Most of them fled in fear of their lives, except John and Peter. Peter denied Christ three times when questioned as to his association with Christ, something he bitterly regretted. Judas, who betrayed Christ, committed suicide. After the Resurrection, however, all of the disciples saw for themselves who Jesus really was and cowardice was replaced with conviction. Most of them were to die for this rather than deny what they had seen.
Jesus and his disciples went to a garden, and Jesus was arrested
they were really the disciples of jesus. they just denied him in fear of being arrested because they were his disciples
100000000
When Jesus was arrested,the most hard two things were: 1)that He will start a very long journey of pain and that will end with His Crucifiction. 2)that we was betrayed by one of His disciples,He knew that He will be betrayed by one of His disciples and He knew that this disciple is Judas but He also knew that His disciples will start to leave Him and that Saint Peter will start to deny Him... all these reasons were enough to make Jesus really sad when He was arrested...
they wer afraid to be arrested so they hid in a place
No matter what we read back into the gospels in hindsight, they say that the disciples clearly did not expect Jesus to be raised. Once Jesus was arrested, we are told that the disciples, to a man, distanced themselves from him. None of them went to the tomb on Sunday morning, and they expressed surprise when he appeared to them.
Jesus' disciples
The disciples present at the arrest of Jesus are not specified except for Peter, James, John, and Judas. It is likely they were all present.
They all faithly remained Jesus disciples after his death.
When He was arrested, Jesus and His disciples were in the Garden of Gethsemane (Matthew 26, Mark 14), which was on the Mount of Olives (Luke 22), across the Brook Kidron [NKJ spelling] from Jerusalem (John 18).
The theme is the last meal, the Passover meal, that Jesus shared with his disciples before being arrested.
Jesus' disciples were primarily Jewish.