The Holy Apostles.
St. Andrew the First-Called.
St. Andrew was a Galilean fisherman
of Bethsaida and was the first called of the Apostles of Christ (John 1:37-40),
to whom he brought his brother Simon, called Peter. According to Church
tradition, he suffered martyrdom at Patras in Achaia on an X-shaped Cross (St.
Andrew's Cross). Another tradition says that he visited Russia as
far as the city of Kiev (while yet another — Novgorod). His Feast Day is November 30.
St. Bartholemew.
In Holy Scripture, St. Bartholemew
is to be identified with the Nathanael of John 1:45-51, of whom the Lord
Himself witnessed, an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile (John 1:47).
According to Church tradition, he preached the Gospel in Lycaonia, India and
Armenia, where he was martyred by being flayed alive. His Feast Day is June
11.
St. James the Elder.
St. James the Elder (so-called to
distinguish him from the other Apostle, St. James the Younger) and his brother, John (the Evangelist), were
fishermen — the sons of Zebedee. This James, along with his brother and St.
Peter, were especially beloved of the Lord. According to the Acts, he was
beheaded by King Agrippa in Jerusalem (Acts 12:2), after first having preached in Spain.
His Feast Day is April 30.
St. James the Younger.
St. James the Younger (so-called to
distinguish him from the other Apostle of the same name; sometimes called the
Son of Alphaeus), was the brother of St. Matthew. In St. Mark's Gospel he is
said to be the son of Mary, one of the Holy Myrrhbearing Women (Mark 16:1). According
to Church tradition, he labored in Judea and then accompanied St. Andrew to Edessa, preaching
the Gospel. Later he traveled to Gaza (on the southern seacoast of Palestine), and
from thereto Egypt, where he was martyred by crucifixion. His Feast Day is October 9.
St. John.
St. John the Evangelist (also the Theologian or the Divine), was a son
of Zebedee and brother of St. James the Elder. In Holy Scripture he is referred
to as the disciple, whom Jesus loved (John 13:23), and who
leaned on his Master's breast at the Last Supper. To him was entrusted the
Most-Holy Theotokos by Our Lord as He was dying on the Cross (John 19:26),
and it was at St. John's house that her Holy Dormition occurred. St. John occupied
an important place in the Apostolic ministry and, according to St. Paul, he,
together with Peter and James were seen to be pillars of the Church in Jerusalem (Gal.
2:9). According to Church tradition, he was the last of the Apostles to die,
ca. 100 A.D., and while exiled on the Isle of Patmos, he wrote the Apocalypse
(or Revelation). To him is also attributed the Gospel and the three Epistles
that bear his name. His Feast Days are May 8 and September 26.
St. Jude.
This Apostle, the brother of James
the Just (both being half-brothers or perhaps, cousins, of the Lord), is also
called Thaddaeus or Lebbaeus (John 14:22; Matt. 10:3). To him is
attributed the Epistle of St. Jude. According to Church tradition, he preached
in Syria and Edessa, eventually being martyred in Persia
with his fellow Apostle, Simeon Zealotes. His Feast Day is June 19.
St. Lebbaeus.
[See St. Jude].
St. Matthew.
St. Matthew (also called Levi the
son of Alphaeus (Mark 2:14)) was a brother of St. James the Younger and was a tax collector.
The First Gospel is attributed to him, and, according to many scholars, was
first written for the Hebrews. According to Church tradition, St. Matthew
preached to the Jews first, and then traveled to Ethiopia,
Macedonia, Syria and Persia, dying a natural death, according to one tradition, or by
martyrdom, according to another. His Feast Day is November 16.
St. Matthias.
According to the Acts, St. Matthias
was chosen by lot to fill the place among the Twelve Apostles left vacant by
the Judas Iscariot (Acts 1:15-26). According to Church Tradition he is said to
have preached in Ethiopia and Armenia, eventually suffering death by crucifixion. His Feast Day is August
9.
St. Nathanael.
[See St. Bartholomew].
St. Peter.
St. Peter was a brother of St.
Andrew, and, together with him, was a fisherman on the Sea of Galilee. Called by the
Lord to become a fisher of men (Matt. 4:19), he was originally named
Simon, but later his name was changed to Peter (in Aramaic Cephas, meaning
rock) by the Lord. This was in response to Peter's declaration: You are the
Christ, the Son of the Living God (Matt. 16:16), for the Lord then said to him,
You are Peter, and on this rock I will build My church, and the gates of Hell
shall not prevail against it (Matt. 16:18). Holy Scripture amply witnesses to
the fact that Peter occupied a primary place among the Apostles, although not
to the extreme claimed by the Roman Catholic Church. His activities after the
Resurrection are witnessed to in the Acts and, according to Church tradition,
he was later martyred in Rome, being crucified upside down at his own request, since he felt
himself not worthy to die in the same manner as the Lord Himself. The two
Epistles of St. Peter are ascribed to him and he is celebrated, together with
the other chief Apostle, St. Paul, on June 29.
St. Philip.
St. Philip, like Peter and Andrew,
came from Bethsaida in Galilee (Matt. 10:3) and was called early in the Lord's
earthly ministry, bringing Nathanael with him (John 1:43ff.). According to
Church tradition, he was a missionary in Phrygia and died there (by martyrdom, according to some) at Hierapolis. His
Feast Day is November 14, the next day being the beginning of the Nativity Fast
(for which reason it is often called St. Philip's Fast).
St. Simeon Zealotes.
St. Simeon Zealotes (or the Zealot;
sometimes the Canaanite), according to Church tradition, traveled through Egypt and
Africa,
then through Mauretania and Libya, preaching the Gospel of Christ. Later he is said to have traveled
to Britain, where he was martyred by the Romans on a Cross. Another tradition
says that he was martyred with St. Jude in Persia.
His Feast Day is May 10.
St. Thaddaeus.
[See St. Jude].
St. Thomas.
St. Thomas, called Didymus (or the
Twin, John 11:16), appears several times in St. John's Gospel, which gives a
good impression of the sort of man he was: ready to die with the Master (John
11:16); skeptical about the Resurrection, yet, when the Risen Christ manifested
Himself to him, is whole-hearted in his belief (John 20:24-28). According to
Church tradition, St. Thomas preached in Parthia (Persia), Edessa and India, where he is held in great veneration as a founder of the Church
there, eventually suffering martyrdom. According to Church tradition, his
remains were buried in Edessa. His Feast Day is October 6 and also the Sunday following Holy
Pascha (St. Thomas Sunday).
Judas Iscariot.
This disciple, forever a symbol of
treachery, the son of Simon, was from the town of Kerioth (from
Kerioth — Iscariot). According to the Gospel, he stole from the common treasury
of which he had charge (John 12:5-6) and ultimately betrayed his Lord for
thirty pieces of silver (Matt. 26:14-15). After the Crucifixion of Jesus, in
deep remorse, Judas cast the pieces of silver into the Temple before the
Chief Priests and Elders, later going out and hanging himself. With the money,
now considered blood money, a potter's field was bought to bury strangers in
(Matt. 27:3-10).
St. Paul.
St. Paul was a strict Pharisee, having studied under the respected Rabbi
Gamaliel at Jerusalem (Acts 22:3). At a young age he had learned the trade of a
tent-maker (Acts 18:1-3) and had inherited Roman citizenship from his father
(Acts 22:28). The young Saul (as he was known before his conversion to
Christianity) was zealous for Judaism and consented to the stoning of St.
Stephen, later actively joining in the persecution of the Christians (Acts
8:3). While on the way to Damascus, to persecute the Christians there, he had a sudden vision of the
Lord, Who rebuked him for his persecution, and later he converted to the
Christian Faith (Acts 9:1-22). After this conversion experience, St. Paul went on to
become one of the greatest of the Apostles, zealously bringing the Light of
Christ to the Gentiles, eventually going to Rome where he
received martyrdom by beheading. During his missionary journeys, amply attested
to in the Acts, he wrote letters of encouragement to various congregations and
individuals along the way, and thirteen of them (fourteen, if the Epistle to
the Hebrews is accepted as of Pauline origin) have been accepted as part of the
New Testament. Together with St. Peter, he is commemorated on June 29.