Christian Churches of God
No. 122B
The
Fate of the
Twelve
Apostles
(Edition 1.0
20100410-20100410)
What happened to the twelve Apostles? Some died by martyrdom and others died from natural causes. In this paper we look at where each of them preached and where each met his end, according to the writings of Hippolytus.
Christian Churches of God
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(Copyright © 2010 Wade Cox)
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The Fate of the Twelve
Apostles
The fate of the Twelve apostles according to Hippolytus (ANF Vol. 5, pp, 254-255) and the dispersal of the Seventy are of interest to the church. These lists were held in doubt by later writers because of what he says and the lesser importance he places on the work of Peter or Cephas in Rome. XLIX was also added to with the canons of Abulides as being also his which is in doubt. His writings on the Twelve and the Seventy are however considered authentic.
"Be
thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee the crown of life."
Ye have
heard, beloved, the answer of the Lord; ye have learned the sentence of the
Judge; ye have been given to understand what kind of awful scrutiny awaits us,
and what day and what hour are before us. Let us therefore ponder this every
day; let us meditate on this both day and night, both in the house, and by the
way, and in the churches, that we may not stand forth at that dread and
impartial judgment condemned, abased, and sad, but with purity of action, life,
conversation, and confession; so that to us also the merciful and benignant God
may say, "Thy faith hath saved thee, go in peace; "139
and again, "Well done, good and faithful servant; thou hast been faithful
over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many, things: enter thou into
the joy of thy Lord."140
Which joy may it be ours to reach, by the grace and kindness of our Lord Jesus
Christ, to whom pertain glory, honour, and adoration, with His Father, who is
without beginning, and His holy, and good, and quickening Spirit, now and ever,
and to the ages of the ages. Amen.141
Hippolytus
ON The Twelve Apostles
Where
Each OF Them Preached, And Where HE Met His End.
1. Peter
preached the Gospel in Pontus, and Galatia, and Cappadocia, and Betania, and
Italy, and Asia, and was afterwards crucified by Nero in Rome with his head
downward, as he had himself desired to suffer in that manner.
2.
Andrew preached to the Scythians and Thracians, and was crucified, suspended on
an olive tree, at Patrae, a town of Achaia; and there too he was buried.
3. John,
again, in Asia, was banished by Domitian the king to the isle of Patmos, in
which also he wrote his Gospel and saw the apocalyptic vision; and in Trajan's
time he fell asleep at Ephesus, where his remains were sought for, but could
not be found.
4.
James, his brother, when preaching in Judea, was cut off with the sword by
Herod the tetrarch, and was buried there.
5.
Philip preached in Phrygia, and was crucified in Hierapolis with his head
downward in the time of Domitian, and was buried there.
6.
Bartholomew, again, preached to the Indians, to whom he also gave the
Gospel according to Matthew, and was crucified with his head downward,
and was buried in Allanum,142
a town of the great Armenia.143
7. And
Matthew wrote the Gospel in the Hebrew tongue,144
and published it at Jerusalem, and fell asleep at Hierees, a town of
Parthia.
8. And
Thomas preached to the Parthians, Medes, Persians, Hyrcanians, Bactrians, and
Margians,145
and was thrust through in the four members of his body with a pine spears146
at Calamene,147
the city of India, and was buried there.
9. And
James the son of Alphaeus, when preaching in Jerusalem was stoned to death by
the Jews, and was buried there beside the temple.
10.
Jude, who is also called Lebbaeus, preached to the people of Edessa,148
and to all Mesopotamia, and fell asleep at Berytus, and was buried there.
11.
Simon the Zealot,149
the son of Clophas, who is also called Jude, became bishop of Jerusalem
after James the Just, and fell asleep and was buried there at the age of 120
years. [James, brother of Christ, was martyred in 63 CE, at the end of the 69
weeks of years of Daniel 9:25 and succeeded by Clophas (Cleopas) and
immediately afterwards by Clophas’ son Simon who then took the church to Pella
where it was safe from the destruction in Jerusalem in 70 CE. The church
returned to Jerusalem later. Cox. ed.]
12. And
Matthias, who was one of the seventy, was numbered along with the eleven
apostles, and preached in Jerusalem, and fell asleep and was buried there.
13. And
Paul entered into the apostleship a year after the assumption of Christ; and
beginning at Jerusalem, he advanced as far as Illyricum, and Italy, and Spain,
preaching the Gospel for five-and-thirty years. And in the time of Nero he was
beheaded at Rome, and was buried there.
The Original Twelve Apostles
Judas was replaced by Matthias determined by Lot (Acts 1:26)
(a)
Thaddaeus (Matthew 10: 1-4; Mark 3:13 -19)
(b)
Judas brother of James is the corresponding name in Luke’s
gospel (Luke 6:12-16)
Thaddaeus is the Greek rendering of the Aramaic Thaddaios which occurs in the text in Matthew and Mark and does not appear in the text in Luke. It is taken as a rendering for Judas brother of James. There is no deviation of the persons in the texts except for the order in which they are listed.
Of the
original Twelve Apostles John, Matthew, Jude and Simon died natural deaths. The
others were martyred for the faith.
The Same Hippolytus ON The Seventy Apostles.150
1. James the Lord's brother,151
bishop of Jerusalem.
2. Cleopas, bishop of Jerusalem.
3. Matthias, who supplied the vacant place in the
number of the twelve apostles.
4. Thaddeus, who conveyed the epistle to Augarus.
5. Ananias, who baptized Paul, and was
bishop of Damascus.
6. Stephen, the first martyr.
7. Philip, who baptized the eunuch.
8. Prochorus, bishop of Nicomedia, who also was the
first that departed,152
believing together with his daughters.
9. Nicanor died when Stephen was martyred.
10. Timon, bishop of Bostra.
11. Parmenas, bishop of Soli.
12. Nicolaus, bishop of Samaria.
13. Barnabas, bishop of Milan.
14. Mark the evangelist, bishop of Alexandria.
15. Luke
the evangelist.
These
two belonged to the seventy disciples who were scattered153
by the offence of the word which Christ spoke, "Except a man eat my flesh,
and drink my blood, he is not worthy of me."154
But the one being induced to return to the Lord by Peter's instrumentality, and
the other by Paul's, they were honoured to preach that Gospel155
on account of which they also suffered martyrdom, the one being burned, and the
other being crucified on an olive tree.
16.
Silas, bishop of Corinth.
17. Silvanus, bishop of Thessalonica.
18. Crisces (Crescens), bishop of Carchedon in
Gaul.
19. Epaenetus, bishop of Carthage.
20. Andronicus, bishop of Pannonia.
21. Amplias, bishop of Odyssus.
22. Urban, bishop of Macedonia.
23. Stachys, bishop of Byzantium.
24. Barnabas, bishop of Heraclea.
25. Phygellus, bishop of Ephesus. He was of the
party also of Simon.156
26. Hermogenes. He, too, was of the same mind with
the former.
27. Demas, who also became a priest of idols.
28. Apelles, bishop of Smyrna.
29. Aristobulus, bishop of Britain.
30. Narcissus, bishop of Athens.
31. Herodion, bishop of Tarsus.
32. Agabus the prophet.
33. Rufus, bishop of Thebes.
34. Asyncritus, bishop of Hyrcania.
35. Phlegon, bishop of Marathon.
36. Hermes, bishop of Dalmatia.
37. Patrobulus,157
bishop of Puteoli.
38. Hermas, bishop of Philippi.
39. Linus, bishop of Rome [son of Caradog of
Britain Cox ed.].
40. Caius, bishop of Ephesus.
41. Philologus, bishop of Sinope.
42, 43. Olympus and Rhodion were martyred in Rome.
44. Lucius, bishop of Laodicea in Syria.
45. Jason, bishop of Tarsus.
46. Sosipater, bishop of Iconium.
47. Tertius, bishop of Iconium.
48. Erastus, bishop of Panellas.
49. Quartus, bishop of Berytus.
50. Apollo, bishop of Caesarea.
51. Cephas.158
52. Sosthenes, bishop of Colophonia.
53. Tychicus, bishop of Colophonia.
54. Epaphroditus, bishop of Andriace.
55. Caesar, bishop of Dyrrachium.
56. Mark, cousin to Barnabas, bishop of Apollonia.
57. Justus, bishop of Eleutheropolis.
58. Artemas, bishop of Lystra.
59. Clement, bishop of Sardinia.
60. Onesiphorus, bishop of Corone.
61. Tychicus, bishop of Chalcedon.
62. Carpus, bishop of Berytus in Thrace.
63. Evodus, bishop of Antioch [appointed by
Cephas].
64. Aristarchus, bishop of Apamea.
65. Mark, who is also John, bishop of Bibloupolis.
66. Zenas, bishop of Diospolis.
67. Philemon, bishop of Gaza.
68, 69. Aristarchus and Pudes.
70. Trophimus, who was martyred along with Paul.
Note the
extensive missions of Peter and from the Bible texts and this and other
records. He was not bishop of Rome but was responsible for the tribe of Israel
through Parthia and the north and at Antioch.
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