Pontius Pilate Quotes
Pontius Pilate
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Ann Wroe497 ratings, 3.62 average rating, 84 reviews
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Pontius Pilate Quotes
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“According to Augustine, “Eve borrowed sin from the devil and wrote a bill and provided a surety, and the interest on the debt was heaped upon posterity. . . . She wrote the bill when she reached out her hand to the forbidden apple.” And in the end, adds the Golden Legend, “Christ took this bill and nailed it to the cross.”
― Pontius Pilate
― Pontius Pilate
“Standing in the praetorium, planting the barricades of his awkward questions, Pilate becomes the prototype of every uncertain man or woman forced into a dialogue with God. He asks, only half-believing that he will ever get an answer. What comes back is elliptical, disturbing; but for a moment the heart has been laid open.”
― Pontius Pilate
― Pontius Pilate
“Pilate also became, in a way, the first priest of the Eucharist of Christ. Christ offered the bread and wine as symbols of his body and blood, but Pilate offered Christ himself. He took him, showed him to the people, proclaimed him and broke him.”
― Pontius Pilate
― Pontius Pilate
“Restraint allows the tyrant to avoid making martyrs. Martyrs know the truth and, by dying for it, proclaim how strong it is. But if the tyrant toys with the truth, queries it, worries it, refuses to grant its importance and spares men the theatrical satisfaction of dying to uphold it, he remains the strongman and they become the fools.”
― Pontius Pilate
― Pontius Pilate
“Because of my underpants?" Ivan asks.
"Chiefly because of Pontius Pilate."
[from Bulgakov's The Master & Margarita]”
― Pontius Pilate
"Chiefly because of Pontius Pilate."
[from Bulgakov's The Master & Margarita]”
― Pontius Pilate
“They went in a spirit of scientific enquiry, but they could not quite manage to be open-minded; for once on the mountain, strange fears began to assail them. Behind their bravely rational and humanist front, they were still men of the Middle Ages, and their climb became a metaphor for the struggle of Renaissance Europe to get past old ghosts.”
― Pontius Pilate
― Pontius Pilate
“In the centuries that followed, even up to the twentieth, Christians wishing to blame the Jews seized on this single sentence. They include some of the most venerated men of the Church: Augustine, Aquinas, Chrysostom. Even if they conceded that Luke’s grammar was ambiguous, they could nonetheless point to the pressure put on Pilate by the chief priests and the crowd. All the Jews, they argued, had killed Jesus. They had even, in Matthew, explicitly taken his blood on themselves and removed it from the Romans. And they had reaped the whirlwind. Every misfortune that subsequently befell the Jews—from the destruction of Jerusalem to Auschwitz—carried an echo of that invented blood pact from the trial.”
― Pontius Pilate
― Pontius Pilate
“in Socrates’ words, he had committed sin by failing to know what was false and what was true.”
― Pontius Pilate
― Pontius Pilate
“There is never any hint of the crowd splitting into factions; the Gospel writers give them one loud hectoring voice. Some commentators suppose they did this to spread the supposed guilt of the Jews evenly and universally; there were no dissenters.”
― Pontius Pilate
― Pontius Pilate
“our modern day when we can neither endure our vices, nor face the remedies needed to cure them.”
― Pontius Pilate
― Pontius Pilate
“THERE IS NO BEATING THESE PEOPLE, though they seem beatable.”
― Pontius Pilate
― Pontius Pilate
“It was probably a coin of Tiberius with, around the edge, the words TI[BERIVS] CAESAR DIVI AVG[VSTI] F[ILIVS], “Tiberius, son of the divine Augustus,” another son of a god;”
― Pontius Pilate
― Pontius Pilate
“We imagine we are free agents, but possibly do not realize how steadily Fate moves us along the road we think we have chosen.”
― Pontius Pilate
― Pontius Pilate
