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- If Cleopas’s wife, Mary, was in Jerusalem for Passover, it makes sense that she would have traveled back home to Emmaus (or stopped overnight in Emmaus en route to home) with her husband afterward.
artandtheology.org/2017/04/28/the-unnamed-emmaus-disciple-mary-wife-of-cleopas/
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Apr 13, 2018 · St. John’s Gospel says that Mary the wife of Clopas was among those standing by the cross when Jesus died. We believe that “Clopas” and “Cleopas” were the same person. Furthermore, we believe that this person was also known as Alphaeus.
Jan 19, 2022 · It suggests the “other disciple” was Cleopas’ wife, Jesus’ aunt! As their destination came in sight, the two invited the stranger into their home to share a meal — and it was only at the ...
Apr 11, 2021 · Today’s passage, Luke 24:13-35, offers a glimpse of Jesus and his disciples after that first Easter. The story begins with two of Jesus’ followers on the road between Jerusalem and Emmaus. One is named Cleopas; the other is not named, and might be Cleopas’ wife.
Meanwhile, Dr. Tim Gray and Jeff Cavins assert that it was Clopas’ wife, arguing that just as Adam and Eve’s eyes were open to their sin (Gen 3:7), so another married couple’s eyes—on the first day of the new creation—were opened to seeing the resurrected Lord in the celebration of the Eucharist (Luke 24:31) [Walking With God: A ...
In John 19:25 the Authorized Version reads, “Mary, the wife of Clopas.” She is mentioned as standing at the cross, in company with Mary of Magdala, and Mary the mother of Jesus. She was the ‘sister’ of our Lord’s mother.
Cleopas assumes Jesus is a visitor to Jerusalem because in that moment most people in the area were travelers. Friday was Passover. Saturday was the Sabbath and the first day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread, which is a holiday Sabbath.