Mark 15:13

Authorized King James Version

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And they cried out again, Crucify him.

Original Language Analysis

οἱ G3588
οἱ
Strong's: G3588
Word #: 1 of 6
the (sometimes to be supplied, at others omitted, in english idiom)
δὲ And G1161
δὲ And
Strong's: G1161
Word #: 2 of 6
but, and, etc
πάλιν again G3825
πάλιν again
Strong's: G3825
Word #: 3 of 6
(adverbially) anew, i.e., (of place) back, (of time) once more, or (conjunctionally) furthermore or on the other hand
ἔκραξαν they cried out G2896
ἔκραξαν they cried out
Strong's: G2896
Word #: 4 of 6
properly, to "croak" (as a raven) or scream, i.e., (genitive case) to call aloud (shriek, exclaim, intreat)
Σταύρωσον Crucify G4717
Σταύρωσον Crucify
Strong's: G4717
Word #: 5 of 6
to impale on the cross; figuratively, to extinguish (subdue) passion or selfishness
αὐτόν him G846
αὐτόν him
Strong's: G846
Word #: 6 of 6
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

And they cried out again, Crucify him (οἱ δὲ πάλιν ἔκραξαν, Σταύρωσον αὐτόν, hoi de palin ekraxan, Staurōson auton)—The verb κράζω (krazō) means to cry out, shout, scream—a visceral, loud demand. The adverb πάλιν (palin, 'again') suggests they'd already begun shouting this before Pilate's question in v. 12. The imperative σταύρωσον (staurōson, 'crucify!') demanded Rome's most shameful execution method. σταυρόω (stauroō) means to fix to a cross, to crucify.

Crucifixion was reserved for slaves, pirates, insurrectionists—the lowest criminals. For a Jewish crowd to demand this for a fellow Jew shows the depths of manipulation achieved. The cry echoes ironically against Palm Sunday's 'Hosanna!' (11:9-10)—the same city that welcomed Jesus now screams for His blood. The crowd fulfilled unwittingly Psalm 22:16: 'they pierced my hands and feet' and Isaiah 53:12: 'he was numbered with the transgressors.' Human voices demand what divine decree ordained.

Historical Context

Crucifixion (Latin: crux, crucifixio) was introduced to the Mediterranean by Persians, adopted by Alexander the Great, and perfected by Romans as public deterrent. Cicero called it 'the most cruel and disgusting penalty' (In Verrem 5.64). The victim died slowly through asphyxiation, exposure, and shock—lasting hours or days. Jewish law considered crucifixion victims cursed: 'he that is hanged is accursed of God' (Deuteronomy 21:23)—which Paul cites to show Christ becoming a curse for us (Galatians 3:13).

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