Commentaries:
Adam Clarke
No, nor yet Herod: for I sent you to him - That is, to see whether he could find that Christ had ever attempted to raise any disaffection or sedition among the Galileans, among whom he had spent the principal part of his life; and yet Herod has not been able to find out any evil in his conduct. Your own accusations I have fully weighed, and find them to the last degree frivolous.
Instead of ̔ , for I sent you to him, BHKLM, and many other MSS., with some versions, read ̔ , for he hath sent him to us. As if he had said, "Herod hath sent him back to us, which is a sure proof that he hath found no blame in him."
Nothing worthy of death is done unto him - Or rather, nothing worthy of death is committed by him, ͅ , not, done unto him. This phrase is of the same sense with , he hath done nothing, and is frequent in the purest Attic writers. See many examples in Kypke.
Other Adam Clarke entries containing Luke 23:15:
John 19:12
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