About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 42. Chapters: Pope Linus, Saint Stephen, Mark the Evangelist, Saint Timothy, Barnabas, Luke the Evangelist, Titus, Apollos, Saint Matthias, Silas, Agabus, Trophimus, Sosthenes, James the Just, Seventy, Priscilla and Aquila, Seven Deacons, Simeon of Jerusalem, Quadratus of Athens, Epaphroditus, Andronicus of Pannonia, Philip the Evangelist, Cleopas, Sosipater of Iconium, Ananias of Damascus, Crescens, Joseph Barsabbas, Herodion of Patras, Aristarchus of Thessalonica, Aristobulus of Britannia, Jason of Tarsus, Onesiphorus, Evodius, Saint Pudens, Tychicus, Philemon, Hermes of Philippopolis, Thaddeus of Edessa, Lucius of Cyrene, Urban of Macedonia, Archippus, Stachys the Apostle, Tertius of Iconium, Phlegon of Marathon, Asyncritus of Hyrcania, Rufus of Thebes, Hermas of Dalmatia, Cephas of Iconium, Erastus of Paneas, Philologus of Sinope, Carpus of Berrhoe, Quartus of Berytus, Fortunatus the Apostle, Clement of Sardice, Ampliatus, Zenas the Lawyer, Caesar of Dyrrhachium, Apelles of Heraklion, Narcissus of Athens, Parrobus of Pottole, Silvanus of the Seventy, Achaicus of Corinth, Nicanor the Deacon, Parmenas, Epaphras, Gaius of Ephesus, Crispus of Chalcedon, Epenetus of Carthage, Artemas of Lystra, Mark of Apollonias, Olympas. Excerpt: James (Hebrew: Ya'akov; Greek I Iak bos), first Bishop of Jerusalem, who died in 62, was an important figure in Early Christianity. He is distinguished from the Apostle James by various epithets; he is called James the brother of the Lord by Paul (Galatians 1:19), James the Just by Hegesippus and others, James the Righteous, James of Jerusalem, James Adelphotheos, and so on. The Belgian theologian Achille Camerlynck (1910) concludes that, based on Hegesippus's account, it is "probable" that James the Just is also James the Less, and in line with "most Catholic interpreters," that he is theref...