This is day five of our thirteen days spent reading The Cross He Bore by Frederick Leahy. Today’s text is from Matthew 26:62,63: “The high priest stood up and said, ‘Have you no answer to make? What is it that these men testify against you?’ But Jesus remained silent.”
What stood out to me in Leahy’s description of this event in the life of Jesus was that his silence was not merely part of his passive obedience but was active obedience to the Father. I had never thought of it in this way—as a deed.
*****
Christ remained silent about the hidden things. He left his judges with the Word of God and there lay their great responsibility. They must busy themselves with the things that had been revealed. Christ will take his riddle with him to the grave. The meaning will become apparent in due course. He will not cast his pearls before swine, rather he will leave it to his judges to execute their high office before God. In this he did justice to them and at the same time condemned them.
To have explained the riddle to the Sanhedrin would not have been to the glory of God or for the good of Christ’s judges. Imagine what would have happened had he said, “Bury me and within three days I will rise again.” He would have been regarded as an ostentatious and supernatural escapologist! He would have relieved the Sanhedrin of its moral responsibility. The dawn of the New Testament Sabbath would have become the occasion for a gathering of gawping spectators hoping to see the latest wonder. What a mockery of predestination that would have been! And what a windfall for Satan! Christ the redeemer reduced to a mere super-fakir, not lying on a bad of nails or walking on hot coals, but rising from the grave!
If Christ had explained his riddle that day, it would have been a most untimely word. That he would never do. He would not prostitute his God-given mission. All his miracles, including his resurrection, were essentially part of his kingdom and of his redeeming work. They were totally different from those related in the Apocryphal Gospels, as when it is written that the boy Jesus making clay birds with other children made his birds fly! But Christ was no magician; he had neither need nor place for stunts.
All too often Christ’s silence has been given a dangerous one-sidedness, as his passive obedience is stressed almost, if not altogether, to the exclusion of his active obedience. Christ’s silence was deliberate, emphatic and authoritative; it was his deed. The passivity of his suffering was real, but so was the activity of his obedience. Led as a lamb to the slaughter and like a sheep before the shearers, he was active right up to and on the cross. He went as a king to die.





Comments (11) »
1. Dan H.
April 2, 2009
12:16 PM
Tim,
Contrast Christ’s obedient silence against what He had just said to His disciples hours before as He was arrested: Matthew 26:53 (NIV) 53Do you think I cannot call on my Father, and he will at once put at my disposal more than twelve legions of angels?
I too had never thought of Jesus’ silence as being a deed or a work of obedience. In my mind, throughout the New Testament, when He would say something, His words had infinite purpose and weight. But now, when I think of the pure and unlimited Power that was standing in the presence of so-called godly men, I am in awe that He could resist His human side and be silent when it was silence that the Father desired. Christ was fully obedient to the Father in every way, both in His words, and in His silence.
In Christ,
Dan…
2. Renee Teate
April 2, 2009
12:48 PM
In the last paragraph, is this statement accurate?
“The passivity of his suffering was real, but so was the activity of his disobedience.”
the activity of his disobedience,,,????
3. David Porter
April 2, 2009
4:21 PM
Although we can’t see him, Satan is in the room this day. He is once again, perhaps, tempting Christ.
Although this statement sounds counter-intuitive, Satan does not want Christ to go to the Cross. Our Savior, dying on the Cross, and experiencing God’s wrath, on our behalf, seals his demise.
Christ certainly could have spoken in his own defense. But here, we see our Savior with his will set on obedience to the Father, and his eminent death on the Cross.
http://tinyurl.com/cng6eq
4. David Porter
April 2, 2009
4:23 PM
seals his demise (above) = Satan’s demise.
5. jmark (Mark Loughridge)
April 2, 2009
5:25 PM
Renee
Its a typo from Tim - should read “His obedience”
6. Lisa notes...
April 2, 2009
7:09 PM
“By a single word Christ might have freed himself from his enemies. But our silent Priest continued majestically to his death. O blessed silence that lay at the heart of our redemption!”
7. Dan H.
April 2, 2009
9:35 PM
Amen Lisa… Amen
I noticed the possible logic issue and considered that it was the Sanhedrin that was being disobeyed by His silence… Perhaps jmark knows better…
Thanks Tim, for a very thought provoking post (again…).
Dan…
8. jmark
April 3, 2009
3:08 AM
I’m only looking at my edition of the book - mine says “obedience” - does your edition say disobedience? If it says disobedience then it must refer to his refusal to obey the Sanhedrin.
9. Dan H.
April 3, 2009
11:37 AM
jmark,
My apologies. I’m not able to read the book at this time and I was forgetting that Tim was transcribing from the book manually… A typo it is….
Dan…
10. Renee Teate
April 3, 2009
12:23 PM
Thank you. This particular subject has been prominent in my mind as of late. The merciful Father is reminding me that Jesus “spoke not a word” in His own defense. As I am living under persecution in my own home with an unsaved husband, it is extremely hard to be silent in these circumstances. When I know he is lying and misleading and being cruel in all my weakest spots it is painful. Even knowing it is being done on purpose and by no fault of his own because he is a child of Satan does not help in the heat of the moment. Remembering and learning more of my Lord’s obedience to the Father in His silence helps. May I be more like Christ today that I was yesterday.
11. Dan H.
April 6, 2009
8:41 AM
Renee,
I too am in an unequally yoked marriage. I’ll pray for you and your husband.
In Christ,
Dan…