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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: INV-JED |
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JAMES (Gr. 'IlrKw,l3or, the Heb. Ya`akob or Jacob) , the name of several persons mentioned in the New Testament. 1. JAMES, the son of Zebedee. He was among the first who were called to be Christ's immediate followers (Mark i. 19 seq.; Matt. iv. 21 seq., and perhaps Luke v. 1o) , and afterwards obtained an honoured place in the apostolic band, his name twice occupying the second place after Peter's in the lists (Mark iii. 17; Acts i. 13), while on at least three notable occasions he was, along with Peter and his brother John, specially chosen by Jesus to be with him (Mark v. 37; Matt. xvii. i, xxvi. 37). This same prominence may have contributed partly to the title " Boanerges " or " sons of thunder " which, according to Mark iii. 17, Jesus himself gave to the two brothers. But its most natural interpretation is to be found in the impetuous disposition which would have called down fire from heaven on the offending Samaritan villagers (Luke ix. 54), and afterwards found expression, though in a different way, in the ambitious request to occupy the places of honour in Christ's kingdom (Mark x. 35 seq.). James is included among those who after the ascension waited at Jerusalem (Acts i. 13) for the descent of the Holy Ghost on the day of Pentecost. And though on this occasion only his name is mentioned, he must have been a zealous and prominent member of the Christian community, to judge from the fact that when a victim had to be chosen from among the apostles, who should be sacrificed to the animosity of the Jews, it was on James that the blow fell first. The brief notice is given in Acts xii. 1, 2. Eusebius (Hist. Eccl. ii. 9) has preserved for us from Clement of Alexandria the additional information that the accuser of the apostle " beholding his confession and moved thereby, confessed that he too was a Christian. So they were both led away to execution together; and on the road the accuser asked James for forgiveness. Gazing on him for a little while, he said, ` Peace be with thee,' and kissed him. And then both were beheaded together."The later, and wholly untrustworthy, legends which tell of the apostle's preaching in Spain, and of the translation of his body
2. JAMES, the son of Alphaeus. He also was one of the apostles, and is mentioned in all the four lists (Matt. x. 3; Mark iii. 18; Luke vi. 15; Acts i. 13) by this name. We know nothing further regarding him, unless we believe him to be the same as James " the little." 3. JAMES, the little. He is described as the son of a Mary (Matt. xxvii. 56; Mark xv. 40), who was in all probability the wife of Clopas (John xix. 25). And on the ground that Clopas is another form of the name Alphaeus, this James has been ,thought by some to be the same as 2. But the evidence of the Syriac versions, which render Alphaeus by Chalphai, while Clopas is simply transliterated Kleopha, makes it extremely improbable that the two names are to be identified. And as we have no better ground for finding in Clopas the Cleopas of Luke xxiv. 18, we must be content to admit that James the little is again an almost wholly unknown personality, and has no connexion with any of the other Jameses mentioned in the New Testament. 4. JAMES, the father of Judas. There can be no doubt that in the mention of " Judas of James " in Luke vi. 16 the ellipsis should be supplied by " the son " and not as in the A.V. by " the brother " (cf. Luke iii. 1, vi. 14; Acts xii. 2, where the word 1s&X06s is inserted). This Judas, known as Thaddaeus by Matthew
5. JAMES, the Lord's brother. In Matt. xiii. 55 and Mark Vi. 3 we read of a certain James as, along with Joses and Judas and Simon, a " brother " of the Lord. The exact nature of the relationship there implied has been the subject of much discussion. Jerome's view (de vir. ill. 2), that the " brothers " were in reality cousins, " sons of Mary the sister of the Lord's mother," rests on too many unproved assumptions to be entitled to much weight, and may be said to have been finally disposed of by Bishop Lightfoot in his essay on " The Brothers of the Lord " (Galatians, pp. 252 sqq., Dissertations on the Apostolic Age, pp. r sqq.). Even however if we understand the word " brethren " in its natural sense, it may be applied either to the sons of Joseph by a former wife, in which case they would be the step-brothers of Jesus, or to sons born to Joseph and Mary after the birth
special
revelation
Hegesippus
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confession of his faith, and was at once thrown down and murdered. This happened immediately before the siege. Josephus (Antiq. xx. 9, 1) tells that it was by order of Ananus the high priest, in the interval
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