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      • In the Gospel of Luke, after the Sanhedrin trial of Jesus, the Court elders ask Pontius Pilate to judge and condemn Jesus in Luke 23:2, accusing Jesus of making false claims of being a king. While questioning Jesus about the claim of being the King of the Jews, Pilate realizes that Jesus is a Galilean and therefore under Herod's jurisdiction.
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  1. Jul 22, 2021 · When Herod didn't take care of the problem for him, but sent Jesus back, instead of being angry and annoyed, Pilate developed a respect for Herod - that he was morally sensible, unlike the rest of the bloodthirsty Jewish leaders in Pilate's region.

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  3. It is likely that the Galileans excited a tumult in the temple, and that Pilate took occasion to come suddenly upon them, and show his opposition to them and Herod by slaying them. "Pilate." The Roman governor of Judea. See the notes at Matthew 27:2.

  4. Jan 2, 2015 · Pontius Pilate, the fifth procurator, appointed in 26AD, condemned Jesus to death in 30AD (see Matthew 27:11-26). Philip (Herod Philip II) ruled as tetrarch of Ituraea and Trachonitis to the north east of the Sea of Galilee from 4BC to 34AD (see Luke 3:1).

  5. Jan 4, 2022 · Herod the Great was the son of a high-ranking official in the Hasmonean dynasty, which was ruling Palestine as an independent kingdom. He was an Idumean or Edomite (a descendant of Esau), but there had been intermarriage between Jews and Edomites, and Herod publicly identified himself as a Jew, although he was not faithful to observe Jewish Law.

    • The Letter of Pontius Pilate
    • The Report of Pontius Pilate, Procurator of Judæa
    • Herod to Pontius Pilate The Governor of Jerusalem: Peace.
    • Pilate to Herod The Tetrarch: Peace.
    • The Report of Pontius Pilate
    • The Trial and Condemnation of Pilate
    • The Death of Pilate, Who Condemned Jesus

    Which He Wrote to the Roman Emperor, Concerning Our Lord Jesus Christ. Pontius Pilate to TiberiusCæsar the emperor, greeting. Upon Jesus Christ, whose case I had clearly set forth to thee in my last, at length by the will of the people a bitter punishment has been inflicted, myself being in a sort unwilling and rather afraid. A man, by Hercules, so...

    Sent to Rome to Tiberius Cæsar. To the most mighty, venerable, awful, most divine, the august,—Pilatus Pontius, the governor of the East: I have to report to thy reverence, through this writing of mine, being seized with great trembling and fear, O most mighty emperor, the conjuncture of the present times, as the end of these things has shown. For ...

    I AM in great anxiety. I write these things unto thee, that when thou hast heard them thou mayest be grieved for me. For as my daughter Herodias, who is dear to me, was playing upon a pool of water which had ice upon it, it broke under her, and all her body went down, and her head was cut off and remained on the surface of the ice. And behold, her ...

    KNOW and see, that in the day when thou didst deliver Jesus unto me, I took pity on myself, and testified by washing my hands (that I was innocent), concerning him who rose from the grave after three days, and had performed thy pleasure in him, for thou didst desire me to be associated with thee in his crucifixion. But I now learn from the executio...

    Governor of Judea; Which was sent to Tiberius Cæsar in Rome. To the most potent, august, dreadful, and divine Augustus, Pontius Pilate, administrator of the Eastern Province. I HAVE undertaken to communicate to thy goodness by this my writing, though possessed with much fear and trembling, most excellent king, the present state of affairs, as the r...

    NOW when the letters came to the city of the Romans, and were read to Cæsar with no few standing there, they were all terrified, because, through the transgression of Pilate, the darkness and the earthquake had happened to all the world. And Cæsar, being filled with anger, sent soldiers and commanded that Pilate should be brought as a prisoner. And...

    NOW whereas Tiberius Cæsar emperor of the Romans was suffering from a grievous sickness, and hearing that there was at Jerusalem a certain physician, Jesus by name, who healed all diseases by his word alone; not knowing that the Jews and Pilate had put him to death, he thus bade one of his attendants, Volusianus by name, saying, Go as quickly as th...

  6. While questioning Jesus about the claim of being the King of the Jews, Pilate realizes that Jesus is a Galilean and therefore under Herod's jurisdiction. Since Herod already happened to be in Jerusalem at that time, Pilate decides to send Jesus to Herod to be tried.

  7. Sending Jesus to Herod was a politic act on Pilate’s part. It might have ended the case so far as he was concerned; it pleased a jealous prince, and it gave him a free hand in dealing with the matter: nothing to fear in that quarter.— μετʼ ἀλλήλωγ for ἀλλήλοις (Euthy.

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