Luke Chapter 22 verse 14 Holy Bible

ASV Luke 22:14

And when the hour was come, he sat down, and the apostles with him.
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BBE Luke 22:14

And when the time had come, he took his seat, and the Apostles with him.
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DARBY Luke 22:14

And when the hour was come, he placed himself at table, and the [twelve] apostles with him.
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KJV Luke 22:14

And when the hour was come, he sat down, and the twelve apostles with him.
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WBT Luke 22:14


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WEB Luke 22:14

When the hour had come, he sat down with the twelve apostles.
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YLT Luke 22:14

And when the hour come, he reclined (at meat), and the twelve apostles with him,
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerses 14-38. - The Last Supper. Verse 14. - And when the hour was come, he sat down, and the twelve apostles with him. The preparation had been made in the "large upper room," and the Lord and the twelve sat down, or rather reclined on the couches covered with carpets, the tables before them laid with the dishes peculiar to the solemn Passover Supper, each dish telling its part of the old loved story of the great deliverance. There was the lamb the Paschal victim, and the bitter herbs, the unleavened bread and the reddish sweet conserve of fruits - commemorating, it is said, by its color the hard labors of brickmaking, one of the chief burdens of the Egyptian bondage - into which the Blaster dipped the sop, and gave it to the traitor-apostle (John 13:26). The Lord reclined, probably, at the middle table; St. John next to him; St. Peter most likely on the other side; and the others reclining in an order corresponding more or less closely with the threefold division of the twelve into groups of four. The Supper itself had its special forms and ceremonies, which the Lord transformed as they proceeded in such a way as to change it into the sacred Supper of the New Testament.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(14-18) And when the hour was come.--See Notes on Matthew 26:20; Mark 14:17. The other Gospels name "the evening." St. Luke uses simply "the hour" as referring to the appointed time, "in the evening" (literally, between the two evenings, i.e., the close of twilight; see Exodus 12:6), for the "killing," the lamb being eaten afterwards as soon as it was roasted. It is characteristic of the comparatively late date of St. Luke's narrative that he speaks of "the twelve Apostles," while the other two reports speak of "the disciples." (Comp. Luke 9:10; Luke 17:5; Luke 24:10.) . . .