“Auto-Pilate” (John 18:33-38)
Intro: Our reading this morning tells of Jesus’ encounter with Pilate. It will be the day of his crucifixion. When Pilate asks Jesus “are you a king?” He couldn’t understand the answer Jesus gave us. ///
Rarely do I feel the need to offer a warning or an explanation in advance of my sermons, today I feel I should mention that I have a pilots license, I used to fly little cessnas and sailplanes. And I seem to think it is endlessly funny that “Pilate” the Roman governor, and “Pilot” the guy who flys a plane, sound the same.
(Skit) “Pilot to copilot, pilot to copilot come in please. Pilot to copilot, can you read me? Where is that twin brother of mine? I guess I’ll just have to fly this plane alone. I’m used to making all the decisions anyway. I am the emperor’s representative in the occupied territory of Judea. That’s where I’m going back to today. Now Judea is not the most desirable of assignments, I know but I run it. I’m governor. I plan to work my way up in time, so I want to do a good job. I need to be on site for the upcoming Jewish Passover, I’ve found it helps keep the peace if I’m there. Excuse me, I better check in with ground control. “Ground, this is Centurion 7913G ready for departure. Runway 13 right.” I’ll just get this off the ground and we’ll be on our way. I’m looking forward to getting back, my wife Claudia is in Judea now. She says I work too much and that I’m away too often. But whenever I go away, she leaves a light on. Although I worry about our relationship, the light she leaves on keeps getting smaller and smaller. First it was the front porch light, then the living room light. Now she just leaves the little one on the stove lit. The pilot light. Enough about that. Let’s talk flying. I love flying. You pull up, and you go up, you push down and you go down. Cause, effect. It’s all rational and understandable. There is a precision to it. That’s what I like, things that make sense. It’s easy to make decisions up here because you know what will happen.
There is no way to overstate the power and drama of our scripture, this moment as Jesus came before Pilate. Jesus knew what was going to happen, how the world was about to change, Pilate did not. Here are two men with some things in common, and one huge difference. They were both about the same age, both of them passionate, committed, opinionated about what they believed. They could be bullheaded at times, too. I imagine they were both quite intelligent. All these things one could suppose they shared in common. The thing that divided them so far apart, was how they thought.
Jesus was a Jew. Pilate was a Roman. And Pilate never understood the Jews. That must have drove him nuts. He was sent on assignment to Judea to be the over seer of the Roman occupation and he had to deal with such different culture. As a Roman he prized reason and logic, straight forward questions with straight forward answers. Cause and effect, rules and regulation. Just get the system set up and maintain it. Ask a question and expect an answer that is to the point.
The Jews however, would answer questions with stories, or worse yet even more questions. Think of how Jesus would often teach in parables and how wide open parables are to varying interpretations. The scribes brought Jesus before Pilate without really answering the question of “what has he done wrong” They bring him forward and say “kill him, he is blaspheming.”
Jesus is brought before Pilate, and Pilate wants to do what is appropriate and necessary. Although Jewish life was seen as having little or no value, he did not want to order an execution with no reason. Blasphemy was not a Roman crime.
The high priests then accuse Jesus of leading a revolt against the emperor in Rome. They said he claimed to be a King. Kings and emperors. Pilate knew about those. And if Jesus was leading a revolt that would be a crime. But this man did not act like a king or revolutionary. So Pilate asks Jesus directly. “Are you the king of the Jews? Jesus replies “my Kingdom is not of this world.”
He wasn’t saying that it was a kingdom off in the clouds somewhere, a kingdom literally “out of this world.” Jesus went on to elaborate the kinds of kingdoms that Pilate knew all about. Ones that depend on raw power, that are maintained by force.
If Jesus were an earthly king his followers would have fought to protect him. In fact, Peter had just tried to do that in the garden. But Jesus told him to put away his sword. The kingdom he belonged to was different.
In that circular, poetic style of his, Jesus was telling Pilate “The kingdom I belong to is not like the kingdoms of this world. It’s not even a kingdom as humans usually understand kingdoms.
As long as we think about the kingdom of God in a geographical of territorial way, as we think about the Roman Empire or the country of the United States, we’re always going to think of God’s kingdom as being somewhere or sometime.
But Jesus said, “my kingdom is not of this world. If it is not somewhere what can it be? Every king we know has a kingdom. Whether it is the king of England, the ring of rock and roll, even the lion king had a particular time and place that defined the kingdom.
Jesus was at the day of his death. Throughout his whole life he knew, he believed, that in him the kingdom had come. Jesus lived on earth, but he lived as no one else ever has, in God’s kingdom. Everything he did, and said and lived, he revealed the love, the influence and the grace of God.
Pilate asks “what is truth” Jesus lived the answer. God’s kingdom exists in people and God’s Kingdom is most visible in him. If we can stop thinking of the Kingdom as somewhere, or sometime, and start thinking of it as someone, a whole lot of what Jesus said will make a lot more sense. If we can get beyond our seeking logical reasoned answers, if we can turn off our “auto-pilots” that guide us though a cause and effect universe. Then we can begin to see the truth is not “an idea with merit.” Truth is felt, it is acted out and enacted in life. Truth in Hebrew means more literally “trustworthy” or “faithful” and it is a term more descriptive of a person than any intellectual proposition.
Pilate asks what is truth. Jesus’ word’s are describing who is truth. Earlier in the Gospel Jesus says “I am the way the truth and the life.”
In his institutes on religion, John Calvin reminds us “To see the kingdom of God is to inherit it… But those who identify the kingdom of God with heaven are mistaken; the kingdom means rather the spiritual life, which begins in this life by faith, and in which we grow daily as we progress in constant faith.
As we pushed back from Thanksgiving tables, let us be thankful not for all the things in our lives, but all the blessing, all the signs of the Kingdom that come to us through people, relationships. Let us be thankful for the truth that is not found out there, but within us. As God is in us. Amen.