- Pilate was faced with a choice that in some ways is very similar to ours, even if we are a Christian.
Sermon Outline - What we can learn about ourselves from Pilate
Goal:
To read the story of Pilate closely
and see how directly relevant it is to us
Plan for today
- The Storyline: Seven Conversations
- Walking with Pilate through the story
- How do we respond to a similar challenge to Pilate’s
Structure of John
1–12 ”Book of Signs” |
13–21 ”Book of Glory” |
John 13–21 “Book of Glory”
13 A meal with the disciples
14–17 New Teaching from Jesus to the disciples |
18–20 Arrest Crucifixion Resurrection |
21 A meal with the disciples
Last time: John 18:1–27
- Betrayed, Arrested, Abandoned, Denied and Abused
- Can’t fail to remind us of injustice and abuse in the world today
- Yet we first have to hear what the passage is telling us on it’s own terms
- Then we can ask what it says about world events
- The disciples should have stood up against the injustice done to Jesus, even if it had cost them their lives.
- We should not be passive in the face of injustice
Takeaway last time
- Appreciate what it was like for Jesus to love at this moment
- The core of following Jesus is to show this kind of love
- Get into a quiet place and ask Jesus what it was like for him at this point
- Ask him to bring to your mind how his love could flow out of you in your life situation right now
- Take a step in faith, and show love
1. The Storyline: Seven Conversations
1. Storyline: Seven Conversations
- Pilate comes out and talks to the Jewish leaders
- Pilate goes in and questions Jesus
- Pilate comes out and talks to the Jewish leaders
- Jesus is flogged and mocked by soldiers
- Pilate comes out and talks to the Jewish leaders
- Pilate goes in and questions Jesus
- Pilate comes out and talks to the Jewish leaders
The Converstaions
- Leaders demand Jesus’ execution.
- Pilate questions Jesus about being a king
- Pilate comes out and says “I find no fault”
- Jesus is flogged and mocked by soldiers
- Pilate comes out and says “I find no fault”
- Pilate questions Jesus about being God
- Leaders granted Jesus’ execution.
Pilate’s four release attempts
- Why are you bothering me? Judge him yourself!
- I can free him or Barabbas?
- I have flogged humiliated him. How weak and pathetic he is—not a threat!
- Why would you want your “king” crucified?
2. Walking with Pilate through the story
Note colour coding
- Pilate: Yellow
- Jesus: Green
- Jewish leaders: Red
- Movement in/out: Inverted
- Link to John 18:28–19:16
3. How do we respond to a similar challenge to Pilate’s
What it was like for Jesus?
- Betrayed, abandoned, denied and abused by the very people he was going to lay down his life for
- Sometimes it is far worse to know things before they happen
- Now they were trying to manipulate the government to commit brutal injustice & murder
- But Jesus even offers the truth to Pilate
My main thesis
- By taking us in and out seven times with Pilate,
the passage is forcing us to walk in Pilate’s shoes
- He is caught between two forces, two choices
- The passage makes us to think about the pressures in our own lives when making choices
Takeaway
- There is a risk in standing with Jesus
- It might be deciding to follow Jesus. Is he truth?
- It might be simply identifying yourself as a Christian—will people reject you, or mock you?
- Is Jesus really your King, Is Jesus really your Truth?
- What do you want me to be doing, right now Jesus?
Updated on 2020-06-14 by Andrew Fountain