A Physician Looks At Jesus’ Death
Following the last supper, Jesus retired across
the Kidron Valley to the Garden of Gethsemene. As He entered the
garden, He withdrew from His disciples to pray. This was probably
the most traumatic experience Jesus faced during the next l2 to
l8 hours. Who could possibly measure the anguish that Jesus
experienced as he submitted His will to that of the Father--as
He anticipated His separation from the Father when He would bear
the sin of the world?
This night--begun as a sleepless one--would be
marked by an extreme spiritual struggle:"And being in agony
he prayed more earnestly: "and his sweat was as it were great
drops of blood falling down to the ground," Luke says (22:44).
This bloody sweat is known medically as hematidrosis, and in the
gospel narratives is mentioned only by the physician Luke. We are
indeed indebted to the astute observation of this medical doctor.
This phenomenon has been documented on other rare occasions among
persons undergoing extreme psychological or physiological stress.
It is caused by tiny capillaries under the skin surface distending
and ultimately going into arterial spasm with necroses, and rupturing
into the sweat glands. This results in a bloody secretion--blood mixed
with sweat--exuding through the pores of the skin. The loss of this
bloody, sweaty mixture would create profound dehydration and early
stages of shock.
Unless you reflect on this point, it is easy to
overlook the fact that an angel appeared to Jesus to strengthen Him.
Certainly the intercessory ministry of this angel empowered our Lord
to sustain the brutal trauma which was yet to occur.
After the battle with His will, Jesus looked across
the night sky toward Jerusalem and saw the torches illuminating the
rolling hillside. He could clearly identify the soldiers, high priests,
some members of the Sanhedrin, and his own disciple, Judas, leading the
mob to arrest Him. Preliminary collusion with Judas, and the cleverness
of Caiaphas was manifested in the nighttime arrest of Jesus. They
evidently feared a rebellion of the people if they attempted to take
Jesus openly.
Not only had the conspirators judged the trial
before the arrest, they literally participated in the actual arrest
of Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemene, Jesus was then taken to the
high priest’s house at night and under clandestine circumstances---a
gross violation of Jewish jurisprudence. In addition, according to
Mosaic law, no trial was to take place on the eve of the Sabbath or
holiday or on a holiday itself. All four Gospels indicate that this
was on the eve of the Sabbath, and more than that, on the eve of
the Passover.
The first trial occurred sometime after midnight
and was concluded before 3:00 a.m. The Gospels record that Jesus was
led away with His hands bound--the same hands that had healed the sick,
opened the eyes of the blind, and raised the dead. But this was only
the beginning of the indignities to which Jesus would be subjected.
Before Annas, Jesus was directly cross-examined in contradiction to
the Jewish law. The Sanhedrin and Council were not allowed to apply
duress and pressure during a trial, and frank confessions were not
accepted by Jewish law. The law itself required two witnesses to bring
accusations, but Jesus was being directly intimidated and cross-examined
before Annas, In fact, one of the officers of the high priest accompanying
Jesus struck him with his hand because of the manner of Jesus’ reply to
Annas.
In Luke 22:63,64, we are told that the man holding
Jesus mocked Him, beat Him, blindfolded Him, and asked Him to prophesy.
The same Jesus who had performed so many miracles and who had been so
willing to gather these in His arms, now sustains the indignity of
their mockery and ridicule before being led away to Caiaphas and the
full Sanhedrin.
During the course of this second trial, even the
charges against Jesus were changed because of the inability of the
false witnesses to agree in their testimony. In modern terminology,
Jesus was tried for an alleged plot to desecrate a national shrine
(He had claimed to be able to tear down the temple and rebuild it
within three days). Caiaphas as the high priest now took an active role
in the interrogation of Jesus. He commanded Jesus by the living God to
speak. By Jewish tradition, this was a compelling oath which a suspect
could not refuse. When all else failed, Caiaphas demanded a complete
confession. Following the testimony, he rent his clothing.This Middle
East custom depicted great emotion and undoubtedly prejudiced and
influenced the other members of the Sanhedrin.
The trial was so prejudiced, it was beyond any
consideration of mercy. Jesus then was taken before Pilate early in
the morning. While being very liberal concerning the trial by their
own Jewish law, the accusers now resume their legalistic stance by
not entering the Roman courtyard and thereby defiling themselves on
the eve of the Passover. This indicates their extreme concern over
the minutia of the law versus the more important weightier matters,
just as Jesus had accused them.
As we see Jesus now, He’s exhausted from lack of
sleep, the two preceding interrogations, abuse, dehydration and
ridicule. Yet he stands before this Roman governor with supernatural
power. His compassionate, soul-searching countenance is bowed in
humility. No reviling or bitterness comes from His parched, swollen
lips. Indeed, He makes no self-defense at all.
Now Pilate, in an attempt to appease the mob, has
Jesus scourged. This was not ordinarily part of a crucifixion. And
there was a difference between Jewish and Roman law in regard to it.
Under Jewish law, scourging was limited to 40 lashes. The Jews were
so intent that the law be upheld, the beating often was stopped at
39 lashes to be sure that a miscount had not taken place. Roman law
knew no such limitations. The prisoner was beaten to the verge of death
as measured by a rapidly increasing, thready pulse and/or a shallow,
irregular respiratory rate.
Wooden-handled leather whips with three strands
were most frequently used. Each strand had a small piece of bone or
metal attached to the end which would chip and gouge out pieces of
bone and tissue with each lash as it was withdrawn sharply backwards
to the readied position. The prisoner was tied across an object that
would support his weight after he had lost consciousness. This position
also provided easy access to areas of the legs, arms, thighs, and upper
chest. Such an atrocity stripped the skin into long, ribbon-like segments,
causing profuse arterial bleeding.
The crown of thorns, in the form of a circlet, now
was pressed deeply into His scalp by the soldiers. This resulted in
additional arterial bleeding which added to the extreme reduction
and contraction of His total vascular space, thereby deepening His
state of shock.
A purple robe was then thrown across Jesus’
shoulders and back. It perhaps acted as a temporary compressive
dressing, helping to congeal some of the blood pouring from the
gaping lesions across His thorax, abdomen and legs. The gospel
narratives continue the description of the atrocity, including the
mockery by the soldiers, Jesus being spat upon, beaten with reeds,
ridiculed, and hailed as the "King of the Jews."
Isaiah 50:6, a Messianic passage, states, "I
gave my back to the smiters, and my cheeks to them that plucked off
the hair. I hid my face from shame and spitting." Anyone who has
had any hair pulled from his face or eyebrows knows the pain and
resultant swelling.
Then Jesus came forth, wearing the crown of thorns
and the purple robe. And Pilate saith unto them, "Behold the man,
" John records (19:5). As Jesus stood before the howling mob, no
doubt He experienced the clammy, lifeless sensation of advanced shock.
Medically, Jesus would demonstrate cold, pale sweaty skin. The mucous
membranes would be bluish and cyanotic and His countenance would be
haggard and drawn. His reflexes would be depressed, His pulse pounding,
His respiration shallow and barely perceptible. His physical strength
would be at the point of prostration at best.
Pilate now succumbs to the manipulation by Jewish
leaders, and Jesus is condemned to death by crucifixion. The purple
robe is stripped away and Jesus is given the cross to bear to the place
of the skull, Golgotha. The rough removal of His garments would be
similar to the careless removal of a surgical dressing, causing the
wounds to bleed freely once more.
Atonement throughout the Old Testament, beginning
in the Garden of Eden where God made skins to cover Adam and Eve
following their sin, required the sacrifice of blood to provide the
covering. Blood atonement reoccurred as the theme through the temple
worship. And now in Jesus we have the profuse loss of blood as the
atonement for our sins.
It is interesting that the gospel writers simply
indicate that Jesus was taken to the place of the skull and there
crucified. We are left with no further information other than that
which can be deduced from the writings of Roman and Jewish historians.
This was such a common practice that no elaboration was necessary.
This act, originally practiced by the Phoenicians,
was perfected and embellished by the Romans. It was known in the
Palestinian area from approximately 200 B.C. until 300 A.D. when
it was abolished by Constantine.
Many of the crosses of Jesus’ day were shaped
like the Greek letter Tau. The upright post, the stipes, was permanently
fixed in the ground at the execution site, and the transverse beam,
carried by the condemned, would be joined to the stipes by a mortise
joint which locked into a self-retaining position. This expedited the
work of the executioner. The transverse beam weighed as much as l00
pounds. So if Jesus carried only that portion of the cross, or an
entire cross, it is no wonder that he fell.
As Jesus arrived at the execution site, the beam or
cross was thrown upon the ground and Jesus was roughly thrown backwards
onto it. His arms were extended to a pre-selected position. The
executioners would be careful not to draw his arms to a fully extended
position, for that would hasten His death.
Large triangular construction-grade nails then would
be used to secure Jesus to the cross. The Bible states that these were
driven through His hands. Many authorities believe that they were
driven through the lower portion of his forearm near the wrist. There
they would compress the median nerve trunks to the hand. These nerve
trunks then would impinge on the tendons of the palm causing the thumbs
to bend toward the palm.
It is interesting to note the Latin word for hand,
manus, also is used by such early writers as Virgil and Josephus to
designate the part of the wrist which joins the hand. If, indeed, the
nails were driven through His hands, as the Bible says, it is not clear
how this kept Him suspended, for a nail through the center palm would
tear through it.
Next, with the nails in place, Jesus would be literally
hoisted upright. His feet would be secured with a single nail--the left
foot extended slightly over the right with the knees flexed, and the nail
driven through the arches of the feet.
The Romans had perfected this brutal art to where the
length of time required for the condemned person to die could be computed
by how much flexion was left in the knees to expedite breathing. His
position on the cross forced a condemned person into a horribly cruel
exercise. In order to breathe and to relieve the pain in the arms as
the body sagged downward, he would have to push up on the nail in the
feet forcing an up and down slithering motion upon the cross until he
expired.
Dangling by the arms in this position would result in
severe muscular pain in the upper extremities. It also would cause a
progressive pain from joint separation. Continual hanging by the arms
would gradually result in paralyzation of the intercostal muscles of the
thoracic wall. As a result, air could be drawn into the lungs easily but
could not be exhaled. As carbon dioxide accumulated, progressive degrees
of asphyxiation would occur. Accumulated carbon dioxide and lactic acid
would create an intense muscular hyperexcitability and violent tetanic
muscle spasm throughout the body.
As the suffering sensation became overwhelming, the
condemned man would be compelled to push up on the nail in his feet to
gasp for breath. It is undoubtedly in this position that Jesus uttered
His famous seven last words. It is indeed amazing, as Jesus’ physical
body was ravaged by shock, exhaustion, incredible thirst, central
nervous system pain, stimulation beyond our comprehension, and gradual
asphyxiation, that no reviling or words of condemnation were uttered by
Him. Rather, He expressed concern for those about Him.
As the crucifixion continued, the chest wall would
further elongate and become grossly distorted. The stomach area would
sink. The altered hemodynamics of the thoracic cavity would result in
a progressive effusion of fluid into the pericardial sack, creating a
searing, sharp, pleuritic type pain with each heartbeat and each
attempted movement on the cross.
These events are accurately depicted in Psalm 22,
which was written hundreds of years before crucifixion was ever practiced:
"All they that see me laugh me to scorn: they shoot out the lip,
they shake the head...I am poured out like water, and all my bones are
out of joint; my heart is like wax; it is melted in the midst of my
bowels. My strength is dried up like a potshard; and my tongue cleaveth
to my jaws; and thou hast brought me into the dust of death. For dogs
have compassed me; the assemble of the wicked have enclosed me: they
pierced my hands and my feet. I may tell (count) all my bones: they
look and stare upon me. They part my garments among them, and cast
lots upon my vesture."
Jesus was placed upon the cross at about the sixth
hour. The crucifixion lasted at least through the ninth hour when the
darkness fell upon the land. Therefore, by inference, it was
approximately six hours before Jesus released his spirit.
Because it was the eve of the preparation for the
Passover, the Jews had asked that the bodies be removed from the crosses.
So the soldiers came to break the legs of the prisoners, to hasten their
death. But when they came to Jesus, they found that he already was dead,
so as John says (l9:33), " they brake not his legs...for these
things were done that the Scripture should be fulfilled, a bone of him
shall not be broken" (Psalm 34:20).
In death, Jesus was numbered with the transgressors,
yet provided a rich man’s burial. (This, too, was prophesied in the Old
Testament: Isaiah 53:9). So Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus, whose
lives had been touched by Jesus, tenderly provided for the funeral
arrangements in a near-by tomb.
The garden tomb area of the old city has a beautiful
representative tomb carved out of solid rock which fits the Protestant
tradition. One of the most moving experiences during a trip to the Holy
Land occurs as you walk into the empty inner chamber. There the guide
points out that other believers would say that the burial occurred in
the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, or over here, or over there. But the
exact place is not really important, he says. Whatever tomb contained
the body of our Lord Jesus, it is empty. What a dramatic testimony to
the power of our risen Lord Jesus Christ.
We need to keep considering Calvary, and the blood
that was spilled as payment in full for our sins. We need also to remember
the empty tomb and the testimony of hundreds of witnesses who saw Jesus
physically following His resurrection. Then we need to answer the same
haunting question that Pilate faced, "What shall I do with this man
called Jesus?"
Author Unknown
|