3. Philip and Bartholomew--That this person is the same with "Nathanael
of Cana in Galilee" is justly concluded for the three following reasons:
First, because Bartholomew is not so properly an individual's name as a
family surname; next, because not only in this list, but in Mark's and
Luke's
(Mr 3:18;
Lu 6:14),
he follows the name of "Philip," who was the instrument of bringing
Nathanael first to Jesus
(Joh 1:45);
and again, when our Lord, after His resurrection, appeared at the Sea
of Tiberias, "Nathanael of Cana in Galilee" is mentioned along with six
others, all of them apostles, as being present
(Joh 21:2).
Matthew the publican--In none of the four lists of the Twelve is
this apostle so branded but in his own, as if he would have all to know
how deep a debtor he had been to his Lord. (See on
Mt 1:3, 5, 6;
9:9).
James the son of Alphaeus--the same person apparently who is called
Cleopas or Clopas
(Lu 24:18;
Joh 19:25);
and, as he was the husband of Mary, sister to the Virgin, James the
Less must have been our Lord's cousin.
and Lebbaeus, whose surname was Thaddaeus--the same, without doubt,
as "Judas the brother of James," mentioned in both the lists of Luke
(Lu 6:16;
Ac 1:13),
while no one of the name of Lebbaeus or Thaddaeus is so. It is he who
in John
(Joh 14:22)
is sweetly called "Judas, not Iscariot." That he was the author of the
Catholic Epistle of "Jude," and not "the Lord's brother"
(Mt 13:55),
unless these be the same, is most likely.
JFB.
Picture Study Bible