Throughout Jesus’ ministry on Earth, he told people he was the Son of God. He demonstrated it with his words and his actions. He forgave sins and healed disease. He taught with authority and drove out demons. And yet, many didn’t believe.
Ironically, one of the most profound declarations of who Jesus was didn’t come from Jesus. It came from Pontius Pilate – the Roman governor of Judea who would preside over Jesus’ trial and hand him over to be crucified.
The moment comes in John 19:5 when Pilate presents Jesus to the raging crowd with the words, “Behold the man.”
The crucifixion story confronts us with the humanity of Christ – his vulnerability, his anguish, his willingness to endure suffering for the sake of love. (Kevin Ferris/Fox News)
This statement may seem insignificant, but it reflects a paradox at the heart of Christianity – a paradox that is both deeply human and divinely transcendent.
With these words, Pilate unwittingly points to the essence of Christ’s mission and the central mystery of the Christian faith. For in Jesus we behold not just a man, but the incarnate Son of God, who willingly embraced suffering and death for the redemption of humanity.
For centuries, this moment has captured the imaginations of artists all over the world, resulting in thousands of works that give us unique insight into the suffering of Jesus during his trial and crucifixion. Each is a testament to the enduring power of art to capture the profound truths of the Gospel narrative, challenging us to engage the heart together with the mind.
This is the inspiration behind the Museum of the Bible’s exhibit “Ecce Homo: Behold the Man.” The exhibit’s 21 pieces – including a piece by Salvador Dalí – offer a different artist’s interpretation of the concept of suffering.
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Some elegant and beautiful, others surreal and haunting, each painting causes us to imagine the deeper spiritual realities behind what Christ went through on Good Friday. Or, in the words of hymn writer Stuart Townsend, to “Behold the man upon the cross, my sin upon his shoulders.”
The crucifixion story confronts us with the humanity of Christ – his vulnerability, his anguish, his willingness to endure suffering for the sake of love. These are profoundly human experiences and emotions, things all of us are familiar with.That’s why Isaiah prophesied that Jesus would be “a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief.”
Good Friday, however, isn’t only about Jesus. We have a part to play.
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Isaiah goes on to say why Jesus suffered: “Surely he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows.”
Like our exhibit’s 21 artists who paint to find a reflection of ourselves in Jesus, Isaiah leads us to see ourselves in the story. He is reminding us that Christ didn’t go to the cross for himself – he went for us.
That is Paul’s message to believers in the book of Romans when he writes, “But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” Jesus knew we couldn’t come to him, so in the incarnation, he came down to us even though he knew it would cost him his life.
On Good Friday, we behold the man – we relate to Jesus’ humanness.
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But if that was the whole story, we’d have no reason to call Good Friday good. If Jesus was only human, we’d have no cause to hope because he would just be another of death’s victims. But it isn’t the whole story. Three days later, Christ did something else for us: He rose from the grave.
On Easter, we behold the risen man – we stand in awe of Christ’s divinity.
Christ’s divine nature accomplished that which human nature by itself cannot; it defied death. That’s why Easter is the day of triumph.
The resurrection demonstrated beyond any doubt that Jesus was who he said he was: the Son of God. But it did something else as well. It fulfilled God’s promise of redemption.
It is the contrast between Good Friday and Easter Sunday that helps us grasp the weight and wonder of Christ’s passion. We will truly understand the triumph and glory of the resurrection when we have also walked with Christ through the depths of His suffering, only when we “behold the man.”
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Harry Hargrave is CEO of Museum of the Bible.