Why Was
Jesus Beaten and Scourged?
As I have
studied the Bible for the past 42
years, I have received untold
blessings from an understanding
of God and His Word. This
growth has been a work in
progress and I have also found
that if a discovery proves to be
a genuine discovery, I may have
to rethink everything that I once
thought about the topic. Because
no human being has or knows
absolute truth, what appears to
be true today is subject to
change tomorrow. This discovery
process has occurred several
times in my life and it has
become necessary to publish
corrections whenever a topic
becomes clearer. Some people view
any change in religious matters a
sign of inferiority, but who is
more foolish: The person (or
religious organization) who
thinks he knows everything about
God and His Word or the person
who is willing to let go of a
cherished idea because compelling
evidence now requires it?
Gods
ways are not our ways (Isaiah
55:9) Gods Word is
comprehensive and our
understanding of Gods truth
and His Word should be constantly
advancing. Advancing truth and
our progress in understanding it
comes with a price and that price
is change. With that
said, I am announcing a change in
my understanding and I think it
deserves a published correction.
This correction is not
earthshaking, but I hope it
brings you the blessing it has
brought to me. My thought process
started when I began wondering
why Jesus was beaten and scourged
before His death on the cross.
Remember, the penalty for sin is
death, not torture, and I believe
I have found the reason why Jesus
was tortured in the extreme.
Jesus
makes the Restitution
In my
book, Jesus: The Alpha and The
Omega, on page 208 (First
Ed., 2001) or Page 211 (Second
Ed., 2014), I wrote, Many
sins go beyond the possibility of
restitution
If a person
commits an evil deed and makes a
gallant effort to restore
whatever he or she can, truly
repents of the sin, and is
seeking Gods mercy, God
will make Lucifer, the originator
of sin; provide full restitution
for the wrong that goes beyond
what man can offer. God
will transfer the debt to Jesus
who made restitution for any
wrongdoing by His extreme
suffering.
We
need to consider some background
information to understand the
reasons for my correction. The
doctrine of restitution is based
on the second law of love which
says; You shall love your
neighbor as you love
yourself. If a person is (a
predator) causes harm or
diminishes his neighbor, two sins
are committed: First, the
predator sinned against God
(broke Gods law that
requires he love his neighbor)
and the predator also sinned
against the neighbor (he
willfully injured or violated his
neighbor). God
requires the predator to make
amends with his victim before He
will allow the sinner to be freed
of his guilt. This is why Jesus
said, Therefore, if you
are offering your gift at the
altar and there remember that
your brother has something
against you, leave your gift
there in front of the altar.
First go and be reconciled to
your brother; then come and offer
your gift. (Matthew 5:
23, 24) So, if you want to
be right with God, go first and
make things right with your
victim(s).
When
Zacchaeus, a chief tax collector,
became a born again Christian, he
made restitution with everyone
that he had wronged. When Jesus
passed by and saw Zacchaeus in
the tree, Jesus commanded
Zacchaeus by declaring that even
a tax collector had
become a son of Abraham. (Luke
19: 2-10) Justice in Gods
sight can be different than what
we might think. For example,
immediately after the flood, God
demanded justice when He said to
Noah: Whoever sheds the
blood of man, by man shall his
blood be shed; for in the image
of God has God made man. (Genesis
9:6) About 1,000 years later, God
again demanded justice when He
told Moses, Do not
accept a ransom for a life of a
murderer, who deserves to die. He
must surely be put to death
Do not pollute the land where you
are. Blood-shed pollutes the
land, and atonement cannot be
made for the land on which blood
has been shed, except by the
blood of the one who shed
it. (Numbers 35: 31,
33) It may seem harsh today, but
God demanded a murderers
life for a victims life
because God requires restitution
for every injustice. This is how
justice is served.
God loves
each person the same and if one
person willfully harms another
person, the predator must pay for
the harm he has caused. God
demands that every injustice be
made right. Just as a loving
parent cannot look at his injured
child and tolerate injustice,
neither can God ignore injustice.
So, let us understand that the
basis for restitution is love.
People may scoff at the Old
Testament, but remember that it
is an omniscient God of love who
declared the principles of
restitution: But if
there is serious injury, you are
to take life for life, eye for
eye, tooth for tooth, hand for
hand, foot for foot, burn for
burn, wound for wound, bruise for
bruise. (Exodus 21:
23-25) If a man steals
an ox or a sheep and slaughters
it or sells it, he must pay back
five head of cattle for the ox
and four sheep for the
sheep. (Exodus
22:1)
The
doctrine of restitution is
derived from the commandment, Do
not seek revenge or bear a grudge
against one of your people, but
love your neighbor as yourself. I
am the Lord. (Leviticus
19: 18) It can be very difficult
to forgive a predator because
human nature prefers revenge and
retaliation. Making
restitution often is as difficult
for the predator as forgiving the
predator is for the victim.
Nevertheless, God requires that
we restore (make restitution to)
our victims and forgive our
predators. God has promised that
he will repay those who refuse to
make restitution. It is
mine to avenge; I will
repay
Know therefore that
the Lord your God is God; He is
the faithful God, keeping His
covenant of love to a thousand
generations of those who love Him
and keep His commands. But those
who hate Him He will repay to
their face by destruction; He
will not be slow to repay to
their face those who hate
Him
(Deuteronomy
32: 35; 9-11)
Did
Jesus Cancel the Restitution
Doctrine?
Some
people believe that Jesus
cancelled the doctrine of
restitution when He said, you
have heard that it was said,
Eye for eye, and tooth for
tooth. But I tell you, Do
not resist an evil person. If
someone strikes you on the right
cheek, turn to him the other
also. And if someone wants to sue
you and take your tunic, let him
have your cloak as well. If
someone forces you to go one
mile, go with him two
miles. (Matthew 5:
38-41) Let us be clear, Jesus did
not declare from Mt. Sinai an
eye for eye and tooth for
tooth and then 1,400 years
later cancel His own words. The
Sermon on the Mount does not
advocate giving the world over to
predators. Instead, it stresses
that we should exercise love for
our neighbors. For example,
if a Roman soldier demanded that
a Jew carry his weapons or
backpack for a mile (which often
happened because Roman soldiers
were permitted to make this
humiliating demand of
non-Romans), Jesus said,
Take up his load and carry
it two miles. If someone
sues you in civil court,
Give him more than he
requires. If someone
is unkind and strikes you on the
cheek, Be patient and
humble, keep your mouth shut, and
be slow to anger.
The
commandment, Love your
neighbor as yourself, is
far more than a suggestion; it is
a divine command that has divine
consequences when it is not
followed. The Golden Rule, in its
totality, expresses the following
idea: Do unto others as you would
have them do unto you because if
you willfully hurt your neighbor
and do not restore him, God will
do unto you as you have done unto
others, plus tax, penalty, and
interest. Remember the phrase, Do
not seek revenge
,
in Leviticus 19:18? There is one
reason for it. God says, it
is mine to avenge; I will
repay
(Deuteronomy
32: 35) If you think this is
merely Old Te4stament theology,
think again! Paul affirms the
doctrine of restitution in
Romans: Do not take
revenge, my friends, but leave
room for Gods wrath, for it
is written: It is mine to
avenge; I will repay, says
the Lord.
(Romans
12: 19)
Now, two
more issues need explanation
before my correction will make
sense. First, the penalty for sin
is death, not death plus torture.
(Romans 6:23) This means that
contrary to what many people
believe, the Bible does not
teach that the penalty for
sin is writhing in Hell for
eternity. If the penalty for sin
was endless torture, Jesus did
not pay the penalty for our sins.
Consider this: If Adam and
Eves sentence had not been
stayed, they would have been put
to death the very day they
sinned. (Genesis 2:17) If God had
put them to death that very day,
would this God of love and
justice have tortured Adam and
Eve for eternity because they ate
the forbidden fruit?
This
brings us to the second issue.
The suffering which the wicked
will suffer in the lake of fire
at the end of the 1,000 years is
the fulfillment of the promise, I
will repay. The
saints will sit with Jesus in
judgment during the 1,000 years
and together they will determine
what each wicked person will
suffer. (1 Corinthians 6: 2,3)
After this judgment is completed,
God will then resurrect the
wicked and repay them according
to the suffering they have
imposed on others. When each
wicked person has suffered
according to the demands of
justice (require restitution),
the sinner will then die
he will be reduced to ashes.
(Malachi 4: 1-3) Thus, the
penalty for sin (death by
execution) will be enforced, but only
after God has repaid the
predators for the harm and
suffering they have caused.
When I
wrote the book, Jesus, The
Alpha and The Omega, I made
the comment that there are
instances where a sorrowful and
repentant person cannot make
restitution. Upon further study
into the life, death and ministry
of Jesus, I now have a solution
to the question: Why was
Jesus tortured in the extreme
before going to the cross?
Jesus was beaten and scourged beyond
the point of human endurance.
I have concluded that the Father
sustained Jesus to endure more
suffering than any human could
possibly endure to ensure that
there is no debt of suffering
left unpaid by any sinner who
will be saved. Jesus
voluntarily did this for you and
me. This is why Isaiah said,
by
His wounds we are healed
[restored].
Restitution
is not always possible or
available when a predator
attempts to restore justice to a
crime victim. However, if the
predator repents of his evil,
makes a gallant effort to
restoration, and exercises faith
and has a sorrowful heart, he can
claim Gods mercy. Then, God
will transfer the predators
debt to Jesus who has absorbed
every ounce of suffering that you
and I cannot repay. Isaiah wrote,
But he was pierced for
our transgressions [the
penalty for sin], He was
crushed for our inequities; the
punishment that brought us peace [repaying
the restitution we cannot pay] was
upon Him, and by His wounds we
are healed. (Isaiah 53:
5, insertions mine)
Guilt
and Restitution Are Transferred
Temple
services in the Old Testament
teach us three important things.
First, if we put our faith in
Jesus (the Lamb of God) and
surrender our will and life to
Him, our guilt is transferred
via the blood of Jesus into
Heavens temple. Second, if
we should harm someone and make
restitution, and God sees that
our sorrow and repentance is
genuine, He will allow our sin to
be transferred into the
temple. If we have caused
suffering and confessed the guilt
to the victim(s), but appropriate
restitution cannot be made, God
will transfer the
suffering that we should endure
to Jesus. Finally, at the close
of salvations offer, all
the guilt collected in the temple
will be transferred to the
head of the scapegoat which
represents Lucifer. Lucifer will
receive the penalty of death that
previously belonged to the
saints.
If the
predator has violated his victim
so that restitution is not
possible (like rape), God will
work two miracles on behalf of
the victim if the victim
is willing. The first miracle is
that of bestowing the gift of
forgiveness. God will take away
any desire or thought of revenge
and replace it with divine
compassion and love for the
predator. (We see this gift
manifested in Jesus while hanging
on the cross and in Stephen when
he was stoned.) Second, God
will give the victim a special
package of grace to deal with and
overcome whatever damage the
predator may have caused. God is
able to restore and/or recreate
whatever was lost! Now
to him who is able to so
immeasurably more than all we ask
or imagine, according to his
power that is at work within us,
to him be glory in the church and
in Christ Jesus throughout all
generations, for ever and ever!
Amen.
(Ephesians
3: 20, 21)
Larry
Wilson