The twelve disciples and other men and women who followed Jesus
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1. Definition of "disciple" | 2. The twelve & other men | 3. Explanation of names | 4. Women followers | * Jesus' family |
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"Twelve, the, a group chosen by Jesus to accompany him and share his ministry (Matt. 10:1-4; Mark 3:13-19; Luke 6:13-16; cf. John 6:70; Acts 1:13). The number apparently refers to the twelve tribes of Israel (Matt. 19:28) and symbolizes the restoration of Israel. As witnesses to his ministry and resurrection, the Twelve authenticate the church’s postresurrection proclamation of the traditions about Jesus (cf. the selection of Matthias to replace Judas, Acts 1:15-26)."
from Harper's Bible Dictionary, edited by Paul J. Achtemier (San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1985)
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Name | Before following Jesus | During Jesus' ministry | After Jesus' ministry | Manner of death | Paul's letters | Mark | Matthew | Luke | Acts | John | Other writings |
Description of source | . | . | . | . | Earliest NT writings | Synoptic gospel #1 | Synoptic gospel #2 | Synoptic gospel #3 | Part 2 of Luke | The Fourth Gospel | . |
Approx date of book/s | . | . | . | . | 50-57 A.D. | 65-70 A.D. | 80-90 A.D. | 80-85 A.D. | 80-85 A.D. | 70- 95 A.D. | 1 Pe: 64 A.D. or 80 A.D. or 90-95 A.D. 2 Pe: 80-90 A.D. or 125-140 A.D. (Scholars differ in their conclusions on author and date.) |
"the twelve" mentioned | . | . | . | . | 1Co 15:5 | Mar 3:14; 4:10; 6:7;9:35; 10:32; 11:11; 14:10, 17, 20, 43 | Mat 10:1, 2, 5; 11:1; (19:28); 20:17; 26:14, 20; 47 | Luk 6:13; 8:1; 9:1, 12; 18:31; 22:3, 14,(30), 47 | Act 6:2 | Joh 6:67, 70, 71; 20:24 | (not mentioned) |
"the twelve" listed | . | . | . | . | (Only Peter and John are named. See below.) | Mar 3:16-19 | Mat 10:2-4 | Luk 6:14-16 | Act 1:13, 16, 26 | John 1:40-47; 6:70-71; 11:16; 14:22; 21:2-3 (Only nine are named. See below.) | (Only Peter is named. See below.) |
"the seventy" or "seventy-two" other disciples (see textual commentary on whether Jesus sent 70 or 72 other disciples) | . | . | . | . | . | . | . | Luk 10:1-24 | . | . | "the seventy" (mentioned by: Tertullian, 207 A.D., ANF 3:387); Thaddaeus or Addaeus (mentioned by Eusebius, 315 A.D., ANF 8:651) |
Simon, Peter, Cephas, Bar-Jona (son of Jona, younger brother of Andrew) | From Bethsaida in Galilee, fisherman, follower of John the Baptist | One of the twelve disciples. He was married (Mat 8:14). | Continued to be married (1Co 9:5). One of the three primary leaders of the church in Jerusalem (Gal 2:9). Traveled to Antioch, where he spent time with Paul. Ended up in Rome. | Martyrdom by crucifixion (upside-down) in Rome | Cephas (1Co 1:12; 3:22; 9:5; 15:5; Gal 2:9), Peter (Gal 1:18; 2:7,8,11,14) | Simon, Peter (1) | Simon, Peter (1) | Simon, Peter (1) | Peter (1) | Peter, Cephas (2) | Peter (1Pe 1:1), Simon Peter (2Pe 1:1); Gosp of Thomas 13 and 114 |
James, son of Zebedee, one of "Boanerges" or "Sons of Thunder | Fisherman from Galilee | One of the twelve disciples | James was brought to trial by a man who was so moved by James' testimony that his accuser became a Christian and was beheaded with James. | Martyrdom by decapitation at the command of Herod Agrippa I (the grandson of Herod the Great) in 44 A.D. James was the first of the twelve to be martyred. | (not mentioned) | James son of Zebedee, one of "Boanerges" or "Sons of Thunder" (2) | James son of Zebedee (3) | James (3) | James (3) | one of "sons of Zebedee" (8) | (not mentioned) |
John, the brother of James, one of "Boanerges" or "Sons of Thunder" | Fisherman from Galilee | One of the twelve disciples, commonly believed to have been "the beloved disciple." | One of the three primary leaders of the Jerusalem church (Gal 2:9). Cared for Jesus' mother Mary. Exiled to the Isle of Patmos. In his late years he reportedly returned to Ephesus to win back a congregant who had left the faith. | No record of martyrdom or death. He was believed to have been around as late as 100 A.D. | John (Gal 2:9) | John the brother of James, one of "Boanerges" or "Sons of Thunder" (3) | John the brother of James (4) | John (4) | John (2) | one of "sons of Zebedee" (9) | (not mentioned) |
Andrew, the brother of Simon | From Bethsaida in Galilee, fisherman, follower of John the Baptist | One of the twelve disciples | Continued his ministry in Scythia (southern Russia), Asia Minor, Thrace, Greece, and Achaia. | Martyrdom in Patras (in Achaia) | (not mentioned) | Andrew (4) | Andrew, the brother of Simon (2) | Andrew, the brother of Simon (2) | Andrew (4) | Andrew (1) | (not mentioned) |
Philip | From Bethsaida in Galilee | One of
the twelve disciples. According to Joh 1:45, Philip was the first to be
asked by Jesus to follow him. According to Joh 6:5-7, Philip may have been
in charge of the disciples' food supply. |
Ancient reports of Philip the disciple are often confused with Philip the Apostle. Fifteen different adventures of Philip were collected in the Acts of Philip. Ancient sources also refer to a Gospel of Philip, which was found in Nag Hammadi. | Martyrdom in Hierapolis | (not mentioned) | Philip (5) | Philip (5) | Philip (5) | Philip (5) | Philip (3) | (not mentioned) |
Bartholomew, Nathanael - more explanation | From Galilee. According to Joh 1:45, he seems to have been a friend of Philip. | One of the twelve disciples | Ministry in India; or as a companion to Andrew among the Parthians; or as a companion to Philip through Lydia and Asia. Books with his name in the title (Questions of Bartholomew, The Book of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ by Bartholomew the Apostle) that are important to coptic theology. | Martyrdom in India; or among the Parthians (after traveling with Andrew); or in Lycaonia (after traveling with Philip). | (not mentioned) | Bartholomew (6) | Bartholomew (6) | Bartholomew (6) | Bartholomew (7) | Nathanael (4) | (not mentioned) |
Matthew - Son of Alphaeus, Levi (?) | From Galilee. Tax collector in Capernaum. Possibly the brother of James, son of Alphaeus | One of the twelve disciples | Though the Gospel of Matthew was traditionally attributed to Matthew the disciple, most biblical scholars believe that the Gospel was written in Antioch around 90 A.D. by a Greek-speaking Jewish Christian. Scholars today do not believe that there is any reliable information about Matthew after Jesus' ministry. | No info available. | (not mentioned) | Matthew (7), Levi son of Alphaeus (?) | Matthew (8) | Matthew (7), Levi (?) | Matthew (8) | (not mentioned) | (not mentioned) |
Thomas, Didymus | From Galilee. He was a twin | One of
the twelve disciples. Most accounts of Thomas come from the Gospel of John,
which portrays Thomas as a follower who did not always grasp the point that
Jesus was trying to make; whereas, the Gospel of Thomas and some other non-canonical
gospels portray Peter as being the one who was somewhat slow to grasp Jesus'
message. (Elaine Pagel's Beyond
Belief argues that the Gospel of John may have been written or revised
to be a rebuttal to the Gospel of Thomas.) |
He conducted his ministry in India. He is very prominent in Syriac Christianity. He took the gospel to Parthia and Persia. The Gospel of Thomas and the Acts of Thomas are apocryphal writings using Thomas' name. | Martyrdom in India; or death in Edessa. | (not mentioned) | Thomas (8) | Thomas (7) | Thomas (8) | Thomas (6) | Thomas, Didymus (6) | Gosp of Thomas 13 |
James son of Alphaeus | From Galilee. | One of the twelve disciples | No info available | No info available. | (not mentioned) | James son of Alphaeus (9) | James son of Alphaeus (9) | James son of Alphaeus (9) | James son of Alphaeus (9) | (not mentioned) | (not mentioned) |
Thaddaeus, Judas son of James, Judas (not Iscariot) - more explanation | From Galilee. | One of the twelve disciples | No info available | No info available. | (not mentioned) | Thaddaeus (10) | Thaddaeus (10) | Judas son of James (11) | Judas son of James (10) | Judas (not Iscariot) (7) | (not mentioned) |
Simon the Cananaean, Simon the Zealot - more explanation | From Galilee. A revolutionary, anti-Roman-occupation guerilla warfare fighter/assasin or a religious zealot. | One of the twelve disciples | No info available. | No info available. | (not mentioned) | Simon the Cananaean (11) | Simon the Cananaean (11) | Simon, the Zealot (10) | Simon, the Zealot (11) | not mentioned) | (not mentioned) |
Judas Iscariot | The only disciple from Judea and not from Galilee. He may have been associated with Judean revolutionaries. | One of the twelve disciples. According to Joh 12:5-6 and 13:29, he was the treasurer of Jesus' group. | According to Mat and Act, he died soon either right before or right after the crucifixion. | According to Mat 27:5, he committed suicide by hanging himself; according to Act 1:18, he died in a field he purchased with the reward money. | (not mentioned) | Judas Iscariot (12) | Judas Iscariot (12) | Judas Iscariot (12) | Judas Iscariot
(12)
(replaced by Matthias) |
Judas Iscariot (5) | (not mentioned) |
Matthias | No info available. | A follower of Jesus since the beginning of his ministry, a witness to the resurrection (Act 1:22), but not one of the twelve until after Jesus' resurrection. | According to Act 1:15-26, after being nominated, he was chosen by lots to replace Judas as one of the twelve disciples. | No info available. | (not mentioned) | (not mentioned) | (not mentioned) | (not mentioned) | Act 1:23,26 | (not mentioned) | (not mentioned) |
Barsabbas, Joseph, Justus | No info available. | A follower of Jesus since the beginning of his ministry, a witness to the resurrection (Act 1:22), but never one of the twelve. | According to Act 1:15-26, he was nominated but not chosen by lots to replace Judas as one of the twelve disciples. | No info available. | (not mentioned) | (not mentioned) | (not mentioned) | (not mentioned) | Act 1:23 | (not mentioned) | (not mentioned) |
James, James the Just (the brother of Jesus | Grew up in Nazareth, Galilee, with Jesus, with 3 other brothers, and with 2 sisters. | According to Joh 7:2-5, he appears to have been somewhat a heckler rather than a follower of Jesus. | Became not only a follower of Jesus but the head primary leader of the church in Jerusalem, with Peter and John as the other two primary leaders in Jerusalem (Gal 2:9). Was likely married (1Co 9:5). Early tradition believed that James was the author of the Epistle of James, but many scholars doubt James' authorship. | Martyrdom in 62 A.D. |
Gal. 1:19; 2:9,12 |
Mar 6:3 | Mat 13:55,56 | . |
Act 12:17; 21:18 |
(not mentioned by name) |
Gosp of Thomas 12 Jesus' siblings not named: Mat 12:46-50, Mar 3:31-35, Joh 2:12, Joh 7:1-9, Acts 1:14, 1Co 9:5 |
Name | Before following Jesus | During Jesus' ministry | After Jesus' ministry | Manner of death | Paul's letters | Mark | Matthew | Luke | Acts | John | Other writings |
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The order of disciples and order of books of the Bible as presented in the above table
Synoptic gospel # indicates the generally agreed upon sequence in which the three synoptic gospels were written:
#1 - Mark - written about 70 A.D.
#2 - Matthew - written about 80 A.D. - using (1) Mark, (2) another early source now called Q, and (3) Matthew's own sources
#3 - Luke - written about 90 A.D. - using (1) Mark, (2) another early source now called Q, and (3) Luke's own sources
Explanations of the apparent discrepancies in the disciples' names listed above
Though different names sometimes are used in different gospels, the twelve individuals are the same.
Bartholomew, Nathanael
Thaddaeus, Judas son of James
In order to distinguish Judas son of James from the traitor Judas Iscariot, it appears that Mark (followed by Matthew) substituted a name that described the character of Judas son of James, rather than using his real name of Judas. John 14:22 also finds the need to distinguish this Judas from Judas Iscariot.
Harper's Bible Dictionary explains:
Thaddaeus, one of the twelve apostles as identified in two of the apostolic lists (Matt. 10:3; Mark 3:18). In the other lists, however, ‘Judas, the son (or brother) of James,’ appears instead of ‘Thaddaeus’ (Luke 6:16; Acts 1:13). Variant readings in Matthew have ‘Lebbaeus,’ and the kjv reads ‘Lebbaeus, whose surname was Thaddaeus.’ ‘Lebbaeus,’ however, does not appear in the best texts and is omitted in most translations. Resulting explanations include: (1) Thaddaeus, Judas, and Lebbaeus are the same person; (2) the lists in Luke and Acts reflect a change in the apostles; and (3) tradition has preserved the fact that Jesus had an inner group of trusted followers (the Twelve) and has retained the names of most of the members of this group but not without slight variations. The second explanation appears unlikely. The third is plausible in light of the fact that the Gospel traditions were transmitted within different communities, making some variation far from surprising. Those who argue that Thaddaeus and Judas are the same person still question his identification with the author of the Letter of Jude. Post-biblical traditions supply additional information about Thaddaeus, but this is of questionable value.
The Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible, Volume 2, page 1008 (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1962) explains:
Luke probably supplies the true name of this apostle. thaddaeus (from a root meaning "breast nipple"?) and Lebbaeus (from a word meaning "heart"?) may be descriptive designations of the apostle, introduced to avoid confusion with the traitor and because of the odium attached to his name. The "Judas (not Iscariot)" of John 14:22 is possibly this apostle.
For reference-rich speculation based largely upon post-apostolic literature, see Robert Eisenman's James the Brother of Jesus (New York: Penguin Books, 1997), especially pages 930-937
On the other hand, Floyd Filson's A New Testament History: The Story of the Emerging Church (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1964, especially pages 107-112) offers another view:
As if to underline the inconspicuous role of many of the Twelve, the name of one of them is uncertain. Matthew and Mark call him Thaddaeus (though some evidence, especially in Matthew, calls him Lebbaeus instead of Thaddaeus). Luke and The Acts give instead the name Judas the son of James. Rather than say that Thaddaeus (and possibly Lebbaeus) was an alternative name of Judas the son of James, it is better to say that though the Twelve had a real role during Jesus' ministry, they had a decreasing role after the very first days of the apostolic church, and the identity of one of the Twelve is uncertain; indeed, most of them were not known for individual contributions.
None of these Twelve, as far as we can learn, were of priestly origin; all were Jewish laymen. They were of Galilean origin; if the the word "Iscariot" comes from the Hebrew and means "man of Kerioth," as has been held, then Judas would appear to be of Judean origin, since Kerioth was a place in Judea; but the Galilean origin of the remaining eleven may be assumed (cf. Acts 2:7).
Simon the Cananaean, Simon the Zealot
Cananaean is a semitic term that is equivalent to the Greek term Zealot.
The Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible, Volume 1, page 498 (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1962) explains:
CANANAEAN [kananaios, from Aram., jealous one, zealot, from Heb. root] (Matt. 10:4; Mark 3:18). A cognomen for a certain Simon, a disciple of Jesus, to distinguish him from Simon Peter. The ending -aios, probably denotes a party (cf. Pharisaios, "Pharisee"; Saddoukaios, "Sadducee"; Essaios, "Essene").
In Luke 6:15; Acts 1:13 the same disciple has the name Simon the Zealot, the Greek Zelotes being the equivalent of the Semitic original.
Harper's Bible Dictionary explains:
Cananaean, epithet of the disciple Simon in Mark 3:18 and Matt. 10:4, derived from Aramaic qan'an', ‘zealous.’ In Luke 6:15 and Acts 1:13, he is called a Zealot, one who opposed Roman rule.
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Name | Before following Jesus | During Jesus' ministry | After Jesus' ministry | Manner of death | Pre-gospel writings | Mark | Matthew | Luke | Acts | John | Other writings |
Description of source | . | . | . | . | Earliest known writings | Synoptic gospel #1 | Synoptic gospel #2 | Synoptic gospel #3 | Part 2 of Luke | The Fourth Gospel | .. |
Approx date of book/s | . | . | . | . | 50-60 A.D. | 65-70 A.D. | 80-90 A.D. | 80-85 A.D. | 80-85 A.D. | 70- 95 A.D. | . |
Joanna (the wife of Chuza, Herod's servant) | No info available | One of several women healed by Jesus, who assisted in maintaining Jesus' traveling group of followers. Her husband, Chuza, was a steward of Herod Antipas. According to Luk 24:1-10, she was one of those who announced the resurrection to the Twelve. | No info available. | No info available. | . | . | . |
Luk 8:3, Luk 24:10 |
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Martha of Bethany (the sister of Mary of Bethany and the the sister of Lazarus, possibly the daughter of Simon the leper) | From Bethany | She and her sister were mentioned prominently in Luke and John. | No info available. | No info available. | . | . | . | Luk 10:38-42 | . | Joh 11:1-44 | . |
Mary of Bethany (the sister of Martha and the sister Lazarus, possibly the daughter of Simon the leper) | From Bethany | She and her sister were mentioned prominently in Luke and John. In Joh 12:1-3, it is Mary who anoints Jesus' feet. In Mat 26:13 and Mar 14:9, which also took place in Bethany, the "woman" was not named, but Jesus said that the anointing story should be told whenever the gospel is preached. Only Luke did not mention that the anointer was from Bethany. | No info available. | No info available. | . | Mar 14:3-9 (?) | Mat 26:6-13 (?) | Luk 10:38-42 | . |
Joh 11:1-44; 12:1-8 |
Was this the woman of Bethany who anointed Jesus?
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Mary Magdalene | From Magdala | One of several women healed by Jesus, who assisted in maintaining Jesus' traveling group of followers. Mary Magdalene is mentioned first in the list of female disciples, therefore is considered to have been the female leader. In each gospel she was the first or among the first to learn of the resurrection or to see Jesus after the resurrection. | Some have speculated that Mary Magdalene was actually "the beloved disciple" in the Gospel of John and/or the voice/source behind the Gospel of John. | No info available. | . | Mar 15:40,47; 16:1,9 |
Mat 27:56,61; 28:1 |
Luk 8:2; 24:10 |
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Joh 19:25; 20:1,18 |
Gosp of Thomas 21, 114 |
Mary, the mother of James and John (the sons of Zebedee) | No info available | According to Mar 15:47; 16:1; Mat 27:61; 28:1, 9, she together with Mary Magdalene were at the empty tomb and/or were the first to experience the risen Jesus. | No info available. | No info available. | . |
Mar 15:40; 16:1 |
Mat 20:20; 27:56,61; 28:1 |
Luk 24:10 | . | . | . |
Mary, the mother of Jesus | Wife of Joseph, who was a carpenter. Mother of Jesus, 4 other sons, and daughters. | Mary appears to have traveled with Jesus, but she did occasionally visit Jesus. Aocording to Matthew, she was at the cross when Jesus was cruxified. | No info available. | No info available. |
Gal 4:4 Q40 (Luk 11:27,28) |
Mar 3:32 |
Mat 1:18; 2:11; 12:47; 13:55 |
Luk 2:34,48; 8:20; 10:28-32; 11:27,28 |
. | Joh 19:25-27 | Act 1:14 |
Mary, the mother of James (James the less) and Joseph | No info available. | One of several women who assisted in maintaining Jesus' traveling group of followers. | No info available. | No info available. | . | Mar 15:40,47 |
Mat 27:61; 28:1; |
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Mary, the "other Mary" | No info available. | No info available. | No info available. | No info available. | . | . |
Mat 27:61; 28:1 |
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Commentators consistently believe that this was the mother of James and Joseph (mentioned in Mat 27:56), but not the mother of Jesus, whose brothers were James, Joseph, Simon, and Judas. (E.g., see J.C. Fenton's St. Matthew, page 445-446, R.G Braatcher's A Translation Guide to ... Matthew, page 368, C. Ricci's Mary Magdalene and many others, page 62 footnote 8)
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Sister of Mary (mother of Jesus), Jesus' aunt | No info available. | At cross with Mary, Mary Magdalene, and Mary the wife of Clopas | No info available. | No info available. | . | Mar 15:40,47 |
Mat 27:56,61; 28:1 |
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Mary, the wife of Clopas (KJV, Cleophas) | No info available. | One of several women who assisted in maintaining Jesus' traveling group of followers. | No info available. | No info available. | . | . | . | . | . | Joh 19:25 | See also Luk 24:18. Is there a connection? |
Salome | From Galilee. May have been the wife of Zebedee and the mother of James and John. | One of several women who assisted in maintaining Jesus' traveling group of followers. | No info available. | No info available. | . | Mar 15:40; 16:1 | Mat 27:56 (?) | . | . | . | Gosp of Thomas 61 |
Susanna | No info available. | One of several women who assisted in maintaining Jesus' traveling group of followers. | No info available. | No info available. | . | . | . | Luk 8:3 | . | . | . |
Woman of Bethany (Was this "Mary of Bethany?") | No info available. | No info available. | No info available. | No info available. | . | Mar 14:3-9 | Mat 26:6-13 | . | . | . | |
"Other women," "the women," or other anonymous women | No info available. | No info available. | No info available. | No info available. | . |
Mar 1:31; 15:41 |
Mat 9:20-22; 14:21; 15:22 |
Luk 8:3; 13:11-13 |
. | Joh 4:7-26 | . |
Name | Before following Jesus | During Jesus' ministry | After Jesus' ministry | Manner of death | Pre-gospel writings | Mark | Matthew | Luke | Acts | John | Other writings |
See also:
1. Definition of "disciple" | 2. The twelve & other men | 3. Explanation of names | 4. Women followers | * Jesus' family |
Copyright
1996-2004 Robert Nguyen Cramer
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