en_tn/luk/22/47.md

1.2 KiB

behold, a crowd appeared

The word "behold" alerts us to a new group in the story. Your language may have a way of doing this. English uses "There was a crowd that appeared…”

leading them

This can be translated as "leading them to Jesus." Judas was showing the people where Jesus was. He was not telling the crowd what to do.

to kiss him

This can be translated as "to greet him with a kiss" or "to greet him by kissing him." When men greeted other men who where family or friends, they would kiss them on one cheek or both cheeks. If your readers would find it embarrassing to say that a man would kiss another man, you could translate it in a more general way: "to give him a friendly greeting." (See: rc://en/ta/man/translate/translate-unknown)

the Son of Man

Jesus is using this term to refer to himself.

are you betraying the Son of Man with a kiss

Jesus used this rhetorical question to rebuke Judas: "It is a kiss you are using to betray the Son of Man!" Judas could have chosen to use a hand signal or words like "Jesus is the one by the large stone" to point to Jesus, but instead he acted out a lie by using a kiss, the sign of love. (See: rc://en/ta/man/translate/figs-rquestion)