John
was one of the twelve apostles of Jesus, the son of Zebedee and Salome,
and the brother of James the Greater. In the Gospels, the brothers are
often called “the sons of Zebedee”. Our Lord also called them
“Boanerges” or “Sons of Thunder” (Mark 3:17). The fact that John is
usually mentioned after James seems to indicate that he was younger than
his brother.
Originally, John fished with his father and brother
in the lake of Genezareth. He was probably among the disciples of John
the Baptist, when the Lord attached him to His apostolic college.
John
is mentioned numerous times in the Scriptures, in Acts 1:13 as second
after Peter. He seems to hold a prominent position among the apostles.
Peter, James and he were the only witnesses to the raising of Jairus’
daughter (Mark 5:37), of the Transfiguration (Matt.17:1), and of the
Agony in the Garden (Matt.26:37). At the Last Supper, he was the one
that leaned his head on the Lord’s chest. According to pious tradition
and private revelation, he was the first recipient of the devotion to
Our Lord’s Most Sacred Heart.
Of all the apostles, John was the only one that was not married, and a virgin.
At
the foot of the cross, he was the only one of the apostles standing
with Mary Most Holy, and it was to him that the dying Savior entrusted
His beloved Mother’s keeping and protection.
After the Lord’s
death, John seems to have labored with the other apostles for several
years in Palestine until the persecution of Herod Agrippa led to the
scattering of the apostles throughout the Roman Empire. John went to
Asia Minor, including to Ephesus, where a pious tradition holds that he
took the Blessed Mother to live.
One of the four evangelists, St.
John is the author of the fourth and last Gospel. He wrote the
Apocalypse on the Island of Patmos and was the only apostle not to
suffer martyrdom but to die of natural causes around the age of 100.
Sunday, December 27, 2020
St. John the Evangelist
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