Meet the Man Who Nailed Jesus to the Cross
By Jim Day
When
James Likens, former parish pastor in the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod, gives
his presentation of Canceled: The story
of Jesus, St. Paul, and Julius, a Centurion, it is not uncommon to see members
of the audience wiping tears from their eyes.
As one Illinois farmer said, “I've been a Christian for 80 years. This was the first time I think I really
experienced the forgiveness of Jesus Christ in my heart.” And what is this
presentation? It is the powerful story
of the man who nailed Jesus to the cross.
Likens, a former newspaper reporter and publisher, television reporter,
and owner of JDL Video Productions in St. Louis, has created the
story
of Julius, the Centurion mentioned in Acts
27:1. (“When it was decided that we would sail for
Italy, Paul and some other prisoners were handed over to a centurion named
Julius, who belonged to the Imperial Regiment.”)
His
first presentation of this Centurion was done for Family Shield Ministries two
years ago. Kay Meyer, a columnist for the MetroVoice,
asked Likens to do a presentation at the ministries' annual fund raising
dinner. After seeing the response of the
audience, Likens set out to further develop this character and his story.
“I
found it extremely interesting that in the first verse of Acts 27 a centurion was ordered to take prisoners to Rome. If a Roman soldier lost a prisoner he was
executed without a trial,” Likens recalled. “In verse three it says, ‘The next day we landed at Sidon; and Julius,
in kindness to Paul, allowed him to go to his friends so they might provide for
his needs’ I asked myself, ‘Why
would he have done this ‘in kindness to Paul?’”
“The
Bible is like a lace table cloth,”
Likens says. “It's held together by a finely woven network of thread and it's
full of many holes. I've simply chosen
to fill one of those holes.”
And
how does he fill that hole? This story,
as told by Julius, reveals that St. Paul asked him that first night on the ship
if he had ever heard of Jesus of Nazareth.
Paul tells Julius that he was on his way to Damascus to persecute the
followers of Jesus when Jesus confronted him on the road and asked, “Saul,
Saul, why do you persecute me?”
Julius
says to Paul, “Sir, you might have persecuted His followers but before I was a
Centurion I was a soldier in Jerusalem and it was my hand that held the hammer
that nailed Him to the tree.”
One
thing helps Likens to truly become Julius in the mind of the audience, and that
is his costume. “The costume I used at the Family Shield banquet was borrowed
from a local church that does a Passion play ever year,” Likens said. “It was made out of plastic and imitation
leather. I knew if Julius was to have
the ability to take an audience back 2000 years, I had to look like a real
centurion.”
Likens
spent several months searching the Internet for just the right elements: the
helmet, the breastplate, the sword. Much
of the leather work he did himself. It takes him nearly 20 minutes to suit up
before a presentation. The costume
weighs nearly 40 pounds and is at times, as Likens says, “really uncomfortable.
Those guys were really tough to have fought battles dressed like this.”
The
story that Likens tells has never been written down. “All I can say is that it
happens,” Likens said. “My presentation begins with an A Cappella version of Were You There. However, I've rewritten
it so it is based upon the concept of ‘Were you there when 'I' crucified your
Lord.’ When my wife begins the
soundtrack CD I close my eyes and listen.
I take a deep breath and I exhale Jim Likens. When I inhale, Julius arrives and he is with
me throughout the story. I simply surrender and let him talk.”
During
Holy Week, Likens did the chapel service for Lutheran Hour Ministries on Maundy
Thursday. The Rev. Dr. Ken Klaus,
speaker of the Lutheran Hour observed: “One cannot view this profound
presentation without being changed. You will not come away the same person you
were when you entered.”
Does
he see himself as an actor? “No,” Likens said.
“I see myself simply as a messenger of the Gospel of Jesus Christ in a
way that makes it hard for a person to avoid having a very close encounter with
Jesus.” A sample of his presentation can be seen at www.spiritusgladius.com/julius.
While
Julius is the teller of the story, the real story is what St. Paul wrote in his
letter to the Colossians, “When you were
dead in your sins and in the uncircumcision of your sinful nature, God made you
alive with Christ. He forgave us all our sins, having canceled the written code
(the Law), with its
regulations, that was against us and that stood opposed to us; He took it away,
nailing it to the cross.” (Col.
2:13-14). As Likens brings his
presentation to a close, he tells the audience that they will receive a nail as
they leave.
“Take
this nail and put it in a place you see it everyday,” Julius says, “to remind
yourself that the Law which condemned you has been canceled, taken away, and
nailed to the cross. You, my dear friends, have been set free.”
At
present, Likens is looking for a booking agent or management team who can
promote and book appearances both locally and nationally.
Julius is available for bookings by
emailing him at julius@spiritusgladius.com. Or you can call Jim Likens at
(314) 308-5203.