Behold your King ; No its Not!

Any royal visit is not without its risks. So it was with Jesus in the last week of His life. His entry into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday had been a high profile event, with many hailing Him as King (John 12.13), and Jesus continued to attract attention whenever He was in the city.
People saw Him, flocked to Him and heard Him. But not all recognised Him as the King proclaimed by the pilgrims who had walked alongside Him on that Sunday.
The ‘royal progress’, culminating in Christ’s last meal with His disciples, ‘hit the buffers’ in the Garden of Gethsemane where Jesus had gone to pray. A band of armed men, sent by the High Priest and guided by Judas, arrested Him and took Him for interrogation and trial.
Judged to be guilty of blasphemy (Matt.26.62-66), He was taken before the Roman governor, Pilate, who alone could pronounce sentence of death.
The accusation made against Jesus then was the political crime of sedition and treason. It was said that He had made claims to be King of the Jews. It was about this that Pilate questioned Him (John 18.33).
When he found that Jesus was not a threat to the state because He claimed no earthly kingdom (John 18.36-37), Pilate tried to find ways of avoiding pronouncing the death sentence. He offered to release Jesus, but the crowd demanded freedom for Barabbas (John 18.39-40). Pilate asked them directly, ‘Do you want me to crucify your King?’ Against all the Jewish traditions, they declared, ‘We have no King but Caesar’ (John19.15).
So Jesus was condemned to death. In jest, the Roman soldiers paraded Jesus in purple robe and crown of thorns, mocking Him as ‘King of the Jews’, unwittingly reminding the crowd of the Palm Sunday acclamation, ’Behold your King.’ But now, priests and people refused to recognise who Jesus was and He was taken out to Golgotha to be crucified.
But, perhaps in anger at being cornered into pronouncing the death sentence on Jesus and not knowing the spiritual truth of His words, Pilate wrote out the charge against Jesus in positive terms. Fixed above Christ’s head on the cross for all to see as He died in agony, and in three languages so that all could understand, the notice read ‘Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews.’
There will not be many who fail to recognise Queen Elizabeth when she visits places around Britain, or even around the world. There are still many who do not recognise Jesus as King.








