The Fool said:
My reading was always actually that it was not the Jews per se who were held responsible for the death of Jesus, as much as mob mentality itself.
However, remaining with the New Testament accounts, how tenable is such an idea?
It depends on which gospel you are reading. Have you read John Dominic Crossan's "Who Killed Jesus?"? If not, I highly recommend it. Crossan makes a very strong case for the Gospel of Peter pre-dating and serving as source material for the synoptic gospels and John. Interestingly, one aspect that is changed from the Gospel of Peter in Mark is that Peter has the Sanhedrin convict Jesus AND carry out the crucifixtion as the Roman soldiers look on. Indeed, in Peter, the Romans are converted when the see the risen Jesus.
On Vinegar and Gall
One interesting aspect of the story to trace through the gospels is the vinegar story. This lends very strong credence to Crossan's position that the Gospel of Peter was a source for the passion/ressurection account in Mark (and hence Matthew and Luke). In Peter, the Jews are carrying out the crucifixtion when the solar eclipse occurs. Afraid that night has suddenly fallen, they fear that they are breaking the Levitical law because a body must be buried before nightfall on the day of execution. But Jesus isn't dead yet! What do they do? They fulfill another "messianic prophecy" (Psalm 69:21) by giving him gall mixed with vinegar to poison him to death!
In Mark, the author apparently misses that the gall and vinegar story is a reference to Psalm 69:21 and as a result makes complete nonsense of a story that makes perfect sense in Peter. First of all, it is important to note that, probably for reasons of believability, Mark has the Romans carrying out the crucifixtion rather than the Sanhedrin (though only at the Jews' demand). In Mark 15:33 darkness falls on the crucixtion scene at noon. The Romans couldn't care less about breaking Levitical law so they don't care that Jesus might still be alive at nightfall. They have no reason to poison him as the Jews did in Peter. So in Mark 15:36 the soldiers give Jesus vinegar (what happened to the gall from Psalm 69:21?) and he
spontaneously dies as if he were poisoned!
In Matthew it starts to get really confusing. There, the author has the soldiers giving Jesus wine mixed with gall which Jesus refuses to drink (Matt 27:33). What happened to the vinegar? It's in a different part of the story (Matt 27:48) that tracks Mark's account of Jesus spontaneously dying after the soldiers offer him vinegar (no gall). It would appear that the author of Matthew saw the reference to Psalm 69:21 in the vinegar story and sought to put it back in, but since the story had been changed from the Jews performing the crucifixtion to the Romans doing it, it no longer made sense in the form and place that Peter used it. So Matthew followed Mark on the vinegar and inserted ANOTHER reference to include the gall from Psalm 69!
In Luke (Chapter 23), the soldiers offer Jesus vinegar (no gall) and he does
not spontaneously die as if poisoned (as in the other three accounts we've looked at). As in Mark, the gall from Psalm 69 is completely missing in Luke.
And in John 19, the soldiers offer Jesus the vinegar (again no gall but at his request for something to drink this time) and Jesus immediately expires upon drinking it (as in Mark).
Just Whose Legs Went Unbroken?
Interestingly, Luke includes the story of the worship of Jesus of one of the zealots being crucified alongside him after the vinegar incident. What's interesting about it is that it is not in Mark - but it is in the Gospel of Peter and the Gospel of John.
Crucifixtion did not kill a person by itself ordinarily. A person would die in crucifixtion by suffocation as their weight was pulled across their chest through their arms. The crucifixtion was to torture a person and when time came to kill them the support for their feet would be removed or their legs would be broken.
In the Gospel of Peter, the author includes the worship of Jesus by the other crucified man but has a very interesting detail. Because this man praises Jesus, the Jews (who are doing the crucifixtion in Peter, remember) decide not to break
his legs in order to prolong his suffering! Luke has no mention at all of the non-breaking of legs but includes the account of the man worshipping Jesus while being crucified.
But look at what the author of the Gospel of John does! In John 19, the soldiers break the legs of the two men crucified with Jesus to finish them off. When they get to Jesus it is
his legs that remain unbroken because he is already dead. John uses this version to slip yet another "messianic prophecy" (reference to Exodus 12:46; Num. 9:12; Psalm 34:20) into the passion/ressurection story. Interestingly, this "prophecy fulfillment" is not in any other gospel and it is directly the opposite of the account in the Gospel of Peter which clearly appears to be the source material or reflective of the source material for the account of the crucifixtion as shown by tracing the vinegar and gall story.