In the New Testament Acts of the Apostles, the author of Luke records that Matthias was the Apostle chosen by the remaining eleven apostles to replace Judas Iscariot, following Judas' betrayal of Jesus and his suicide (Acts 1:21 - 26). Saint Matthias is venerated with a feast day in the Roman Catholic Church that was February 24, until it was moved in the 20th century to May 14. The vigil of his feast was also distinctive in that, in leap year, it moved to the traditional leap day of February 24, with the feast one day later. In the Eastern Orthodox Church, his feast is celebrated on August 9.
Though there is no mention of a Matthias among the lists of disciples in the three synoptic gospels, according to Acts 1, in the days following the Ascension of Jesus, Peter proposed to the assembled disciples, who numbered about one hundred and twenty, that they choose one to fill the place of the traitor Judas in the Apostolate:
Clement of Alexandria observed:
No further information about Matthias is to be found in the canonical New Testament. Even his name is variable: the Syriac version of Eusebius calls him throughout not Matthias but "Tolmai", i.e. Bartholomew, without confusing him with the Bartholomew who was originally one of the twelve Apostles; Matthias is often identified with the Nathanael mentioned in the Gospel of John; Clement of Alexandria says some identified him with Zacchaeus; the Clementine Recognitions identify him with Barnabas; Hilgenfeld thinks he is the same as Nathanael.
According to Nicephorus (Historia eccl., 2, 40), Matthias first preached the Gospel in Judea, then in Ethiopia (made out to be a synonym for the geographically quite separate Colchis (now Caucasian Georgia) and was crucified in Colchis.
The Synopsis of Dorotheus contains this tradition:
Alternately, another tradition maintains that Matthias was stoned at Jerusalem by the Jews, and then beheaded (cf. Tillemont, Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire ecclesiastique des six premiers siècles, I, 406-7).
It is said that Helena, mother of Constantine the Great brought the relics of St. Matthias to Rome, and that a portion of them was at Trier. The Bollandists (Acta Sanctorum, May, III) doubts whether the relics that are in Rome are not rather those of the St Matthias who was Bishop of Jerusalem about the year 120, and whose history would seem to have been confounded with that of the Apostle.
This lost gospel is probably the document whence Clement of Alexandria quoted several passages, saying that they were borrowed from the traditions of Matthias, Paradoseis ("Paradoxes"), the testimony of which he claimed to have been invoked by the heretics Valentinus, Marcion, and Basilides (Stromateis, VII.17). According to Philosophoumena, VII.20, Basilides quoted apocryphal discourses that he attributed to Matthias. These three writings: the gospel, the Traditions, and the Apocryphal Discourses were identified by Zahn (Gesch. des N. T. Kanon, II, 751), but Harnack (Chron. der altchrist. Litteratur, 597) denies this identification.
Tischendorf (Acta apostolorum apocrypha, Leipzig, 1851) published after Thilo, 1846, Acta Andreae et Matthiae in urbe anthropophagarum , which, according to Lipsius, belonged to the middle of the 2nd century. This apocrypha relates that Matthias went among the cannibals and, being cast into prison, was delivered by Andrew. The narrative has no historical value. In the apocryphal writings Matthew and Matthias have sometimes been confounded.
Text partly adapted from the Catholic Encyclopedia
Christian martyrs | Saints | Coptic saints
Matthias (Apostel) | Maciej Apostoł | Matia Apostolul | Mattias (apostoli) | Mattias (apostel) | 使徒馬提亞
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"Saint Matthias".
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