The answer to this question depends on which gospel is preferred as a source.
The ealiest of the gospels, The Gospel According to St Mark, is clear in that none of the disciples was at the crucifixion. Women looked from afar off: among them, Mary.
The Gospel According to St Matthew says only that women looked from afar off: among them, Mary and Mary Magdalene.
The Gospel According to St Luke says that those of his acquaintance stood afar off with the women.
The Gospel According to St John says that the mother of Jesus, her sister (also called Mary) and Mary Magdalene stood by the cross with the disciple whom he loved. Nowhere is the disciple whom Jesus loved identified, but Christian tradition holds him to be John
The saint who stood with Mary at the foot of the cross was St. John the Apostle. He is often referred to as "the disciple whom Jesus loved" and was entrusted by Jesus to care for his mother, Mary, as he died on the cross.
The Gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke are clear in saying that no disciple of Jesus stood at the foot of the cross; those of his acquaintance stood afar off. In the Gospel of John, the "disciple whom Jesus loved" stood at the foot of the cross with Mary. Who the disciple was, or who he was intended to be, is unknown. The second-century Church Fathers, by a process of elimination, decided that the disciple must have been John.
John was the only apostle at the cross when he died.
A:In the synoptic gospels, none of the disciples stood at the foot of the cross. They are quite clear in stating that those of Jesus' acquaintance stood afar off (Luke 23:49). John's Gospel, although loosely based on Luke, changes the account of the crucifixion to place the 'disciple whom Jesus loved' at the foot of the cross with Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of Jesus and her sister. The second-century Church Fathers announced that the beloved disciple must have been John, son of Zebedee, and the Christian Church has subsequently accepted this attribution.
Mary magdeline
No John the Babtist was beheaded long ago by king herod . And it was the John the disciple who was at the cross.
No, the only apostle at the foot of the cross was St. John.
A:In the synoptic gospels (Matthew, Mark and Luke), it appears that none of Jesus' supporters or friends stood at the foot of the cross. The earliest of the gospels, The Gospel According to St Mark, only says that women looked from afar off: among them, Mary. The Gospel According to St Matthew also says that women looked from afar off: among them, Mary and Mary Magdalene. Luke's Gospel says that those of his acquaintance stood afar off with the women. So only Luke has anyone nearby other than the women, and even then only afar off. The Gospel According to St John says that the mother of Jesus, her sister (also called Mary) and Mary Magdalene stood by the cross with the disciple whom he loved. The identity of this disciple has long been debated, but most Christians think that he was the disciple John.
No, the vowel sound in "stood" is different from the vowel sound in "foot." The vowel sound in "stood" is pronounced as /ʊ/, while the vowel sound in "foot" is pronounced as /ʊ/.
The apostles and Jesus were at the Last Supper of Jesus. When Jesus was on the cross, Jesus' mother Mary, the apostle John, and a few other women were there.
A:In the synoptic gospels, no one was at the foot of the cross, although those of Jesus' acquaintance stood afar off with Mary Magdalene and other women. Peter could perhaps have been one of those afar off, but he was not at the crucifixion.In John's Gospel, Mary mother of Jesus, Mary Magdalene and another woman called Mary were at the foot of the cross with the 'disciple whom Jesus loved'. We do not know who the beloved disciple was, but he certainly was not Peter. Tradition says that he was John.
The ealiest of the gospels, The Gospel According to St Mark, is clear in that none of the disciples was at the crucifixion, not even with the women who looked from afar off, among them Mary.The Gospel According to St Matthew says only that women looked from afar off. Once again it appears that none of the disciples was willing to watch, even from a distance.The Gospel According to St Luke says that those of his acquaintance stood afar off with the women. In this gospel, there may have been disciples with the women, but the gospel does not name them.The Gospel According to St John says that the disciple whom Jesus loved stood with the women at the cross itself. Nowhere is the disciple whom Jesus loved identified, but Christian tradition holds him to be John.