Je Suis Barabbas
What if Barabbas, smouldering in his cell,
should hear, perhaps from a guard on a good day,
of a wandering rabbi, of cures and crowds?
Or on a bad day, between beatings, he's taunted
with tales of a harmless preacher roaming free,
while he, the wild one, wastes in a stinking cage?
What if one day Pilate's smirking guards
wrench him to his blistered feet,
drag him through the dingy passageways
out to the blinding brilliance of a balcony
whose Roman colonnades lord it over the crowds.
What if he stands beside that wandering fool,
also bound and beaten, and a flash
of sympathy sparks between them, and
Barabbas nods as if to say, 'It's you or me, mate.'
And the other nods, as if to say, 'Then – me.
Let me die in your place. Never mind your crimes.
Go free. Be blessed. Live passionately.'
And Pilate's craven choice confirms the deal,
and the unlovely, unlikely rogue becomes
the first of us. I stand with him: unworthily set free.