A Tale of Trial
The Narrative Lectionary advances us rather quickly in John’s gospel to the last day of his life, in which he stands trial before the authorities of his world, both Jewish and Roman. As the gospel of John provides us with more details of Jesus’ trial than any other gospel, it affords us plenty of space to ponder not only Jesus’ trial, but also the trials of our own faith.
If you think about it, Jesus’ ministry begins and ends with a trial. First, there are the temptations—or the trial—by Satan in the wilderness, in which Satan invites Jesus to prove himself. He taunts Jesus, “If you are the son of God,” prove it: secure what you need all by yourself (supernaturally); make a spectacle of your greatness; take the power which you deserve. There is a sense in which Jesus’ final trial is no different. Yes, it is conducted by human players, but through them the spirit of Satan is again inviting Jesus to prove himself. How tempting it must be to turn the tables on his antagonists, as they mock him and beat him and heap shame on him. In a sense, this final trial taunts him with the same gibe: “If you really are the son of God…prove it.”
As we will see, however, Jesus does not stand alone in his trial. His followers undergo a trial of their own. Today as we witness Peter’s trial, I invite us to contemplate how we might stand a similar trial in our world today.
Two Different Peters?
Right before today’s passage, Peter attempts to defend Jesus against arrest by cutting off the ear of the high priest’s slave. It is remarkable that Peter is not himself arrested. Most likely he escapes seizure because Jesus intervenes, commanding him to drop his sword. In Luke’s gospel, Jesus goes a step further and heals the slave, proving to the soldiers that his movement is not toward violence but toward healing.
In any case, it is worth remembering that before Peter denies Jesus, he defends him. These two events seem to stand in stark contrast to one another. Courageous Peter versus cowardly Peter. I will suggest, however, that Peter’s defense of Jesus and his denial of Jesus are two sides of the same coin. They are not in contradiction but in harmony.
“Possessed by the Crowd”
15 Simon Peter and another disciple followed Jesus. Since that disciple was known to the high priest, he went with Jesus into the courtyard of the high priest, 16 but Peter was standing outside at the gate. So the other disciple, who was known to the high priest, went out, spoke to the woman who guarded the gate, and brought Peter in. 17 The woman said to Peter, “You are not also one of this man’s disciples, are you?” He said, “I am not.” 18 Now the slaves and the police had made a charcoal fire because it was cold, and they were standing around it and warming themselves. Peter also was standing with them and warming himself.
Fifteen years ago, I left Richmond to go study at the University of Sheffield in England. I visited several of the neighborhood churches and settled at St. Mark’s, an Anglican church with a beautiful cathedral (reconstructed after the original was destroyed in the Blitz in WWII) and a small but vibrant student ministry. I quickly fell in love with the thoughtful and poetic liturgy and the music, which often featured an authentic pipe organ. But there were some growing pains. The first few Sundays, I was overwhelmed with a host of ritual gestures that everyone but me seemed to know. There was a lot of unannounced standing up and sitting down and kneeling—it felt a little bit like church Hokie Pokie! And people would do some curtsy-like thing and make the sign of the cross when they left their pew; and they would bow their head when they received communion and say something under their breath (I later discovered they were just saying “Amen”).
Within a couple of months, though, I was doing it all myself. (Well, almost all of it—I never quite got the hang of that curtsy-like sign-of-the-cross gesture.) Thinking back on the experience now, I recognize in my behavior a strong and simple desire: to belong, to be accepted, to not be the odd person out. And so I quickly learned how to do what everyone else was doing.
When I read today’s scripture, I am particularly intrigued by the seemingly superfluous comment about the slaves and police warming themselves by the charcoal fire. Why do we need to know what they are doing? But then John tells us, “Peter also was standing with them and warming himself.” Again, if the only detail John wants to communicate is that it was cold, then this aside seems completely unnecessary. But perhaps John wants to communicate more than the temperature. Perhaps John is showing us a very basic principle of our humanity: the desire to belong, to be accepted, to not be the odd person out. Peter does what everyone else is doing. Peter makes himself one with the crowd.
Of course, all of this happens right after Peter has denied Jesus for the first time. When the woman who guards the gate—which is to say, the woman who is a gatekeeper, both literally, but also figuratively, for she will determine whether Peter is one of “us” or one of “them”—when she interrogates Peter about his allegiance to Jesus, she asks in a negative way: “You’re not one of his disciples, are you?” A negative question invites a negative response. She’s opening the door, so to speak, so that Peter can discreetly step in, so that he can easily join the crowd.
I would suggest that the world operates in a similar manner today. We ourselves are regularly interrogated, “You don’t really follow that radical Jesus, do you?” Of course, people rarely say these words. In part because the world has so thoroughly domesticated Jesus that they no longer associate him with the countercultural kingdom to which he calls us. But every time we are in a crowd that is vilifying and demonizing another person, we are being invited to warm ourselves by the fire with everyone else, while Jesus stands in the cold apart from the crowd, weathering his interrogation with a nonjudgmental heart. Every time we are in a crowd that is clamoring for revenge, for retribution, usually under the holy name of “justice,” we are being invited to warm ourselves by the fire with everyone else, while Jesus stands in the cold apart from the crowd, weathering his interrogation with forgiveness.
Pastor Brian Zahnd shares very vulnerably from his own experience right after 9/11. He insists that that event and others like it remain “a test for the American church.” “Will we succumb,” he asks, “to the temptation of scapegoating? Will the church scapegoat Muslims in the twenty-first century as the church scapegoated Jews in previous centuries? For me it was a personal test of my commitment to the Jesus way of responding to violence and enemies. I failed the test. Miserably.” He then explains what he means: “On that strange and confusing night, I failed in my role as a Christian pastor. I prayed [at a city-wide vigil] a prayer based on anger and vengeance. I prayed a prayer to sanction US military retaliation. I prayed a war prayer. Oh, I’m sure I prayed in appropriate ways as well—for the rescue workers, for the missing, for their families, for comfort from above, etc. But for the most part, my prayer was a petition for God to take our side in the inevitable war to come. Yes, it was a war prayer. And I could feel how my prayer energized the crowd. The crowd certainly did not think I had failed. The crowd thought I had passionately expressed to God the very thing they were feeling. Many in the crowd would have described my prayer as ‘anointed.’ I don’t presume every person present shared that sentiment, but there is no doubt that the crowd was with me. The crowd wanted a war prayer, and that’s what I prayed. I gave the crowd what it wanted. I wish I had done better. I wish my prayer had been more of a broken lament. I wish my prayer had been a tearful cry for mercy. I wish my prayer had been an honest wrestling with Jesus’s call to love our enemies … even if it had only been to express how impossible it seemed at that moment. But I didn’t do those things. I prayed a war prayer.”[1]
Philosopher and theologian Rene Girard, perhaps one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th centuries, comments that Peter is not a “special case” in today’s story. He is all of us.
“When you are in a crowd,” Girard says, “you become literally possessed by the crowd.” You do what the crowd does. As I did in that Sheffield cathedral. As Brian Zahnd did at that 9/11 prayer vigil. As Peter did around that fire.
In the Garden as in
the Courtyard:
Peter Follows the Crowd
19 Then the high priest questioned Jesus about his disciples and about his teaching. 20 Jesus answered, “I have spoken openly to the world; I have always taught in synagogues and in the temple, where all the Jews come together. I have said nothing in secret. 21 Why do you ask me? Ask those who heard what I said to them; they know what I said.” 22 When he had said this, one of the police standing nearby struck Jesus on the face, saying, “Is that how you answer the high priest?” 23 Jesus answered, “If I have spoken wrongly, testify to the wrong. But if I have spoken rightly, why do you strike me?” 24 Then Annas sent him bound to Caiaphas the high priest.
In this first glimpse into Jesus’ trial, we see how the world reacts to its enemies. One of the police strike Jesus on the face for what is considered an antagonistic response. We might remember what Peter did in the garden not long before this scene, striking the ear of the high priest’s slave. The similarity between what Peter did and what the police do to Jesus, hints at the truth about Peter’s behavior. As I suggested earlier, it is not necessarily that Peter was first courageous and then a coward. Rather, both in the garden and also in the courtyard, Peter follows the crowd. In both garden and courtyard, he does what the world does, rather than what his Lord does. When the world comes ready to fight, he fights (until his Lord disarms him). When the world quietly rejects his Lord, he rejects him too.
Jesus Calls Him Peter
25 Now Simon Peter was standing and warming himself. They asked him, “You are not also one of his disciples, are you?” He denied it and said, “I am not.” 26 One of the slaves of the high priest, a relative of the man whose ear Peter had cut off, asked, “Did I not see you in the garden with him?” 27 Again Peter denied it, and at that moment the cock crowed.
Again, negative questions. “You don’t really follow this guy, do you?” Again, an easy capitulation to the crowd. Peter quietly denies his Lord. The cock’s crowing—which Jesus had earlier predicted would happen when Peter denied him—acts almost like an alarm clock, waking Peter up to what has just happened. This simple sign suggests that previously Peter is unaware of what is happening. The crowd has a hypnotic effect. We can quietly fall asleep to our values, to our commitments, to the point that we don’t even realize we’re falling away from our Lord as we deny him. As we join the world in its judgment of others, or its cries for vengeance, or its demonizing and scapegoating of the enemy.
The good news is perhaps difficult to see in this passage alone. If Peter is indeed all of us, are we to leave here today in quiet resignation, in a fatalistic acceptance that we will capitulate whenever we encounter the crowd? Today’s passage is one of those where the best I can offer is, “Stay tuned…” The story does not end here. Peter’s shortcoming does not define him. If nothing else, we might find the good news in his name. Peter, remember, is the name that Jesus gives to Simon. Jesus knows that this man will one day deny him and desert him, and even so he calls him Peter. It is as though, by giving Simon the name Peter, Jesus stubbornly resists what Satan will try to tell Peter after today’s episode. That he is weak, spineless, shifting sand, an unsteady foundation. But Jesus says, no, despite everything, Peter is a rock. A solid foundation. A good person and child of God.
I think he says the same of us. All of us.
Prayer
Who believes in us
Even when we fall short,
Grant us sober hearts
To beware the power of the crowd
And the temptations to stray
From your way of love and forgiveness.
…
Ground us in the assurance
That we are God’s good and beloved children,
Created to live as you lived.
Amen.
[1] Brian Zahnd, A Farewell to Mars: An Evangelical Pastor’s Journey Toward the Biblical Gospel of Peace (Colorado Springs: David Cook, 2014), chapter 4, “It’s Hard to Believe in Jesus.”