If Pontius Pilate were alive today, he wouldn’t need a balcony in Jerusalem.
All he needs is a microphone, a trending hashtag, and maybe a live-stream with comments turned off—though that wouldn’t stop the netizens from shouting.
“Whom do you want me to release to you?” he would ask again, but this time the crowd wouldn’t be gathered in a dusty square.
They’d be online, armed with Wi-Fi, opinions, and a remarkable talent for selective hearing.
On one side stands the quiet, decent man (Jesus)—calm, principled, perhaps a little too honest for his own good.
He doesn’t promise miracles on demand, doesn’t flatter, doesn’t dance for applause.
His campaign slogan is something boring like “truth” or “integrity.”
Naturally, he polls terribly.
On the other side stands Barabbas 2.0: loud, charismatic, and wildly entertaining.
His résumé is… flexible. His past is… misunderstood.
His supporters insist he’s “changed,” though they can’t quite say when.
But he’s funny, he’s bold, and most importantly, he makes people feel good.
Pilate clears his throat. “You have a choice.”
The chief influencers—today’s version of chief priests and elders—intervened.
“Pick the exciting one,” they whisper. “The honest one is too dull. Too inconvenient. Too… correct.”
The crowd nods. Being right is exhausting. Being entertained is easy.
“Release Barabbas!” they cry, this time with emojis and reaction buttons.
Pilate hesitates, as he always does.
He knows how this story ends. But he also knows something else: the crowd doesn’t actually want justice.
They want validation. They want someone who reflects their desires, not challenges them.
So he symbolically washes his hands—though today it might just be a carefully worded statement—and gives them what they asked for.
And the quiet man? He walks the same lonely road as before, carrying not just a cross, but the weight of being unwanted in a world that claims to love goodness—as long as it’s not inconvenient.
Meanwhile, the crowd celebrates their choice. Their champion waves, smiles, and promises everything. For a moment, it feels like victory.
Until, slowly, quietly, reality begins to ask its own question:
“Was this really the one you wanted?”
But by then, of course, Pilate has already closed the livestream.
To be continued: The next post will compare the People's Choice (Anno Domini) and the new wave on how Pinoys elect their leaders.


