Well the first trial that Jesus had to face is really to be arrested. Now you see Jesus could of simply snap His finger and could of left earth and return to heaven. But he chose not to and that in its self is a trial.
Answer
The trials which were mounted upon Christ by the Jews were nothing compared to the trial of taking upon himself the sins of all mankind. Even his crucifiction, though painful was naught to his ordeal in the Garden of Gethsemene.
The first Easter was the events of the crucifixtion and ressurection of Jesus Christ.
Jesus was put on trial before the Roman governor Pilate.
The Roman soldiers were present at the Crucifixion of Jesus.
According to the Bible after his crucifixtion Jesus descended into 'schoal' or a holding place for souls.
The Gospels, which are the first four books of the New Testament, contain the words of Christ before and after his crucifixtion and resurrection. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John are full of Jesus's teachings.
A:The trial of Jesus before the Sanhedrin is in the synoptic gospels: Matthew 26:57-66, Mark 14:53-64, Luke 22:66-71. In Matthew and Mark, the trial takes place soon after Jesus is arrested at midnight, but in Luke the priests wait until daybreak, since the Sanhedrin would never have met during hours of darkness to try Jesus. John's Gospel does not have a trial before the Sanhedrin, but has Jesus taken first to the house of Annas, father-in-law to the high priest, who interrogated him alone. Then Jesus was taken to the house of the high priest, Caiaphas, who again interviewed Jesus alone.
Agree with him lest he haul you off to jail...
Barabbas was the criminal that was released at the trial of Jesus.
According to Acts of the Apostles, Paul spent his childhood in Jerusalem, learning under the famous Gamaliel I, so, on that evidence, he could have been at the trial of Jesus. However, scholars say that there is no evidence in any of the epistles that he was in Jerusalem during the lifetime of Jesus, in which case he could not have been present at the trial. Certainly, Paul never mentions having seen Jesus before his crucifixion. The gospels do not mention John as in attendance at the trial of Jesus. .
Popular "t"radition holds that he died prior to the crucifixtion of Jesus, therefore he is considered to be the patron of a "happy death" in that he died in the presence of the Lord.
no
I will assume you are asking about the onlookers during the mockery of a trial Jesus had before He was cricified. He was taunted and spit on. They cried out for His death and that is what they got.