Mark 6 names James, Joses, Judas (conventionally known in English as Jude) and Simon as the brothers of Jesus, and
Matthew 13, which probably used Mark as its source, gives the same names in different order, James, Joseph, Simon and Judas. "Joseph" is simply the longer form of "Joses", and so it appears that James was the eldest and Joses/Joseph the next, but as Matthew has reversed the order of the last two it is uncertain who was the youngest. Unnamed sisters are mentioned in Mark 6:3 and Matthew 13:56 and may be implied in Mark 3:35 and
Matthew 12:46, but their number is unknown. The gospels indicate a rift between Jesus and his brothers in the early part of his ministry (see
Mark 3:31–35 and the parallel passages in
Matthew 12:46–50 and
Luke 8:19–21), and they never appear among his followers during his lifetime.
John has Jesus's brothers advising him to go to
Judea despite being aware that his life would be in danger, and they are absent from his burial, which should have been their responsibility, but they do appear in
Acts 1:14 with the Eleven (i.e., the remaining disciples after the betrayal by Judas Iscariot): "These all (the Eleven) were persevering in prayer along with the women, with Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his brothers." In
1 Corinthians 15:3–7
Paul lists a "James" among those to whom the risen Christ had appeared, and most scholars agree that this refers to
James the brother of Jesus. Paul the Apostle personally knew James (Gal 1:19). The 2nd century historian
Hegesippus (c. 110–80 AD) reports that James the brother of Jesus came to be known as
James the Just, and
Eusebius of Caesarea (died 339) says that he spent so much of his life in prayer that his knees became "like the knees of a camel." According to
Clement of Alexandria, reported by Eusebius, he was chosen as bishop of Jerusalem, and from the time when Peter left Jerusalem after Herod's attempt to kill him (
Acts 12) he appears as the principal authority in the Jerusalem church, presiding at the
Council of Jerusalem recorded in Acts 15. In
Galatians 1:19 Paul tells how he went to Jerusalem a few years after his conversion and met Cephas (Peter) but no other apostles, only "James, the brother of the Lord"; Paul's Greek leaves it unclear whether he includes, or does not include, James among the apostles. He goes on to describe a second visit fourteen years later when he met the "pillars of the Church", James and Peter and John; James is mentioned first and seems to be the primary leader among these three. In chapter 2 he describes how he and Peter were later in
Antioch and in the habit of dining with gentile Christians in breach of Jewish
torah, until "certain people from James" came and Peter withdrew, "fearing those who belong to the circumcision." The 1st century historian
Josephus tells how he was martyred by the Jews in 62 AD on charges of breaking the Jewish Law. Paul records in 1 Corinthians that the other brothers of Jesus (that is, other than James, who is portrayed as rooted in Jerusalem) travelled as evangelists, and that they were married ("Do we not have the right to be accompanied by a believing wife, as do the other apostles and the brothers of the Lord and Cephas (Peter)?" -
1 Corinthians 9:5). The 3rd century Apostolic Father
Eusebius left a list of 12 bishops of the early church, of whom two, Joseph/Joses and Jude, may be the brothers of Jesus. The number of sisters and their names are not specified in the New Testament, but the apocryphal 3rd century
Gospel of Philip mentions a Mary, and
Salome, who appears in the late 2nd century
Gospel of James, is arguably the other sister. The author of the
epistle of James introduces himself as "James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ". He does not identify himself as the brother of Jesus or an apostle or a leader of the church in any way, but one recent study characterises this letter as "the most Jewish text in the New Testament". The
epistle of Jude identifies its author as "Jude… the brother of James", but today there is widespread, although not unanimous, support for the view that it was composed in the early part of the 2nd century by an unknown author borrowing the name of the brother of Jesus. Hegesippus mentions a Simon or Simeon (the names are equivalent) who became leader of the Jerusalem church after the death of James, but makes this Simon a son of Clopas, the brother of Joseph. Of the "brothers," however, no direct relationship to Mary or Joseph is ever indicated. Only Jesus is referred to as "son of Mary," "the son of Mary," or "son of Joseph." Only Jesus is the subject of the
Old Testament messianic prophecies and only of him is the
genealogy proposed. ==Relationship to Jesus==