Identification with Matthew and James the Less Usually, in the Western Catholic tradition, there are believed to be two men named Alphaeus. One of them was the father of the apostle
James and the other the father of
Matthew (Levi). Though both Matthew and James are described as being the "son of Alphaeus," there is no Biblical account of the two being called brothers, even in the same context where
John and
James or
Peter and
Andrew are described as being brothers. Despite this, Eastern Church tradition typically states that Matthew and James were brothers. The
apocryphal Gospel of Peter also refers to Levi as the son of Alphaeus.
Identification with Clopas In the
Middle Ages, Alphaeus was said to be the husband of Mary the daughter of Clopas. More recently, Alphaeus has been identified with
Clopas, based on the identification from parallel Gospel accounts of
Mary, the mother of James the third woman with
Mary Magdalene and
Salome, wife of Zebedee beside the cross in Matthew with
Mary of Clopas, the third woman in John's account. Post-medieval scholars and translators often take the name 'Mary of Clopas' to mean Mary was the wife of Clopas, not his daughter. Mary is called the wife of Cleophas in the King James Version. According to the surviving fragments of the work
Exposition of the Sayings of the Lord of the
Apostolic Father Papias of Hierapolis, who lived c. 70–163 AD, Cleophas and Alphaeus are the same person: "Mary the wife of Cleophas or Alphaeus, who was the mother of James the bishop and apostle, and of Simon and Thaddeus, and of one Joseph" According to the Anglican theologian
J.B. Lightfoot this fragment quoted above is spurious. The
Catholic Encyclopedia suggests that etymologically, the names
Clopas and
Alphaeus are different, but that they could still be the same person. Other sources propose that
Alphaeus,
Clophas and
Cleophas are variant attempts to render the Aramaic
H in Aramaic Hilfai into
Greek as aspirated, or
K. ==References==