Other Apostles.
St. Barnabas.
St. Barnabas, a good man, full of
the Holy Spirit and of faith (Acts 11:24), was a Jew from Cyprus,
closely associated with the work of St. Paul. It was
Barnabas who was sent to the Christians at Antioch, fetching
Paul from Tarsus to help him. Later, he and Paul were sent on the first missionary
journey, which began on the island of Cyprus, of which Church St. Barnabas is said to have founded. According to
Church tradition, he was martyred on Cyprus at
Salamis. He commemorated together with St. Bartholomew on June 11.
St. James the Brother of the Lord.
St. James was a half-brother (or
perhaps a cousin) of the Lord, and was the first Bishop of the Church at
Jerusalem, being called by St. Paul a pillar of that Church, together with
Peter and John (Gal. 2:9). At the first general Church council, the Council of
Jerusalem, James is depicted as having a leading role (Acts 15:12-21).
Having ruled the Church in Jerusalem wisely (for which reason he is often called the Just), St. James was martyred there.
Being taken to the top of the Temple wall, he was commanded to convince the people to turn away from
Christ, which he refused to do, speaking to them in quite the opposite manner.
Thereupon he was thrown down from that high point to the
ground, where he was stoned and beaten to death. The Epistle of St. James is
attributed to him and his Feast Day is celebrated on October 23.
St. Luke.
St. Luke, the Beloved Physician
(Col. 4:14), is the author of the Gospel bearing his name, as well as the Acts
of the Apostles. He was a Gentile convert, probably a Greek, and was a companion
of St. Paul in his later missionary journeys, concerning which he related in
the Acts. According to Church tradition, St. Luke was an iconographer and wrote
the first Icon of the Most-Holy Theotokos. St. Luke died, unmarried, in Greece,
at the age of eighty-four, and is commemorated on October 18.
St. Mark.
The Second Gospel is attributed to
this Apostle, who some say was the young man who fled away naked at the arrest
of Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane (Mark 14:51-52). In the Acts, he is called John Mark (Acts 12:12;
15:37), the son of Mary, at whose house in Jerusalem the early
Christians stayed (Acts 12:12), and he was a cousin of
the Apostle Barnabas (Col. 4:10). He figures several times in the Acts, at one
point being the source of a temporary rift between Paul and Barnabas (Acts 15:36-40),
but later he was with Paul during his first imprisonment at Rome (Col. 4:10).
In his 1st Epistle, St. Peter mentions Mark as being with him, styling him my
son (1 Pet. 5:13). According to Church tradition, St. Mark wrote his Gospel at the
request of the brethren in Rome, who asked him to relate what he had learned from St. Peter. He is
said to have preached the Gospel at Alexandria, Egypt,
and was its first Bishop, being martyred there during the reign of the Emperor
Trajan. His Feast Day is April 25.