Luke 23:21

Authorized King James Version

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But they cried, saying, Crucify him, crucify him.

Original Language Analysis

οἱ G3588
οἱ
Strong's: G3588
Word #: 1 of 7
the (sometimes to be supplied, at others omitted, in english idiom)
δὲ But G1161
δὲ But
Strong's: G1161
Word #: 2 of 7
but, and, etc
ἐπεφώνουν they cried G2019
ἐπεφώνουν they cried
Strong's: G2019
Word #: 3 of 7
to call at something, i.e., exclaim
λέγοντες saying G3004
λέγοντες saying
Strong's: G3004
Word #: 4 of 7
properly, to "lay" forth, i.e., (figuratively) relate (in words (usually of systematic or set discourse; whereas g2036 and g5346 generally refer to an
σταύρωσον Crucify G4717
σταύρωσον Crucify
Strong's: G4717
Word #: 5 of 7
to impale on the cross; figuratively, to extinguish (subdue) passion or selfishness
σταύρωσον Crucify G4717
σταύρωσον Crucify
Strong's: G4717
Word #: 6 of 7
to impale on the cross; figuratively, to extinguish (subdue) passion or selfishness
αὐτόν him G846
αὐτόν him
Strong's: G846
Word #: 7 of 7
the reflexive pronoun self, used (alone or in the comparative g1438) of the third person, and (with the proper personal pronoun) of the other persons

Analysis & Commentary

The crowd's demand: 'But they cried, saying, Crucify him, crucify him.' The verb 'cried' (ἐπεφώνουν, epephōnoun) indicates loud, repeated shouting. Their demand is emphatic through repetition: 'Crucify him, crucify him' (Σταύρου σταύρου αὐτόν, Staurou staurou auton). Crucifixion was Rome's most shameful, agonizing execution—reserved for slaves and worst criminals. That crowds demand this for Jesus, who taught and healed them, demonstrates humanity's depth of depravity. Days earlier, many of these same people cried 'Hosanna' (19:38); now they scream 'Crucify.' Their fickleness exposes the human heart's instability. More tragically, they demand death for the very One who could give them life. Sinful humanity instinctively rejects its only Savior.

Historical Context

The cry 'Crucify him' was likely orchestrated by religious leaders who manipulated the crowd (Matthew 27:20, Mark 15:11). Mob mentality took over—reason fled, violence dominated. Pilate tried repeatedly to release Jesus, finding no fault (23:4, 14, 22), but political expediency overcame justice. The crowd's preference for Barabbas (a murderer, v. 18-19) over Jesus (the sinless Son of God) symbolizes humanity's natural preference for rebellion over righteousness. This scene proves total depravity—humans, left to themselves, reject God and choose sin. It also demonstrates God's sovereignty—the crowds fulfilled prophecy and accomplished God's redemptive plan (Acts 2:23, 4:27-28) even while acting wickedly.

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