Saint John the Apostle

detail of a stained glass window of Saint John the Apostle; date and artist unknown; church of Saint George, Castle Way, Hanworth, England; photographed on 10 December 2004 by John Salmon; swipe from Wikimedia CommonsAlso known as

  • Apostle of Charity
  • Beloved Apostle
  • Beloved Disciple
  • Giovanni Evangelista
  • John the Beloved
  • John the Divine
  • John the Evangelist
  • John the Gospeller
  • John the Theologian

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Profile

Son of Zebedee and Salome. Fisherman. Brother of Saint James the Greater, and called one of the Sons of Thunder. Disciple of Saint John the Baptist. Friend of Saint Peter the Apostle. Called by Jesus during the first year of His ministry, and traveled everywhere with Him, becoming so close as to be known as the beloved disciple. Took part in the Last Supper. The only one of the Twelve not to forsake the Saviour in the hour of His Passion, standing at the foot of the cross. Made guardian of Our Lady by Jesus, and he took her into his home. Upon hearing of the Resurrection, he was the first to reach the tomb; when he met the risen Lord at the lake of Tiberias, he was the first to recognize Him.

During the era of the new Church, he worked in Jerusalem and at Ephesus. During Jesus’ ministry, he tried to block a Samaritan from their group, but Jesus explained the open nature of the new Way, and he worked on that principle to found churches in Asia Minor and baptizing converts in Samaria. Imprisoned with Peter for preaching after Pentecost. Wrote the fourth Gospel, three Epistles, and possibly the Book of Revelation. Survived all his fellow apostles.

Traditional stories:

  • Emperor Dometian had him brought to Rome, beaten, poisoned, and thrown into a cauldron of boiling oil, but he stepped out unharmed and was banished to Patmos instead. This is commemorated by the feast of Saint John before the Latin Gate.
  • When John was en route to preach in Asia, his ship was wrecked in a storm; all but John were cast ashore. John was assumed dead, but two weeks later the waves cast him ashore alive at the feet of his disciple Prochoros.
  • When John denounced idol worship as demonic, followers of Artemis stoned him; the rocks turned and hit the throwers.
  • He prayed in a temple of Artemis; fire from heaven killed 200 men who worshipped the idol. When the remaining group begged for mercy, he raised the 200 from the dead; they all converted and were baptized.
  • Drove out a demon who had lived in a pagan temple for 249 years.
  • Aboard ship, he purified vessels of sea water for drinking.
  • Ceonops, a magician, pretended to bring three dead people come to life; the “people” were actually demons who mimicked people so the magician could turn people away from Christ. Through prayer, John caused the magician to drown and the demons to vanish.
  • Once a year his grave gave off a fragrant dust that cured the sick.

Died

  • c.101 at Ephesus (in modern Turkey)
  • a church was built over his tomb, which was later converted to a mosque

Canonized

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Additional Information

Readings

O God, who by the mouth of thy blessed Apostle and Evangelist Saint John hast revealed unto us the deep mystery of the incarnate word: grant that the doctrine, which through his most excellent teaching hath entered into our ears, our hearts may duly understand and believe. – Leonine Sacramentary

MLA Citation

  • “Saint John the Apostle“. CatholicSaints.Info. 14 May 2024. Web. 15 May 2024. <>