Saint Bartholomew the Apostle

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Today is the Feast of Saint Bartholomew the Apostle. In the gospel of John he is called “Nathanael”. I know this because our Priest told us this in his homily today.

Is there any scriptural evidence for this connection? If so, please post the applicable verses and the logical connection. If not, then have we some ECF writings or something that makes the connection between Bartholomew and Nathanael?

Pax Christi
 
Here’s some information for you. I was very pleased to see your thread, as this is my birthday–the feast of St. Bartholomew, and both my father and brother are “Bartholomews” as well.

<<Many scholars, however, identify him with Nathaniel (John 1:45-51; 21:2). The reasons for this are that Bartholomew is not the proper name of the Apostle; that the name never occurs in the Fourth Gospel, while Nathaniel is not mentioned in the synoptics; that Bartholomew’s name is coupled with Philip’s in the lists of Matthew and Luke, and found next to it in Mark, which agrees well with the fact shown by St. John that Philip was an old friend of Nathaniel’s and brought him to Jesus; that the call of Nathaniel, mentioned with the call of several Apostles, seems to mark him for the apostolate, especially since the rather full and beautiful narrative leads one to expect some important development; that Nathaniel was of Galilee where Jesus found most, if not all, of the Twelve; finally, that on the occasion of the appearance of the risen Savior on the shore of the Sea of Tiberias, Nathaniel is found present, together with several Apostles who are named and two unnamed Disciples who were, almost certainly, likewise Apostles (the word “apostle” not occurring in the Fourth Gospel and “disciple” of Jesus ordinarily meaning Apostle) and so, presumably, was one of the Twelve. This chain of circumstantial evidence is ingenious and pretty strong; the weak link is that, after all, Nathaniel may have been another personage in whom, for some reason, the author of the Fourth Gospel may have been particularly interested, as he was in Nicodemus, who is likewise not named in the synoptics.

No mention of St. Bartholomew occurs in ecclesiastical literature before Eusebius, who mentions that Pantaenus, the master of Origen, while evangelizing India, was told that the Apostle had preached there before him and had given to his converts the Gospel of St. Matthew written in Hebrew, which was still treasured by the Church. “India” was a name covering a very wide area, including even Arabia Felix. Other traditions represent St. Bartholomew as preaching in Mesopotamia, Persia, Egypt, Armenia, Lycaonia, Phrygia, and on the shores of the Black Sea; one legend, it is interesting to note, identifies him with Nathaniel. The manner of his death, said to have occurred at Albanopolis in Armenia, is equally uncertain; according to some, he was beheaded, according to others, flayed alive and crucified, head downward, by order of Astyages, for having converted his brother, Polymius, King of Armenia. On account of this latter legend, he is often represented in art (e.g. in Michelangelo’s Last Judgment) as flayed and holding in his hand his own skin. His relics are thought by some to be preserved in the church of St. Bartholomew-in-the-Island, at Rome. His feast is celebrated on 24 August.>> 🙂
 
Additional useless information: “Bartholomew” is actually a patrynymic, “bar-Tolmai,” “son of Tolmai.” So just as Peter’s full legal name was “Simon bar-Jona,” Bart’s full legal name was “Nathaniel bar-Tolmai.”

The tell-tale sign of a patrinymic is the prefix “ben-” (Hebrew), “bar-” (Aramaic), or “bin-/ibn-” (Arabic).

DaveBj
 
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DaveBj:
Additional useless information: “Bartholomew” is actually a patrynymic, “bar-Tolmai,” “son of Tolmai.” So just as Peter’s full legal name was “Simon bar-Jona,” Bart’s full legal name was “Nathaniel bar-Tolmai.”

The tell-tale sign of a patrinymic is the prefix “ben-” (Hebrew), “bar-” (Aramaic), or “bin-/ibn-” (Arabic).

DaveBj
It’s obvious but “Tolmai” = Ptolemy. Nathanael Bar-Ptolemeu
 
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mercygate:
It’s obvious but “Tolmai” = Ptolemy. Nathanael Bar-Ptolemeu
Mercygate:

Good catch; I didn’t even think about that. I do know that the name Tolmai does not appear in the Hebrew OT.

DaveBj
 
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