The "Others" Crucified
With
The Lord
(Matthew 27:38 and Luke
23:32).
This
Is Appendix 164 From The Companion Bible.
Misled
by tradion and the ignorance of Scripture on the part of
mediæval
painters, it is the general belief that only two were
crucified
with the Lord.
But
Scripture does not say so. It states that there were two
"thieves" (Greek lestai = robbers, Matthew 27:38. Mark 15:27); and
that
there were two "malefactors"
(Greek kakourgoi,
Luke 23:32).
It
is also recorded that both
the robbers reviled Him (Matthew
27:44. Mark 15:32); while in Luke 23:39 only one
of the malefactors
"railed
on Him", and "the other rebuked him"
for so doing (verse
40). If there were only two, this is a real
discrepancy; and there is
another,
for the two malefactors were "led with Him to be put to
death" (Luke
23:32), and
when they were come to Calvary, "they"
then
and there "crucified Him and the malefactors, one on the right
hand
and the other on the left"
(verse 33).
But
the other discrepancy is, according to Matthew, that after the
parting
of the garments, and after
"sitting down they watched Him
there", that "THEN" were
there two robbers crucified with Him,
one
on the right hand and the other on the left"
(Matthew 27:38.
Mark
15:27). The
two malefactors had already been "led with Him"
and
were therefore crucified "with Him", before the dividing of the
garments,
and before the two robbers were brought.
The
first two (malefactors) who were "led with Him"
were placed
one
on either side. When the other two (robbers) were brought,
much
later, they were also similarly placed; so that there were two
(one
of each) on either side and the Lord in the midst. The
malefactors
were therefore the nearer, and being on the inside they
could
speak to each other better, and the one with the Lord, as
recorded
(Luke 23:39 - 43).
John's
record confirms this for he speaks only of place and not of
time. He speaks, generally of the fact: "where they crucified Him,
and
with Him others, two on this side, and that side, and Jesus in the
midst" (John
19:18). In
Revelation 22:2 we have
the same
expression
in the Greek (enteuthen kai enteuthen), which is
accurately
rendered "on either side". So it should be rendered here:
"and
with Him others, on either side."
But
John further states (19:32, 33): "then
came the soldiers and
brake
the legs of the first, and of the other which was crucified with
Him.
But when they came (Greek = having come) to Jesus, and saw
that
He was dead already, they brake not His legs."
Had there been
only
two (one on either side) the soldiers would not have come to
the
Lord, but would have passed Him, and then turned back again.
But
they came to Him after they had broken the legs of the first two.
There
are two words used of the "other" and "others" in John
19:32 and Luke 23:32 (see Appendix 124. 1).
THE FIVE CROSSES AT
PLOUBEZERE, NEAR LANNION,
Cotes-du-Nord, Brittany.
In the former passage we read, "they brake the legs of the first and
of the other." Here the Greek is allos, which is the other (the
second) of two when there are more (see Matthew 10:23; 25:16, 17,
20: 27:61; 28:1. John 18:15, 16; 20:2, 4, 8, and Revelation 17:10).
In the latter passage (Luke 23:32) the word is heteros = different
(see Appendix 124. 2); "and others also, two, were being led with
Him." These were different1 from Him with Whom they were led,
not different from one another; for they were "in the same
condemnation", and "justly", while He had "done nothing
amiss" (verses 40, 41).
From this evidence, therefore, it is clear that there were four
"others" crucified with the Lord; and thus, on the hand, there are no
"discrepancies", as alleged; while, on the other hand, every word
and every expression, in the Greek, gets (and gives) its own exact
value, and its full significance.
To show that we are not without evidence, even from tradition, we
may state that there is a "Calvary" to be seen at Ploubézéré near
Lannion, in the Côtes-du-Nord, Brittany, known as Les Cinq Croix
("The Five Crosses"). There is a high cross in the centre, with four
lower ones, two on either side. There may be other instances of
which we have not heard.
"In the Roman Catholic church.... the altar-slab or 'table' alone is
consecrated, and in sign if this are cut in its upper surface five
Greek crosses, one in the centre and one in each corner... but the
history of the origin and development of this practice is not fully
worked out" (Encycl. Brit., 11th (Cambridge) ed., vol. i, pages 762,
763). This practice may possibly be explained by the subject of this
Appendix.
NOTE
1 Compare Matthew 6:21, 24; 8:21; 11:3. Luke 5:7; 6:6; 7:41; 9:56;
14:31; 16:13, 18; 17:34, 35; 18:10; 23:40.