By Dr. C. Truman Davis - Originally published in Arizona Medicine, March 1965, Arizona Medical Association.
Dr. C. Truman Davis is a graduate of the University of Tennessee College
of Medicine. He is a practicing ophthalmologist, a pastor, and author of
a book about medicine and the Bible.
Several years ago I became interested in the physical aspects of the
passion, or suffering, of Jesus Christ when I read an account of the crucifixion
in Jim Bishop's book, The Day Christ Died.
I suddenly realized that I had taken the crucifixion more or less for
granted all these years that I had grown callous to its horror by a too-easy
familiarity with the grim details. It finally occurred to me that, as a
physician, I did not even know the actual immediate cause of Christ's death.
The gospel writers do not help much on this point. Since crucifixion
and scourging were so common during their lifetimes, they undoubtedly considered
a detailed description superfluous. For that reason we have only the concise
words of the evangelists: "Pilate, having scourged Jesus, delivered Him
to them to be crucified ... and they crucified Him."
Despite the gospel accounts silence on the details of Christ's crucifixion,
many have looked into this subject in the past.
In my personal study of the event from a medical viewpoint, I
am indebted especially to Dr. Pierre Barbet, a French surgeon who did exhaustive
historical and experimental research and wrote extensively on the topic.
An attempt to examine the infinite psychic and spiritual suffering of
the Incarnate God in atonement for the sins of fallen man is beyond the
scope of this article.
However, the physiological and anatomical aspects of our Lord's passion
we can examine in some detail.
What did the body of Jesus of Nazareth actually endure during those
hours of torture?
Gethsemane
The physical passion of Christ began in Gethsemane. Of the many aspects
of His initial suffering, the one which is of particular physiological
interest is the bloody sweat. Interestingly enough, the physician, St.
Luke, is the only evangelist to mention this occurrence.
He says, " And being in an agony he prayed more earnestly: and his sweat
was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the ground."
Every attempt imaginable has been used by modern scholars to explain
away the phenomenon of bloody sweat, apparently under the mistaken impression
that it simply does not occur.
A great deal of effort could be saved by consulting the medical literature.
Though very rare, the phenomenon of hematidrosis, or bloody sweat, is well
documented.
Under great emotional stress, tiny capillaries in the sweat glands can
break, thus mixing blood with sweat. This process alone could have produced
marked weakness and possible shock.
Although Jesus' betrayal and arrest are important portions of the passion
story, the next event in the account which is significant from a medical
perspective is His trial before the Sanhedrin and Caiaphas, the High Priest.
Here the first physical trauma was inflicted. A soldier struck
Jesus across the face for remaining silent when questioned by Caiaphas.
The palace guards then blindfolded Him, mockingly taunted Him to identify
them as each passed by, spat on Him, and struck Him in the face.
Before Pilate
In the early morning, battered and bruised, dehydrated, and worn out
from a sleepless night, Jesus was taken across Jerusalem to the Praetorium
of the Fortress Antonia, the seat of government of the Procurator of Judea,
Pontius Pilate.
We are familiar with Pilate's action in attempting to shift responsibility
to Herod Antipas, the Tetrarch of Judea. Jesus apparently suffered no physical
mistreatment at the hands of Herod and was returned to Pilate.
It was then, in response to the outcry of the mob, that Pilate ordered
Barabbas released and condemned Jesus to scourging and crucifixion.
Preparations for Jesus' scourging were carried out at Caesar's orders.
The prisoner was stripped of His clothing and His hands tied to a post
above His head. The Roman legionnaire stepped forward with the flagrum,
or flagellum, in his hand.
This was a short whip consisting of several heavy, leather thongs with
two small balls of lead attached near the ends of each. The heavy whip
was brought down with full force again and again across Jesus' shoulders,
back, and legs.
At first the weighted thongs cut through the skin only. Then, as the
blows continued, they cut deeper into the subcutaneous tissues, producing
first an oozing of blood from the capillaries and veins of the skin and
finally spurting arterial bleeding from vessels in the underlying muscles.
The small balls of lead first produced large deep bruises that were
broken open by subsequent blows. Finally, the skin of the back was hanging
in long ribbons, and the entire area was an unrecognizable mass of torn,
bleeding tissue.
When it was determined by the centurion in charge that the prisoner
was near death, the beating was finally stopped.
Mockery
The half-fainting Jesus was then untied and allowed to slump to the
stone pavement, wet with his own blood. The Roman soldiers saw a great
joke in this provincial Jew claiming to be a king. They threw a robe across
His shoulders and placed a stick in His hand for a scepter.
They still needed a crown to make their travesty complete. Small flexible
branches covered with long thorns, commonly used for kindling fires in
the charcoal braziers in the courtyard, were plaited into the shape of
a crude crown.
The crown was pressed into his scalp and again there was copious bleeding
as the thorns pierced the very vascular tissue. After mocking Him and striking
Him across the face, the soldiers took the stick from His hand and struck
Him across the head, driving the thorns deeper into His scalp.
Finally, they tired of their sadistic sport and tore the robe from His
back. The robe had already become adherent to the clots of blood and serum
in the wounds, and its removal, just as in the careless removal of a surgical
bandage, caused excruciating pain. The wounds again began to bleed.
Golgotha
In deference to Jewish custom, the Romans apparently returned His garments.
The heavy patibulum of the cross was tied across His shoulders. The procession
of the condemned Christ, two thieves, and the execution detail of Roman
soldiers headed by a centurion began its slow journey along the route which
we know today as the Via Dolorosa.
In spite of Jesus' efforts to walk erect, the weight of the heavy wooden
beam, together with the shock produced by copious loss of blood, was too
much. He stumbled and fell.
The rough wood of the beam gouged into the lacerated skin and muscles
of the shoulders. He tried to rise, but human muscles had been pushed beyond
their endurance. The centurion, anxious to proceed with the crucifixion,
selected a stalwart North African onlooker, Simon of Cyrene, to carry the
cross.
Jesus followed, still bleeding and sweating the cold, clammy sweat of
shock. The 650-yard journey from the Fortress Antonia to Golgotha was finally
completed. The prisoner was again stripped of His clothing except for a
loin cloth which was allowed the Jews.
The crucifixion began. Jesus was offered wine mixed with myrrh, a mild
analgesic, pain-reliving mixture. He refused the drink.
Simon was ordered to place the patibulum on the ground, and Jesus was
quickly thrown backward, with His shoulders against the wood. The legionnaire
felt for the depression at the front of the wrist.
He drove a heavy, square wrought-iron nail through the wrist and deep
into the wood. Quickly, he moved to the other side and repeated the action,
being careful not to pull the arms too tightly, but to allow some flexion
and movement.
The patibulum was then lifted into place at the top of the stipes, and
the titulus reading "Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews" was nailed into
place.
The left foot was pressed backward against the right foot. With both
feet extended, toes down, a nail was driven through the arch of each, leaving
the knees moderately flexed. The victim was now crucified.
On the Cross
As Jesus slowly sagged down with more weight on the nails in the wrists,
excruciating, fiery pain shot along the fingers and up the arms to explode
in the brain. The nails in the wrists were putting pressure on the median
nerve, large nerve trunks which traverse the mid-wrist and hand.
As He pushed himself upward to avoid this stretching torment, He placed
His full weight on the nail through His feet. Again there was searing agony
as the nail tore through the nerves between the metatarsal bones of this
feet.
At this point, another phenomenon occurred.
As the arms fatigued, great waves of cramps swept over the muscles,
knotting them in deep relentless, throbbing pain.
With these cramps came the inability to push Himself upward.
Hanging by the arm, the pectoral muscles, the large muscles of the chest,
were paralyzed and the intercostal muscles, the small muscles between the
ribs, were unable to act.
Air could be drawn into the lungs, but could not be exhaled.
Jesus fought to raise Himself in order to get even one short breath.
Finally, the carbon dioxide level increased in the lungs and in the blood
stream, and the cramps partially subsided.
The Last Words
Spasmodically, He was able to push Himself upward to exhale and bring
in life-giving oxygen. It was undoubtedly during these periods that He
uttered the seven short sentences that are recorded.
The first - looking down at the Roman soldiers throwing dice for His
seamless garment:
"Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do."
The second - to the penitent thief: "Verily I say unto thee, To day
shalt thou be with me in paradise."
The third - looking down at Mary His mother, He said: "Woman, behold
thy son!" Then turning to the terrified, grief-stricken John, the beloved
apostle, He said: "Behold thy mother!"
The fourth cry is from the beginning of Psalm 22: "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?"
He suffered hours of limitless pain, cycles of twisting, joint-rending
cramps, intermittent partial asphyxiation, and searing pain as tissue was
torn from His lacerated back from His movement up and down against the
rough timbers of the cross.
Then another agony began: a deep crushing pain in the chest as the pericardium, the sac surrounding the heart, slowly filled with serum and began to compress the heart.
The prophecy in Psalm 22:14 was being fulfilled: "I am poured out like water, and all my bones are out of joint: my heart is like wax; it is melted in the midst of my bowels."
The end was rapidly approaching. The loss of tissue fluids had reached
a critical level; the compressed heart was struggling to pump heavy, thick, sluggish blood to the tissues, and the tortured lungs were making a frantic effort to inhale small gulps of air.
The markedly dehydrated tissues sent their flood of stimuli to the brain.
Jesus gasped His fifth cry: "I thirst." Again we read in the prophetic
psalm: "My strength is dried up like a potsherd; and my tongue cleaveth
to my jaws; and thou hast brought me into the dust of death."
A sponge soaked in posca, the cheap, sour wine that was the staple drink of the Roman legionnaires, was lifted to Jesus' lips. His body was now in extremis, and He could feel the chill of death creeping through His tissues.
This realization brought forth His sixth word, possibly little more
than a tortured whisper: "It is finished." (Bro Woodys' note: We are
told in Matthew 27:50 that Jesus cried with a loud voice.)
His mission of atonement had been completed. Finally, He could allow
His body to die.
With one last surge of strength, He once again pressed His torn feet
against the nail, straightened His legs, took a deeper breath, and uttered His seventh and last cry
"Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit"
Death
The common method of ending a crucifixion was by crurifracture, the
breaking of the bones of the leg. This prevented the victim from pushing himself upward; the tension could not be relieved from the muscles of the chest, and rapid suffocation occurred.
The legs of the two thieves were broken, but when the soldiers approached Jesus, they saw that this was unnecessary.
Apparently, to make doubly sure of death, the legionnaire drove his
lance between the ribs, upward through the pericardium and into the heart. John 19:34 states, "But one of the soldiers with a spear pierced his side, and forthwith came there out blood and water."
Thus there was an escape of watery fluid from the sac surrounding the heart and the blood of the interior of the heart. This is rather conclusive post-mortem evidence that Jesus died, not the usual crucifixion death by suffocation, but of heart failure due to shock and constriction of the heart by fluid in the pericardium.
(Bro. Woodys' Note: This may be correct as far as medical terminology but
John 10:18 tells us that Jesus lay down His life on his own "No man
taketh it from me, but I lay it down of myself. I have power to lay it
down, and I have power to take it again. This commandment have I received of my Father." Jesus died because it was His choice to do so whether by heart failure or crucifixion in obedience to the fathers will.)
Resurrection
In these events, we have seen a glimpse of the epitome of evil that
man can exhibit toward his fellowman and toward God. This is an ugly sight
and is likely to leave us despondent and depressed.
But the crucifixion was not the end of the story. How grateful we can be that we have a sequel: a glimpse of the infinite mercy of God toward man--the gift of atonement, the miracle of the resurrection, and the expectation of Easter morning.
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Brother Woodys' Notes
John 15:13
"Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends."
I had chosen the above verse as the title because after reading the above article I have come to the realization that indeed what a friend I have in Jesus.
I wish to sadly echo the above writers claim when he made the statement
"I suddenly realized that I had taken the crucifixion more or less for granted all these years."
Never had I actually considered the Pain and humiliation Jesus Christ actually suffered at the hands of man. Never had I really known the full horror of His death until reading the above article.
Perhaps you, like I, will have a greater love for the perfect sacrifice and the true cost of the salvation freely given us.
Jesus Christ, the Son of God and very God himself, took on the body
of a man and died an excruciating death willing so that I and all those that believe can have fellowship with the Father.
It is my belief that this same Jesus knew of the suffering that was
about to befall him as we can see if we look at Luke chapter twenty-two
and verses forty-one and forty-two and again a Luke chapter twenty-two and verse forty-four:
"And he was withdrawn from them about a stone's cast, and kneeled down, and prayed,"
"Saying, Father, if thou be willing, remove this cup from me: nevertheless not my will, but thine, be done."
"And being in an agony he prayed more earnestly: and his sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the ground."
Still He laid down his life for us, still He took on the sins of the
world both past and present willingly.
Friend if you have never accepted the perfect sacrifice, if you have
never accepted the Lord Jesus Christ as your personal savior He had still died for you. He had still suffered the same pain, the same death for you.
John Chapter one and verse twenty-nine says "The next day John seeth
Jesus coming unto him, and saith, Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh
away the sin of the world."
And again in First John chapter two and verse two we read: "And he is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world."
Yes this same Jesus had died for you also. If you had never accepted
the lord Jesus Christ He is inviting you now.