John 18:38
Pilate asked him, 'What is truth?' After he said this, he went out to the Jews again and said, 'I find no case against him.' — Pilate's famous question—"What is truth?" (ti estin alētheia)—appears without answer in John's narrative. The irony: truth himself stands before Pilate (14:6), yet the prefect asks abstractly as if truth were mere epistemology rather than person. Pilate's finding "no case" (ouk heuriskō en autō aitian) represents his legal judgment: the political charge cannot be substantiated. Yet Pilate will crucify the innocent.