There are 2 apostles in the Western Cape region. To find the names of the apostles in those regions go to the offial Old Apostolic Website www.oldapostolic.com and they will be able to give you the addresses and names of the officers. There are currently four Apostles in the Western Cape. Three of them is coloured. All other districts do have black Apostles. The current breakdown is as follows: Eastern Cape 1 Free State 1 Kwazulu-Natal 1 Gauteng 2 Northern District 1 All the Apostles for Botswana, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi and Mosambique is black. The majority of Apostles in the OAC is black.
luke
The apostles are Matthew, John, James, Peter, Paul, Andrew.
It was mainly Matthew and john the apostles wrote it. but Mark and Luke also wrote but they were not apostles.
They already came with names, Jesus didn't change them.
No. The formation known as the Twelve Apostles in Australia are in the sea. They can, however, be viewed from the western end of the Great Ocean Road.
The catholics have apostles and prophets. The apostles and prophets names are what are you asking for. like Saint Gianna Beretta Molla is Gianna's name
The most popular names are of the 12 apostles. Peter, James, John, Andrew, Samuel, etc.
A:The New Testament epistles are named for the apostles in whose names they were written or the apostles the second-century Church Fathers believed to have written them. The apostles are: Paul, James, Peter, John and Jude. The apostle Paul certainly wrote some of the epistles named for him, but scholars believe that the other epistles were all written pseudepigraphically, not by the apostles whose names they now bear.
The names commonly associated with the 12 disciples in Western culture are translations or adaptations of their original Hebrew or Aramaic names. As Christianity spread throughout the Western world, these names were anglicized for ease of pronunciation and understanding by Western audiences.
The bible does not mention the father or the mothers of the 12 apostles.
In the Bible, Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James and Joses, Joanna, and Susanna are sometimes referred to as female disciples or followers of Jesus, but they are not explicitly called apostles. There is no clear evidence of female apostles in the traditional sense of the twelve disciples chosen by Jesus.