Choices:
you can call the java compiler from java, create a class, and call it dynamically. This is overkill for a few line snippet.
if your "20 instructions" are all of a similar form, and you have a finite vocabulary, then you could create your own "instruction set" and key off of that with some dispatch function. (This is a generic solution for any language.)
if you've used to more powerful languages like Lisp, some of the available scripting languages for java also have an eval function.
I like groovy because it has the best of both worlds: dynamic and functional use, closures, interactive, exploratory (eg tab completion on vars and methods), and is a superset of the java language and can use all of your existing java classes and jars. Easy to embed a groovy console to popup (even from your server) and interactively poke around, examine values, etc.
Below is an example of evaluating the code from the groovy shell; calling it from Java is practically the same;
see http://groovy.codehaus.org/Embedding+Groovy
$ groovysh
Groovy Shell (1.8.4, JVM: 1.6.0_24)
Type 'help' or '\h' for help.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
groovy:000> class Athing { String name; public Athing(String name){ this.name=name; }; String getText() { return name + "'s getText() returns..."; }; }
===> true
groovy:000> a1 = new Athing("a1"); a2 = new Athing("a-two"); a3 = new Athing("A_3");
===> Athing@6e7616ad
groovy:000> a1.getText() // showing
===> a1's getText() returns...
groovy:000> b = new Binding();
===> groovy.lang.Binding@2c704cf5
groovy:000> array = [ 'not','set','yet' ] // create an array for return values
===> [not, set, yet]
groovy:000> b.setVariable( "a1", a1 ); b.setVariable( "a2", a2 ); b.setVariable( "a3", a3 ); b.setVariable( "array", array );
===> null
groovy:000> shell = new GroovyShell(binding);
===> groovy.lang.GroovyShell@24fe2558
groovy:000> code = "array[1] = a1.getText();\n" + "array[2] = a2.getText();\n" + "array[3] = a3.getText();\n";
===> array[1] = a1.getText();
array[2] = a2.getText();
array[3] = a3.getText();
groovy:000> array // value of array before
===> [not, set, yet]
groovy:000> shell.evaluate( code ); // evaluate the string of code we were given
===> A_3's getText() returns...
groovy:000> array
===> [not, a1's getText() returns..., a-two's getText() returns..., A_3's getText() returns...]
groovy:000>