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Crucified On A Stake?
Was Jesus crucified on crossed timbers tied
together or a stake? The fact that he was crucified is
overwhelmingly supported by NT accounts. It was such a well-know
fact in Jerusalem that there was no room for questioning it.
Peter merely affirmed what was known by his Jewish audience in
Acts 2:23 -"...ye have by wicked hands crucified and slain."
This was not the only time he laid that guilt at the feet of the
Jews and their rulers.
It is evident from the definition of the
Greek word "stuaros" that "stake" is a better translation than
"cross."
The word "cross," to us, conveys the
thought of two pieces of wood which are "crossed" by being tied
or nailed together.
What Jesus was crucified on may have been
either a large piece of timber or a crude trunk of a tree.
Notice that Peter uses the word "tree" in
Acts 5:30 and 10:39 and again in 1 Peter 2:24.
Later when Paul wrote I Corinthians 1:18,
he used the word "stauros" to stand for the entire message of
the crucified savior.
But, crucified on a stake? That surely
would ruin the goldsmiths who have profited so much from the
little gold necklaces and articles that adorn some church
buildings and homes. The acceptance of "tree" instead of two
timbers tied together would cause an uprising far surpassing
Demetrius and those of his craft (cf. Acts 19:23-41). And, the
thought of Jesus being crucified on a stake instead of the
crossed timbers would seem almost blasphemous to those who put
so much stake in tradition and symbolism where prejudice rules
instead of truth.
Neither crossed beams nor tree trunk is
critical when considering the crucifixion of Jesus. It is not
the object upon which Jesus was crucified that is sacred and it
matters not if the Romans nailed Jesus to crossed timbers or a
stake. Furthermore the "message of the cross" (1 Corinthians
1:17-18) is not a message about a piece of wood. It is the
message of a crucified savior who died for the sins of the world
in the most horrible way conceivable to man.
It is possible to attach significance to
the insignificant and miss the point of the message of the cross
altogether. Wearing a little gold cross around one's neck does
not make one any closer to God. But trust in the crucified
savior by which our sins
are forgiven and by which we walk daily with God? - that's the
real story.
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