John the disciple (also known as John the Revelator) was the son of Zebedee (Matthew 4:21). The mother of John is not directly given, though some speculate that Salome was his and James's mother.
John Finlayson - disciple - was born in 1770.
John Finlayson - disciple - died in 1854.
John the disciple was banished to the isle of Patmos.
John the Baptist was a prophet who preached about the coming of Jesus as the Messiah, but he was not one of Jesus's disciples. John baptized Jesus and played a crucial role in preparing the way for Jesus's ministry.
St. Andrew was a disciple of St. John the Baptist.
------------------------ John's Gospel talks of a 'disciple whom Jesus loved' but does not identify that disciple. The second-century Church Fathers noticed that whenever the book talks about the disciple, it does not mention John and, on this evidence alone, decided that this disciple must therefore be John. Like all the New Testament Gospels, John's Gospel was written anonymously, but the Church Fathers came to the conclusion that the author must be the 'disciple whom Jesus loved' and, since they had decided this disciple to be John, the Gospel author was the disciple John. The second century reasoning was merely conjecture and is not accepted by modern biblical scholars. If the 'disciple whom Jesus loved' was closest to Jesus, we still do not know who that disciple was.
Andrew had been a disciple of John the Baptist and was given an order from John to follow Jesus instead of him.
This refers to John (later writer of the Gospel of John), who was the youngest disciple.
John 111 was written by John the disciple.
The villain's actions were so despicable that they left the entire town shocked and angry.
The disciple traditionally believed to have died of natural causes is John. He is said to have lived to an old age and died peacefully, contrasting with the deaths of other disciples who were martyred.
The Apostle John When Jesus therefore saw His mother, and the disciple whom He loved standing by, He said to His mother, "Woman, behold your son!" Then He said to the disciple, "Behold your mother!" And from that hour that disciple took her to his own home. (NKJV) John refers to himself as the "disciple Jesus loved" several times in his gospel in order to keep the readers' focus on Jesus, and not call attention to himself.