Monday, March 11, 2013

The Roman Centurion's Son


An Easter story
© 2013 Jeannie St. John Taylor
  
The details about Roman society as well as the story and facts about Jesus are accurate. 
Quintus is fictional.
  
Nobody was stronger or braver than Qunitus’ dad. One hundred Roman soldiers obeyed his every command. If he told them to build a siege tower twenty houses tall, they did it. If he instructed them to crush a wall with an iron battering ram, it happened. He wore red under his heavy armor and never left the house without a dagger and a sword.

Quintus wanted to be just like him. That’s why Quintus followed him everywhere. And that’s how the boy met Jesus.

Quintus squatted on a boulder beside the road that drifted down the Mount of
Olives. Whispered rumors had tipped off his father that a man who claimed to be the Jewish Messiah planed to cause a riot during Passover. So Dad led soldiers carrying heavy shields and javelins to this spot to wait. And Quintus followed. Now he watched his father standing, feet wide apart and hands gripping a sword in front of him. Dad’s eyes scanned the area for problems. He’ll quash any troublemakers, Quintus thought. His heart swelled with pride.

For a while, everything seemed peaceful. Birds twittered in the trees overhead, a
cisium, an open carriage with two wheels, rumbled past.

Then Quintus heard the distant roar of a crowd. The sound grew louder and Jews waving palm branches spilled around a bend in the road. They spread coats of all colors on the pavement as they shouted, “Bless the King who comes in the name of the Lord!”

The soldiers lining the road raised their weapons, but Dad held up his hand, warning his men against acting in haste.

More men, women and children rounded the corner and excitedly spread along
the sides of the road. Soon, a man riding a donkey colt appeared. Robes thrown over the donkey’s back acted as a saddle and, because the donkey was not yet full grown, the man’s feet nearly touched the ground as he rode. The Jews – it seemed like millions of them – danced around singing “Hosannah!” as the ass with the young man on its back left hoof marks on their best clothes.

The whole thing looked so ridiculous that Quintus’s lips curled upward and he opened his mouth to laugh. Then he saw the man’s face and the laughter froze in his throat.

In that instant, Quintus knew he was looking in the face of a king. He wasn’t sure
how he knew, but he knew. What was it? The man’s eyes? The way he held himself?

“The sons of Israel’s kings have always ridden donkeys!” someone shouted, and the crowd cheered in agreement. Obviously, these Jews believed the man was a king.

Yet strangely, the man didn’t seem to care that people celebrated him on every side. He looked past the crowd at the city of Jerusalem and tears poured down his cheeks. As he passed Quintus, the boy heard him say, “But now it is too late . . .”

“Who is he?”  Quintus asked his father before dinner that night.

“Jesus of Nazareth.”
“I know. But who is he really? Some of the Jews said their prophets foretold that the Messiah would ride in from the east on a donkey colt. Jesus did that today. Right?”

“Right.” Dad unbuckled his dagger and set it on the table. “He started from
Jericho and that’s east of here.”

“Their Messiah is a god.” Quintus lowered his voice. “Is Jesus a god?”

Dad shot Quintus a sharp look. “We Romans have lots of gods, but Jesus of
Nazareth isn’t one of them. I expect you to stay away from him in the future. He’s a trouble maker.”

For the first time in his life, Quintus disagreed with Father.

The next time Quintus saw Jesus, night had fallen. With a man named Judas
leading the way, Dad and a battalion of soldiers marched across the Kidron Valley and climbed the Mount of Olives road. A silent mob that included temple guards and servants of the religious leaders strode along with them carrying torches and weapons. The flickering torchlight revealed faces grim with hatred. Only the sounds of labored breathing and the tromping of hundreds of feet broke the stillness.

Quintus hid in the middle of the throng where Dad wouldn’t see him. The boy knew these people intended to kill Jesus and he knew doing so would be wrong. Was there anything he could do to stop them?

Judas led the throng off the road and into a grove of olive trees where Jesus knelt
in prayer. Quintus slipped around the edge of the crowd to where he could see and hear without Father spotting him. Jesus stood and stepped forward to meet the mob. He looked tired. Upset. “Who are you looking for?” he asked. Yet Quintus felt certain Jesus knew exactly what was happening.

“Jesus of Nazareth,” someone said.

“I AM he,” Jesus answered.

An unseen force slammed Quintus like a fist and he fell backward. Flat on his back, he glanced around. Not a single person was left standing. The power of Jesus’ words had knocked everyone to the ground. Even Dad.

Grinning, Quintus scrambled to his feet and ran for home and bed. Jesus of Nazareth didn’t need Quintus. The man could take care of himself.

Sometime in the middle of the night, Quintus realized Father hadn’t returned
home after his watch. Quintus crept from bed and made his way to Castle Antonia. Inside, in the soldiers’ headquarters where Father worked, a shocking sight greeted him.

The entire battalion had gathered for a night of fun. Several soldiers crouched around a circle etched into the floor playing the game of Basilius, or King – using Jesus as the skittle. They had dressed a badly beaten Jesus in a purple robe and punctured his scalp with a crown of thorns. At every dice roll, men grabbed the stick “scepter” from Jesus’ hand and beat him on the head. They spit on him. They dropped to their knees, laughing in mock worship.

Quintus watched in horror as Jesus stood silently, refusing to defend himself.

Across the room, Dad looked on with crossed arms, observing everything. Except
Quintus. He didn’t notice his son standing near the large pillar.

But Jesus did. He turned to gaze directly at Quintus with eyes full of love. Quintus covered his face in shame ducked behind the pillar. During the long night, he imagined himself fighting the soldiers and saving Jesus.  

In the morning, when soldiers dragged Jesus outside and thrust the heavy cross on his shoulders, Quintus followed. He fought tears when Jesus stumbled and an African man helped carry the cross. With leaden feet, Quintus trailed behind Jesus all the way to the Skull Hill. A cold lump formed in his gut when Jesus refused the drugged wine intended to ease pain. Quintus looked away as his own father pounded long spikes through Jesus’ hands.

For three long hours, Quintus stood near the cross grieving for Jesus . . . and
studying his father. When passing mockers stopped to laugh at the sign on Jesus’ cross which proclaimed Jesus “King of the Jews,” Quintus saw Dad stare at Jesus with a strange look.  When Jesus promised paradise to the thief on the cross beside his, Dad looked astonished. Church leaders shot cruel words at Jesus and Quintus recognized respect for Jesus on Dad’s face.

Finally, gasping for breath Jesus looked around the crowd, then at Quintus, then at Dad. “Father forgive them,” he said, “For they know not what they do.”

Shock rippled through Quintus. Dad’s eyes grew wide and the dagger fell from his fingers. Suddenly Quintus understood.

Jesus was not just a king, not just a god, he was the Messiah, the Son of the Only
True God. And Jesus loved everyone – even the people who were murdering him. Even Dad. But, as Jesus had said when he rode past Quintus on the donkey, it was too late. Jesus would be dead soon and Quintus was helpless to stop it.

A short while later – precisely at noon – thick blackness fell over the land and silence shrouded the hillside. Terror slithered around Quintus. For three long hours nothing could be heard but sounds of suffering from the three crosses and the anguished weeping of women.  

Then Jesus cried out, “Father, I entrust my Spirit into your hands!” His head slumped in death. That very instant, with a loud roar the earth began to quake. Quintus tore his eyes from Jesus long enough to look in Dad’s face. It was filled with regret. And horror.

Rocks split open. The ground rose and fell like waves in a turbulent sea. Jesus’
cross swayed. Quintus screamed, struggling to stay on his feet. In a terrified voice Dad shouted, “Truly, this was the Son of God!” Boulders crashed down the hillside. It was the end of the world. The shaking would never stop. But it did stop. Silence smothered them like grave clothes.

Silently, Dad’s soldiers lifted Jesus’ body from the cross and gave it to a rich man who wrapped it in a long linen cloth and laid it in a tomb. If it wasn’t the end of the world, why did Quintus feel like it was? Why could he barely breathe?

The next day, Dad told his men to seal Jesus’ tomb and stand watch over it.
Dad’s eyes looked empty. Dead. Quintus decided to keep watch over his father.

That’s how Quintus happened to be shivering in the grass by the tomb when the earthquake struck on Sunday morning. And that’s why he saw the shining angel roll aside the boulder plugging the tomb’s entrance.
And then Quintus saw Jesus with his very own eyes. For the third time, Jesus looked directly at Quintus with love in his eyes. Then he disappeared.

Quintus wanted to jump around shouting for joy. So he did. The noise awakened his father who, along with all the other soldiers, had fainted at the sight of the angel. After Quintus explained everything he had seen, Father grabbed Quintus and bear-hugged him.

“We’re going to find the disciples and learn all about Jesus,” Dad said. His eyes shone with hope. “We won’t worship our Roman gods any more. All we need is Jesus. He proved he is the only True God when he rose from the dead!”

Quintus agreed.

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