The two men on the road after Jesus' death were Cleopas and another disciple, as mentioned in the Gospel of Luke (Luke 24:13-35). They were discussing the recent events surrounding Jesus' crucifixion and resurrection when Jesus appeared to them, though they did not recognize him at first.
Do you mean who were the men beside Jesus on the cross, or the men to put Jesus on the cross
Your question has two answers: Jesus appeared to two disciples on the road to Emmaus the day of His resurrection (Luke 24:13-15), and He appeared in spirit to Saul of Tarsus on the road to Damascus (Acts 9:3-5).
The two people Jesus appeared to on the road to Damascus were Saul (who later became known as the apostle Paul) and Ananias. Jesus appeared to Saul in a blinding light and spoke to him, causing him to become a believer and change his ways. Ananias was instructed by Jesus to go to Saul and heal him of his blindness.
Jesus met two of his new disciples (not apostles) there and walked with them! They were blinded by their own sorrow that Jesus had died and didn't recognize Him. At the end other their journey they finally recognized Him and went back to Jerusalem to see the 11 disciples and told them Jesus had risen from the dead.
Mary, the mother of Jesus, and John, one of Jesus' disciples, were both present at the crucifixion and witnessed Jesus dying on the cross. Jesus entrusted John to take care of Mary after his death, highlighting their close relationship.
Jesus appeared to two men on the road to Emmaeus, but they did not recognise him. This occurs only in Luke's Gospel, which states that one of the two men was a disciple named Cleopas. The other appears to be Peter.
I don't think that their names are mentioned but they were two people sentenced to death and they just happened to be crucified next to him
Do you mean who were the men beside Jesus on the cross, or the men to put Jesus on the cross
emmaus
A:In Matthew's Gospel, Jesus appeared to the two of them, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary, while they were returning along the road from his empty tomb.In Luke's Gospel, Jesus appeared to the two of them, Cleopas and another, on the road to Emmaeus.Mark's Gospel originally ended at verse 16:8 with the young man telling the women that Jesus was risen and they fled in terror, telling no one. Much later, the 'Long Ending' (verses 16:9-20) was added to harmonise with the other gospels. In this Ending, Jesus once again appeared to "the two of them", either the two women returning along the road from the tomb or the two men on the road to Emmaeus.
The two names are not mentioned in the bible.Another answer:One of the two men Jesus appeared to on the road to Emmaus was named Cleopas (Luke 24:18). The other man's name isn't given. Another comment:We don't really know if both people on the road to Emmaus were men. One was (Cleopas) and the other could have even been his wife. That could be quite possible.The bible simply does not tell us.
Jesus was crucified alongside two other criminals, he was treated as a criminal. The disciples of jesus were not crucified.
The Bible mentions that two criminals were crucified with Him, one on either side.
His death and resurrection.
Jesus healed the two men of blindness. The account is in Matthew 9:27-29.
On the road to Emmaus
Your question has two answers: Jesus appeared to two disciples on the road to Emmaus the day of His resurrection (Luke 24:13-15), and He appeared in spirit to Saul of Tarsus on the road to Damascus (Acts 9:3-5).