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The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ by Anne Catherine Emmerich
CHAPTER XXII.
The Scourging of Jesus.
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THAT most weak and undecided of all judges, Pilate, had several times
repeated these dastardly words: I find no crime in him: I will chastise
him, therefore, and let him go;' to which the Jews had continued to
respond, Crucify him! Crucify him!' but he determined to adhere to his
resolution of not condemning our Lord to death, and ordered him to be
scourged according to the manner of the Romans. The guards were
therefore ordered to conduct him through the midst of the furious
multitude to the forum, which they did with the utmost brutality, at
the same time loading him with abuse, and striking him with their
staffs. The pillar where criminals were scourged stood to the north of
Pilate's palace, near the guard-house, and the executioners Soon
arrived, carrying whips, rods, and ropes, which they tossed down at its
base. They were six in number, dark, swarthy men, somewhat shorter than
Jesus; their chests were covered with a piece of leather, or with some
dirty stuff; their loins were girded, and their hairy, sinewy arms
bare. They were malefactors from the frontiers of Egypt, who had been
condemned for their crimes to hard labour, and were employed
principally in making canals, and in erecting public buildings, the
most criminal being selected to act as executioners in the Pr?torium.
These cruel men had many times scourged poor criminals to death at this
pillar. They resembled wild beasts or demons, and appeared to be half
drunk. They struck our Lord with their fists, and dragged him by the
cords with which he was pinioned, although he followed them without
offering the least resistance, and, finally, they barbarously knocked
him down against the pillar. This pillar, placed in the centre of the
court, stood alone, and did not serve to sustain any part of the
building; it was not very high, for a tall man could touch the summit
by stretching out his arm; there was a large iron ring at the top, and
both rings and hooks a little lower down. It is quite impossible to
describe the cruelty shown by these ruffians towards Jesus: they tore
off the mantle with which he had been clothed in derision at the court
of Herod, and almost threw him prostrate again.
Jesus trembled and shuddered as he stood before the pillar, and took
off his garments as quickly as he could, but his hands were bloody and
swollen. The only return he made when his brutal executioners struck
and abused him was, to pray for them in the most touching manner: he
turned his face once towards his Mother, who was standing overcome with
grief; this look quite unnerved her: she fainted, and would have
fallen, had not the holy women who were there supported her. Jesus put
his arms round the pillar, and when his hands were thus raised, the
archers fastened them to the iron ring which was at the top of the
pillar; they then dragged his arms to such a height that his feet,
which were tightly bound to the base of the pillar, scarcely touched
the ground. Thus was the Holy of holies violently stretched, without a
particle of clothing, on a pillar used for the punishment of the
greatest criminals; and then did two furious ruffians who were
thirsting for his blood begin in the most barbarous manner to scourge
his sacred body from head to foot. The whips or scourges which they
first made use of appeared to me to be made of a species of flexible
white wood, but perhaps they were composed of the sinews ot the ox, or
of strips of leather.
Our loving Lord, the Son of God, true God and true Man, writhed as a
worm under the blows of these barbarians; his mild but deep groans
might be heard from afar; they resounded through the air, forming a
kind of touching accompaniment to the hissing of the instruments of
torture. These groans resembled rather a touching cry of prayer and
supplication, than moans of anguish. The clamour of the Pharisees and
the people formed another species of accompaniment, which at times as a
deafening thunder-storm deadened and smothered these sacred and
mournful cries, and in their place might be heard the words, Put him to
death!' Crucify him!' Pilate continued parleying with the people, and
when he demanded silence in order to be able to speak, he was obliged
to proclaim his wishes to the clamorous assembly by the sound of a
trumpet, and at such moments you might again hear the noise of the
scourges, the moans of Jesus, the imprecations of the soldiers, and the
bleating of the Paschal lambs which were being washed in the Probatica
pool, at no great distance from the forum. There was something
peculiarly touching in the plaintive bleating of these lambs: they
alone appeared to unite their lamentations with the suffering moans of
our Lord.
The Jewish mob was gathered together at some distance from the pillar
at which the dreadful punishment was taking place, and Roman soldiers
were stationed in different parts round about. Many persons were
walking to and fro, some in silence, others speaking of Jesus in the
most insulting terms possible, and a few appearing touched, and I
thought I beheld rays of light issuing from our Lord and entering the
hearts of the latter. I saw groups of infamous, bold-looking young men,
who wore for the most part busying themselves near the watch-house in
preparing fresh scourges, while others went to seek branches of thorns.
Several of the servants of the High Priests went up to the brutal
executioners and gave them money; as also a large jug filled with a
strong bright red liquid, which quite inebriated them, and increased
their cruelty tenfold towards their innocent victim. The two ruffians
continued to strike our Lord with unremitting violence for a quarter of
an hour, and were then succeeded by two others. His body was entirely
covered with black, blue, and red marks; the blood was trickling down
on the ground, and yet the furious cries which issued from among the
assembled Jews showed that their cruelty was far from being satiated.
The night had been extremely cold, and the morning was dark and cloudy;
a little hail had fallen, which surprised every one, but towards twelve
o'clock the day became brighter, and the sun shone forth.
The two fresh executioners commenced scourging Jesus with the greatest
possible fury; they made use of a different kind of rod,--a species of
thorny stick, covered with knots and splinters. The blows from these
sticks tore his flesh to pieces; his blood spouted out so as to stain
their arms, and he groaned, prayed, and shuddered. At this moment, some
strangers mounted on camels passed through the forum; they stopped for
a moment, and were quite overcome with pity and horror at the scene
before them, upon which some of the bystanders explained the cause of
what they witnessed. Some of these travellers had been baptised by
John, and others had heard the sermon of Jesus on the mountain. The
noise and the tumult of the mob was even more deafening near the house
of Pilate.
Two fresh executioners took the places of the last mentioned, who were
beginning to flag; their scourges were composed of small chains, or
straps covered with iron hooks, which penetrated to the bone, and tore
off large pieces of flesh at every blow. What word, alas! could
describe this terrible--this heartrending scene!
The cruelty of these barbarians was nevertheless not yet satiated; they
untied Jesus, and again fastened him up with his back turned towards
the pillar. As he was totally unable to support himself in an upright
position, they passed cords round his waist, under his arms, and above
his knees, and having bound his hands tightly into the rings which wore
placed at the upper part of the pillar, they recommenced scourging him
with even greater fury than before; and one among them struck him
constantly on the face with a new rod. The body of our Lord was
perfectly torn to shreds,--it was but one wound. He looked at his
torturers with his eyes filled with blood, as if entreating mercy; but
their brutality appeared to increase, and his moans each moment became
more feeble.
The dreadful scourging had been continued without intermission for
three quarters of an hour, when a stranger of lowly birth, a relation
to Ct?siphon, the blind man whom Jesus had cured, rushed from amidst
the crowd, and approached the pillar with a knife shaped like a cutlass
in his hand. Cease!' he exclaimed, in an indignant tone; Cease! scourge
not this innocent man unto death!' The drunken miscreants, taken by
surprise, stopped short, while he quickly severed the cords which bound
Jesus to the pillar, and disappeared among the crowd. Jesus fell almost
without consciousness on the ground, which was bathed with his blood.
The executioners left him there, and rejoined their cruel companions,
who were amusing themselves in the guard-house with drinking, and
plaiting the crown of thorns.
Our Lord remained for a short time on the ground, at the foot of the
pillar, bathed in his own blood, and two or three bold-looking girls
came up to gratify their curiosity by looking at him. They gave a
glance, and were turning away in disgust, but at the moment the pain of
the wounds of Jesus was so intense that he raised his bleeding head and
looked at them. They retired quickly, and the soldiers and guards
laughed and made game of them.
During the time of the scourging of our Lord, I saw weeping angels
approach him many times; I likewise heard the prayers he constantly
addressed to his Father for the pardon of our sins--prayers which never
ceased during the whole time of the infliction of this cruel
punishment. Whilst he lay bathed in his blood I saw an angel present to
him a vase containing a bright-looking beverage which appeared to
reinvigorate him in a certain degree. The archers soon returned, and
after giving him some blows with their sticks, bade him rise and follow
them. He raised himself with the greatest difficulty, as his trembling
limbs could scarcely support the weight of his body; they did not give
him sufficient time to put on his clothes, but threw his upper garment
over his naked shoulders and led him from the pillar to the
guard-house, where he wiped the blood which trickled down his face with
a corner of his garment. When he passed before the benches on which the
High Priests were seated, they cried out, Put him to death! Crucify
him! crucify him!' and then turned away disdainfully. The executioners
led him into the interior of the guard-house, which was filled with
slaves, archers, hodmen, and the very dregs of the people, but there
were no soldiers.
The great excitement among the populace alarmed Pilate so much, that he
sent to the fortress of Antonia for a reinforcement of Roman soldiers,
and posted these well-disciplined troops round the guard-house; they
were permitted to talk and to deride Jesus in every possible way, but
were forbidden to quit their ranks. These soldiers, whom Pilate had
sent for to intimidate the mob, numbered about a thousand.
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