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31 For if such things are done[a] when the wood is green, what will happen when it is dry?”[b]

32 Two other criminals[c] were also led away to be executed with him. 33 So[d] when they came to the place that is called “The Skull,”[e] they crucified[f] him there, along with the criminals, one on his right and one on his left.

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Footnotes

  1. Luke 23:31 tn Grk “if they do such things.” The plural subject here is indefinite, so the active voice has been translated as a passive (see ExSyn 402).
  2. Luke 23:31 sn The figure of the green wood and the dry has been variously understood. Most likely the picture compares the judgment on Jesus as the green (living) wood to the worse judgment that will surely come for the dry (dead) wood of the nation.
  3. Luke 23:32 tc The text reads either “two other criminals” or “others, two criminals.” The first reading (found in P75 א B) could be read as describing Jesus as a criminal, while the second (found in A C D L W Θ Ψ 070 0250 ƒ1,13 33 M) looks like an attempt to prevent this identification. The first reading, more difficult to explain from the other, is likely autographic.sn Jesus is numbered among the criminals (see Isa 53:12 and Luke 22:37).
  4. Luke 23:33 tn Here καί (kai) has been translated as “so” to indicate the conclusion of the preceding material.
  5. Luke 23:33 sn The place that is calledThe Skull’ (known as Golgotha in Aramaic, cf. John 19:17) is north and just outside of Jerusalem. The hill on which it is located protruded much like a skull, giving the place its name. The Latin word for Greek κρανίον (kranion) is calvaria, from which the English word “Calvary” derives (cf. Luke 23:33 in the KJV).
  6. Luke 23:33 sn See the note on crucify in 23:21.