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GodHeals
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Hi,
Was the Apostle John a martyr? I read he was somehow… just not physically.
Was the Apostle John a martyr? I read he was somehow… just not physically.
No. St John the Evangelist and Apostle did not die a martyr.Hi,
Was the Apostle John a martyr? I read he was somehow… just not physically.
He is deemed to have earned the crown of martyrdom when he willingly accepted death by being boiled in a cauldron of hot oil. But God spared him by reducing the temperature of the oil,and allowed him to continue his ministry until he died peacefully at Ephesus. The Church celebrates St. John with white, not red.
St. John the Evangelist, one of The Twelve.
Which John are you referring to?
According to tradition, he was the only one of the Twelve Apostles to die a natural death.I thought John died a natural death.
I know that. Someone posted that he was boiled in oil . That’s what I was referring to.According to tradition, he was the only one of the Twelve Apostles to die a natural death.
Actually, someone posted that he was subjected to being boiled in oil, but that it did not happen. The poster also said that he died peacefully at Ephesus (hence, not a martyr).I know that. Someone posted that he was boiled in oil . That’s what I was referring to.
Thanks.
Try some more cocoa. It’ll help you to read slower. Great for relaxation.He is deemed to have earned the crown of martyrdom when he willingly accepted death by being boiled in a cauldron of hot oil. But God spared him by reducing the temperature of the oil,and allowed him to continue his ministry until he died peacefully at Ephesus. The Church celebrates St. John with white, not red.
Cocoa does sound good. yumActually, someone posted that he was subjected to being boiled in oil, but that it did not happen. The poster also said that he died peacefully at Ephesus (hence, not a martyr).
Try some more cocoa. It’ll help you to read slower. Great for relaxation.![]()
There is a tradition that he was boiled in oil but that was miraculously spared from harm. The tradition is attributed to Tertullian.I know that. Someone posted that he was boiled in oil . That’s what I was referring to.
Thanks.
That’s what I found, too:There is a tradition that he was boiled in oil but that was miraculously spared from harm. The tradition is attributed to Tertullian.
No. As mentioned, there was a belief that he was put in a cauldron of boiling oil but came out of it with no harm.Hi,
Was the Apostle John a martyr? I read he was somehow… just not physically.
Thank you for sharing! It seems white martyr and confessor are similar.No. St John the Evangelist and Apostle did not die a martyr.
He certainly gave his life to Christ. Sometimes when saints dedicated their lives to Christ without actually being killed out of hatred for the faith, they are called “white martyrs.” That might be what you read. We also use the term “confessor.” The reason they’re called “white martyrs” is that the proper vestment color for the day of a martyr is red, while the color for a confessor is white.
Thank you for all of the posts everyone!Default Re: What is a “white martyr”?
It is a martyrdom in which there is no violent death. The traditional “red martyrdom” is when a Christian is killed for his faith. “White martyrdom” is when a Christian totally commits his life to God, uniting himself completely to God. Often “white martyrdom” involves tremendous suffering accepted and offered up to God in union with the cross of Christ. To date, “white martyrdom” is a pious classification of the sufferings of certain saints and not an official category of martyrdom in the Church. Examples of those who might be said to have endured a “white martyrdom” include St. Therese of Lisieux, St. Gianna Beretta Molla, and Pope John Paul II.
interesting… so we don’t know what happened to his body, yet.No. As mentioned, there was a belief that he was put in a cauldron of boiling oil but came out of it with no harm.
As early as the 2nd century, there was also a belief (recorded in the Acts of John) that John ordered a pit in the ground to be dug for him outside Ephesus; when the trench was finished he went down to it, took off his clothes, laid them as bedding, and laid himself to rest. Later versions of this legend add fantastic elements to it: for example, in one version, when his disciples later went to the grave, they found the earth in his grave “springing up like a well” - which was interpreted as him not really being dead but just ‘sleeping’. (By the 4th/5th century, holy ‘manna’ (dust) produced by the stirring of the earth was reported to come out of this tomb at Ephesus.) In fact, there were two conflicting beliefs about what happened to John’s body: one was that it is in Ephesus either dead or asleep, the other was that it was was transported (to heaven?)
Well, his tomb is supposedly at Ephesus, but Christians had conflicting stories about what became of him. Partly because of John 21:interesting… so we don’t know what happened to his body, yet.
That’s the majority belief, yes. There is however, a minority tradition (which was only expressed by a 5th century historian named Philip of Side - who claimed to get it from Papias - and the 9th century chronicler George Hamartolos) that claimed that both of Zebedee’s sons were martyred. “Papias in the second book says that John the Theologian and James his brother were killed by the Jews.” The idea never really caught on though.He is deemed to have earned the crown of martyrdom when he willingly accepted death by being boiled in a cauldron of hot oil. But God spared him by reducing the temperature of the oil,and allowed him to continue his ministry until he died peacefully at Ephesus. The Church celebrates St. John with white, not red.
Now THAT is interesting. I’ll have to read up on that. Thanks!Until the kalendar revisions of 1960, the Church used to celebrate the near-martyrdom of St. John, previously described here, on 6 May. It was the feast of St. John before the Latin gate.
Yes, St. John is considered a martyr, even though he did not die a bloody martyrdom like the other apostles. God bless you.Hi,
Was the Apostle John a martyr? I read he was somehow… just not physically.