Commentary
Luke frames the Passover meal and the Mount of Olives prayer as Jesus’ deliberate movement into appointed suffering. At table He recasts Passover around His body given and His blood of the new covenant, announces betrayal, answers the disciples’ scramble for status with His own pattern of service, promises kingdom fellowship, and warns Peter of both collapse and restoration. On the Mount He faces the cup in prayer, yielding His will to the Father while the disciples, though grieving, fail to stay watchful and pray against temptation.
This passage shows Jesus knowingly entering the suffering set before Him: He interprets His death through Passover and covenant language, prepares His disciples for betrayal, testing, and a servant-shaped kingdom, and in prayer embraces the Father’s will as the trial arrives.
22:7 Then the day for the feast of Unleavened Bread came, on which the Passover lamb had to be sacrificed. 22:8 Jesus sent Peter and John, saying, "Go and prepare the Passover for us to eat." 22:9 They said to him, "Where do you want us to prepare it?" 22:10 He said to them, "Listen, when you have entered the city, a man carrying a jar of water will meet you. Follow him into the house that he enters, 22:11 and tell the owner of the house, 'The Teacher says to you, "Where is the guest room where I may eat the Passover with my disciples?"' 22:12 Then he will show you a large furnished room upstairs. Make preparations there." 22:13 So they went and found things just as he had told them, and they prepared the Passover. 22:14 Now when the hour came, Jesus took his place at the table and the apostles joined him. 22:15 And he said to them, "I have earnestly desired to eat this Passover with you before I suffer. 22:16 For I tell you, I will not eat it again until it is fulfilled in the kingdom of God." 22:17 Then he took a cup, and after giving thanks he said, "Take this and divide it among yourselves. 22:18 For I tell you that from now on I will not drink of the fruit of the vine until the kingdom of God comes." 22:19 Then he took bread, and after giving thanks he broke it and gave it to them, saying, "This is my body which is given for you. Do this in remembrance of me." 22:20 And in the same way he took the cup after they had eaten, saying, "This cup that is poured out for you is the new covenant in my blood. 22:21 "But look, the hand of the one who betrays me is with me on the table. 22:22 For the Son of Man is to go just as it has been determined, but woe to that man by whom he is betrayed!" 22:23 So they began to question one another as to which of them it could possibly be who would do this. 22:24 A dispute also started among them over which of them was to be regarded as the greatest. 22:25 So Jesus said to them, "The kings of the Gentiles lord it over them, and those in authority over them are called 'benefactors.' 22:26 Not so with you; instead the one who is greatest among you must become like the youngest, and the leader like the one who serves. 22:27 For who is greater, the one who is seated at the table, or the one who serves? Is it not the one who is seated at the table? But I am among you as one who serves. 22:28 "You are the ones who have remained with me in my trials. 22:29 Thus I grant to you a kingdom, just as my Father granted to me, 22:30 that you may eat and drink at my table in my kingdom, and you will sit on thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel. 22:31 "Simon, Simon, pay attention! Satan has demanded to have you all, to sift you like wheat, 22:32 but I have prayed for you, Simon, that your faith may not fail. When you have turned back, strengthen your brothers." 22:33 But Peter said to him, "Lord, I am ready to go with you both to prison and to death!" 22:34 Jesus replied, "I tell you, Peter, the rooster will not crow today until you have denied three times that you know me." 22:35 Then Jesus said to them, "When I sent you out with no money bag, or traveler's bag, or sandals, you didn't lack anything, did you?" They replied, "Nothing." 22:36 He said to them, "But now, the one who has a money bag must take it, and likewise a traveler's bag too. And the one who has no sword must sell his cloak and buy one. 22:37 For I tell you that this scripture must be fulfilled in me, 'And he was counted with the transgressors.' For what is written about me is being fulfilled." 22:38 So they said, "Look, Lord, here are two swords." Then he told them, "It is enough." 22:39 Then Jesus went out and made his way, as he customarily did, to the Mount of Olives, and the disciples followed him. 22:40 When he came to the place, he said to them, "Pray that you will not fall into temptation." 22:41 He went away from them about a stone's throw, knelt down, and prayed, 22:42 "Father, if you are willing, take this cup away from me. Yet not my will but yours be done." [ 22:43 Then an angel from heaven appeared to him and strengthened him. 22:44 And in his anguish he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground.] 22:45 When he got up from prayer, he came to the disciples and found them sleeping, exhausted from grief. 22:46 So he said to them, "Why are you sleeping? Get up and pray that you will not fall into temptation!"
Observation notes
- The preparation scene is narrated to show Jesus’ sovereign awareness and control; the disciples find matters 'just as he had told them.
- I have earnestly desired' intensifies Jesus’ resolve to share this meal before He suffers; the meal is framed explicitly by approaching suffering and the kingdom.
- Luke contains both an initial cup saying (vv. 17-18) and then bread and a later cup (vv. 19-20), creating a careful meal sequence rather than a bare formula.
- The phrases 'for you' attached to the body and cup mark Jesus’ death as vicarious and directed toward the disciples’ benefit.
- The betrayal announcement occurs in immediate proximity to covenantal meal language, sharpening the treachery of Judas and the moral gravity of the moment.
- The disciples’ argument about greatness immediately after the meal exposes their misunderstanding of the kind of kingdom Jesus is bringing.
- Jesus grounds His leadership teaching not in abstraction but in His own example: 'I am among you as one who serves.
- The promise of eating and drinking at Jesus’ table in His kingdom and sitting on thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel gives the disciples a future royal role without canceling the present call to humility and endurance.
- The warning to Simon uses plural and singular movement: Satan has demanded to sift the group, but Jesus addresses Simon specifically and prays particularly for him, making Peter representative yet personally accountable.
- When you have turned back' assumes Peter’s fall is not final and anticipates restoration to useful ministry.
- The saying about purse, bag, and sword is explained by v. 37, where Jesus cites Isaiah 53:12; the point is the new hostile setting associated with His being treated as a criminal.
- In Gethsemane, prayer is both command and model: the disciples are twice told to pray against temptation, while Jesus Himself prays in submission.
- Cup' in v. 42 links the prayer scene with the supper scene; what He distributes sacrificially He Himself must first endure obediently.
- The disciples sleep 'from grief,' showing genuine sorrow but also spiritual unreadiness; emotion does not replace vigilance.
Structure
- 22:7-13 Jesus directs the Passover preparations with precise foreknowledge, and events unfold exactly as He said.
- 22:14-20 At table Jesus interprets the meal in relation to His imminent suffering, the kingdom of God, His body given for the disciples, and the new covenant in His blood.
- 22:21-23 Jesus announces that His betrayer is present, holding together divine determination and human culpability.
- 22:24-30 After the disciples dispute about greatness, Jesus contrasts Gentile rule with servant leadership and promises kingdom reward to those who have remained with Him.
- 22:31-34 Jesus warns Simon of satanic testing, assures him of intercessory support, and predicts his denial and later restoration to strengthen the others.
- 22:35-38 Jesus announces a changed mission setting marked by danger and fulfillment of Scripture, culminating in the citation about being counted with transgressors; the sword exchange closes the saying without authorizing militant action as the next scene confirms by context.
- 22:39-46 On the Mount of Olives Jesus exhorts the disciples to pray against temptation, then prays for the Father’s will regarding the cup, while the disciples fail through grief and sleep.
Key terms
pascha
Strong's: G3957
Gloss: Passover meal/lamb/festival
Luke uses Passover timing to frame Jesus’ death as redemptive and climactic rather than accidental; the meal becomes the setting where Jesus interprets His death.
basileia
Strong's: G932
Gloss: kingdom, reign
The repeated kingdom language ties present suffering to future consummation and keeps the meal and promises oriented toward God’s coming reign.
soma
Strong's: G4983
Gloss: body
The term personalizes the sacrificial act: His own embodied life is being handed over on behalf of His followers.
kaine diatheke
Strong's: G1242
Gloss: new covenant
This places His death in covenant-establishing categories and signals that His blood inaugurates a new redemptive arrangement promised in Scripture.
horizo
Strong's: G3724
Gloss: appoint, determine
The term affirms divine purpose in Jesus’ death without lessening the betrayer’s guilt, since the same saying pronounces woe.
diakoneo
Strong's: G1247
Gloss: serve, wait on
The term defines kingdom greatness by self-giving service and anchors discipleship in imitation of Jesus’ pattern.
Syntactical features
Purpose clause in warning about prayer
Textual signal: "Pray that you will not fall into temptation" (vv. 40, 46)
Interpretive effect: The clause gives the intended result of prayer in this setting: watchful dependence is the proper means of facing trial rather than self-confidence.
Strong adversative contrast
Textual signal: "But look" (v. 21); "But I am among you as one who serves" (v. 27); "But now" (v. 36)
Interpretive effect: These turns mark major shifts: covenant meal to betrayal, worldly models of greatness to Jesus’ model, and earlier mission conditions to a more hostile phase.
Divine necessity formulation
Textual signal: "must be fulfilled in me" (v. 37)
Interpretive effect: The impersonal necessity language frames the coming events as scripturally ordained, not merely politically driven.
Concessive and volitional prayer pattern
Textual signal: "if you are willing ... yet not my will but yours be done" (v. 42)
Interpretive effect: Jesus’ request does not resist the Father in rebellion; it expresses real human dread while submitting decisively to the Father’s purpose.
Future-oriented until clauses
Textual signal: "until it is fulfilled in the kingdom of God" (v. 16); "until the kingdom of God comes" (v. 18)
Interpretive effect: These clauses push the meaning of the meal beyond the moment toward eschatological fulfillment, preventing reduction of the supper to mere memorial disconnected from future hope.
Textual critical issues
Longer and shorter readings of Luke 22:19b-20
Variants: Some witnesses shorten the institution narrative by omitting parts of v. 19 after 'This is my body' and/or v. 20 about the cup as the new covenant in Jesus’ blood.
Preferred reading: The longer reading including 'which is given for you; do this in remembrance of me' and v. 20 is preferred.
Interpretive effect: The longer reading preserves the full covenantal interpretation of Jesus’ death and the command of remembrance; the shorter reading would make Luke’s account notably briefer and less explicit.
Rationale: The longer reading has strong and widespread manuscript support and best explains the rise of the shorter form, likely through accidental omission or liturgical/textual simplification.
Luke 22:43-44 angel and bloody-sweat-like anguish
Variants: Some manuscripts include the angelic strengthening and the description of Jesus’ anguished prayer and sweat like drops of blood; others omit these verses.
Preferred reading: The verses are probably original, though the textual problem remains debated.
Interpretive effect: If included, they intensify Luke’s portrayal of Jesus’ agony and heavenly strengthening; if omitted, the main thrust of submissive prayer remains intact.
Rationale: The verses fit Luke’s interest in prayer and angelic ministry, and omission is understandable if scribes were uneasy with so vivid a portrayal of Jesus’ anguish.
Old Testament background
Exodus 12
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: Passover provides the immediate matrix for the meal; Jesus places His coming death within the context of deliverance through sacrifice.
Jeremiah 31:31-34
Connection type: allusion
Note: The phrase 'new covenant' likely evokes Jeremiah’s promise of covenant renewal, now linked to Jesus’ blood.
Isaiah 53:12
Connection type: quotation
Note: Jesus explicitly cites 'he was counted with the transgressors' to interpret the coming arrest and suffering as scriptural fulfillment.
Daniel 7:13-14
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The self-designation 'Son of Man' and the movement from suffering to kingdom participation resonate with Danielic kingship through vindication.
Psalm 110:1
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: Though explicit in the following section, the unit’s kingdom and enthronement trajectory prepares for the vindicated royal status associated with Jesus.
Interpretive options
How should the sword saying in 22:36-38 be understood?
- Jesus literally instructs the disciples to arm themselves for physical resistance.
- Jesus speaks symbolically or hyperbolically to indicate the onset of danger and opposition.
- Jesus permits limited practical preparation for travel danger, but not violent defense of His mission.
Preferred option: Jesus indicates a changed hostile setting and allows practical preparedness, but not armed resistance as a means of advancing or protecting His messianic mission.
Rationale: Verse 37 gives the controlling explanation: He must be counted with transgressors. The immediate context is fulfillment and looming danger, and the next scene rejects sword use in the arrest.
What is the force of 'This is my body' and 'This cup ... is the new covenant in my blood'?
- A strictly literal transformation of the elements into Christ’s physical body and blood.
- A covenantal-identificational use in which the elements signify and represent Jesus’ sacrificial self-giving and covenant-inaugurating blood.
- A merely mental memorial with no strong sacrificial or covenantal force.
Preferred option: A covenantal-identificational use in which the elements signify Jesus’ sacrificial death and covenant inauguration, without requiring a literalistic change of substance.
Rationale: The surrounding language of 'given for you,' 'poured out for you,' Passover setting, and 'new covenant' points to sacrificial and covenantal significance, while the discourse does not require metaphysical transformation of the elements.
Does Jesus’ prayer about the cup imply reluctance contrary to the Father’s plan?
- Yes; Jesus momentarily resists the mission.
- No; Jesus expresses genuine human anguish while willingly submitting to the Father’s will.
- The prayer is purely dramatic language with no disclosure of real inner struggle.
Preferred option: Jesus expresses genuine human anguish while willingly submitting to the Father’s will.
Rationale: The wording openly distinguishes His will from the Father’s in the sphere of suffering, yet resolves the tension in obedient submission; this best honors the full humanity of Jesus and the moral force of His obedience.
How should Peter’s predicted return be read?
- As proof that true disciples cannot seriously fail.
- As a temporary lapse followed by restoration through Jesus’ intercession and Peter’s renewed response.
- As an indication that Peter’s denial is only apparent, not real.
Preferred option: As a temporary lapse followed by restoration through Jesus’ intercession and Peter’s renewed response.
Rationale: Jesus plainly predicts real denial, yet also says 'when you have turned back, strengthen your brothers,' which anticipates recovery and renewed ministry after failure.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The unit must be read in sequence with Judas’ betrayal before it and Jesus’ arrest and Peter’s denial after it; these adjacent scenes clarify the meal warnings, the sword saying, and the prayer against temptation.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: Jesus’ words about His body, blood, suffering, service, prayer, and scriptural fulfillment require a reading centered on His messianic identity and mission rather than on the disciples as the main subject.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: The passage contains real ethical instruction: betrayal incurs woe, greatness is redefined by service, and prayer is commanded as the necessary response to temptation.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: Not every mention should be absolutized; the two swords are mentioned briefly and are immediately subordinated to the larger themes of fulfillment, danger, and nonviolent submission.
election_covenant_ethnic
Relevance: medium
Note: The promise of thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel should not be spiritualized away; Luke preserves a concrete kingdom outlook involving Israel even as the new covenant is inaugurated through Jesus’ blood.
prophetic
Relevance: high
Note: Explicit fulfillment language and the Isaiah citation govern the reading of the coming suffering as prophetically anticipated and divinely purposed.
Theological significance
- Jesus speaks of His death before it happens and gives it meaning as a "for you" sacrifice that establishes the new covenant.
- The saying about the betrayer holds divine purpose and human guilt together: the Son of Man goes as determined, yet woe still falls on the betrayer.
- The promise of future table fellowship and rule places the disciples’ present confusion inside a still-future kingdom hope.
- Greatness among Jesus’ followers is measured by the table image of serving, because Jesus Himself takes that place among them.
- Peter’s coming denial is neither minimized nor treated as final; Jesus’ intercession opens the way for return and renewed usefulness.
- The repeated command to pray shows how temptation is to be met. Grief and bold promises are not enough.
- In Gethsemane, obedient sonship appears not as emotional detachment but as costly submission to the Father’s will.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: Luke arranges the scene through sharp juxtapositions: Passover and suffering, covenant speech and betrayal, thrones and serving, confident vows and impending denial, prayer commanded and prayer neglected. Jesus repeatedly interprets the moment as it unfolds, so the actions carry declared meaning rather than remaining unexplained.
Biblical theological: Exodus-patterned deliverance, Jeremiah’s new-covenant promise, Isaiah’s suffering-servant language, satanic testing, and kingdom expectation meet in this scene. The meal and the prayer on the Mount belong together: the covenant cup given to the disciples rests on the cup Jesus must accept from the Father.
Metaphysical: The passage depicts a world in which several levels of agency operate at once. Satan seeks to sift, disciples choose and fail, Judas bears guilt, Scripture moves toward fulfillment, and the Father’s purpose is not overturned by any of it.
Psychological Spiritual: Luke is exact about spiritual vulnerability. The disciples can argue over rank at the table, grieve sincerely in the garden, and still fail the watch Jesus requires. Peter can be earnest and still collapse. Jesus’ own prayer shows that obedience does not cancel dread; it governs dread by yielding to the Father.
Divine Perspective: The Father’s will remains active through betrayal, exhaustion, and approaching violence. Jesus is not swept along by events; He receives the path before Him, interprets it, and walks it in prayerful obedience.
Category: character
Note: God’s covenant faithfulness appears in Jesus’ words over the cup, where promised renewal is tied to His blood.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: The ordered movement toward suffering and the explicit appeal to fulfilled Scripture display God’s providential rule in salvation history.
Category: personhood
Note: The prayer in Gethsemane presents a real relation between Father and Son, not submission to impersonal necessity.
Category: attributes
Note: The cup Jesus accepts shows both the seriousness of sin and God’s merciful provision for His people.
- Jesus directs events with composure, yet prays in real anguish.
- The kingdom is promised in royal terms, yet Jesus defines greatness by serving at table.
- Peter is warned of genuine failure, yet also addressed as one who will return and strengthen others.
- What Scripture determines does not erase the moral accountability of those who betray, boast, sleep, or deny.
Enrichment summary
The scene is held together by three threads: Passover recast around Jesus’ death, kingdom status overturned by table-service, and testing met only through prayerful dependence. Jesus places His body and blood at the center of covenant identity, interprets the sword saying through Isaiah 53:12 and the approach of criminal treatment, and then faces the cup in Gethsemane. The meal and the prayer belong to the same movement: the blessing given to the disciples depends on the suffering Jesus must accept.
Traditions of men check
Treating the Lord’s Supper as a free-floating ritual cut loose from sacrifice, covenant, and kingdom expectation.
Why it conflicts: Jesus ties the bread and cup to His body given, His blood poured out, and the coming kingdom.
Textual pressure point: Verses 15-20, where suffering, "for you" language, covenant, and kingdom are woven together.
Caution: The memorial note should not be denied; the problem is reducing remembrance to bare recollection.
Church leadership shaped by prestige, titled importance, or public honor.
Why it conflicts: Jesus answers the dispute over greatness by contrasting Gentile benefactor-style rule with His own place as one who serves.
Textual pressure point: Verses 24-27, especially "Not so with you" and "I am among you as one who serves."
Caution: The passage does not abolish authority; it remakes its posture and use.
Confident claims of loyalty to Jesus that neglect the need for prayerful vigilance.
Why it conflicts: Peter’s pledge stands beside Jesus’ warning, His intercession, and the repeated command to pray against temptation.
Textual pressure point: Verses 31-34 and 40-46.
Caution: The correction is against self-reliance, not against courage or resolve.
Turning Luke 22:36 into a stand-alone mandate for Christian militancy.
Why it conflicts: Jesus explains the moment by Isaiah 53:12 and, in the arrest scene, stops the move toward armed action.
Textual pressure point: Verse 37 in this unit and the halted sword use in 22:49-51.
Caution: This does not by itself settle every question of prudence or self-protection; it does keep this text from being used as a charter for violent messianic advance.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: At Passover, Jesus names the cup as the new covenant in His blood. The meal therefore marks a people gathered around His impending death, not simply around shared memory.
Western Misread: Treating the supper as mainly a private devotional exercise or a detached church ordinance.
Interpretive Difference: The table becomes a covenant-defining act with communal and future-kingdom weight.
Dynamic: honor_shame
Why It Matters: The argument about greatness erupts at table, where rank and recognition were socially legible. Jesus answers by taking the servant’s place as the controlling image for leadership among His followers.
Western Misread: Hearing the saying as generic advice about humility while missing the direct rebuke of status competition inside the disciple band.
Interpretive Difference: The passage recasts authority itself, not just the tone of authority.
Idioms and figures
Expression: This cup ... is the new covenant in my blood
Category: metonymy
Explanation: The cup stands for its contents, and the blood language interprets Jesus’ death as the means by which the covenant is enacted.
Interpretive effect: Keeps the focus on Jesus’ sacrificial death and covenantal significance rather than on the vessel as such.
Expression: to sift you like wheat
Category: simile
Explanation: The image evokes violent shaking that exposes what is there. Jesus describes the coming crisis as severe testing of the disciples, not a passing moment of discouragement.
Interpretive effect: It sharpens the urgency of prayer and explains why Peter’s restoration matters for the others.
Expression: take this cup away from me
Category: metaphor
Explanation: "Cup" names the suffering allotted to Jesus. Its reuse after the supper links the covenant words at table with the ordeal He must undergo.
Interpretive effect: Shows that the covenant blessing announced in the meal is inseparable from the suffering accepted in prayer.
Expression: It is enough
Category: other
Explanation: The reply most likely closes the conversation rather than endorsing a plan of armed resistance. The local force is abrupt and the arrest scene immediately prevents militant use.
Interpretive effect: It cautions against building a theology of violence from this brief exchange.
Application implications
- Receive the Lord’s Supper with attention to Jesus’ self-giving death, covenant mercy, and the kingdom meal still ahead, rather than as a familiar religious form.
- Judge Christian leadership by whether it resembles Jesus at the table—serving rather than accumulating visible importance.
- Answer seasons of testing with prayer. Sincerity, grief, and bold intention do not by themselves keep a disciple from falling.
- Do not excuse serious failure, but do not treat repentant failure as the end of usefulness when Christ restores and recommissions.
- Read the disciples’ changed circumstances with sobriety: hostility may require preparedness, but this passage does not authorize advancing Jesus’ mission by force.
- In distress, pray as Jesus prays—honestly naming the burden before the Father while yielding to His will.
Enrichment applications
- Come to the Lord’s Table as those receiving covenant mercy through Jesus’ self-giving, with the coming kingdom still in view.
- In leadership, refuse the hunger for rank that surfaced among the disciples at the meal; take up visible forms of service instead.
- When pressure rises, do more than promise faithfulness—pray against temptation and depend on Christ’s interceding help.
Warnings
- The sword saying is compressed and can be distorted if detached from verse 37 and the arrest scene that follows.
- Luke 22:43-44 should be handled with measured confidence because its textual status remains debated.
- The promise about judging the twelve tribes of Israel should not be dissolved into a vague symbol, though this passage does not explain its full mode of fulfillment.
- The scene contains several tightly joined movements—meal, betrayal warning, dispute over greatness, warning to Peter, and prayer on the Mount—and they should not be flattened into one undifferentiated discourse.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not reconstruct the meal too confidently from later rabbinic Passover practice; Luke’s wording should carry the main interpretive weight.
- Do not build major claims on Luke 22:43-44 without acknowledging the live textual question.
- Do not turn "judge the twelve tribes of Israel" into a mere abstraction; the saying retains a concrete Israel-shaped kingdom horizon even though its full realization is not detailed here.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Reading Luke 22:36-38 as a direct command for Christian militancy or for defending Jesus’ mission by force.
Why It Happens: The sword saying is isolated from verse 37 and from the arrest narrative that follows.
Correction: The saying is governed by Jesus’ citation of Isaiah 53:12 and by His refusal to let the arrest become an armed defense.
Misreading: Forcing the supper language here to settle later sacramental debates, either by reducing it to bare recollection or by making this passage alone carry a full metaphysical system.
Why It Happens: Later doctrinal questions are imported too quickly into Luke’s Passover setting.
Correction: The immediate emphasis is covenant, sacrifice, and Jesus’ self-giving "for you." Those features should control first.
Misreading: Treating the warning to Peter as only an individual episode rather than part of a wider assault on the disciple group.
Why It Happens: The shift between plural and singular is easy to miss, especially in translation.
Correction: Satan’s demand concerns the disciples collectively, while Peter is singled out as the one who, after returning, must strengthen the others.
Misreading: Taking Gethsemane either as sinful reluctance or as a staged display with no real inner struggle.
Why It Happens: Some readers assume anguish and obedience cannot coexist.
Correction: Luke presents true dread joined to true submission; the force of the scene lies in obedience through anguish.