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    • December 27, 0100December 27, 0100
  2. Jan 21, 2022 · The most plausible theory of John’s death states that John was arrested in Ephesus and faced martyrdom when his enemies threw him in a huge basin of boiling oil. However, according to the tradition, John was miraculously delivered from death.

  3. John the Apostle (Ancient Greek: Ἰωάννης; Latin: Ioannes c. 6 AD – c. 100 AD; Ge'ez: ዮሐንስ;), also known as Saint John the Beloved and, in Eastern Orthodox Christianity, Saint John the Theologian, was one of the Twelve Apostles of Jesus according to the New Testament.

    • John The Apostle
    • John The Author
    • John The Martyr
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    We get the vast majority of our information about John from the pages of the four gospels. We know that John was the younger brother of James and the son of Zebedee (Mark 10:35; Luke 5:10). Though not directly stated, we know that John was called the beloved disciple, or “the disciple whom Jesus loved” (John 21:20-24). His occupation was as a fishe...

    John wrote 5 books in the New Testament. He wrote The Gospel According to John, First, Second and Third John, and he was the penman of the Book of the Revelation of Jesus Christ. All of his books were written later in life and after all the other books in the Bible were recorded. We don’t know the exact time or order of the books having been writte...

    We know little about John’s later life and death from the Bible. The most insightful bit of information comes from John 21 when the risen Christ was talking to Peterabout Peter’s death. After Jesus told Peter that he would not live long Peter asked about John’s death. Jesus replied that if John lived until Christ’s return, that was not Peter’s conc...

    Learn about John the Apostle, one of the 12 disciples of Christ, who wrote five books in the New Testament and survived martyrdom. Find out his relationship with Jesus, his occupation, his vision of the Revelation, and his possible date and place of death.

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  5. Learn about the tradition and evidence of John's death in Ephesus around 100 A.D. after writing Revelation and being released from Patmos. Find out how he escaped a violent death and outlived his friends.

  6. It closes with an account of John’s death at which time he was thankful for his celibate life. The book is strongly Docetic in nature, quite at variance with the emphasis of the First Epistle of John.

  7. The theologian Tertullian reported that John was plunged into boiling oil but miraculously escaped unscathed. In the original apocryphal Acts of John, the apostle dies; however, later traditions assume that he ascended to heaven. Officially, the apostle’s grave is at Ephesus.

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