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Breaking news: Jesus is risen!
Christians commemorate the crucifixion of Jesus Christ on Good Friday.
Columns
April 5, 2023

Breaking news: Jesus is risen!

A blessed Easter Sunday to all as we recall those Easter holidays that were savaged and displaced by the COVID-19 pandemic but have now been replaced by the renewed opportunities to celebrate the resurrection.

There were early signs of the approaching season when the shops and supermarkets lined their shelves with the traditional Easter Bun packages a few days after Ash Wednesday.

Each year the array of choices widens. I am now seeing attractively wrapped packages from every corner of Jamaica with home-made buns competing against the established bakeries from the early days of Hannah Town Bakery with their famous HTB jingle — “HTB means hard to beat.”

And as for the other Easter traditions, long may the beautiful Easter lily remain in place. Easter services would not be the same without those trumpet-shaped flowers adorning church altars and decorating the aisles.

Christians celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ on Easter Sunday.

That is what we sing and pray about on Easter Sunday mornings. If we can say that any one aspect of the Christian faith is more important than the other, it must be the resurrection. Without faith that Jesus rose from the dead there would be no Christianity, no Easter morn.

So party as we will this year, the church doors will be open today, the message remains the same as it was 2,000 years ago, and Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus will continue to thrill our souls.

Pause for a moment before you cut the bun and cheese and think of the events that unfolded from Palm Sunday to the Last Supper, from the surreal trials in the Praetorium to the crucifixion at Gethsemane. It’s a week of human drama of epic proportions and implications.

I have tried to recapture the magic and excitement of those seven days with the world’s best news reporters, including one from the Jamaica Observer on location. So here goes for 2023.

It all started with a man named Jesus, son of a humble carpenter, who had started a three-year ministry, preaching from village to village and across the hills and valleys and the well-worn paths of the province of Galilee.

Crowds were attracted by his extraordinary powers of healing and his miracles and his seeming personal acquaintance with the kingdom of God.

To those who opposed him, like the Sadducees and the Pharisees, he was sacrilegious, a “black-heart man” and a distinct threat to the stability of the State and the established Church.

Most of his followers were simple people — the poor and dispossessed. They were from the very strata of the society in which the temple leaders realised that he could raise up a following. But he taught with such self-confidence and authority that some men would ask: Who does this man think he is? Or in Jamaican parlance, “A weh dis ya man come from?”

His opponents tried to trap him with leading questions and with provocative debate, but his knowledge of the law was overwhelming.

Then one day came that outrageous pronouncement of his, “Before Abraham was I am.”

Wow! What a shocking statement. What blasphemy! The high priest Caiaphas had been kept up to date with the Jesus happenings, and when he heard of this latest claim he became convinced that the man was not only deranged but needed to be brought down. The Jewish leaders were now fearing that he might be the centre of a popular uprising against Rome, which would lead to reprisals and the loss of their own positions.

But that didn’t bother Jesus. He was certain of his impending death. No reminder was needed. He had been seen earlier in his mission at the scene of the transfiguration, conferring with Moses and Elijah on the future happenings that would take place in Jerusalem, including his suffering and resurrection.

And then there came that fateful day when he left Galilee for Jerusalem, never to return — at least not in mortal form. As he commenced the last lap of his earthly ministry, “He set his face steadfastly towards the city… and told them again that he would be put to death.”

This scared the living daylights out of the disciples. They tried their best to dissuade him from travelling.

Their fear was not without justification. It was Passover time, a mere two years since the bloody suppression of protesters in Jerusalem by the Roman prefect Pontius Pilate. And during the Passover feasts Roman forces were known to be on even higher alert than usual. No doubt security in Jerusalem would be tight.

The stage was now set for the media to move in. What was to follow would have kept television, radio, and newspapers fully focused as event after event catapulted towards an inevitable earth-shattering ending.

Let’s see what was taking place at that time.

In the days leading up to Holy Week the headlines would have read, ‘Pilate orders heightened security for Passover celebrations’. A subhead would have added that: ‘The man Jesus who has been attracting large crowds is on his way to Jerusalem for the Passover feast.’ Hmm. Discerning editors would have realised that a news story was in the making. And, as Jesus overnighted in Bethany, the young cub reporter sent out to cover his movements would have filed the story of the raising of Lazarus from the dead.

Now that last item would have made Caiaphas sit up and perhaps call the Sanhedrin together to discuss their own security measures against any disturbance generated by the presence of the mad man in the city.

He decided to call a press conference, but kept it low-key, avoiding the issue of the threat of possible public disorder, and instead reminded the public that the temple authorities had organised the usual market at which young, unblemished lambs could be purchased by pilgrims who wished to offer such for a Passover sacrifice.

But suddenly, and before Caiaphas could complete his press statement designed to take the reporters off track, there was a roar from a massive crowd outside the city walls. The photographers and the journalists rushed from the conference. Jesus and his disciples had joined the throngs of worshippers who were streaming towards the Holy City to celebrate the Passover. Cameras started rolling as the crowd converged on the man who was seated on a donkey riding up to Jerusalem’s walls. The people waved palm branches and spread their coats on the ground. They were shouting, “Hosanna!”

‘Triumphant Entry’, blazed the headlines.

‘Huge demonstrations outside Jerusalem city walls’, read another.

“It’s highly possible that we are about to witness a pivotal point in history,” said the major station’s leading news analyst that night, “because if the fervour is anything to go by, this man, as simple as he looks, could hold the future of the Jewish nation in his hands. And as for Caiaphas and others of his ilk”, he warned, “there are many nervous nights ahead for the high priest who, by the end of this week, may not be riding so high after all”.

The excitement had barely died down when Jesus entered the temple and began to drive out all the higglers and money changers who were doing business. He took a whip to them, turned over the tables, and drove them outside. It made prime time news that night.

Neither the Romans nor the priests could now ignore the risk that Jesus might stage a violent demonstration. About 40,000 people lived in Jerusalem, but that number swelled to more than 180,000 during the Passover. Jesus was now a marked man.

The city is buzzing. Reporters are rushing from one scene to another as Jesus keeps them busy. The headlines flash across the front pages, ‘Arguments in the temple’, ‘Herod throws lavish holiday party’, and ‘Jesus weeps over Jerusalem’. There is a news leak out of the palace that the Passover may be cancelled.

Jesus is hot news and the panellists are busy analysing every step, every detail. To add further to the excitement, Facebook circulates a photo of Judas sneaking out of Caiaphas’s house at night. An innkeeper is quoted as saying that the disciples are enjoying the Passover meal in an upper room, address undisclosed. The media is in a frenzy.

Then comes the breaking news over all the networks: ‘Jesus has been arrested!’

The press tries to follow the trial but are denied entry to the hall.

‘From Pilate to Herod and back’, screams the headline. ‘Pilate washes his hands’. (About time, says his wife, as reported in the afternoon scandal paper.)

‘Crucify Him!’ roars the midday news.

And then, at 3:00 pm, more breaking news: ‘Jesus is dead!’.

Mourning ensues and the streets are quiet. Passions are subdued. Groups huddle on street corners, but most people remain indoors. The disciples are in retreat, the dream is over and their candles are all out.

“The skies over Jerusalem have been darkened,” reports a famous broadcaster.

The entire affair was over and done with in little more than a day. Caiaphas must have dined well that night. He must have leaned back in his chair and assured his dinner guests that this Jesus movement, or whatever they called it, was surely dead and done with.

But something was in the air. It was rumoured that at the time of His death the veil of the temple had split in two. Then there was that curious darkening of the land and the violent earthquake that shook Jerusalem.

But not to worry, the high priest would say, “We have got rid of him, and the media has already put the story to bed.”

Or had they?

Seventy-two hours later the wire services started clicking again. It was early in the morning, but the town was stirring.

A caller with a distinctive Jamaican accent tells a talk show host that the man’s chief disciple, Peter, was seen running through the streets like a mad man, “And what is more, boss, mi si Mary and Martha a run back a him.”

Shortly after that, the headlines blazed around the world: ‘He is risen!’

Lance Neita is a communications specialist and author. Send comments to the Jamaica Observer or to lanceneita@hotmail.com

Lance Neita

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