This book brings life to an unnamed soldier present in the Garden of Gethsemane at the arrest of Jesus. In the scriptural account, he is simply the victim of Peter's impulsive sword, losing an ear in the process. Malchus was a Roman soldier. A military man with a family to support, just doing the job day in, day out. Like all of Jerusalem, he had heard accounts of the man called Jesus - of the unrest following in his wake. Rumors of political uprisings, rumors of miracles. None of this concerned Malchus until his personal encounter with Jesus. The day that Jesus healed the very man sent to arrest him, wounded by Jesus' own disciple, was the day that changed Malchus's life forever. The imagination behind this story and fitting it with the Biblical account of Jesus' ministry and crucifixion is wonderful. W.G. Griffiths truly brings life to a man barely a foot note in the Bible, and truly brings perspective to Jesus' ministry and the people he impacted. When you have read and re-read the crucifixion story, it is easy to forget that everyone involved was a real person with a full life, and though the Bible doesn't tell us what ever became of the men who arrested Jesus, or the men who nailed him to the cross, this book prompts us to re-examine things we have glossed over time and again, and to consider the implications of the life and death of Christ on a more personal scale.