediately sent troops to monitor the
situation. The troops blockaded the crowd, killing some and
capturing others, while the rest fled. Pilate ordered the
ringleaders executed.46
THE GOSPEL OF MARK AND THE JEWISH WAR / 33
Pilate’s rule ended abruptly when the legate of Syria finally
responded to repeated protests by stripping Pilate of his
commission and dispatching a man from his own staff to serve as
governor in his place. Pilate was ordered to return to Rome at
once to answer charges against him, and disappeared from the
historical record. Philo’s account coincides with Mark’s on one
point: that Pilate, aware of the animosity toward him, was
concerned lest the chief priests complain about him to the
emperor. Yet Mark, as we have seen, presents a Pilate not only as
a man too weak to withstand the shouting of a crowd, but also as
one solicitous to ensure justice in the case of a Jewish prisoner
whom the Jewish leaders want to destroy.
Mark’s benign portrait of Pilate increases the culpability of the
Jewish leaders and supports Mark’s contention that Jews, not
Romans, were the primary force behind Jesus’ crucifixion.
Throughout the following decades, as bitterness between the
Jewish majority and Jesus’ followers increased, the gospels came
to depict Pilate in an increasingly favorable light. As Paul Winter
observes,
the stern Pilate grows more mellow from gospel to gospel
[from Mark to Matthew, from Matthew and Luke to John]. . . .
The more removed from history, the more sympathetic a
character he becomes.47
In depicting Jesus’ Jewish enemies, the same process works in
reverse. Matthew, writing around ten years later, depicts much
greater antagonism between Jesus and the Pharisees than Mark
suggests. And while Mark says that the leaders restrained their
animosity because the crowds favored Jesus, Matthew’s account
ends with both leaders
and
crowds unanimously shouting for his
execution. Furthermore, what Mark merely implies—that Jesus’
opponents are energized by Satan—Luke and John will state
explicitly. Both Matthew and Luke, writing ten to twenty years
after Mark, adapted the earlier gospel and revised it in various
ways, updating it to reflect the situation of Jesus’ followers in
their own times.
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Jesus' followers did not invent the practice of demonizing
enemies within their own group. In this respect, as in many
others, as we shall see, they drew upon traditions they shared
with other first-century Jewish sects. The Essenes, for example,
had developed and elaborated images of an evil power they called
by many names—Satan, Belial, Beelzebub, Mastema (“hatred”)—
precisely to characterize their own struggle against a Jewish
majority whom they, for reasons different from those of Jesus’
followers, denounced as apostate. The Essenes never admitted
Gentiles to their movement. But the followers of Jesus did—
cautiously and provisionally at first, and against the wishes of
some members. But as the Christian movement became
increasingly Gentile during the second century and later, the
identification of Satan primarily with the Jewish enemies of
Jesus, borne along in Christian tradition over the centuries,
would fuel the fires of anti-Semitism.
The relationship between Jesus’ followers and the rest of the
Jewish community, however, especially during the first century,
is anything but simple. Mark himself, like the Essenes, sees his
movement essentially as a conflict within one “house”—as I read
it, the house of Israel. Such religious reformers see their primary
struggle not with foreigners, however ominously Roman power
lurks in the background, but with other Jews who try to define
the “people of God.”48 Yet while Mark sees the Jewish leaders as
doing Satan’s work in trying to destroy Jesus, his own account is
by no means anti-Jewish, much less anti-Semitic. After all,
virtually everyone who appears in the account is Jewish,
including, of course, the Messiah. Mark does not see himself as
separate from Israel, but depicts Jesus’ followers as what Isaiah
calls God’s “remnant”
within Israel
(Isaiah 10:22-23). Even the