VIII. The Crowning with Thorns - The Ignominy of Jesus

Then the soldiers of Pilate the governor, taking Jesus into the hall, and stripping Him, they put a scarlet cloak about Him. And platting a crown of thorns, they put it upon His head, and a reed in His right hand. And bowing the knee before Him they mocked Him saying: 'Hail King of the Jews.' And, spitting upon Him, they took the reed and struck His head. - Matthew 27:27,28,29,30

'Go forth, daughters of Zion, and see King Solomon, in the diadem wherewith his mother crowned him in the day of his espousals, and in the day of the joy of his heart' (Canticles 3).

This King Solomon means my Saviour. The Church, His Spouse, invites us to go with her and contemplate the. strange and unheard-of diadem with which the synagogue. His cruel and relentless stepmother, crowns our Holy Saviour.

Those who were employed to scourge Him are now glutted with blood; the soldiers lying listlessly around wish to amuse themselves. 'Then the soldiers of the governor, taking Jesus in the hall, gathered together unto Him the whole band' (Matthew 27:27). A broken column and a shaky stool are found. They will answer for a throne. Our dear Saviour is stripped of His garments a second time. An old scarlet mantle is thrown upon His shoulders; this is His royal purple. A reed is put into His right hand; this is His sceptre. Now, O my Saviour, be seated! Thou art about to be crowned!

The soldiers have obtained three thorny branches, which, with diabolical art, they twist together in the form of a crown, bristling on the inside with a hundred sharp points. These ruffians, assuming a solemn air and simulating a grave ceremony, place this newly-invented crown on the head of Jesus. It will not keep its place at first, but they force it to remain by the blows of a piece of wood. The thorns pierce His head on all sides, and His eyes are almost destroyed. All the veins of the head are pierced; blood flows like water from this newly-opened source. Jesus now loses the power of sight; He is a prey to burning fever; He is devoured by extreme thirst, and He shudders with pain and anguish. Nothing more frightful can be conceived, but it is mere sport for His tormentors. One after another they come before Him, bending the knee in mockery, saluting Him with the words, 'Hail, King of the Jews!' Then they throw down the throne and its Occupant, and again put Him on it with brutal violence. All this lasts at least half an hour, and is applauded by the full cohort which surrounds the praetorium. Then our dear Saviour is brought to Pilate, who presents Him to the people with the words: 'Behold the Man!'

Yes, behold the Man! No longer the glorious being whom the Father presented to a world just fresh from His creating hand, saying to it: 'Be ruled by him, be his subject.' Behold now Man such as sin has made him! The ignominy of our Lord is a living and a horrible image of the ignominy of the sinner. How wretched indeed the sinner is! He thinks that it will increase his power, or at least his independence, to throw off the yoke of the divine will and to follow no longer any but his own. Soon he becomes a marvel of shame and misery.

Behold the Man! Jesus is despoiled of His clothing and covered with a ragged purple garment. The sinner is stripped of the white robe of innocence. Grace, the gifts of the Holy Ghost, the reflection of the glory of God in his soul, all disappear at the very instant in which he becomes a sinner. Only the tattered remnants of a dishonoured nature are left to him.

Behold the Man! Jesus is crowned with thorns, the sharp points of which pierce and torture His adorable head. The sinner is wild with joy in his transgression. His joy comes quickly and flies away again like the lightning. The enjoyment of past iniquity soon becomes nothing more than the sharp thorn of disgrace and remorse.

Behold the Man! Jesus is forced to take into His hand a reed for a sceptre; it is a mock sceptre, an insult to His omnipotence. The sinner holds over his passions only a power enfeebled by the consent he has given to sin. His reason, deprived of the supernatural vigour derived from grace, no longer knows how to rule the appetites. It is no longer the rigid sceptre to which obedience is given; it is now but a reed that bends with the least resistance.

Behold the Man! Jesus has his hands tied and is led without effort from Pilate to Herod, and from Herod back again to Pilate. The sinner has forfeited his liberty, for 'he that commits sin is become the slave of sin!' (John 8:34)

Behold the Man! Jesus is the sport of a troop of soldiers, who deride Him, buffet Him, treat Him as a fool, and mock Him in His miserable state. The sinner, when his eyes are opened, will see around him a troop of devils well pleased with their triumph, laughing at the misfortune of their victim and feasting on their victory with atrocious joy. For a long time they had looked for his fall, which they effected by their wiles. Their hour is come; they hold fast this proud soul that wished to be its own master. It is become in their hands a mock-king, whilst it listens only to their flatteries and is invisibly saturated with their outrages.

What ignominy! O my God! Behold what sin has made of man.

O humbled yet blessed Saviour! I bring to Thy feet this miserable soul, which at length confesses its disgrace. I bring it confused, repentant, wounded not merely by cruel remorse, but also by the salutary thorns of contrition. Have pity on it. Touch it with one drop of that precious blood which flowed from Thy adorable head. It comes to Thee to be transformed, to be invested with glory and honour; a master again, and possessed of the blessed liberty of the children of God. Seeing it restored the angels will cry out in joy: 'Behold the Man.'

- text taken from Jesus in the Rosary, by Father Jacques-Marie Louis Monsabre, O.P.