Yes.
Thaddeus is usually thought of as the other name for Saint Judas (not Judas Iscariot) the disciple. Many people do not realise that there were two Judas's among the disciples - Judas Iscariot who betryed Jesus, and Saint Judas son of James. The problems of confusion surrounding St Judas meant that he became eventually known as St Jude and often called Thaddeus instead, and became the patrion saint of Lost Causes. It was quite common in those days for people to use more than one name (Jesus/Emmanuel, Simon/Peter, Matthew/Levi, Saul/Paul etc) and so this dual nomenclature is not unusual. However,some scholars do not accept that Jude was the same person as Thaddeus, relegating Thaddeus to one of the 72 'outer' crowd as opposed to the inner group of 12 disciples. Others claim that the '12' and the '72' were approximations, and there might have been 13 or even 14 disciples to take account of different names (e.g. Matthew/Levi) and Thaddeus would have been one of the 'extras', and 70-80 others rather than the 72, but this is rather far-fetched. Jewish culture bestowed great importance on numbers (12 tribes of israel etc) and so the numbers 12 and 72 (12 times half of 12) would have been very significant. So it seems that the likelihood is that Thaddeus was the other name given for Jude.
No. It was John the brother of James. (Matthew 10:2-4; Mark 3:16-19, and Luke 6:13-16)
Jude Thaddeus or Thaddeus Jude.
The possessive form of the noun disciple is disciple's.Example: His disciple's job is to make arrangements for him.
A:Mark's Gospel refers to Levi, son of Alpheus (Alphaeus) as a tax collector whom Jesus called to follow him (Mark 2:14). Mark never again refers to Levi, who is not mentioned in the full list of the twelve disciples (verses 3:14-19), but introduces other disciples including Matthew, Thaddeus (Thaddaeus), and James, son of Alpheus. This should mean that Levi and James are brothers, but not Thaddeus. .Disciples are not meant to change their minds when called by Jesus, yet this seems to happen when Mark omits Levi in the list of all the twelve apostles. Matthew's Gospel is known to have been based substantially on Mark and, when copying the original gospel, its anonymous author resolves Levi's unexplained absence simply by not mentioning Levi and by having Matthew as the disciple who was a tax collector, so that two thousand years of tradition have held that Levi and Matthew must be the same person. Older translations of Matthew also list a "Lebbaeus, whose surname was Thaddaeus" (which means that his father was called Thaddaeus), but but most recent translations leave out "Lebbaeus, whose surname was," thus referring to Thaddeus as the disciple. .Our primary source should be Mark's Gospel, since the author of Matthew could not possibly have known anything about these disciples that was not to be found in Mark. In any case, Mark lists only Levi and James as sons of Alpheus and therefore brothers, while Matthew has only James as the son of Alpheus. Neither of them can be read as saying that Thaddeus and James were brothers.
Thaddeus was Jesus' tenth disciple.
Tradition says that he was a farmer before he became a disciple.
There was not a disciple called Joseph.
The first disciple was Simon Peter. No, Was Andrew =)
Judas son of James (Luke 6:16) was also called Thaddaeus (Mark 3:18, Matthew 10:3). But not much is known about this disciple. John 14:22 Then Judas (not Judas Iscariot) said, "But, Lord, why do you intend to show yourself to us and not to the world?"
Yes, St. Jude Thaddeus was one of the 12 apostles.
The disciple of the prophet Isaiah was a man called Gehazi.
Saint Augustine was a disciple in the sense he was a follower of Christ but he was not a disciple or apostle called by Jesus himself.
Thaddeus is usually thought of as the other name for Saint Judas (not Judas Iscariot) the disciple. Many people do not realise that there were two Judas's among the disciples - Judas Iscariot who betryed Jesus, and Saint Judas son of James. The problems of confusion surrounding St Judas meant that he became eventually known as St Jude and often called Thaddeus instead, and became the patrion saint of Lost Causes. It was quite common in those days for people to use more than one name (Jesus/Emmanuel, Simon/Peter, Matthew/Levi, Saul/Paul etc) and so this dual nomenclature is not unusual. However,some scholars do not accept that Jude was the same person as Thaddeus, relegating Thaddeus to one of the 72 'outer' crowd as opposed to the inner group of 12 disciples. Others claim that the '12' and the '72' were approximations, and there might have been 13 or even 14 disciples to take account of different names (e.g. Matthew/Levi) and Thaddeus would have been one of the 'extras', and 70-80 others rather than the 72, but this is rather far-fetched. Jewish culture bestowed great importance on numbers (12 tribes of israel etc) and so the numbers 12 and 72 (12 times half of 12) would have been very significant. So it seems that the likelihood is that Thaddeus was the other name given for Jude.
Jesus apostles were Peter, Andrew, James, John, Phillip, Bartholomew, Matthew, Thomas, James (the Less), Thaddeus, Simon, and Judas Iscariot, later replaced by Mathias.
An acolyte .
Yawey