Primary Texts: Matthew 26:57–27:56; Mark 14:53–15:41; Luke 22:54–23:49; John 18–19
Main Sayings: “You have said so.” “My kingdom is not of this world.” “Father, forgive them.” “Today you will be with me in paradise.” “It is finished.”
Jesus has interpreted His death before it happens.
Now the hour comes.
He is arrested, accused, mocked, beaten, condemned, and crucified.
But the Gospels do not present Jesus as a man swept away by events.
They present Him as the King who gives Himself.
Condemned for Who He Is
Before the religious council, Jesus is questioned about His identity.
“Are you the Christ, the Son of the Blessed?”
Jesus answers with words that point to the Son of Man seated at the right hand of Power and coming with the clouds of heaven.
The high priest tears his garments.
They call it blasphemy.
This matters.
Jesus is not finally condemned because He told people to be kind.
He is condemned because of who He claims to be.
A harmless moral teacher does not provoke this verdict.
A prophet with advice does not force this crisis.
Jesus’ identity is the issue.
A King Before Pilate
Before Pilate, the question becomes political:
“Are you the King of the Jews?”
Jesus does not deny kingship.
In John, He says:
“My kingdom is not of this world.”
That does not mean His kingdom is unreal.
It means His kingdom does not arise from the world’s source of power.
It is not built by coercion, tribal pride, violence, propaganda, or human ambition.
This confronts every earthly confidence.
Human power can condemn the innocent and still think it is in control.
Religious power can protect itself and still call it righteousness.
Public opinion can shout for death and still feel morally justified.
Jesus stands before all of it as King.
Bound, but not defeated.
Condemned, but not exposed.
Mocked, but not dethroned.
“Father, Forgive Them”
At the cross, Jesus is surrounded by mockery.
Leaders sneer. Soldiers gamble. Bystanders insult. Criminals hang beside Him.
Then Jesus prays:
“Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
This is not sentimental mercy.
It is mercy spoken from inside injustice.
Jesus does not excuse evil. He does not pretend sin is harmless. He is nailed there because sin is deadly serious.
Yet from the cross, He asks the Father to forgive.
That destroys shallow views of forgiveness.
Forgiveness is not denial. It is not weakness. It is not pretending the wound is small.
At the cross, forgiveness is costly.
The innocent One bears the violence of guilty people and still opens the door of mercy.
“Today You Will Be With Me”
One criminal turns to Jesus.
He has no time to rebuild his life. No record to repair. No religious achievement to offer.
He simply confesses guilt and turns to the crucified King:
“Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.”
Jesus answers:
“Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in paradise.”
This is stunning.
The dying criminal brings nothing but need.
Jesus gives him paradise.
That confronts every system that makes salvation finally rest on human achievement, ritual completion, moral balance, or spiritual résumé.
The thief cannot boast.
He can only trust.
And Jesus saves him.
“It Is Finished”
John records Jesus’ final cry:
“It is finished.”
Not “I am finished.”
“It is finished.”
The work is completed.
The death Jesus interpreted at the table now reaches its appointed end. The blood of the covenant is poured out. The ransom is given. The Lamb is slain.
Nothing in the scene looks victorious to human eyes.
A crucified man appears defeated.
But Jesus says the work is finished.
That confronts every attempt to add another foundation to forgiveness.
If Jesus finished the work, then we do not finish it for Him.
We receive it.
Why This Matters
Movement 11 brings us to the condemned King.
Jesus is condemned for His identity.
He stands before human power as King.
He forgives from the cross.
He saves a dying criminal.
He declares His work finished.
This is not martyrdom alone.
This is not tragedy alone.
This is not merely religious violence or political injustice.
This is Jesus giving Himself for sinners.
The cross exposes us.
It exposes our violence, pride, cowardice, hypocrisy, and need.
But it also reveals mercy.
The condemned King is the Savior of the guilty.
So the question is not whether we can admire His courage.
The question is whether we will come like the thief: empty, guilty, and trusting the King who saves.
If the cross is pressing you toward that response, begin here: https://logosmap.org/en/begin-here.
Staff Writer, A Disciple of Christ.
The JesusAccordingToJesus.com staff is committed to helping readers examine the person, words, and claims of Jesus with clarity, honesty, and reverence. Our work is shaped by a deep conviction that Jesus must be understood first by what He said about Himself, why He came, and what He calls every person to consider. We write for thoughtful readers, seekers, skeptics, and believers, pointing beyond mere religion to the living Christ, in whom truth, grace, meaning, and eternal hope are found.
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