Yes, it is believed that Jude was a cousin of Jesus and looked quite like him.
No, Saint Jude did not sell Jesus. Judas Iscariot was the disciple who betrayed Jesus for 30 pieces of silver. Saint Jude is known for being one of the twelve apostles of Jesus and is often invoked as the patron saint of desperate and impossible situations.
Saint Jude is believed to have been a cousin of Jesus so it is likely that they knew each other before Jude became an apostle.
To the best of our knowledge Jude was not married.
Nearly all sources state that Jude Thaddeus was a farmer by trade, not a fisherman.
Jude Thaddeus or Thaddeus Jude.
It is thought that his mother was Mary of Cleophas, the brother of Saint Joseph, making his a first cousin of Jesus.
Saint Jude was not Jesus' brother. Although he was stonned to death in about 65 AD.
St. Jude was one of the 12 apostles. He was the son of Cleophas, who died a martyr, and Mary who stood at the foot of the Cross with the Blessed Virgin, and who anointed Christ's body after death. He is the brother of Saint James the Lesser and a nephew of Mary and Joseph which made him a blood relative of Jesus Christ, and he was reported to have looked a lot like him. Before he joined the apostles he was probably a fisherman. He was beaten to death in Persia and later beheaded.
The symbol of Saint Jude, often depicted in pictures, typically features a combination of elements associated with the saint. It commonly includes a staff or rod, symbolizing authority and power, as well as a flame or a crown of flames, representing the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. Additionally, Saint Jude may be depicted holding an image of Jesus or a medallion with the face of Jesus.
St. Jude was not made a saint by a particular church; he was one of the original 12 apostles chosen by Jesus. After his death, he became known for his intercession in desperate situations, leading to him being recognized as the patron saint of lost causes.
Saint Jude was a man.
Simon the Zealot and Jude the Apostle, St. Simon and St. Jude were two of Jesus' original Apostles. The two of them are popularly regarded as an 'evangelizing team' by the Christian religious tradition.