Caiaphas then declared, "This shall be a feast day forever."
And the Pharisees said, "Yes, for all time to come it shall be kept every year with grateful jubilation."
"And now," said the aged Annas, "now gladly will I go down to my fathers since I have lived to have the joy of seeing this wretch on the cross." And as he gazed long as if exultingly drinking in the pleasure of satisfied vengeance, he saw for the first time the writing on the cross, but his old eyes could not decipher the words. Turning to Caiaphas he said, "The superscription seems to be very short." Then the Jews drew nearer to see what was written. The hangmen seated themselves on the ground at the foot of the cross and looked up at Jesus.
Then the rabbi, reading the words written by Pilate exclaimed, "That is an insult, an outrage upon the people and the Sanhedrin!"
Caiaphas, hearing him, asked, "What is written?"
Annas, who had also looked at the inscription, said, "The rabbi is right. The Sanhedrin cannot allow this to pass."
Then said the rabbi, "It is written, 'Jesus of Nazareth, king of the Jews!'"
Caiaphas as if incredulous, approached the cross and reading it himself, started back with indignation. "Verily," he cried, "that is an affront upon the honor of our nation."
"Down with it at once," cried the priest.
But Caiaphas said, "We dare not touch it ourselves, but do you two," addressing the rabbi and Saras, "hasten at once to the governor to demand from him, in the name of the Sanhedrin and the assembled people that the superscription shall be altered. Say to him, 'Write not the king of the Jews, but that he said, I am king of the Jews?'"