Saint John the Divine as the son of Zebedee, and his
mother's name was Salome [Matthew 4:21, 27:56; Mark 15:40, 16:1]. They lived on
the shores of the sea of Galilee. The brother of Saint John, probably
considerably older, was Saint James. The mention of the "hired men"
[Mark 1:20], and of Saint John's "home" [John 19:27], implies that
the condition of Salome and her children was not one of great poverty.
SS. John and James followed the Baptist when he
preached repentance in the wilderness of Jordan. There can be little doubt that
the two disciples, whom Saint John does not name (John 1:35), who looked on
Jesus "as he walked," when the Baptist exclaimed with prophetic
perception, "Behold the Lamb of God!" were Andrew and John. They
followed and asked the Lord where he dwelt. He bade them come and see, and they
stayed with him all day. Of the subject of conversation that took place in this
interview no record has come to us, but it was probably the starting-point of
the entire devotion of heart and soul which lasted through the life of the
Beloved Apostle.
John apparently followed his new Master to Galilee,
and was with him at the marriage feast of Cana, journeyed with him to
Capernaum, and thenceforth never left him, save when sent on the missionary
expedition with another, invested with the power of healing. He, James, and
Peter, came within the innermost circle of their Lord's friends, and these
three were suffered to remain with Christ when all the rest of the apostles
were kept at a distance [Mark 5:37, Matthew 17:1, 26:37]. Peter, James, and
John were with Christ in the Garden of Gethsemane. The mother of James and
John, knowing our Lord's love for the brethren, made special request for them,
that they might sit, one on his right hand, the other on his left, in his
kingdom [Matthew 20:21]. There must have been much impetuosity in the character
of the brothers, for they obtained the nickname of Boanerges, Sons of Thunder
[Mark 3:17, see also Luke 9:54]. It is not necessary to dwell on the familiar
history of the Last Supper and the Passion. To John was committed by our Lord
the highest of privileges, the care of his mother [John 19:27]. John [the
"disciple whom Jesus loved"] and Peter were the first to receive the
news from the Magdalene of the Resurrection [John 20:2], and they hastened at
once to the sepulchre, and there when Peter was restrained by awe, John
impetuously "reached the tomb first."
In the interval between the Resurrection and the
Ascension, John and Peter were together on the Sea of Galilee [John 21:1],
having returned to their old calling, and old familiar haunts.
When Christ appeared on the shore in the dusk of
morning, John was the first to recognize him. The last words of the Gospel
reveal the attachment which existed between the two apostles. It was not enough
for Peter to know his own fate, he must learn also something of the future that
awaited his friend. The Acts show us them still united, entering together as
worshippers into the Temple [Acts 3:1], and protesting together against the
threats of the Sanhedrin [Acts 4:13]. They were fellow-workers together in the
first step of Church expansion. The apostle whose wrath had been kindled at the
unbelief of the Samaritans, was the first to receive these Samaritans as
brethren [Luke 9:54, Acts 8:14].
He probably remained at Jerusalem until the death of
the Virgin, though tradition of no great antiquity or weight asserts that he
took her to Ephesus. When he went to Ephesus is uncertain. He was at Jerusalem
fifteen years after Saint Paul's first visit there [Acts 15:6]. There is no
trace of his presence there when Saint Paul was at Jerusalem for the last time.
Tradition, more or less trustworthy, completes the
history. Irenaeus says that Saint John did not settle at Ephesus until after
the death SS. Peter and Paul, and this is probable. He certainly as not there
when Saint Timothy was appointed bishop of that place. Saint Jerome says that
he supervised and governed all the Churches of Asia. He probably took up his
abode finally in Ephesus in 97. In the persecution of Domitian he was taken to
Rome, and was placed in a cauldron of boiling oil, outside the Latin gate,
without the boiling fluid doing him any injury. [Eusebius makes no mention of
this. The legend of the boiling oil occurs in Tertullian and in Saint Jerome].
He was sent to labor at the mines in Patmos. At the accession of Nerva he was
set free, and returned to Ephesus, and there it is thought that he wrote his
gospel. Of his zeal and love combined we have examples in Eusebius, who tells,
on the authority of Irenaeus, that Saint John once fled out of a bath on
hearing that Cerinthus was in it, lest, as he asserted, the roof should fall
in, and crush the heretic. On the other hand, he showed the love that was in
him. He commended a young man in whom he was interested to a bishop, and bade
him keep his trust well. Some years after he learned that the young man had
become a robber. Saint John, though very old, pursued him among the mountain
fastnesses, and by his tenderness recovered him.
In his old age, when unable to do more, he was
carried into the assembly of the Church at Ephesus, and his sole exhortation
was, "Little children, love one another."
The date of his death cannot be fixed with anything
like precision, but it is certain that he lived to a very advanced age. He is
represented holding a chalice from which issues a dragon, as he is supposed to
have been given poison, which was, however, innocuous. Also his symbol is an
eagle.
From The Lives
of the Saints by the Rev. S. Baring-Gould, M.A., published in 1914 in
Edinburgh.
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