Chapter 27
Matthew 27:2
καὶ δήσαντες αὐτὸν ἀπήγαγον καὶ παρέδωκαν αὐτὸν Ποντίῳ Πιλάτῳ τῷ ἡγεμόνι.
RBT Greek Interlinear:
Strongs 2532
[list] Λογεῖον Perseus kai καὶ and Conj |
Strongs 1210
[list] Λογεῖον Perseus dēsantes δήσαντες those who have bound V-APA-NMP |
Strongs 846
[list] Λογεῖον Perseus auton αὐτὸν himself PPro-AM3S |
Strongs 520
[list] Λογεῖον Perseus apēgagon ἀπήγαγον they led away V-AIA-3P |
Strongs 2532
[list] Λογεῖον Perseus kai καὶ and Conj |
Strongs 3860
[list] Λογεῖον Perseus paredōkan παρέδωκαν have given up V-AIA-3P |
Strongs 4091
[list] Λογεῖον Perseus Pilatō Πιλάτῳ to Pilate N-DMS |
Strongs 3588
[list] Λογεῖον Perseus tō τῷ the Art-DMS |
Strongs 2232
[list] Λογεῖον Perseus hēgemoni ἡγεμόνι leader N-DMS |
RBT Hebrew Literal:
Pilatus - "Man of the Spear"
And those who have chained himself, they led away, and they handed over to Man of the Spear ("Pilate"), the Commander.51bJulia Smith Literal 1876 Translation:
And having bound they brought him away, and they delivered him to Pontius Pilate, the leader.
And having bound they brought him away, and they delivered him to Pontius Pilate, the leader.
LITV Translation:
And binding Him, they led Him away and delivered Him to Pontius Pilate the governor.
And binding Him, they led Him away and delivered Him to Pontius Pilate the governor.
ESV Translation:
Error retrieving verse.
Error retrieving verse.
Footnotes
51b | Man of the Spear The Greek name Πειλᾶτος is a transliteration of the Latin Pilatus, a Roman cognomen likely derived from pilum (“spear, javelin”), suggesting “man of the spear” or “armed with a javelin.” It reflects a typical Roman naming convention and possibly denotes military background or honorific status. The full name, Pontius Pilatus, places him within the Pontii gens, a well-attested Samnite-origin family in Roman history. |