Pilate seeks tenaciously to avoid the pronunciation of a verdict. Even at the end, when he yields to the tumultuous insistence of the Jews, the prefect does not, as we will see, pronounce a sentence.
—Giorgio AgambenPilate gave sentence.
—Luke 23:24Introduction
With its nineteen numbered sections and seven “glosses,” all of which only fill some sixty pages, Giorgio Agamben's Pilate and Jesus is an opuscule. Nor would the Italian philosopher object to this diminutive. In a candid piece he wrote for La Stampa after Pilato e Gesú appeared,Footnote 1 Agamben called it a libretto—which is to say, not a libro—and admitted to having written it in several “frenetic months.”Footnote 2 The haste shows. Nevertheless, this libretto makes a dense and provocative addition to Agamben's influential oeuvre.
Agamben's method in Pilate and Jesus is characteristically philological or, more loosely, “genealogical” and “archaeological” (à la Friedrich Nietzsche and Michel Foucault).Footnote 3 In a series of books, he has attempted to theorize contemporary legal, political, and economic complexes on the basis of legal, philosophical, and ritual complexes that link antiquity to the present.Footnote 4 Or as Agamben expressed it in his fullest statement on method, The Signature of All Things:
My investigations … have an archaeological character, and the phenomena with which they deal unfold across time and therefore require an attention to documents and diachrony that cannot but follow the laws of historical philology. Nevertheless … [they seek to make] the inquirer's present intelligible, as much as the past.Footnote 5
In Pilate and Jesus, one of the most recent displays of Agamben's method,Footnote 6 the appearance of Jesus before Pontius Pilate becomes “an allegory of our time.”Footnote 7 But what could this mean?
Unlike the heterodox Marxist philosopher Ernst Bloch, who wrote in 1916 that “our modern age is burdensome” because “Easter and Pentecost seem like one long Good Friday, like merely the insubstantial knowledge that the Redeemer has died”;Footnote 8 Agamben now writes, a hundred years on, that modernity is unfurling “in a state of permanent crisis” because Pontius Pilate “has not handed down a legitimate judgment.”Footnote 9 Our period is not afflicted by a post-Christian malaise, brought on by the conviction that the Redeemer is dead—that is, is not resurrected. Rather, late modernity is traumatized by a latent sense that the Redeemer has died—and was never sentenced.
This is Agamben's thesis in Pilate and Jesus: Pilate never formally, pro tribunali, condemned Jesus.Footnote 10 “The traditional interpretation of Jesus's trial … must be revised,” he urges, because “there has not been any judgment in a technical sense.”Footnote 11 Pilate's non-judgment is the original truth of Jesus's death which has been “covered over and neutralized by tradition.”Footnote 12
Obviously, this is a juridical thesis. And one of its consequences, according to Agamben, is that the trial of Jesus was not a valid trial according to Roman law, but rather the “semblance of a trial.”Footnote 13 Agamben argues this on the grounds that none of the evangelists report “the pronouncement of a clear sentence of conviction.”Footnote 14 Perhaps, on this account, the Roman prefect's infamous hand-washing could be regarded less as hypocritical, than as properly symbolic.Footnote 15 Pilate could wash his hands of Jesus because he would never condemn Jesus.
On the face of it, this thesis is not implausible. In his Embassy to Gaius, Philo of Alexandria complains that Pilate frequently ordered “extrajudicial killings,”Footnote 16 and had acquired a reputation for “supremely grievous cruelty.”Footnote 17 On the basis of this non-Christian testimony, it could even be predicted that Pilate would have crucified Jesus without a trial—or, as Agamben prefers, after “a trial without a judgment” (un processo senza giudizio).Footnote 18
And if Agamben's juridical thesis is correct, the theological consequences could prove to be fundamental, since according to Agamben, “a trial without judgment” is “not properly a trial”Footnote 19 ; and since, according to Dante's Monarchy (a work that Agamben treats as emblematic of Christian political theology),Footnote 20 a capital sentence that is not imposed by a judge is not a “punishment” (punitio) at all, but rather an “injury” (iniuria).Footnote 21 This would seem to accord with the most general definition of “injury” in the Corpus Iuris Civilis as “whatever is not done by right.”Footnote 22
But what would it mean if Jesus's death had no legal status? If Jesus had not been condemned to the “ultimate punishment” by a Roman prefect but merely killed hors la loi with the prefect's connivance? According to Dante, at least, the theological significance of this irregularity would be catastrophic. He reasons that if “Adam's sin was not punished in Christ”—that is, by a penalty exacted after a solemnly concluded Roman trial—all of humankind “would still be ‘the children of wrath.’”Footnote 23 And what would it mean for us still, if Jesus's trial had reached no formal conclusion? That is to say, if—as Agamben claims—the trial of Jesus is, “in a certain way … always under way”?Footnote 24
These questions, posed by Agamben, are genuinely interesting. His use of sources in posing and resolving them, however, is at times high-handed, and at others—to all appearances—underhanded. Since Agamben takes “attention to documents” as a methodological ground rule; professes to “follow the laws of historical philology”;Footnote 25 and undertakes in Pilate and Jesus to “carefully evaluate every detail of the chronicle of [Jesus's] confrontation [with Pilate],”Footnote 26 this sort of philological indiscipline can only drastically undermine his conclusions.
Agamben's legal-philosophical writings have seen a decade or so of intensely politicized and often exotic appropriation. They have occasionally been the object of polemics. Yet they have least frequently met with rigorous criticism on their own terms. It is, thus, precisely a philological critique of the philological arguments made in Pilate and Jesus that I offer in this article. The result is a demonstration that Pilate did sentence Jesus to death on a Roman cross.
The Structure of Agamben's Text
On the surface, Agamben's text has no structure—apart from its division into nineteen numbered (but untitled) sections, and seven unnumbered (and untitled) sections. The seven unnumbered sections of the text are best treated as their rubric suggests: they are Agamben's “glosses.” The reader can use them to clarify or amplify the meaning of his core, numbered sections.
But while Agamben's numbered sections carry no titles and exhibit no obvious order, I suggest that they can nevertheless be distributed into five definite—if not always discrete—groupings:
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creedal (§§1–2)
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apocryphal (§§3–5)
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exegetical (§§6–9, 13–14)
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theological (§§10–12)
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political (§§15–19)
As these groupings do not contribute equally to the interpretive base or argumentive arc of Pilate and Jesus, in my discussion I therefore treat them accordingly.
In Agamben's introductory creedal grouping, I identify a pair of clear implications regarding Pontius Pilate's place in the Creed—neither of which holds up under close inspection. In the apocryphal grouping that follows, we will see that Agamben makes substantial use of only a single passage in a single extra-canonical text—a fourth-century Acts of Pilate—and that this passage contradicts the juridical thesis of Pilate and Jesus.
The question of the irregularity of Jesus's trial only comes to the fore in Agamben's exegetical grouping, but it remains decisive for the remainder of his text. The core section of this grouping is §7, which is also the core section of Pilate and Jesus. This is where Agamben sketches his interpretation of Jesus's Roman trial in seven “scenes,”Footnote 27 privileging the trial narrative in John's gospel.Footnote 28 Yet Agamben's decisive claims are not made in §7. First, in §6, he claims that none of the gospels reports a Roman judgment expressis verbis; and second, in §13, that Pilate “hands over” Jesus without having sentenced him. Both claims set the argumentive arc of Pilate and Jesus, and both prove to be false. With these claims discredited, the theological and political groupings of Pilate and Jesus lose their force.
In a historical excursus, I trace the thesis of Pilate's non-judgment back to the Divine Institutes of Lactantius, a fourth-century Roman courtier; and then outline the refutation of the Lactantian tradition by the celebrated seventeenth-century Dutch legist, Hugo Grotius. It is not without interest to see how the thesis of Pilate and Jesus is dismantled, avant la lettre, by the leading international lawyer of the early modern period.
I conclude with a very brief critique of Agamben's general theory of judgment, as he presents it in Pilate and Jesus.
Creedal Grouping: The Primitive Centrality of Pontius Pilate
I once overheard a joke in a Budapest establishment, which I believe is Hungarian, or at least Middle-European: “I made it in like Pilate made it into the Creed.” This captures the sense of improbability—or even, on the face of it, impropriety—that Agamben uses to open his text. The only name to appear in the core profession of Christian belief, beside those of Mary and Jesus, is that of a pagan, Roman official—an idolater.Footnote 29 Christians are still, to this day, confessing that they believe in Pontius Pilate.Footnote 30 Why is this?
Agamben first points out that Pilate is not named in the creed promulgated by the Council of Nicaea (325 C.E.).Footnote 31 It is only with the creed attributed to the Council of Constantinople (381 C.E.)Footnote 32 that a conciliar creed represents Jesus as having been “crucified for us under Pontius Pilate.”Footnote 33 Agamben uses this contrast—Pilate's absence in the 325 creed, and his presence in the 381 creed—to structure what I call the creedal grouping of Pilate and Jesus (§§1–2).
In §1, Agamben writes that Pilate's name “was added in 381 by the Council of Constantinople, by all evidence in order to … fix the historical character of Jesus’ passion chronologically.”Footnote 34 In §2, he returns to this accretion, now asking why “the Fathers assembled at Constantinople preferred Pilate to Tiberius, the prefect [of Judaea] … to Caesar.”Footnote 35 Agamben then asks: Would it not have been more natural for the Constantinopolitan Creed to state that Jesus was crucified “under Tiberius” (sub Tiberio), much as Dante's Vergil was born “under Julius” (sub Julio)?Footnote 36 He then—correctly—suggests that Tiberius would be the more logical reference here, if “the historical character of Jesus’ passion” were all that concerned the Council of Constantinople. In support of this, Agamben cites Luke 3:1,Footnote 37 where John the Baptist begins to preach “in the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar.”Footnote 38
On the basis of this set of clear implications—Agamben presents them as (α) that Pilate only surfaced in creedal formulas in the year 381, and (β) that Tiberius Caesar would have been the most logical “pagan” to have figured in the creed of 381—Agamben proposes a vague, tentative reason for Pilate's appearance in the Constantinopolitan Creed: “It is possible that over [the Council's] undoubted chronographic intention there prevailed the importance that the figure of Pilate has in the narrative of the Gospels.”Footnote 39 This conjecture permits Agamben to then aestheticize and psychologize the figure of Pilate in the remainder of §2.
“One can say,” Agamben goes on to say, “that Pilate is perhaps the only true ‘character’ of the Gospels.”Footnote 40 By this, he means that it is only with Pilate, and over the course of Jesus's trial, that “the evangelists reveal … something like the intention to construct a character, with his own psychology and idiosyncrasies.”Footnote 41 Yet bypassing the theological tradition entirely, a single page of a 1920s Soviet-suppressed novel by Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky serves to discredit this notion. For Jesus is himself, of course, an artfully realized character in the gospels. Krzhizhanovsky, in passing, registers the uncanny effect of Jesus's silences in the gospels. These pauses are so pregnant, and so singular—says Krzhizhanovsky—that one could arrange them to compose a “Gospel according to Silence.”Footnote 42 He is right. And one such silence occurs during Jesus's interrogation by Pilate, “so that the governor was greatly amazed.”Footnote 43
It is unnecessary to analyze Agamben's literary intuitions, however, for when we turn to pre-Nicene creed-like formulas it immediately becomes evident that the Council of Constantinople—contra Agamben's (α)—merely formalized Pilate's place in a host of pre-Nicene formulas.
Before even turning to these pre-Nicene formulas, we should note that Luke 3:1 names Pontius Pilate. Now, this is the verse that Agamben cites in support of his notion that Tiberius had a more logical claim than Pilate upon the Creed.Footnote 44 Yet this is how Luke introduces the figure of John the Baptist: “in the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar, Pontius Pilate being governor of Judaea.” In his only reference to Christ, Tacitus uses comparable phrasing. “During the rule of Tiberius,” we read in the Annals, Jesus was crucified “by sentence of the procurator Pontius Pilatus.”Footnote 45 And similarly, Justin Martyr writes that Jesus was “crucified under Pontius Pilate, procurator of Judaea, in the times of Tiberius Caesar.”Footnote 46
Notwithstanding this common form of dating under the emperors—that is, of dating by emperors’ regnal years—Luke 3:1 indicates how Agamben has misconstrued both Pilate's presence and Tiberius's absence in the Constantinopolitan Creed. For Agamben simply assumes that Pilate's name is a chronological index in the Creed, when it is, rather, a jurisdictional index. What Agamben takes to be the Creed's historical line is, instead, a juridical line.Footnote 47
Pontius Pilate held the office of “prefect of Judaea” (praefectus Judaeae).Footnote 48 For a trial that was held in Judaea circa 30 C.E.,Footnote 49 a reference to Pilate happens to be chronologically more serviceable than a reference to Tiberius—since Tiberius ruled from 14 to 37, whereas Pilate only held his prefectship from 26 to 36. But this is immaterial. Dates in the first centuries C.E. were indexed by emperors’ regnal years—not by provincial officials’ careers. The Creed names Pilate because this is institutionally and jurisdictionally more precise than a reference to Tiberius.
The emperor had isolated himself on Capri beginning in the year 25, and Tiberius's debauchery there had resulted—as Suetonius relates—in his near-total neglect of Roman Palestine.Footnote 50 By way of contrast, Pilate occupied a heavily fortified palace at Caesarea Maritima on Israel's coastline. He is only ever named—in Christian and non-Christian sources alikeFootnote 51 —in connection with his tenure as “the highest Roman official in Judea.”Footnote 52 Whereas Tiberius's jurisdiction never ceased to extend—in Luke's phrase—to “all the world,”Footnote 53 Pilate's strictly coincided with the imperial province within which Jesus lived and died.
Contra Agamben's (β), then, it is perfectly logical for Pontius Pilate to figure in the Constantinopolitan Creed. The name “Pilate” succinctly accounts for the crucifixion of Jesus—a Roman punishmentFootnote 54 —outside the walls of Jerusalem. For this execution, there is no need to reference Tiberius. We find a subtle confirmation of this in Luke 20:20, where it is only the Roman prefect who matters when the evangelist relates how the high-priestly court in Jerusalem sought to “hand Jesus over to the jurisdiction (archē) and authority (exousia) of the governor.” Why would Pilate's appearance in the Creed not be determined by his “jurisdiction and authority” in Roman Judaea? And similarly, in Luke 13:1,Footnote 55 when Luke alludes to certain “Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices” at Jerusalem, there is no reference to Tiberius. This is because the name “Pilate” suffices to account for the deaths of these Galileans in Jerusalem.Footnote 56
And this is why it is primarily Pilate—the prefect of Judaea—who is named in a great number of primitive Christian formulas which recollect Jesus's death. The first of these is incorporated into the New Testament. At 1 Timothy 6:13, the letter's recipient is charged to keep the faith “in the presence of God, who gives life to all things, and of Christ Jesus, who in his testimony before Pontius Pilate made the good confession.” This passage goes unnoticed by Agamben, but in his study of the early Christian creeds, J. N. D. Kelly remarks that the “creed-like character” of this passage “leaps at once to the eye.”Footnote 57
The apostolic centrality of Jesus's suffering “under Pontius Pilate” is similarly attested by Peter's sermon in Acts 3, where Jesus is “delivered up … before the face of Pilate” and then crucified (3:13–15); by the kerygmatic prayer of Peter and John in Acts 4, which begins (much like the Symbolum Apostolicum), “Lord, you are he that made heaven and earth,” before reciting how “Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles and peoples of Israel” had conspired against the Christ (4:24–30); and finally—still within the canonical Acts—by Paul's sermon in the synagogue at Antioch, where he states that the Judaic “rulers” of Jerusalem had “asked Pilate to have him killed” (13:27–28).
It is doubtless this litany of apostolic references to Pilate that echoes through Ignatius of Antioch's early Greek epistles (ca. 107), where we see that Jesus's passion and resurrection occurred “in the time of the governorship (hēgemonias) of Pontius Pilate,”Footnote 58 and that Jesus was “truly nailed to a tree in the flesh for us under Pontius Pilate.”Footnote 59 Turning to one of the earliest Latin fathers, Justin Martyr's First Apology (ca. 150)Footnote 60 contains a kerygmatic invocation of “Jesus Christ, who was crucified under Pontius Pilate,”Footnote 61 and reports a baptismal liturgy in which the baptizand is washed “in the name of Jesus Christ, who was crucified under Pontius Pilate.”Footnote 62 Again, in Justin's Dialogue with Trypho, we find a formulaic passage which rehearses how the Son of God came to be “crucified under Pontius Pilate.”Footnote 63
References to Pilate continue to surface in the third and fourth centuries. For instance, in a creedal formula that Tertullian recites as the only immutable “law of faith,” we read that Jesus was “crucified under Pontius Pilate.”Footnote 64 Hippolytus of Rome records a Latin formula in which Jesus is “crucified under Pontius Pilate.”Footnote 65 And Marcellus of Ancyra preserves an early Greek formula according to which Jesus is “crucified under Pontius Pilate.”Footnote 66
These testimonies place it out of question that Pilate's name is a recurring, even a routine, element of pre-381 liturgical and creedal formulas in Greek and in Latin.Footnote 67 Contra Agamben's (α), then, Pilate's appearance in the Constantinopolitan Creed of 381 is neither novel nor mystifying. He is recollected as the Roman prefect of Judaea at the time of Jesus's death on a cross. The creed's wording thus proves to be precise. Jesus was crucified under Pontius Pilate—and not in the time of Pontius Pilate.
Apocryphal Grouping: “How Those Who Tell the Truth Are Judged”
Pilate does not figure in the Constantinopolitan Creed because he intrigued the bishops of the Council of Constantinople. Still, there is no denying that early Christians were fascinated by Pilate's psychology—or perhaps better, by the question of his “conscience” (conscientia).Footnote 68 The reason for this fascination is, arguably, simple.
According to Tacitus's Annals, Jesus was put to death “by sentence of the procurator Pontius Pilatus.”Footnote 69 And according to Josephus's Judaic Antiquities, Pilate “condemned [Jesus] to the cross” after he had been formally “indicted”Footnote 70 by the high-priestly court in Jerusalem.Footnote 71 Yet according to the canonical gospels, Pilate yielded to the high-priestly indictment, and ordered the crucifixion of Jesus, without being persuaded by that indictment.Footnote 72 He crucified a man he held to be innocent.
On this point there is no need to harmonize the canonical gospels. In all of the Synoptic accounts, Pilate challenges Jesus's accusers: “What evil has he done?”Footnote 73 And in Luke and John alike, he protests that he has found “no cause” to condemn Jesus.Footnote 74 The prefect's incredulity is most explicitly stated in Luke 23, where he denies that his investigation has sustained the charges of sedition. “Having examined him,” Pilate says, “I find no cause in this man.”Footnote 75 This is obviously intended to read as a formal protestation of Jesus's innocence. Nevertheless, shortly after this protest, Luke reports that Pilate “gave sentence”Footnote 76 or “gave his verdict,”Footnote 77 so that it was on the prefect's decree that Jesus was put to death—flanked by “bandits” or “rebels”Footnote 78 —outside of Jerusalem.
This is the tragic interest of Pilate's psychology in the canonical gospels: he declares Jesus to be innocent, but he orders the crucifixion. In terms of Aristotle's Poetics, Pilate kills Jesus like Medea kills her children: consciously.Footnote 79 The Roman prefect is neither crazed nor deceived. And because of this, the question—however misdirected—can be raised: is Pilate's decision to crucify the Son of God an act of consummate impiety (since Jesus is not only innocent but “the light of the world”)Footnote 80 or a sign of reluctant piety (since Jesus, nevertheless, “must be lifted up” for the salvation of the world)?Footnote 81 It is this uncertainty that inspires a colorful sub-genre of early Christian texts that embellish the Roman prefect's life and afterlife—a convoluted mass of traditions that J. K. Elliott has dubbed a “Pilate cycle.”Footnote 82
We have surviving variations on what appears to be a fourth-century Christian Acts of Pilate,Footnote 83 which may have originally been put into circulation to neutralize a pagan Acts of Pilate that was “published under Emperor Maximin in 311–12 for use against Christians.”Footnote 84 We have letters purportedly sent from Pilate to the emperors TiberiusFootnote 85 and Claudius, and to the tetrarch Herod—and occasionally, letters in reply—all of which were authored by Christians. We even have a fictitious martyrdom of Pilate, in which he is put to death in Rome, but not before Jesus thunders out of the clouds to console his erstwhile judge: “All generations … shall call you blessed, because in your governorship everything was fulfilled which the prophets foretold about me.”Footnote 86 At the same time, the Pilate cycle celebrates his wife Procla (so named according to tradition),Footnote 87 who “suffered many things … in a dream” about Jesus and tried to prevent the crucifixion of “that just man” (according to Matthew 27).Footnote 88
Agamben tarries for nine pages with this extra-canonical material, in what I take to be the apocryphal grouping of Pilate and Jesus (§§3–5). He convincingly divides this material into Christianizing and demonizing Pilate legends. According to the Christianizing legend,Footnote 89 Pilate is “already a Christian in his own conscience”—the phrase, which Agamben quotes, is Tertullian's (iam pro sua conscientia christianus)Footnote 90 —at the time of Jesus's trial. According to the demonizing legend, Pilate is dogged by “malignant and filthy spirits” who spectacularly defile his corpse after he is beheaded (or suicides)Footnote 91 in Rome.Footnote 92
Since this material is full of “curious imaginings,”Footnote 93 Agamben's apocryphal grouping makes for lively reading. But in terms of substance, there is only one extra-canonical text that Agamben introduces in this grouping and then returns to in his exegetical grouping. When he introduces this text, he announces that he will return to it.Footnote 94 And conveniently, there is only a single passage of this text that he treats as significant.
The text in question is the recently mentioned fourth-century Christian Acts of Pilate.Footnote 95 It is with this Acts that the “true and proper Pilate cycle … begins,”Footnote 96 according to Agamben, and the part of this Acts that intrigues him contains Pilate's “dialogue with Jesus on truth, which in the canonical gospels ends abruptly with Pilate's question” to Jesus, at John 18:38: “What is truth?” In the Acts of Pilate—Agamben promises us in §3—this dialogue rather “continues and acquires a completely different significance.”Footnote 97 That is likely an overstatement. But it is no overstatement to say that the extra-canonical dialogue Agamben alludes to in §3, and then quotes in §7, contradicts the thesis of Pilate and Jesus.
Agamben's juridical thesis, which the apocryphal grouping is still preparing, is that Jesus's trial “does not conclude with a judgment.”Footnote 98 To buttress this thesis, Agamben insists that the Greek terms for judgment are not represented in the canonical trial narratives. He stresses this for the first time in §6, at the outset of his exegetical grouping. “Judgment in Greek is krisis,” we are informed; and then: “In the [trial] narrative of the evangelists the term does not appear.”Footnote 99 This is inaccurate, as Agamben half-concedes in his first gloss.Footnote 100 The Greek term for judgment is, in fact, represented in the Roman trial narrative of Luke,Footnote 101 as it is in the predictions of a Judaic trial in Matthew and MarkFootnote 102 and during the preparations for a Judaic trial in John.Footnote 103 But what matters for us, here, is simply that Agamben does not want the term judgment to appear in the canonical trial narratives. This is because Agamben's Pilate has not judged, and cannot judge, his Jesus.Footnote 104
Pilate, however, expressly judges Jesus in the extra-canonical dialogue that Agamben cites in §3, and then quotes in §7. This is Agamben's report of that dialogue:
[T]he interrogation continues [after Pilate's question, “What is truth?”] with Jesus’ reply: “Truth is from heaven,” and with Pilate's new question: “Is there not truth upon the earth?” Jesus’ response—“You see how those who tell the truth are judged by those who have authority on earth”—concludes the interrogation.Footnote 105
Now, Agamben habitually gives the original Greek and Latin in parentheses, following critical or difficult terms in his sources. He decides not to do so here. But when Jesus responds to Pilate for the last time in the preceding exchange, he uses the term for judgment that Agamben denies finding in the canonical gospels. “You see,” says Jesus, “how those who tell the truth are judged (krinontai).”Footnote 106
We see from this rebuke that Agamben's apocryphal Jesus is judged by his apocryphal Pilate. Moreover, this judgment is formally issued several chapters later in the Acts of Pilate, where—in a paragraph that Agamben prefers not to cite—Pilate says to Jesus,
Your nation has convicted (katēlegze) you of being a king. Therefore I have decreed (apephēnamēn) that you should first be scourged according to the law of the pious [Roman] emperors, and then hanged on the cross in the garden where you were seized. And let Dysmas and Gestas, the two malefactors, be crucified with you.Footnote 107
Pilate's judgment, here, by no means contains purely canonical material. The names for the “malefactors” crucified with Jesus are extra-canonical (although the term itself, kakourgos, is likely taken over from Luke),Footnote 108 and the idea of a crucifixion in Gethsemane is flagrantly counter-canonical.Footnote 109 Nevertheless, Pilate's judgment in this passage opens with a paraphrase of John 18:35 (“Your own nation and the chief priests have handed you over to me”), and his punitive decree is compatible with—and very likely, suggested by—the canonical narratives of the trial. This brings us to the exegetical grouping of Pilate and Jesus (§§6–9, 13–14).
Exegetical Grouping: The Judgments of Jesus and Pilate
For Agamben, the truth of Jesus's interrogation by Pilate can be distilled into the single word: non-judgment. Jesus is not judged by Pilate for the obscure reason that “Jesus could not actually be judged”—and this leads Agamben to make the obscurantist deduction that “there can truly be no judgment” until the Last Day.Footnote 110 Pilate, in turn, is not judged because Agamben's Jesus practices nothing but a “critique of every judgment.”Footnote 111 The trial of Jesus is therefore in an absolute sense “a trial without judgment,”Footnote 112 which is also to say, “a simulacrum of a trial” (un simulacro di processo).Footnote 113
We can rapidly establish that the thesis of Jesus's non-judgment is contradicted by a series of texts in John—the gospel that Agamben cites in support of this thesisFootnote 114 —such as the following:
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John 5:22: “The Father,” Jesus testifies, “has committed all judgment to the Son.”Footnote 115
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John 5:26–27: “The Father,” he clarifies, “has given to [the Son] authority to execute judgment.”Footnote 116
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John 5:30: “I judge,” says Jesus, “and my judgment is just.”Footnote 117
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John 7:24: “Do not judge by appearances,” he exhorts the multitudes, “but judge with right judgment.”Footnote 118
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John 8:26: “I have many things to say and to judge,” he assures his disciples.Footnote 119
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John 12:31: “Now is the judgment of the world,” he warns.Footnote 120
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John 16:11: “The prince of this world,” Jesus declares in Jerusalem, “is already judged.”Footnote 121
The critical passage here is John 12:31, regarding “the judgment of the world” (krisis … tou kosmou), since the evangelist interjects that Jesus said this “signifying the death he should die.”Footnote 122 In strictly exegetical terms, it is impossible to separate Jesus's death on a Roman cross from a mystical judgment of Pilate—and indeed, of all terrestrial government—by Jesus. For in the gospel of John, at least,Footnote 123 Jesus's cross is the place where the prince of this world is invisibly yet irreversibly judged and overcome. In other words, at the site of Jesus's punishment by Pilate (and the Sanhedrin), he accomplishes his judgment of Pilate (and the Sanhedrin).
Still, the supposed non-judgment of Jesus is of only momentary interest to Agamben.Footnote 124 In his exegetical grouping (§§6–9, 13–14), he introduces the juridical thesis that shapes his theological and political groupings (§§10–12, 15–19) and preoccupies him in the glosses: the non-judgment of Pilate. This is the notion that serves, at once, as the fulcrum and base of Agamben's text: Jesus was crucified after “a trial without any judgment.”Footnote 125
At the close of the Roman phase of Jesus's trial, Pilate had “not handed down a sentence.”Footnote 126 Agamben reiterates this claim frequently, and practically verbatim. Refusing to “pronounce a sentence,” he writes in §7, Pilate “limits himself to ‘handing over’ (paredōken) the accused to the Jews.”Footnote 127 Pilate “does not give a verdict,” he repeats in §13, but “limits himself to ‘handing over’ Jesus” to be crucified.Footnote 128 And again, in his first gloss: the Roman prefect “did not pronounce his sentence,” but “simply ‘handed over’ the accused to the Sanhedrin and the executioner.”Footnote 129
This is the place to point out that the juridical thesis of Pilate and Jesus is not original to Agamben. Already in the seventeenth century, Thomas Hobbes could write that “Pilate … without finding fault in him, delivered [Christ] to the Jews to bee crucified.”Footnote 130 The elision of Pilate's judgment, here, signals a negation—and this reading of the trial of Jesus antedates Hobbes by at least 1300 years. There will be more on this subsequently.
Nearer to our purpose here is that the thesis of Pilate's non-judgment has maintained a presence in the critical literature since at least the appearance of Giovanni Rosadi's Il processo di Gesú.Footnote 131 Consider the following:
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1. “In reality,” Rosadi asserts in 1904, “the sentence was not pronounced [by Pilate]; the accused was simply handed over to his accusers.”Footnote 132 As we have seen, Agamben asserts the same—and in much the same wording—in Pilate and Jesus.
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2. In a still indispensable 1935 essay, “Utilitas Crucis,” E. J. Bickerman concedes that “none of the evangelists explicitly mentions the death warrant which Pilate issues. They all write that the procurator, wishing to satisfy the people's demands, ‘handed over’ Jesus to them, so that he might be crucified.”Footnote 133 Crucially, however, Bickerman warns that “no one would infer from this that Paul or Justin [Martyr] … ever forgot that juridically speaking, Jesus was condemned by the Roman procurator.”Footnote 134
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3. More darkly, a German jurist and Nazi Reichsjustizministerium officer, Wilhelm von Ammon,Footnote 135 states flatly in 1953, “Nowhere in the sources is there talk of a death sentence by the Roman governor Pontius Pilate against Jesus.”Footnote 136 Von Ammon of course had a sinister investment in the Gentile's non-judgment: it increases the Sanhedrin's guilt.
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4. In his mid-century study, Der Prozess Jesu, Jozef Blinzler treats von Ammon's as a doctrinaire position. Introducing the problem of Pilate's judgment, Blinzler writes, “The evangelists do not explicitly say that Pilate pronounced a formal death sentence. Many researchers have concluded from this that his decision was not a verdict in the technical sense (kein Urteilsspruch im technischen Sinn).”Footnote 137 Agamben seems to half-recollect this passage of Der Prozess Jesu in one restatement of his own thesis.Footnote 138 “A trial … has taken place,” Agamben concedes, but “there has not been any judgment in a technical sense (non vi è stato in senso tecnico alcun giudizio).”Footnote 139
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5. T. A. Burkill can still insist in the pages of Novum Testamentum, in the late twentieth century, that “in none of the canonical gospels does Pontius Pilate expressly affirm that Jesus was guilty of making kingly pretensions or of any other crime. … [H]e simply orders an execution.”Footnote 140
My task in the remainder of this section is to discredit this twentieth-century critical thesis—only, however, as Agamben argues it in Pilate and Jesus.
We can begin with Agamben's seemingly philological claim that there is no report of a Roman judgment in the gospels. “Judgment in Greek is krisis,” he begins, before he then states that (α): “In the [trial] narrative of the evangelists the term does not appear.”Footnote 141
In writing (α), Agamben overlooks Matthew 20:18 and Mark 10:33, where Jesus predicts that the Sanhedrin will judge him—using an expression from the Greek stem that (α) excludes.Footnote 142 More damaging is the fact that he takes no notice of several verses in the actual trial narratives of Matthew and Mark that state, in terms excluded by (α), that the Sanhedrin “judged” or “condemned” Jesus.Footnote 143 As it is written, then, (α) is false.
But Agamben does not want (α) to be taken as it is written, since he has no interest in the Sanhedrin trial.Footnote 144 What he means by “the trial of Jesus” is merely the Roman phase of Jesus's trial, or what German specialists call the Pilatus-Prozess. Consequently, what Agamben materially claims in (α) is that krisis—the Greek term for judgment—never appears in the gospels’ Roman trial narratives. Of this Agamben is confident: “On the fact that a sentence was not pronounced [by Pilate], the narrative of the Gospels does not seem to leave any doubt.”Footnote 145 Yet this also is false.
The Greek term for judgment is represented in the Roman trial narrative of Luke's gospel, in which we read that “Pilate gave sentence,”Footnote 146 or “gave his verdict.”Footnote 147 The Lukan verb here is epikrinein (to judge),Footnote 148 which the Vulgate renders with adiudicare (to judge).Footnote 149 In his first gloss, Agamben tries to brush this off by writing that “the verb epikrinō … is never used in a trial-related sense.”Footnote 150 But what does he mean by “never”? He cannot mean that epikrinein never has a forensic sense in Greek literature—since the term already features in a discussion of verdicts in Plato's Laws.Footnote 151 But neither can he mean that epikrinein never has a forensic sense in Judaic literature—since the term announces a capital sentence in 2 Maccabees.Footnote 152 Nor finally can he mean that epikrinein never has a forensic sense in the New Testament—since the term is only used to signal the conclusion of Jesus's Roman trial. For epikrinein is in fact a hapax legomenon in the New Testament.Footnote 153 It only appears in Luke 23:24,Footnote 154 where it marks Pilate's judicial decree that Jesus should be crucified under the penal inscription: “This is the king of the Jews” (Luke 23:38).
In her fine monograph Pontius Pilate in History and Interpretation, Helen Bond catches the “technical nuance” of judgment in Luke's choice of epikrinein. This word shows Pilate in the act of issuing his capital sentence.Footnote 155 And this interpretation is put out of doubt by Luke 23:40, where one of the bandits crucified at Jesus's side says that he is dying “under the same sentence” as Jesus.Footnote 156 The Greek term rendered “sentence” here is krima, meaning judgment, and hence, judicial sentence.Footnote 157 Pilate's judgment of Jesus, which is issued in Luke 23:24, is unmistakably echoed by this bandit in Luke 23:40. Similarly, after Jesus's resurrection, one of his disciples laments that the Sanhedrin had “handed him over to be sentenced to death” (Luke 24:20).Footnote 158 The disciple's term here is again krima, which can again only refer to Pilate's judgment.Footnote 159 It is of course to Pilate's tribunal that the Sanhedrin conducts Jesus.Footnote 160
Our finding is thus that Luke not only reports a Roman sentence against Jesus, but three times references it: once during the Roman trial (23:24), once during the crucifixion (23:40), and once following the resurrection (24:20). Contra Agamben's (α), then, a Roman judgment undeniably occurs in Luke. But if Luke reports a Roman judgment, what of the other gospels? Is Pilate's judgment an instance of the gospels’ disharmony? That is to say, is Pilate's judgment recorded in Luke, but counter-indicated in the other gospels?
This question carries us forward, since Agamben persistently links (α) to a distinct, and, for our purposes, final philological claim. As already quoted, Pilate “does not give a verdict” in Pilate and Jesus (α); instead, the Roman prefect “limits himself to ‘handing over’ Jesus” to be crucified (β).Footnote 161 While it is only Luke that defeats (α), all of the gospels appear to justify (β). They all state that Pilate “handed over” Jesus to be crucified.
The substance of (β) is Agamben's inference that this “handing over” is unconnected to Roman judgment. Unsurprisingly, this inference predates him in the critical literature by at least half a century. A Jesuit exegete, Joseph Bonsirven, concluded in 1952 that “Pilate did not pronounce a veritable sentence,” on the grounds that in John 19:16, “we encounter the same word that is inscribed in the Synoptics: paredōken, ‘he delivered up.’”Footnote 162 Bonsirven receives no mention in Pilate and Jesus.
But regardless of Agamben's sources, a complex New Testament thematic of “handing over”Footnote 163 that is merely touched on by (β) structures a transitional part of Agamben's exegetical grouping (§§8–9) and the first part of his theological grouping (§10). Having stressed in other works the etymological link between tradition (tradere) and betrayal (tradire),Footnote 164 Agamben here exploits the same duplicity of the Greek verb paradidōmi: Judas “betrays” Jesus in Gethsemane; Jesus “yields up” his spirit in death; the apostles “hand down” doctrines to the churches, and so on. All of these conveyances derive from the Greek verb paradidōmi. Yet none of this concerns us, since the decisive formulation for our purposes is (β): Pilate “hands over” Jesus to be crucified.
As stated above, (β) is lexically sound. The evangelists all use paradidōmi to describe the moment when Pilate commits Jesus to a detachment of Roman troops—what Blinzler calls an Exekutionskommando Footnote 165 —to be put to death:
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Matthew 27:26: “So Pilate released Barabbas for them; and after flogging Jesus, he handed him over (paredōken) to be crucified.”
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Mark 15:15: “So Pilate, wishing to satisfy the crowd, released Barabbas for them; and after flogging Jesus, he handed him over (paredōken) to be crucified.”
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Luke 23:25: “He released the man they asked for, the one who had been put in prison for insurrection and murder [that is, Barabbas], and he handed over (paredōken) Jesus as they wished.”
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John 19:16: “Then Pilate handed over (paredōken) Jesus to them to be crucified.”
But if (β) is lexically correct, it is semantically incorrect. Or said differently: it is not the occurrence, but the sense of paradidōmi in Jesus's Roman trial that (β) misrepresents.
For Agamben implies with (α) that the language of “handing over” is detached from the machinery of judgment in the gospels. It is because of Pilate's non-judgment that he merely “hands over” Jesus, while this “handing over” is taken as evidence that Pilate has not sentenced Jesus.Footnote 166 The problem here is not only that Pilate sentences Jesus in Luke 23:24, immediately before he hands him over in Luke 23:25. The procedural logic of this is hard to miss: Pilate's “handing over” in verse 25 is consequent on his verdict in verse 24. It is no less of a problem that the Sanhedrin's “handing over” of Jesus is consequent on its own judgment, and pursuant of a Roman judgment.Footnote 167 We have already seen this in Luke 24:20, where the high-priestly court “handed Jesus over to be sentenced to death.” What the Sanhedrin seeks, here, is a Roman “death sentence” (krima thanatou), and it is in order to obtain this sentence that they “hand Jesus over” (paredōkan auton). Still, the most acute difficulty for Agamben is that “handing over” itself comes to serve as a juridical formula in the gospels. Far from encoding Pilate's non-judgment, that is to say, the occurrence of paradidōmi in the gospels’ trial accounts signals Pilate's judgment of Jesus.
It is necessary at this point to take distance from the trial narratives. For, long before Jesus is arrested by the Sanhedrin and handed over to Pontius Pilate, John the Baptist is seized by Herod Antipas. In the roughly parallel notices of John's arrest in Mark 1 and Matthew 4, the term used is paradidōmi.Footnote 168 In this way, the episode of John's arrest links the term paradidōmi to wrongful imprisonment and death in the first chapters of the earliest gospels.Footnote 169 The term's formal link to judgment is made no later than Matthew 5 and a related segment of Luke 12.
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Matthew 5:25: “Come to terms quickly with your accuser,” says Jesus, “or your accuser may hand you over (paradōi) to the judge, and the judge hand you over (paradōi) to the guard,Footnote 170 and you will be thrown into prison.”
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Luke 12:58: “When you go with your accuser before a magistrate, on the way make an effort to settle the case, or you may be dragged before the judge, and the judge hand you over (paradōsei) to the officer, and the officer throw you into prison.”
In both sayings, it is given that when a judge (kritēs) “hands over” a prisoner it is a juridical act, and that when he “hands over” a prisoner for punishment it indicates a prior sentence.
A rule of Bickerman's is apropos here: “We must decipher allusions to juridical facts which the sacred authors assumed their readers knew.”Footnote 171 This is the situation with paradidōmi in the gospels. The term's juridical significance is never stated in Matthew's gospel, for instance—yet without it, a parable in Matthew 18 cannot be interpreted. Here, Jesus likens the divine Father to a human master who at first forgave a slave's debt and released him, but later summoned this slave and “handed him over (paredōken) to be tortured until he would pay.”Footnote 172 This parable's domestic court scenes simply assume the master's authority to judge his slaves. There is no reason for this authority, or this judgment, to be stated. Yet the parable ineluctably leads us to believe that this slave has been judged by his master, before being committed to the punishers, since his punishment is a type of the Last Judgment.Footnote 173
It is only Paul who explicitly juridicalizes the term paradidōmi in the New Testament. When he writes to the Corinthian believers that he has “judged” (kekrika) one of their number, Paul then instructs the church to “deliver” (paradounai) the offender into the power of Satan,Footnote 174 which is to say, into “the world.”Footnote 175 But if the juridical use of paradidōmi is most explicit in this apostolic verdict, it is still definite in the gospels. The late Dominican lexicographer Ceslas Spicq was sensitive to this. As Spicq documents, paradidōmi in Hellenistic papyri “often has the judicial meaning ‘deliver to court or to prison.’”Footnote 176 He rightly observes that paradidōmi becomes “a technical term for Jesus's passion,” and that in the gospels’ trial narratives, it is “to be taken first in its legal and judicial sense.”Footnote 177 It is precisely this juridical sense that Agamben, without justification, denies paradidōmi.
Contra Agamben's (β), then, the occurrence of paradidōmi before Jesus's crucifixion is a signal, in all the gospels, of Pilate's judgment—not his non-judgment. The Sanhedrin “hands Jesus over” to Pilate after ruling that he should be “sentenced to death.”Footnote 178 And Pilate “gives his verdict” before he “hands over” Jesus to be crucified.Footnote 179 In both cases, the ‘handing over’ of Jesus is consequent on the sentencing of Jesus. Therefore, with (β), Agamben has cited a procedural Greek term as proof of a procedural breach in Jesus's trial. This fails to convince. In the gospels, “handing over” implies no absence of judgment. On the contrary, paradidōmi is the language of courts, and the language of judgment.
Excursus: Lactantius and Hugo Grotius on Pilate's Judgment
Agamben holds that “the traditional interpretation of Jesus’ trial … must be revised” in light of Pilate and Jesus,Footnote 180 yet there is nothing new in his thesis that Pilate fails to pronounce a sentence.Footnote 181 On the contrary, this idea is archly traditional. Its twentieth-century bona fides have already been sketched, but the idea of Pilate's non-judgment originated in antiquity, and it attracted controversy throughout the early modern period.Footnote 182
Hugo Grotius's fabulously learned—and barbarously neglected—Annotations on the New Testament contains a compelling treatment of the question of Pilate's judgment.Footnote 183 In this nine-volume philological commentary, which has never been translated from the Latin, the preeminent international lawyer of the seventeenth century—who produced a Senecan tragedyFootnote 184 of Jesus's trial and death, Christus Patiens,Footnote 185 a year before he published his epoch-making treatise on the law of the seas,Footnote 186 Mare Liberum—conclusively discredits the thesis of Pilate's non-judgment. And it is Grotius—not Agamben—who directs us to the Patristic text that long legitimized this thesis: Lactantius's Divine Institutes.Footnote 187 Precisely because neither Grotius nor Lactantius figures in Pilate and Jesus, it will be interesting to glance at Lactantius's denial, and Grotius's acceptance, of a Roman judgment by Pontius Pilate.
Lactantius was a fourth-century convert whose patron, significantly, was the Christianizing Roman emperor, Constantine I. Reflecting this fact, Constantine is addressed by name in the first line of Divine Institutes 4.Footnote 188 Thus, it is to Constantine himself that Lactantius reports, in Divine Institutes 4.10, that “in Tiberius’ fifteenth year, in the consulship of the two Gemini, on 23rd March, the Jews fastened Christ to the cross (Iudaei Christum cruci adfixerunt).”Footnote 189
It should require no comment that in this uniquely “Constantinian” version of the Passion, the Roman prefect is exculpated. Lactantius is writing “once the Pilates and Neros [have] themselves turned Christian,” in Ernst Bloch's acid phrase.Footnote 190 Moreover, he is writing at the court of the first emperor to have “turned Christian.” In this setting, Pilate's non-judgment would be a highly politic supposition to make. But whatever his complex of motives: Lactantius imputes the crucifixion solely to the Jews. According to Lactantius, the death of Jesus is not chargeable to Rome or its laws.
And hereafter, in Divine Institutes 4, Israel's guilt is the recurring note—until, in 4.18, Lactantius concludes that “the Jews hoisted Jesus up between two criminals.”Footnote 191 Pilate figures only briefly as the Roman official who questioned Jesus before “the Jews … killed him.”Footnote 192 What exactly, on Lactantius's telling, is Pilate's role in the death of Jesus? It is certainly not judicial. Pilate indulged a Jerusalem lynch mob, but he “did not himself pronounce a sentence.” Instead, Lactantius writes, he “handed Jesus over to the Jews.”Footnote 193
Agamben's reprise of Divine Institutes 4.18 could hardly be more precise. He writes that Pilate “did not pronounce his sentence,” but “simply ‘handed over’ the accused to the Sanhedrin.”Footnote 194 This could serve as a passable translation of Lactantius's fourth-century Latin clauses: nec tamen ipse sententiam protulit, sed tradidit eum Iudaeis.Footnote 195 Thus, without entering into the question of a Judaic crucifixionFootnote 196 —a baseless rumor that Lactantius propagates,Footnote 197 and that Agamben seems mistakenly to detect in LukeFootnote 198 —we can conclude that the idea of Pilate's non-judgment is a Patristic one.
This returns us to Grotius—who not only cites Lactantius's opinion, but collects counter-testimonies in his gloss on Matthew 27:26. The pagan Acts of Pilate,Footnote 199 the Roman annalist Tacitus,Footnote 200 the Roman jurist Paulus,Footnote 201 and “Christ himself,”Footnote 202 differently testify to the fact that Pilate judged Jesus. What is more, Grotius notes that the “ancient Christians”—in contrast to a relative latecomer such as Lactantius—accepted that Jesus died under a Roman sentence.Footnote 203 Grotius mines short passages from Ignatius in the second and Cyprian in the third century to support this claim.Footnote 204 (I would add to this short catalogue Augustine in the early fifth century.)Footnote 205 In this way Grotius proves, in the space of a single gloss, that Lactantius's opinion—and, mutatis mutandis, Agamben's—is a dissenting, and relatively late, Patristic opinion.
But Grotius is most impressive as an exegete. His commentaries on the Synoptic gospels were completed by 1621,Footnote 206 and this can be taken as the date after which it became frivolous to uphold the Lactantian tradition.
Grotius begins by noting at Matthew 20:18–19 that the Sanhedrin's judgment—predicted in Matthew 20 and issued in Matthew 26—is not a “judicial sentence” (sententia iudicis) in the fullest sense, but only a “pre-judgment” (praeiudicium).Footnote 207 This is a crucial distinction of imperial legal practice in the first century, and the canonical accounts certainly stress that Jesus's nocturnal Sanhedrin trial—though it resulted in a “condemnation” (katakrima) of Jesus—was not held in open court (iudicium publicum).Footnote 208 That the Sanhedrin's verdict only served as a praeiudicium is further reflected in the fact that Pilate can still urge the Judaic authorities, in John's narrative, to “take Jesus and judge him (krinate auton) according to your law.”Footnote 209
At the outset of Matthew 27, Grotius convincingly reconstructs the Sanhedrin's political calculation. A covert killing of Jesus would be scandalous; a lynching would be dangerous; therefore, Jesus must be sentenced to death in open court. Only the Roman prefect could preside over a iudicium publicum, however.Footnote 210 Therefore, Jesus had to be “delivered to Pontius Pilate.”Footnote 211 This is of course what all the gospels relate. And when this “handing over” occurs, Grotius takes care to document the legal sense of paradidōmi, citing Jerome's corpus and Justinian's Digest.Footnote 212
At Matthew 27:19 (“Pilate was sitting on the judgment seat”), Grotius specifies that the evangelist's use of a juridically significant phrase—in Greek, epi tou bēmatos; and in Latin, pro tribunali—prepares us for “the final interrogation during which Christ is sentenced to the cross.”Footnote 213 Then, at Matthew 27:26 (“The soldiers of the governor took Jesus”), Grotius evinces the aspects of Jesus's trial that fatally compromise the Lactantian tradition.Footnote 214 They are numerous, says Grotius, but seven seem to be most salient.
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1. Jesus's interrogation is conducted before Pilate's tribunal,Footnote 215 which places him in the sanctum of Roman judgment (secretum iudicii locum).Footnote 216
In his annotations on John's gospel, Grotius calls the tribunal a “dais” (locum excelsum), and emphasizes that no Roman judgment “could be uttered except from the dais (pro tribunali).”Footnote 217 In his 1681 treatise, Pilatus Judex, Willem van der Goes similarly remarks that “not even a child” could miss the significance of the site of Jesus's trial: he is subject to Roman judgment.Footnote 218
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2. The Sanhedrin disclaims the right to carry out a “capital sentence” (iudicium capitalium) in Jerusalem.Footnote 219
This has been controverted in much of the modern literature, not least due to passages in the gospels and Acts.Footnote 220 Still, it is hard to deny that a Roman prefect reserved supreme jurisdiction—that is to say, “unlimited executive and legal authority, including the ius gladii”Footnote 221 —in the Roman province that he governed.Footnote 222 And according to the most recent treatment of the question, Philo's writings and the gospels only “lend support to the view that the Jews might carry out vigilante execution … without due court procedure.”Footnote 223 It is precisely this last type of execution—namely, lynching—that the Sanhedrin ruled to be excessively dangerous in Jesus's case.Footnote 224
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3. All the clamor before Pilate tends towards a juridical conclusion—in Grotius's words, “that Pilate condemn Jesus with his own voice” (ut Pilatus sua voce Iesum damnaret).Footnote 225 Pilate's verdict is a necessary precursor to Jesus's crucifixion.
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4. Despite his reluctance to issue a verdict, and his repeated declarations of Jesus's innocence, Pilate ultimately yields to the crowd by handing down a Roman sentence (sententiam obsequium commodavit).Footnote 226
There can be absolutely no equivocation on this point. Grotius clarifies this in his lexical note on Luke 23:24 (“Pilate gave sentence”). “Epikrinein means nothing other,” writes Grotius, “than to render a judicial sentence (iudicando decernere).”Footnote 227 And in his gloss on Luke 24:20 (“our chief priests … handed Jesus over to be sentenced to death”), he reiterates that only Pilate's “judgment” (sententia) could have effectuated the Sanhedrin's pre-judgment.Footnote 228
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5. Only Roman troops were authorized to carry out a crucifixion.Footnote 229 Grotius returns to this point in his comment on Matthew 27:31 (“Then they led him away to crucify him”), quoting Tacitus, Suetonius, and Tertullian to the effect that “the Romans [always] used soldiers to exact this punishment.”Footnote 230
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6. The cross, according to Grotius, is “a punishment distinctive to Roman law, and foreign to the laws of the Jews.”Footnote 231
Grotius's first clause is uncontentious, and his second clause is vindicated by Gunnar Samuelsson's recent monograph, Crucifixion in Antiquity, which concludes that there is no extant record of a Judaic crucifixion.Footnote 232 Bickerman reached the same conclusion in “Utilitas Crucis,” a decade before the Dead Sea Scrolls came to light.Footnote 233 The only forms of execution that have Mishnaic sanction are stoning, burning, beheading, and strangling.Footnote 234 (Thus, Jesus reproaches the Holy City for having “stoned” (lithobolousa) its prophets.)Footnote 235
“According to the Hebrew law,” Bickerman observes, “blasphemers were to be stoned—and Jesus was crucified.” Like Grotius, he makes the necessary inference: “Juridically speaking, Jesus was condemned by the Roman procurator.”Footnote 236
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7. Pilate himself dictates the inscription which is affixed to Jesus's cross: Iesus Nazarenus Rex Iudaeorum.Footnote 237
Grotius takes seriously the juridical symbolism of this inscription in his comment on Matthew 27:37 (“Over his head they put the charge against him”). Suetonius and Tertullian use the Latin term titulus for this type of inscription (and as Paul Winter points out in his 1961 monograph, On the Trial of Jesus, “this technical term actually occurs in John 19:19”),Footnote 238 while the Roman consul Dio Cassius provides Grotius with a definition of such a script: it consists of “words setting out the crime for which a man is dying” (literas causam mortis indicantes).Footnote 239 That Pilate dictates Jesus's inscription can therefore only mean that Pilate had himself declared, pro tribunali, the crime for which Jesus would die.
Legal historian Robert Besnier argues in the same way to Grotius—that is, from Jesus's titulus to Pilate's judgment—in the Tijdschrift voor Rechtsgeschiedenis. “The proof of the existence of a conviction by Pilate,” writes Besnier, “is furnished by the fact that on Jesus’ cross there is a titulus.”Footnote 240 And Winter concurs: “The charge on which he was executed, is stated explicitly in the titulus on the cross.”Footnote 241
In short, the penal inscription affixed to Jesus's cross proves Pilate's judgment.Footnote 242
Grotius alludes to “other circumstances” that belie the Lactantian traditionFootnote 243 —the tradition that Agamben represents—but he considers it unnecessary to go into them. Surely it is.
Conclusion
At the core of Pilate and Jesus is the ancient and discredited notion that the Roman trial of Jesus is “a trial without a judgment.”Footnote 244 Agamben's whole text revolves upon this Lactantian interpretation of the gospels, and he even appears willing to stake a new general theory of judgment on its validity:
Jesus could not actually be judged. Just as the law cannot justify anyone, so also can it judge no one. … There can truly be no judgment, because it has always already happened. … The trial of Jesus—every trial—begins when judgment has already happened. The judge can only hand over the accused to the executioner; he cannot judge him. (Il giudice può soltanto consegnare l'accusato al carnefice, non può giudicarlo.)Footnote 245
The most obvious objection to this theory is not—as Agamben suggests—that it constitutes “the most severe objection that can be raised against the juridical order (il diritto).”Footnote 246 Rather, this theory must be discounted because it blurs out the most basic juridical phenomenon. And for this phenomenon, conveniently, we can cite Pontius Pilate. “Do you not know that I have the power to crucify you,” he asks a taciturn Jesus, “and I have power to release you (apolusai se)?”Footnote 247 It is this duplicity that constitutes the task and power of the judge. The judge is precisely not one who “can only hand over the accused.”
We glimpse this duplicity again in Acts 3:13, which states that Pilate originally “judged” that he should not hand over the accused to be crucified. When Jesus stood “before the face of Pilate,” Peter says here, “he judged (krinantos) that Jesus should be released (apoluein).” Like inculpation, exculpation is a work of judgment. Of course, Jesus's trial did not end with that judgment; but it did end with a Roman judgment.
It is Jesus's crucifixion, and not Pilate's judgment, that inaugurates the mystery of Christian faith. Yet Pilate figures in the gospels and Acts, the apostolic letters, and the most primitive Christian formularies for the ineliminable reason that Jesus could not have been crucified without his sentence.Footnote 248 It is only because Agamben denies a Roman sentence that he is mystified by Pilate's presence in the Creed. For the confession of Pontius Pilate is not a mystery. It is precisely in the office of Jesus's judge that Christians recollect him.
Agamben undertakes in Pilate and Jesus to “carefully evaluate every detail” of Jesus's Roman trial.Footnote 249 In evidentiary terms, he fails. After his misleading opening sections on the Creed, Agamben takes up a fourth-century Christian Acts of Pilate. He misses the fact that this Acts shows Pilate sentencing Jesus. Agamben's exegetical sections follow, and give the impression of originality. But in them he reintroduces a doctrinaire twentieth-century thesis that at the close of Jesus's Roman trial—as Giovanni Rosadi put it in 1904—“the sentence was not pronounced; the accused was simply handed over to his accusers.”Footnote 250 This thesis proves to be doubly erroneous. In the first place, because Luke reports the pronunciation of a Roman sentence. And in the second place, because in all the gospels, Pilate's “handing over” signals a punitive juridical act.
There is a formidable irony behind all of this. For in the last pages of Pilate and Jesus, Agamben revisits the topic of his first pages: Pilate's appearance in the creed of 381. Having aestheticized the Roman prefect in §2, Agamben prefers to politicize him in his penultimate gloss. He writes here that “the name of Pilate was included in the Constantinopolitan Symbolon” as a “theological justification of imperial power and of the alliance that the church had concluded” with Rome in the fourth century.Footnote 251
In historical terms, this is pure insinuation. Pilate is already named in formulaic texts of the canonical Acts and 1 Timothy. But the irony, here, is that it is not the Creed's solemn insistence upon Pilate's judgment that subserved a fourth-century “alliance” of church and empire. To the contrary, it is Lactantius's interpretation of the Passion—now Agamben's—that flattered a newly Christianized Roman imperium. Pilate's non-judgment is the Constantinian line. Thus, even while he is indicting the Council of Constantinople—and throughout Pilate and Jesus—it is Agamben who is unconsciously reproducing a theological justification of imperial power.