Then came the soldiers, and brake the legs of the first, and of the other which was crucified with him.
So the soldiers came over and broke the legs of the first guy who was crucified, and then the other one who was hanging there with Jesus.
Even in the darkest moments, every detail of Jesus' story was unfolding exactly as it was meant to.
📚 Historical Context
In the first century AD, during the Roman occupation of Judea, soldiers would break the legs of crucified individuals to speed up death by making it harder to breathe, especially when the Jewish Sabbath was approaching and bodies needed to be removed. This event in John 19:32 occurred as part of Jesus' crucifixion, where he was executed alongside two criminals, and it reflects the brutal efficiency of Roman crucifixion practices. It also ties into Jewish customs and Old Testament prophecies about the Passover lamb, whose bones were not to be broken.
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