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Away with him, away with him (αρον, αρον). First aorist active imperative of αιρω. See αιρε in Lu 23:18. This thing has gotten on …

But they cried out...—Better, they cried out therefore... They feel the sting of Pilate’s irony, therefore cry t…

And it was the preparation of the passover, and about the sixth hour: and he said to the Jews, Behold your King! But they cried out, Away with …

John 19:12-16a
St. Augustine of Hippo: The Jews thought they could alarm Pilate more by mentioning Caesar than by telling…

The time in view here depends on the method of reckoning “the sixth hour.” If it were reckoned from midnight, it would be about six o’clock in the …

We have no king but Caesar. It is a display of shocking madness that the priests, who should have been well acquainted with the Law, rejec…

But they cried out, Away with him
As a person hateful and loathsome to them, the sight of whom they could not bear; and this t…

Little did Pilate think with what holy regard these sufferings of Christ would, in later ages, be considered and spoken of by the best and greatest…

Previously, the Jews accused Christ of a crime against their law, but Pilate seemed to consider this a minor matter since he himself was not subjec…
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A.T. Robertson
A.T.Robertson