H
Hope1960
Guest
Was St. John assumed into Heaven? I’ve never heard of this before.
But my question is was John assumed into Heaven? Because I never heard of that before.I think it was St. Jerome who wrote that St. John the Apostle died in Ephesus, in the third year of Emperor Trajan.
If St. John was assumed, then who is in St. John’s tomb located in Selçuk Turkey near Ephesus?Dan_Defender:![]()
But my question is was John assumed into Heaven? Because I never heard of that before.I think it was St. Jerome who wrote that St. John the Apostle died in Ephesus, in the third year of Emperor Trajan.
No one–at least according to the legend above his tomb was found to be filled with manna.If St. John was assumed, then who is in St. John’s tomb located in Selçuk Turkey near Ephesus?
In the second paragraph of your link, it mentions the Apocolypse. What’s it talking about?It’s referenced in the Golden Legend and reflects a prior tradition:
http://www.christianiconography.info/goldenLegend/john.htm
That’s just an older name for the book of Revelation in the Bible.In the second paragraph of your link, it mentions the Apocolypse. What’s it talking about?
I’d never thought so.He was not. And early Christians did not believe this.
Well, given that the Eastern calendar has the first, second, and third finding of the head of John the Baptist, and that there is a church with each head . . .If St. John was assumed, then who is in St. John’s tomb located in Selçuk Turkey near Ephesus?
…After Domitian’s death the Apostle returned to Ephesus during the reign of Trajan, and at Ephesus he died about A.D. 100 at a great age. …
…The “departure” or “assumption” of the Apostle is noted in the Menology of Constantinople and the Calendar of Naples (26 September), which seems to have been regarded as the date of his death. …
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/08492a.htm
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gosh, that would have been a handy quote during my four years at Bellarmine College Preparatory . . .“because nobody can remember more than seven of anything.”
That would be fitting.No one–at least according to the legend above his tomb was found to be filled with manna.