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The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ by Anne Catherine Emmerich
CHAPTER LXV.
The Relation which was given by the Sentinels who were placed around the Sepulchre.
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CASSIUS hastened to the house of Pilate about an hour after the
Resurrection, in order to give him an account of the stupendous events
which had taken place. He was not yet risen, but Cassius was allowed to
enter his bedroom. He related all that had happened, and expressed his
feelings in the most forcible language. He described how the rock had
been rent, and how an angel had descended from Heaven and pushed aside
the stone; he also spoke of the empty winding-sheet, and added that
most certainly Jesus was the Messiah, the Son of God, and that he was
truly risen. Pilate listened to this account; he trembled and quivered
with terror, but concealed his agitation to the best of his power, and
answered Cassius in these words: Thou art exceedingly superstitious; it
was very foolish to go to the Galil?an's tomb; his gods took advantage
of thy weakness, and displayed all these ridiculous visions to alarm
thee. I recommend thee to keep silence, and not recount such silly
tales to the priests, for thou wouldst got the worst of it from them.'
He pretended to believe that the body of Jesus had been carried away by
his disciples, and that the sentinels, who had been bribed, and had
fallen asleep, or perhaps been deceived by witchcraft, had fabricated
these accounts in order to justify their conduct. When Pilate had said
all he could on the subject, Cassius left him, and he went to offer
sacrifice to his gods.
The four soldiers who had guarded the tomb arrived shortly after at
Pilate's palace, and began to tell him all that he had already heard
from Cassius; but he would listen to nothing more, and sent them to
Caiphas. The rest of the guards were assembled in a large court near
the Temple which was filled with aged Jews, who, after some previous
consultation, took the soldiers on one side, and by dint of bribes and
threats endeavoured to persuade them to say that they fell asleep, and
that while they were asleep the disciples came and carried away the
body of our Lord. The soldiers, however, demurred, because the
statement which their comrades were gone to make to Pilate would
contradict any account which they could now fabricate, but the
Pharisees promised to arrange everything with the governor. Whilst they
were still disputing, the four guards returned from their interview
with Pilate, and the Pharisees endeavoured to persuade them to conceal
the truth; but this they refused to do, and declared firmly that they
would not vary their first statement in the smallest degree. The
miraculous deliverance of Joseph of Arimathea from prison was become
public, and when the Pharisees accused the soldiers of having allowed
the Apostles to carry off the body of Jesus, and threatened them with
the infliction of the most severe punishment if they did not produce
the body, they replied, that it would be as utterly impossible for them
to produce the body of Jesus, as it was for the soldiers who had charge
of Joseph of Arimathea to bring him back into his prison again. They
spoke with the greatest firmness and courage promises and menaces were
equally ineffectual. They declared that they would speak the truth and
nothing but the truth; that the sentence of death which had been passed
upon Jesus was both unjust and iniquitous; and that the crime which was
perpetrated in putting him to death was the sole cause of the
interruption in the Paschal solemnity. The Pharisees, being perfectly
furious, caused the four soldiers to be arrested and thrown into
prison, and the others, who had accepted the bribes they offered, then
affirmed that the body of Jesus had been carried off by the disciples
while they slept; and the Pharisees, Sadducees, and Herodians
endeavoured to disseminate this lie to the utmost of their power, not
only in the synagogue but also among the people; and they accompanied
this false statement by the most slanderous lies concerning Jesus.
All these precautions, however, availed but little, for, after the
Resurrection, many persons who had been long dead arose from their
graves, and appeared to those among their descendants who were not
sufficiently hardened to be impervious to grace, and exhorted them to
be converted. These dead persons were likewise seen by many of the
disciples, who, overcome with terror, and shaken in faith, had fled
into the country. They both exhorted and encouraged them to return, and
restored their drooping courage. The resurrection of these dead persons
did not in the slightest degree resemble the Resurrection of Jesus. He
arose with a glorified body, which was no longer susceptible of either
corruption or death, and ascended into heaven with this glorified body
in the sight of all his disciples; but the dead bodies of which we
spoke above were motionless corpses, and the souls which once inhabited
them were only allowed to enter and reanimate them for a time, and
after performing the mission given them, the souls again quitted these
bodies, which returned to their original state in the bowels of the
earth, where they will remain until the resurrection at the day of
judgment. Neither could their return to life be compared to the raising
of Lazarus from the dead; for he really returned to a new life, and
died a second time.
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