Thaddaeus in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
tha-de'-us (Thaddaios): One of the Twelve Apostles (Mt 10:3;
Mk 3:18). In Mt 10:3 the King James Version, the reading is
"Lebbaeus, whose surname was Thaddaeus." The name
corresponds to Judas, the son (Revised Version), or brother
(the King James Version), of James, given in the lists of Lk
6:16; Acts 1:13.
See JUDAS, NOT ISCARIOT; LEBBAEUS.
The "Gospel of the Ebionites," or "Gospel of the Twelve
Apostles," of the 2nd century and mentioned by Origen,
narrates that Thaddaeus was also among those who received
their call to follow Jesus at the Sea of Tiberias (compare
Mt 4:18-22).
See also SIMON THE CANANAEAN.
According to the "Genealogies of the Twelve Apostles"
(compare Budge, Contendings of the Apostles, II, 50),
Thaddaeus was of the house of Joseph; according to the "Book
of the Bee" he was of the tribe of Judah. There is abundant
testimony in apocryphal literature of the missionary
activity of a certain Thaddaeus in Syria, but doubt exists
as to whether this was the apostle. Thus (1) according to
the "Acts of Peter" (compare Budge, II, 466 ff) Peter
appointed Thaddaeus over the island of Syria and Edessa. (2)
The "Preaching of the blessed Judas, the brother of our
Lord, who was surnamed Thaddaeus" (Budge, 357 ff), describes
his mission in Syria and in Dacia, and indicates him as one
of the Twelve. (3) The "Acta Thaddaei" (compare Tischendorf,
Acta Apostolorum Apocrypha, 1851, 261 ff) refers to this
Thaddaeus in the text as one of the Twelve, but in the
heading as one of the Seventy. (4) The Abgar legend, dealing
with a supposed correspondence between Abgar, king of Syria,
and Christ, states in its Syriac form, as translated by
Eusebius (Historia Ecclesiastica, I, xiii, 6-22) (compare
THOMAS), that "after the ascension of Christ, Judas, who was
also called Thomas, sent to Abgar the apostle Thaddaeus, one
of the Seventy" (compare Hennecke, Neutestamentliche
Apokryphen, 76 ff). Jerome, however, identifies this same
Thaddaeus with Lebbaeus and "Judas .... of James" of Luke
(Lk 6:16). Hennecks (op. cit., 473, 474) surmises that in
the original form of the Abgar legend Thomas was the central
figure, but that through the influence of the later "Acts of
Thomas", which required room to be made for Thomas' activity
in India, a later Syriac recension was made, in which Thomas
became merely the sender of Thaddaeus to Edessa, and that
this was the form which Eusebius made use of in his
translation According to Phillips (compare Phillips, The
Doctrine of Addai the Apostle), who quotes Zahn in support,
the confusion may be due to the substitution of the Greek
name Thaddaeus for the name Addai of the Syriac manuscripts.
See APOCRYPHAL ACTS.
The general consensus seems to indicate, however, that both
Thomas and Thaddaeus the apostle had some connection with
Edessa. Of the various identifications of Thaddaeus with
other Biblical personages which might be inferred from the
foregoing, that with "Judas .... of James" is the only one
that has received wide acceptance.
The burial place of Thaddaeus is variously placed at Beirut
and in Egypt. A "Gospel of Thaddaeus" is mentioned in the
Decree of Gelasius.
C. M. Kerr
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