When God’s People Chose Caesar
It’s one of those lines that ought to make you wince a little if you’re paying attention. There in the courtyard, sometime around dawn on that Passover Friday, the chief priests look a Roman governor in the eye and say, “We have no king but Caesar.” That’s not just political maneuvering. That’s theological collapse in a single sentence. Israel, the nation called out in Exodus, the people who sang about Yahweh as their King in the Psalms, now disclaim Him publicly to secure a death sentence. If you slow down and let that land, it’s almost surreal. And then it gets worse. Because the same crowd that rejects their true King also prefers a murderer in His place. Barabbas. A rebel, likely involved in insurrection and bloodshed. They want him released instead of Jesus. There’s a kind of dark irony there that’s easy to miss. Rome feared insurrectionists. The priests feared Rome. So to preserve their fragile arrangement with Caesar, they choose the very kind of man Rome supposedly despised. It...