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Saint Stephen

Stephen (Hebrew: סטפנוס (Setēpānôs), Greek: Στέφανος Stéphanos, meaning 'wreath or crown' and by extension 'reward, honor, renown, fame', often given as a title rather than as a name; c. 5 – c. 34 AD) is traditionally venerated as the protomartyr or first martyr of Christianity.[2] According to the Acts of the Apostles, he was a deacon in the early church at Jerusalem who angered members of various synagogues by his teachings. Accused of blasphemy at his trial, he made a speech denouncing the Jewish authorities who were sitting in judgment on him[3] and was then stoned to death. Saul of Tarsus, later known as Paul, a Pharisee and Roman citizen who would later become a Christian apostle, participated in Stephen's martyrdom.[4]


Stephen
Saint Stephen by Carlo Crivelli
Deacon, Archdeacon
Apostle of the Seventy
Protomartyr of the Faith
First Martyr
Bornc. 5 AD
Died33–36 AD (aged 28–32)
Jerusalem, Judaea, Roman Empire
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Eastern Catholic Churches
Orthodox Church
Oriental Orthodox Churches
Assyrian Church of the East
Anglican Communion
Lutheranism
CanonizedPre-Congregation
Feast25 December (Armenian Christianity)
26 December (Western)
27 December, 4 January, 2 August, 15 September (Eastern)
Tobi 1 (Coptic Christianity)
AttributesRed Martyr, stones, dalmatic, censer, miniature church, Gospel Book, martyr's palm. In Orthodox and Eastern Christianity he often wears an orarion
PatronageAltar Servers[1];Acoma Native American Pueblo; Bricklayers; casket makers; Cetona, Italy; deacons; headaches; horses; Kessel, Belgium; masons; Owensboro, Kentucky; Passau, Germany; Kigali, Rwanda; Dodoma, Tanzania; Serbia; Ligao; Republic of Srpska; Prato, Italy [2]

The only source for information about Stephen is the New Testament book of the Acts of the Apostles.[5] Stephen is mentioned in Acts 6 as one of the Greek-speaking Hellenistic Jews selected to administer the daily charitable distribution of food to the Greek-speaking widows.[6]

The Catholic, Anglican, Oriental Orthodox, Eastern Orthodox, and Lutheran churches and the Church of the East view Stephen as a saint.[7] Artistic representations often show Stephen with a crown symbolising martyrdom, three stones, martyr's palm frond, censer, and often holding a miniature church building. Stephen is often shown as a young, beardless man with a tonsure, wearing a deacon's vestments.

Background edit

Stephen is first mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles as one of seven deacons appointed by the Apostles to distribute food and charitable aid to poorer members of the community in the early church. According to Orthodox belief, he was the eldest and is therefore called "archdeacon".[8] As another deacon, Nicholas of Antioch, is specifically stated to have been a convert to Judaism, it may be assumed that Stephen was born Jewish, but nothing more is known about his previous life.[5] The reason for the appointment of the deacons is stated to have been dissatisfaction among Hellenistic (that is, Greek-influenced and Greek-speaking) Jews that their widows were being slighted in preference to Hebraic ones in the daily distribution of food. Since the name "Stephanos" is Greek, it has been assumed that he was one of these Hellenistic Jews. Stephen is stated to have been full of faith and the Holy Spirit and to have performed miracles among the people.[9]

 
Stoning of Saint Stephen, altarpiece of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice, by Jacopo & Domenico Tintoretto

It seems to have been among synagogues of Hellenistic Jews that he performed his teachings and "signs and wonders" since it is said that he aroused the opposition of the "Synagogue of the Freedmen", and "of the Cyrenians, and of the Alexandrians, and of them that were of Cilicia and Asia".[10] Members of these synagogues had challenged Stephen's teachings, but Stephen had bested them in debate. Furious at this humiliation, they suborned false testimony that Stephen had preached blasphemy against Moses and God. They dragged him to appear before the Sanhedrin, the supreme legal court of Jewish elders, accusing him of preaching against the Temple and the Mosaic Law.[11] Stephen is said to have been unperturbed, his face looking like "that of an angel".[5]

Speech to Sanhedrin edit

In a long speech to the Sanhedrin comprising almost the whole of Acts chapter 7, Stephen presents his view of the history of Israel. The God of glory, he says, appeared to Abraham in Mesopotamia, thus establishing at the beginning of the speech one of its major themes, that God does not dwell only in one particular building (meaning the Temple).[12] Stephen recounts the stories of the patriarchs in some depth, and goes into even more detail in the case of Moses. God appeared to Moses in the burning bush,[13] and inspired Moses to lead his people out of Egypt. Nevertheless, the Israelites turned to other gods.[14] This establishes the second main theme of Stephen's speech, Israel's disobedience to God.[12] Stephen faced two accusations: that he had declared that Jesus would destroy the Temple in Jerusalem and that he had changed the customs of Moses. Pope Benedict XVI stated in 2012 that St. Stephen appealed to the Jewish scriptures to prove how the laws of Moses were not subverted by Jesus but, instead, were being fulfilled.[15] Stephen denounces his listeners[12] as "stiff-necked" people who, just as their ancestors had done, resist the Holy Spirit. "Was there ever a prophet your ancestors did not persecute? They even killed those who predicted the coming of the Righteous One. And now you have betrayed and murdered him."[16]

The stoning of Stephen edit

 
Stoning of Saint Stephen by Giovanni Battista Lucini

Thus castigated, the account is that the crowd could contain their anger no longer.[17] However, Stephen looked up and cried, "Look! I see heaven open and the Son of Man standing on the right hand of God!" He said that the recently resurrected Jesus was standing by the side of God.[18][19] The people from the crowd, who threw the first stones,[20][18] laid their coats down so as to be able to do this, at the feet of a "young man named Saul" (later identified as Paul the Apostle). Stephen prayed that the Lord would receive his spirit and his killers be forgiven, sank to his knees, and "fell asleep".[21] Saul "approved of their killing him."[22] In the aftermath of Stephen's death, the remaining disciples except for the apostles fled to distant lands, many to Antioch.[23][24]

Location of the martyrdom edit

The exact site of Stephen's stoning is not mentioned in Acts; instead there are two different traditions. One, claimed by noted French archaeologists Louis-Hugues Vincent (1872–1960) and Félix-Marie Abel (1878–1953) to be ancient, places the event at Jerusalem's northern gate, while another one, dated by Vincent and Abel to the Middle Ages and no earlier than the 12th century, locates it at the eastern gate.[25]

Views of Stephen's speech edit

 
Saint Stephen by Luis de Morales

Of the numerous speeches in Acts of the Apostles, Stephen's speech to the Sanhedrin is the longest.[26] To the objection that it seems unlikely that such a long speech could be reproduced in the text of Acts exactly as it was delivered, some Biblical scholars have replied that Stephen's speech shows a distinctive personality behind it.[12]

There are at least five places where Stephen's re-telling of the stories of Israelite history diverges from the scriptures where these stories originated; for instance, Stephen says that Jacob's tomb was in Shechem,[27] but Genesis 50:13[28] says Jacob's body was carried and buried in a cave in Machpelah at Hebron.[29][12] Some theologians argue that these may not be discrepancies, but rather a condensing of historical events for people who were already familiar with them.[30] That Jacob's body was carried to a final resting place in Shechem is not recorded in Genesis, though it does not exclude the possibility that his bones were transferred to Shechem for a final burial place, as was done with the bones of Jacob's son Joseph, as described in Joshua 24:32 Other scholars consider them as errors. Still others interpret them as deliberate choices making theological points.[26] Another possibility is that the discrepancies come from an ancient Jewish tradition which was not included in the scriptures or may have been popular among people of Jerusalem who were not scribes.[31]

Numerous parallels between the accounts of Stephen in Acts and the Jesus of the Gospels – they both perform miracles, they are both tried by the Sanhedrin, they both pray for forgiveness for their killers, for instance – have led to suspicions that the author of Acts has emphasised – in order to show the recipient that people become holy when they follow the example of Christ – or invented some (or all) of these.[18]

The criticism of traditional Jewish belief and practice in Stephen's speech is very strong – when he says God does not live in a dwelling "made by human hands", referring to the Temple, he is using an expression often employed by Biblical texts to describe idols.[12]

Some people have laid the charge of anti-Judaism against the speech, for instance the priest and scholar of comparative religion S. G. F. Brandon, who states: "The anti-Jewish polemic of this speech reflects the attitude of the author of Acts."[32]

Commentary edit

Friedrich Justus Knecht lists the similarities of the martyrdom of Stephen to Jesus' death on the cross:

1. Our Blessed Lord was sentenced to death on the charge of blasphemy, because He had affirmed on oath: "I am the Son of the living God, and hereafter you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of God". In the same manner Stephen was stoned on the assumption that he was a blasphemer, and because he professed his belief in the Divinity of Jesus, and said: "I see heaven open, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God". 2. Both our Blessed Lord and St. Stephen were treated as outcasts, and put to death outside the city. 3. Both, when dying, prayed for their enemies: "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do". – "Lay not this sin to their charge". 4. Both, before dying, commended their souls to God: "Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit". – "Lord Jesus, receive my soul!”[33]

Tomb and relics of Stephen edit

 
Reputed site of the stoning of Stephen, Greek Orthodox Church of St Stephen, Kidron Valley, Jerusalem

Acts 8:2[34] says "Godly men buried Stephen and mourned deeply for him," but the location where he was buried is not specified.

In 415, a priest named Lucian purportedly had a dream that revealed the location of Stephen's remains at Beit Jimal. After that, the relics of the protomartyr were taken in procession to the Church of Hagia Sion on 26 December 415, making it the date for the feast of Saint Stephen. The recovery of the relics were described in a letter written by Avitus of Braga,[35] who was involved in a plot to bring some of those relics to Braga via the historian and theologian Paulus Orosius.[36] In 439, the relics were translated to a new church north of the Damascus Gate built by the empress Aelia Eudocia in honor of Saint Stephen. This church was destroyed in the 12th century. A 20th-century French Catholic church, Saint-Étienne, was built in its place, while another, the Greek Orthodox Church of St Stephen, was built outside the eastern gate of the city,[37] which a second tradition holds to be the site of his martyrdom, rather than the northern location outside Damascus Gate (for the two traditions see here).

The Crusaders initially called the main northern gate of Jerusalem "Saint Stephen's Gate" (in Latin, Porta Sancti Stephani), highlighting its proximity to the site of martyrdom of Saint Stephen, marked by the church and monastery built by Empress Eudocia.[38] A different tradition is documented from the end of the Crusader period, after the disappearance of the Byzantine church: as Christian pilgrims were prohibited from approaching the militarily exposed northern city wall, the name "Saint Stephen's Gate" was transferred to the still accessible eastern gate, which bears this name until this day.[39]

The relics of the protomartyr were later translated to Rome by Pope Pelagius II during the construction of the basilica of San Lorenzo fuori le Mura. They were interred alongside the relics of Saint Lawrence, whose tomb is enshrined within the church. According to the Golden Legend, the relics of Lawrence moved miraculously to one side to make room for those of Stephen.[40]

The Imperial Regalia of the Holy Roman Empire includes a relic known as St. Stephen's Purse which is an elaborate gold and jewel-encrusted box believed to contain soil soaked with the blood of St. Stephen. The reliquary is likely a 9th-century creation.

In his book The City of God, Augustine of Hippo describes the many miracles that occurred when part of the relics of Saint Stephen were brought to Africa.[41]

Saint Stephen's Day edit

Public holidays edit

In Western Christianity, 26 December is called "Saint Stephen's Day", the "Feast of Stephen" mentioned in the English Christmas carol "Good King Wenceslas". It is a public holiday in many nations that are of historic Catholic, Anglican and Lutheran traditions, including Austria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Ireland, Luxembourg, Slovakia, Poland, Italy, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Catalonia and the Balearic Isles. In Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the United Kingdom, the day is celebrated as "Boxing Day".

Western Christianity edit

In the current norms for the liturgy of the Roman Catholic Church, the feast is celebrated at the Eucharist, but, for the Liturgy of the Hours, is restricted to the Hours during the day, with Evening Prayer being reserved to the celebration of the Octave of Christmas. Historically, the "Invention of the Relics of Saint Stephen" (i.e., their reputed discovery) was commemorated on 3 August.[42] The feasts of both 26 December and 3 August have been used in dating clauses in historical documents produced in England.[43] Stephen is remembered in the Church of England with a Festival on 26 December.[44]

Eastern Christianity edit

 
Byzantine icon, 11th century

In the Eastern Orthodox Church, those Eastern Catholic Churches which follow the Byzantine Rite, and in Oriental Orthodox Churches (e.g., Coptic, Syrian, Malankara) Saint Stephen's feast day is celebrated on 27 December, due to the celebration of the Synaxis of the Theotokos on 26 December. This also has the effect of pushing the Feast of the Holy Innocents to 29 December. This day is also called the "Third Day of the Nativity" because it is the third day of the Christmas season.

Some Orthodox churches, particularly in the west, follow a modified Julian calendar that places date names identically with the standard Gregorian calendar of widespread civil usage. In those churches, then, the date the feast is observed is generally known as 27 December. However, other Orthodox churches, including the Oriental Orthodox, continue to use the original Julian calendar. Throughout the 21st century, 27 December Julian will continue to fall on 9 January in the Gregorian calendar, and that is the date on which they observe the feast.

Saint Stephen is also commemorated on 4 January (Synaxis of the Seventy Apostles) in the Eastern Orthodox Church.

Uncovering of his relics (relics of the saints: Nicodemus, Gamaliel and Abibas son of Gamaliel were also found in Saint Stephen's tomb) took place in 415, Gamaliel appeared to presbyter Lucian [ru] and he told him to go to Jerusalem and inform Bishop John about relics of Saint Stephen.[45] Bishop John II with bishops Eusthia (from Sebastia) and Eleutherius (from Jericho) came to the tomb in Beit Jimal and translated relics to Jerusalem, this event is commemorated on 15 September.[46][47][48]

In 428 (when Saint Theodosius II the Younger Roman Emperor) relics of saint: Stephen, Nicodemus, Gamaliel and Abibas were translated from Jerusalem to Constantinople and relics have been placed in Saint Lawrence church, and after preparations were made relics were moved to specially prepared Saint Stephen church in Constantinople, this event took place on 2 August.[49][47][48]

Armenian Liturgy edit

In the Armenian Apostolic and Armenian Catholic Churches, Saint Stephen's Day falls on 25 December – the day on which the feast of the Nativity of Jesus (Christmas) falls in all other churches. This is because the Armenian churches maintain the decree of Constantine, which stipulated that the Nativity and Theophany of Jesus were to be celebrated on 6 January. In dioceses of the Armenian Church which use the Julian Calendar, Saint Stephen's Day falls on 7 January and Nativity/Theophany on 19 January (for the remainder of the 21st century Julian).

In the eucharistic celebration on this feast day, it is traditional for all deacons serving at the altar to wear a liturgical crown (Armenian: խոյր khooyr), which is one of the vestments worn only by priests on all other days of the year, the crown being in this instance a symbol of martyrdom.

Commemorative places edit

 
The Saint Stephen Armenian Monastery of the 9th century near Jolfa, Iran
 
Saint Stephen holding a Gospel Book in a 1601 painting by Giacomo Cavedone.
See also: St. Stephen's Cathedral, St. Stephen's Church

Many churches and other places commemorate Stephen. Among the most notable are the two sites in Jerusalem held by different traditions to be the place of his martyrdom, the Salesian monastery of Beit Jimal in Israel held to be the place where his remains were miraculously found, and the church of San Lorenzo fuori le Mura in Rome, where the saint's remains are said to be buried.

Important churches and sites dedicated to Saint Stephen are:

Armenian churches edit

Australia edit

Austria edit

Belgium edit

  • Saints John's and Stephen's church of the Minims [fr] (Brussels)

France edit

Denmark edit

India edit

Ireland edit

Italy edit

Holy Land edit

  • St. Stephen's Basilica, Jerusalem, in French Saint-Étienne, at the traditional place of St Stephen's martyrdom; modern church over ruins of Byzantine 5th-century predecessor
  • St. Stephan's Gate, the Christian name of one of the city gates of the Old City of Jerusalem, also known as the "Lions' Gate". A post-Byzantine tradition holds that Stephen's stoning occurred there, while an older tradition connects the martyrdom to the Damascus Gate, where a church and large monastic complex dedicated to Saint Stephen was built in the 5th century (see above). A modern Greek Orthodox Church of Saint Stephen stands a short distance from Lions' Gate.

United Kingdom edit

United States edit

  • St. Stephen the martyr church, Renton, Washington[54]
  • St. Stephen Parish in Portland, Oregon
  • St. Stephen Church in Cleveland, Ohio
  • St. Stephen Protomartyr Catholic Church and Parish in St. Louis, Missouri[55]
  • St. Stephen's Church in Boston, Massachusetts
  • St. Stephen Catholic Church in Cincinnati, Ohio
  • St. Stephen's Church in Providence, RI[56]
  • St. Stephen the Martyr Church, Omaha, Nebraska[57]
  • St. Stephen Lutheran Church in Milwaukee, Wisconsin[58]

Other associations edit

  • In the Catholic Church, the Guild of St. Stephen is an international association of altar servers whose aim is to promote "highest standards of serving at the Church's liturgy".[59]
  • Saint Stephen is one of the sculptures on the side of the Orsanmichele in Florence. Saint Stephen is the patron saint of the wool guild.
  • In the 14th −16th century, the bishopric of Halberstadt issued one-sided stamped silver coins. The obverse showed the face of St. Stephen in chief over two large rocks in base and a martyr's palm frond (palmwedel) on the left side. The halo around St. Stephen's head and the two rocks being mistaken for hands made it look like he was lying in state inside of a coffin (sarg). Thus they were nicknamed sargpfennig ("coffin pennies").
  • Saint Stephen is featured as the eponymous subject of a song by the Grateful Dead.
  • Stephen Ministry is inspired by St. Stephen. This ministry provides high-quality, one-to-one, Christ-centered care to people in the congregation and the community experiencing life difficulties.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ "St. Stephen the Deacon" 12 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine, St. Stephen Diaconal Community Association, Roman Catholic Diocese of Rochester.
  3. ^ Acts 7:51–53
  4. ^ Acts 22:20
  5. ^ a b c Souvay, Charles. "Saint Stephen". Catholic Encyclopedia,1912. New Advent. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  6. ^ Mal Couch, A Bible Handbook to the Acts of the Apostles, 2003, p. 246. "Stephen is distinguished as "a man full of faith and of the Holy Spirit" (Acts 6:5). Stephen and the other men were Hellenistic Jews whose native language was Greek. He had lived with Gentiles in other parts of the Roman Empire."
  7. ^ "Article XXI (IX) Of the Invocation of the Saints".
  8. ^ "Protomartyr and Archdeacon Stephen".
  9. ^ Acts 6:5, 8
  10. ^ Acts 6:9
  11. ^ Acts 6:9–14
  12. ^ a b c d e f David J. Williams (1989), Acts (Understanding the Bible Commentary Series), Baker Books, Chapter 16, ISBN 978-0-8010-4805-0.
  13. ^ Acts 7:30–32
  14. ^ Acts 7:39–43
  15. ^ Kerr, David. "St. Stephen's death shows importance of Scripture, Pope says", Catholic News Agency, 2 May 2012.
  16. ^ Acts 7:51–53
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  18. ^ a b c David J. Williams, Acts (Understanding the Bible Commentary Series), Baker Books 1989, chapter 17, ISBN 978-0-8010-4805-0
  19. ^ Acts 7:54
  20. ^ Deuteronomy 13:9 and Deuteronomy 17:7
  21. ^ Acts 7:58–60
  22. ^ Acts 8:1
  23. ^ Acts 11:19–20
  24. ^ Unger, Merrill F. (2006) [1957]. Harrison, R. K. (ed.). The New Unger's Bible Dictionary. Chicago: Moody Publishers. Antioch Ariana Grande Yuh. ISBN 978-0-8024-9066-7.
  25. ^ Hannah M. Cotton; Leah Di Segni; Werner Eck; et al., eds. (2012). Jerusalem, Part 2: 705–1120. Corpus Inscriptionum Iudeae/Palaestinae. Vol. 1. De Gruyter. p. 275. ISBN 978-3-11-025188-3. Retrieved 31 August 2016. .... St. Stephen's Gate (Lions' gate; Bab Sitti Mariam). The gate owes its name to a tradition according to which Stephen the Deacon, the first martyr, was stoned on this spot. At the beginning of the 20 c. the Greek Orthodox Patriarchy built a church dedicated to the Protomartyr in their property in front of the gate, in an endeavour to pinpoint the tradition of the site, which was falling into oblivion following the construction of the Dominican church and monastery on the site of the Eudocian church of St. Stephen north of Damascus Gate. The Greek builders went so far as to maintain that, in digging the foundations of the new church, they had found a broken lintel with an engraved invocation to Saint Stephen, but their claim, accepted by Macalister and Vailhé, was promptly disproved by Vincent, who was able to show that the lintel came in fact from Beersheba. Vincent and Abel maintained that the tradition about Stephen's stoning at the eastern gate of Jerusalem was not earlier than the 12 c., while the tradition pointing to the northern gate was ancient. .... J. Milik .... suggested that all the tombstones discovered in this area belonged to the cemetery of the Probatica.
  26. ^ a b Rex A. Koivisto (1987). (PDF). Grace Theological College. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 May 2016. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  27. ^ Acts 7:16
  28. ^ Genesis 50:13
  29. ^ Acts 8:1
  30. ^ Balge, Richard (2016). The People's Bible: Acts. Milwaukee: Northwestern Publishing House. p. 77. ISBN 978-0-8100-1190-8.
  31. ^ Marian Wolniewicz as the translator of the Book of Acts from: The Millennium Holy Bible; Warsaw, 1980
  32. ^ Brandon, S. G. F. (1967). Jesus and the Zealots: A Study of the Political Factor in Primitive Christianity. Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 158. ISBN 978-0-684-31010-7.
  33. ^ Friedrich Justus Knecht (1910). "LXXXVIII. Election and Ordination of Deacons. – Stephen the First Martyr" . A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture. B. Herder.
  34. ^ Acts 8:2
  35. ^ The standard edition of the Revelatio Sancti Stephani and the Epistula Aviti is that of S. Vanderlinden in Revue des Etudes Byzantines 4 (1946:178-217).
  36. ^ Wace, Henry; Piercy, William Coleman, eds. (2014). A dictionary of early Christian biography: and literature to the end of the sixth century A.D. ; with an account of the principal sects and heresies. Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson Publ. pp. 1263–1264. ISBN 978-1-61970-269-1.
  37. ^ "St Stephen Church". Ministry of Tourism, Government of Israel. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  38. ^ Adrian J. Boas (2001). Jerusalem in the time of the crusades: society, landscape, and art in the Holy City under Frankish rule (Illustrated, reprint ed.). Routledge. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-415-23000-1.
  39. ^ Jerome Murphy-O'Connor (2008). The Holy Land: An Oxford Archaeological Guide from Earliest Times to 1700. Oxford Archaeological Guides. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-19-923666-4. Retrieved 2 March 2018. The local guides simply moved to the Kidron valley certain holy places, notably the church of Saint Stephen, which in reality were north of the city, and business went on as before.
  40. ^ "Golden Legend – Invention of Saint Stephen, Protomartyr". CatholicSaints.Info. 15 November 2014. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
  41. ^ Augustine, City of God, Book XXII, Chapter 8, accessed 3 July 2021
  42. ^ Oxford Dictionary of Saints, ed. David Hugh Farmer, corr. ed. (Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1979), p. 361. ISBN 0198691203
  43. ^ Handbook of dates for students of British history, ed. C. R. Cheney. New, rev. ed. (Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2000), pp. 59, 85. ISBN 0521770955
  44. ^ "The Calendar". The Church of England. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  45. ^ "Finding of the relics of Saint Gamaliel". oca.org. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  46. ^ "Uncovering of the relics of the Holy Protomartyr and Archdeacon Stephen". oca.org. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  47. ^ a b "THE TRANSFER FROM JERUSALEM TO CONSTANTINOPLE OF THE RELICS OF THE HOLY FIRSTMARTYR STEPHEN". holytrinityorthodox.com. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  48. ^ a b "Orthodox Calendar. HOLY TRINITY RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH, a parish of the Patriarchate of Moscow". holytrinityorthodox.com. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  49. ^ "Translation of the relics of the Protomartyr and Archdeacon Stephen from Jerusalem to Constantinople". oca.org. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  50. ^ "St. Stephen's Cathedral (Stephansdom)". U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  51. ^ (PDF). Phoenix Park. The Office of Public Works. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 October 2015. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  52. ^ "Santo Stefano Rotondo – Rome, Italy".
  53. ^ "Frequently asked questions: Big Ben and Elizabeth Tower". UK Parliament.
  54. ^ St. Stephen's Church, Renton, WA
  55. ^ St. Stephen Protomartyr Catholic Church, St. Louis, Missouri
  56. ^ St. Stephen's Church, Providence, RI
  57. ^ St. Stephen the Martyr Catholic Church, Omaha, NE
  58. ^ St. Stephen Lutheran Church, Milwaukee
  59. ^ Guild of St. Stephen, accessed 21 March 2018

External links edit

  • "Saint Stephen, the First Martyr"
  • Benedict XVI, "Reflection on the Life and Death of Saint Stephen"
  • Colonnade Statue in St Peter's Square
  • "Saint Stephen" in the Ecumenical Lexicon of Saints

saint, stephen, this, article, about, deacon, stephen, first, martyred, saint, first, king, hungary, hungary, other, uses, stephen, disambiguation, stephen, hebrew, סטפנוס, setēpānôs, greek, Στέφανος, stéphanos, meaning, wreath, crown, extension, reward, honor. This article is about Deacon Stephen the first martyred saint For the first king of Hungary see Saint Stephen of Hungary For other uses see St Stephen disambiguation Stephen Hebrew סטפנוס Setepanos Greek Stefanos Stephanos meaning wreath or crown and by extension reward honor renown fame often given as a title rather than as a name c 5 c 34 AD is traditionally venerated as the protomartyr or first martyr of Christianity 2 According to the Acts of the Apostles he was a deacon in the early church at Jerusalem who angered members of various synagogues by his teachings Accused of blasphemy at his trial he made a speech denouncing the Jewish authorities who were sitting in judgment on him 3 and was then stoned to death Saul of Tarsus later known as Paul a Pharisee and Roman citizen who would later become a Christian apostle participated in Stephen s martyrdom 4 SaintStephenSaint Stephen by Carlo CrivelliDeacon ArchdeaconApostle of the SeventyProtomartyr of the FaithFirst MartyrBornc 5 ADDied33 36 AD aged 28 32 Jerusalem Judaea Roman EmpireVenerated inRoman Catholic ChurchEastern Catholic ChurchesOrthodox ChurchOriental Orthodox ChurchesAssyrian Church of the EastAnglican CommunionLutheranismCanonizedPre CongregationFeast25 December Armenian Christianity 26 December Western 27 December 4 January 2 August 15 September Eastern Tobi 1 Coptic Christianity AttributesRed Martyr stones dalmatic censer miniature church Gospel Book martyr s palm In Orthodox and Eastern Christianity he often wears an orarionPatronageAltar Servers 1 Acoma Native American Pueblo Bricklayers casket makers Cetona Italy deacons headaches horses Kessel Belgium masons Owensboro Kentucky Passau Germany Kigali Rwanda Dodoma Tanzania Serbia Ligao Republic of Srpska Prato Italy 2 The only source for information about Stephen is the New Testament book of the Acts of the Apostles 5 Stephen is mentioned in Acts 6 as one of the Greek speaking Hellenistic Jews selected to administer the daily charitable distribution of food to the Greek speaking widows 6 The Catholic Anglican Oriental Orthodox Eastern Orthodox and Lutheran churches and the Church of the East view Stephen as a saint 7 Artistic representations often show Stephen with a crown symbolising martyrdom three stones martyr s palm frond censer and often holding a miniature church building Stephen is often shown as a young beardless man with a tonsure wearing a deacon s vestments Contents 1 Background 1 1 Speech to Sanhedrin 1 2 The stoning of Stephen 1 2 1 Location of the martyrdom 2 Views of Stephen s speech 3 Commentary 4 Tomb and relics of Stephen 5 Saint Stephen s Day 5 1 Public holidays 5 2 Western Christianity 5 3 Eastern Christianity 5 4 Armenian Liturgy 6 Commemorative places 6 1 Armenian churches 6 2 Australia 6 3 Austria 6 4 Belgium 6 5 France 6 6 Denmark 6 7 India 6 8 Ireland 6 9 Italy 6 10 Holy Land 6 11 United Kingdom 6 12 United States 7 Other associations 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksBackground editStephen is first mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles as one of seven deacons appointed by the Apostles to distribute food and charitable aid to poorer members of the community in the early church According to Orthodox belief he was the eldest and is therefore called archdeacon 8 As another deacon Nicholas of Antioch is specifically stated to have been a convert to Judaism it may be assumed that Stephen was born Jewish but nothing more is known about his previous life 5 The reason for the appointment of the deacons is stated to have been dissatisfaction among Hellenistic that is Greek influenced and Greek speaking Jews that their widows were being slighted in preference to Hebraic ones in the daily distribution of food Since the name Stephanos is Greek it has been assumed that he was one of these Hellenistic Jews Stephen is stated to have been full of faith and the Holy Spirit and to have performed miracles among the people 9 nbsp Stoning of Saint Stephen altarpiece of San Giorgio Maggiore Venice by Jacopo amp Domenico TintorettoIt seems to have been among synagogues of Hellenistic Jews that he performed his teachings and signs and wonders since it is said that he aroused the opposition of the Synagogue of the Freedmen and of the Cyrenians and of the Alexandrians and of them that were of Cilicia and Asia 10 Members of these synagogues had challenged Stephen s teachings but Stephen had bested them in debate Furious at this humiliation they suborned false testimony that Stephen had preached blasphemy against Moses and God They dragged him to appear before the Sanhedrin the supreme legal court of Jewish elders accusing him of preaching against the Temple and the Mosaic Law 11 Stephen is said to have been unperturbed his face looking like that of an angel 5 Speech to Sanhedrin edit In a long speech to the Sanhedrin comprising almost the whole of Acts chapter 7 Stephen presents his view of the history of Israel The God of glory he says appeared to Abraham in Mesopotamia thus establishing at the beginning of the speech one of its major themes that God does not dwell only in one particular building meaning the Temple 12 Stephen recounts the stories of the patriarchs in some depth and goes into even more detail in the case of Moses God appeared to Moses in the burning bush 13 and inspired Moses to lead his people out of Egypt Nevertheless the Israelites turned to other gods 14 This establishes the second main theme of Stephen s speech Israel s disobedience to God 12 Stephen faced two accusations that he had declared that Jesus would destroy the Temple in Jerusalem and that he had changed the customs of Moses Pope Benedict XVI stated in 2012 that St Stephen appealed to the Jewish scriptures to prove how the laws of Moses were not subverted by Jesus but instead were being fulfilled 15 Stephen denounces his listeners 12 as stiff necked people who just as their ancestors had done resist the Holy Spirit Was there ever a prophet your ancestors did not persecute They even killed those who predicted the coming of the Righteous One And now you have betrayed and murdered him 16 The stoning of Stephen edit nbsp Stoning of Saint Stephen by Giovanni Battista LuciniThus castigated the account is that the crowd could contain their anger no longer 17 However Stephen looked up and cried Look I see heaven open and the Son of Man standing on the right hand of God He said that the recently resurrected Jesus was standing by the side of God 18 19 The people from the crowd who threw the first stones 20 18 laid their coats down so as to be able to do this at the feet of a young man named Saul later identified as Paul the Apostle Stephen prayed that the Lord would receive his spirit and his killers be forgiven sank to his knees and fell asleep 21 Saul approved of their killing him 22 In the aftermath of Stephen s death the remaining disciples except for the apostles fled to distant lands many to Antioch 23 24 Location of the martyrdom edit The exact site of Stephen s stoning is not mentioned in Acts instead there are two different traditions One claimed by noted French archaeologists Louis Hugues Vincent 1872 1960 and Felix Marie Abel 1878 1953 to be ancient places the event at Jerusalem s northern gate while another one dated by Vincent and Abel to the Middle Ages and no earlier than the 12th century locates it at the eastern gate 25 Views of Stephen s speech edit nbsp Saint Stephen by Luis de MoralesOf the numerous speeches in Acts of the Apostles Stephen s speech to the Sanhedrin is the longest 26 To the objection that it seems unlikely that such a long speech could be reproduced in the text of Acts exactly as it was delivered some Biblical scholars have replied that Stephen s speech shows a distinctive personality behind it 12 There are at least five places where Stephen s re telling of the stories of Israelite history diverges from the scriptures where these stories originated for instance Stephen says that Jacob s tomb was in Shechem 27 but Genesis 50 13 28 says Jacob s body was carried and buried in a cave in Machpelah at Hebron 29 12 Some theologians argue that these may not be discrepancies but rather a condensing of historical events for people who were already familiar with them 30 That Jacob s body was carried to a final resting place in Shechem is not recorded in Genesis though it does not exclude the possibility that his bones were transferred to Shechem for a final burial place as was done with the bones of Jacob s son Joseph as described in Joshua 24 32 Other scholars consider them as errors Still others interpret them as deliberate choices making theological points 26 Another possibility is that the discrepancies come from an ancient Jewish tradition which was not included in the scriptures or may have been popular among people of Jerusalem who were not scribes 31 Numerous parallels between the accounts of Stephen in Acts and the Jesus of the Gospels they both perform miracles they are both tried by the Sanhedrin they both pray for forgiveness for their killers for instance have led to suspicions that the author of Acts has emphasised in order to show the recipient that people become holy when they follow the example of Christ or invented some or all of these 18 The criticism of traditional Jewish belief and practice in Stephen s speech is very strong when he says God does not live in a dwelling made by human hands referring to the Temple he is using an expression often employed by Biblical texts to describe idols 12 Some people have laid the charge of anti Judaism against the speech for instance the priest and scholar of comparative religion S G F Brandon who states The anti Jewish polemic of this speech reflects the attitude of the author of Acts 32 Commentary editFriedrich Justus Knecht lists the similarities of the martyrdom of Stephen to Jesus death on the cross 1 Our Blessed Lord was sentenced to death on the charge of blasphemy because He had affirmed on oath I am the Son of the living God and hereafter you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of God In the same manner Stephen was stoned on the assumption that he was a blasphemer and because he professed his belief in the Divinity of Jesus and said I see heaven open and Jesus standing at the right hand of God 2 Both our Blessed Lord and St Stephen were treated as outcasts and put to death outside the city 3 Both when dying prayed for their enemies Father forgive them for they know not what they do Lay not this sin to their charge 4 Both before dying commended their souls to God Father into Thy hands I commend My spirit Lord Jesus receive my soul 33 Tomb and relics of Stephen edit nbsp Reputed site of the stoning of Stephen Greek Orthodox Church of St Stephen Kidron Valley JerusalemActs 8 2 34 says Godly men buried Stephen and mourned deeply for him but the location where he was buried is not specified In 415 a priest named Lucian purportedly had a dream that revealed the location of Stephen s remains at Beit Jimal After that the relics of the protomartyr were taken in procession to the Church of Hagia Sion on 26 December 415 making it the date for the feast of Saint Stephen The recovery of the relics were described in a letter written by Avitus of Braga 35 who was involved in a plot to bring some of those relics to Braga via the historian and theologian Paulus Orosius 36 In 439 the relics were translated to a new church north of the Damascus Gate built by the empress Aelia Eudocia in honor of Saint Stephen This church was destroyed in the 12th century A 20th century French Catholic church Saint Etienne was built in its place while another the Greek Orthodox Church of St Stephen was built outside the eastern gate of the city 37 which a second tradition holds to be the site of his martyrdom rather than the northern location outside Damascus Gate for the two traditions see here The Crusaders initially called the main northern gate of Jerusalem Saint Stephen s Gate in Latin Porta Sancti Stephani highlighting its proximity to the site of martyrdom of Saint Stephen marked by the church and monastery built by Empress Eudocia 38 A different tradition is documented from the end of the Crusader period after the disappearance of the Byzantine church as Christian pilgrims were prohibited from approaching the militarily exposed northern city wall the name Saint Stephen s Gate was transferred to the still accessible eastern gate which bears this name until this day 39 The relics of the protomartyr were later translated to Rome by Pope Pelagius II during the construction of the basilica of San Lorenzo fuori le Mura They were interred alongside the relics of Saint Lawrence whose tomb is enshrined within the church According to the Golden Legend the relics of Lawrence moved miraculously to one side to make room for those of Stephen 40 The Imperial Regalia of the Holy Roman Empire includes a relic known as St Stephen s Purse which is an elaborate gold and jewel encrusted box believed to contain soil soaked with the blood of St Stephen The reliquary is likely a 9th century creation In his book The City of God Augustine of Hippo describes the many miracles that occurred when part of the relics of Saint Stephen were brought to Africa 41 Saint Stephen s Day editMain article Saint Stephen s Day Public holidays edit In Western Christianity 26 December is called Saint Stephen s Day the Feast of Stephen mentioned in the English Christmas carol Good King Wenceslas It is a public holiday in many nations that are of historic Catholic Anglican and Lutheran traditions including Austria Croatia the Czech Republic Hungary Ireland Luxembourg Slovakia Poland Italy Germany Norway Sweden Denmark Finland Catalonia and the Balearic Isles In Australia New Zealand Canada and the United Kingdom the day is celebrated as Boxing Day Western Christianity edit In the current norms for the liturgy of the Roman Catholic Church the feast is celebrated at the Eucharist but for the Liturgy of the Hours is restricted to the Hours during the day with Evening Prayer being reserved to the celebration of the Octave of Christmas Historically the Invention of the Relics of Saint Stephen i e their reputed discovery was commemorated on 3 August 42 The feasts of both 26 December and 3 August have been used in dating clauses in historical documents produced in England 43 Stephen is remembered in the Church of England with a Festival on 26 December 44 Eastern Christianity edit nbsp Byzantine icon 11th centuryIn the Eastern Orthodox Church those Eastern Catholic Churches which follow the Byzantine Rite and in Oriental Orthodox Churches e g Coptic Syrian Malankara Saint Stephen s feast day is celebrated on 27 December due to the celebration of the Synaxis of the Theotokos on 26 December This also has the effect of pushing the Feast of the Holy Innocents to 29 December This day is also called the Third Day of the Nativity because it is the third day of the Christmas season Some Orthodox churches particularly in the west follow a modified Julian calendar that places date names identically with the standard Gregorian calendar of widespread civil usage In those churches then the date the feast is observed is generally known as 27 December However other Orthodox churches including the Oriental Orthodox continue to use the original Julian calendar Throughout the 21st century 27 December Julian will continue to fall on 9 January in the Gregorian calendar and that is the date on which they observe the feast Saint Stephen is also commemorated on 4 January Synaxis of the Seventy Apostles in the Eastern Orthodox Church Uncovering of his relics relics of the saints Nicodemus Gamaliel and Abibas son of Gamaliel were also found in Saint Stephen s tomb took place in 415 Gamaliel appeared to presbyter Lucian ru and he told him to go to Jerusalem and inform Bishop John about relics of Saint Stephen 45 Bishop John II with bishops Eusthia from Sebastia and Eleutherius from Jericho came to the tomb in Beit Jimal and translated relics to Jerusalem this event is commemorated on 15 September 46 47 48 In 428 when Saint Theodosius II the Younger Roman Emperor relics of saint Stephen Nicodemus Gamaliel and Abibas were translated from Jerusalem to Constantinople and relics have been placed in Saint Lawrence church and after preparations were made relics were moved to specially prepared Saint Stephen church in Constantinople this event took place on 2 August 49 47 48 Armenian Liturgy edit In the Armenian Apostolic and Armenian Catholic Churches Saint Stephen s Day falls on 25 December the day on which the feast of the Nativity of Jesus Christmas falls in all other churches This is because the Armenian churches maintain the decree of Constantine which stipulated that the Nativity and Theophany of Jesus were to be celebrated on 6 January In dioceses of the Armenian Church which use the Julian Calendar Saint Stephen s Day falls on 7 January and Nativity Theophany on 19 January for the remainder of the 21st century Julian In the eucharistic celebration on this feast day it is traditional for all deacons serving at the altar to wear a liturgical crown Armenian խոյր khooyr which is one of the vestments worn only by priests on all other days of the year the crown being in this instance a symbol of martyrdom Commemorative places edit nbsp The Saint Stephen Armenian Monastery of the 9th century near Jolfa Iran nbsp Saint Stephen holding a Gospel Book in a 1601 painting by Giacomo Cavedone See also St Stephen s Cathedral St Stephen s ChurchMany churches and other places commemorate Stephen Among the most notable are the two sites in Jerusalem held by different traditions to be the place of his martyrdom the Salesian monastery of Beit Jimal in Israel held to be the place where his remains were miraculously found and the church of San Lorenzo fuori le Mura in Rome where the saint s remains are said to be buried Important churches and sites dedicated to Saint Stephen are Armenian churches edit Saint Stephen Church of Lmbat of the 7th century near the town of Artik Armenia Saint Stephen Armenian Monastery of the 9th century near the city of Jolfa northwestern Iran St Stepanos Armenian Church of Izmir Turkey built in 1863 and destroyed in September 1922 during the Catastrophe of SmyrnaAustralia edit St Stephen s Cathedral Brisbane Queensland Australia is the primary Catholic place of worship in the archdiocese of Brisbane Austria edit Stephansdom Vienna Austria the Cathedral of St Stephen founded 1147 and seat of the Archbishop of Vienna Symbol of the city of Vienna and of Austria has the tallest spire in Austria and is the centerpiece of Vienna 50 Belgium edit Saints John s and Stephen s church of the Minims fr Brussels France edit Saint Etienne France and numerous other places named Saint Etienne in the French speaking world Etienne is the French form of Stephen Denmark edit St Stephen s Church CopenhagenIndia edit St Stephen s School ICSE ISC Sonarpur Kolkata Under Church of North India in India Principal Hebron Larruna Peters St Stephen s Church Kombuthurai built by Francis Xavier in India in 1542 St Stephen s knanaya Catholic Forane Church Uzhavoor Kottayam built 1631 St Stephen s Orthodox Cathedral Kudassanad Pandalam Kerala the first Orthodox Cathedral of Saint Stephen in India St Stephen s College Delhi St Stephen s Church Delhi and St Stephen s Hospital Delhi St Stephen s School Chandigarh founded in 1986 St Stephen s Church Thope is one of the parishes of the first diocese of India Kollam It is 216 years old and the patron of this parish is St Stephen the first Martyr of the Church and it is situated beside Kollam Beach St Stephen Church in Santo Estevao Goa India St Stephan s Orthodox Syrian Church Kattanam Kattanam Valiyapalli St Stephen s Malankara Catholic Church Kattanam St Stephen s Church OotyIreland edit St Stephen s Green Dublin The largest of Dublin s Georgian squares and itself named after a former leper hospital near the site 51 Church of St Stephen Tyrrellspass located in Tyrrellspass County WestmeathItaly edit Rome Santo Stefano Rotondo a church built under the commission of Constantine I on the ruins of the Caelian Hill of Rome Built in the 5th century it is the first church in Rome to have a circular floor plan instead of the traditional Greek or Latin cross designs 52 San Lorenzo fuori le Mura where Saint Stephen is said to be interred together with Saint Lawrence in the crypt under the high altar Vatican City Santo Stefano degli Abissini Coptic Christian church in Vatican City that is also the National Church of Ethiopia in Rome Rome Basilica Papale di San Paolo fuori le Mura a side chapel to St Stephen is about a stone s throw from the tomb of St Paul Milan Basilica di Santo Stefano Maggiore a baroque church built in the fifth century and originally dedicated to both Saint Stephen and Saint Zecheriah Holy Land edit St Stephen s Basilica Jerusalem in French Saint Etienne at the traditional place of St Stephen s martyrdom modern church over ruins of Byzantine 5th century predecessor St Stephan s Gate the Christian name of one of the city gates of the Old City of Jerusalem also known as the Lions Gate A post Byzantine tradition holds that Stephen s stoning occurred there while an older tradition connects the martyrdom to the Damascus Gate where a church and large monastic complex dedicated to Saint Stephen was built in the 5th century see above A modern Greek Orthodox Church of Saint Stephen stands a short distance from Lions Gate United Kingdom edit St Stephen s Chapel in the Palace of Westminster London was originally built in the reign of Henry III of England it became the first site of the debating chamber of the British House of Commons The tower that houses Big Ben which was properly called The Clock Tower was referred to as St Stephen s Tower by Victorian journalists 53 The Clock Tower was renamed Elizabeth Tower to commemorate the Diamond Jubilee of Elizabeth II in 2013 St Stephen s Tower is the smaller tower in the middle of the building St Stephen s House Oxford a permanent private hall of the University of Oxford and Anglican theological college St Stephen s Church Bristol a city church built outside the walls c 1250 rebuilt c 1430 1490 St Stephen s Sneinton Nottingham has strong links to William Booth and The Salvation Army The parents of D H Lawrence married in the church on 27 December 1875 St Stephen s Walbrook City of London first recorded in C11 and rebuilt to Wren s design after the Great FireUnited States edit St Stephen the martyr church Renton Washington 54 St Stephen Parish in Portland Oregon St Stephen Church in Cleveland Ohio St Stephen Protomartyr Catholic Church and Parish in St Louis Missouri 55 St Stephen s Church in Boston Massachusetts St Stephen Catholic Church in Cincinnati Ohio St Stephen s Church in Providence RI 56 St Stephen the Martyr Church Omaha Nebraska 57 St Stephen Lutheran Church in Milwaukee Wisconsin 58 Other associations editIn the Catholic Church the Guild of St Stephen is an international association of altar servers whose aim is to promote highest standards of serving at the Church s liturgy 59 Saint Stephen is one of the sculptures on the side of the Orsanmichele in Florence Saint Stephen is the patron saint of the wool guild In the 14th 16th century the bishopric of Halberstadt issued one sided stamped silver coins The obverse showed the face of St Stephen in chief over two large rocks in base and a martyr s palm frond palmwedel on the left side The halo around St Stephen s head and the two rocks being mistaken for hands made it look like he was lying in state inside of a coffin sarg Thus they were nicknamed sargpfennig coffin pennies Saint Stephen is featured as the eponymous subject of a song by the Grateful Dead Stephen Ministry is inspired by St Stephen This ministry provides high quality one to one Christ centered care to people in the congregation and the community experiencing life difficulties See also editSaint Stephen patron saint archive Guilds of FlorenceReferences edit 1 St Stephen the Deacon Archived 12 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine St Stephen Diaconal Community Association Roman Catholic Diocese of Rochester Acts 7 51 53 Acts 22 20 a b c Souvay Charles Saint Stephen Catholic Encyclopedia 1912 New Advent Retrieved 3 April 2013 Mal Couch A Bible Handbook to the Acts of the Apostles 2003 p 246 Stephen is distinguished as a man full of faith and of the Holy Spirit Acts 6 5 Stephen and the other men were Hellenistic Jews whose native language was Greek He had lived with Gentiles in other parts of the Roman Empire Article XXI IX Of the Invocation of the Saints Protomartyr and Archdeacon Stephen Acts 6 5 8 Acts 6 9 Acts 6 9 14 a b c d e f David J Williams 1989 Acts Understanding the Bible Commentary Series Baker Books Chapter 16 ISBN 978 0 8010 4805 0 Acts 7 30 32 Acts 7 39 43 Kerr David St Stephen s death shows importance of Scripture Pope says Catholic News Agency 2 May 2012 Acts 7 51 53 of Saints John J Crawley amp Co Inc Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 21 April 2013 a b c David J Williams Acts Understanding the Bible Commentary Series Baker Books 1989 chapter 17 ISBN 978 0 8010 4805 0 Acts 7 54 Deuteronomy 13 9 and Deuteronomy 17 7 Acts 7 58 60 Acts 8 1 Acts 11 19 20 Unger Merrill F 2006 1957 Harrison R K ed The New Unger s Bible Dictionary Chicago Moody Publishers Antioch Ariana Grande Yuh ISBN 978 0 8024 9066 7 Hannah M Cotton Leah Di Segni Werner Eck et al eds 2012 Jerusalem Part 2 705 1120 Corpus Inscriptionum Iudeae Palaestinae Vol 1 De Gruyter p 275 ISBN 978 3 11 025188 3 Retrieved 31 August 2016 St Stephen s Gate Lions gate Bab Sitti Mariam The gate owes its name to a tradition according to which Stephen the Deacon the first martyr was stoned on this spot At the beginning of the 20 c the Greek Orthodox Patriarchy built a church dedicated to the Protomartyr in their property in front of the gate in an endeavour to pinpoint the tradition of the site which was falling into oblivion following the construction of the Dominican church and monastery on the site of the Eudocian church of St Stephen north of Damascus Gate The Greek builders went so far as to maintain that in digging the foundations of the new church they had found a broken lintel with an engraved invocation to Saint Stephen but their claim accepted by Macalister and Vailhe was promptly disproved by Vincent who was able to show that the lintel came in fact from Beersheba Vincent and Abel maintained that the tradition about Stephen s stoning at the eastern gate of Jerusalem was not earlier than the 12 c while the tradition pointing to the northern gate was ancient J Milik suggested that all the tombstones discovered in this area belonged to the cemetery of the Probatica a b Rex A Koivisto 1987 Stephen s Speech A Theology of Errors PDF Grace Theological College Archived from the original PDF on 12 May 2016 Retrieved 3 April 2013 Acts 7 16 Genesis 50 13 Acts 8 1 Balge Richard 2016 The People s Bible Acts Milwaukee Northwestern Publishing House p 77 ISBN 978 0 8100 1190 8 Marian Wolniewicz as the translator of the Book of Acts from The Millennium Holy Bible Warsaw 1980 Brandon S G F 1967 Jesus and the Zealots A Study of the Political Factor in Primitive Christianity Charles Scribner s Sons p 158 ISBN 978 0 684 31010 7 Friedrich Justus Knecht 1910 LXXXVIII Election and Ordination of Deacons Stephen the First Martyr A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture B Herder Acts 8 2 The standard edition of the Revelatio Sancti Stephani and the Epistula Aviti is that of S Vanderlinden in Revue des Etudes Byzantines 4 1946 178 217 Wace Henry Piercy William Coleman eds 2014 A dictionary of early Christian biography and literature to the end of the sixth century A D with an account of the principal sects and heresies Peabody Mass Hendrickson Publ pp 1263 1264 ISBN 978 1 61970 269 1 St Stephen Church Ministry of Tourism Government of Israel Retrieved 3 April 2013 Adrian J Boas 2001 Jerusalem in the time of the crusades society landscape and art in the Holy City under Frankish rule Illustrated reprint ed Routledge p 53 ISBN 978 0 415 23000 1 Jerome Murphy O Connor 2008 The Holy Land An Oxford Archaeological Guide from Earliest Times to 1700 Oxford Archaeological Guides Oxford Oxford University Press p 21 ISBN 978 0 19 923666 4 Retrieved 2 March 2018 The local guides simply moved to the Kidron valley certain holy places notably the church of Saint Stephen which in reality were north of the city and business went on as before Golden Legend Invention of Saint Stephen Protomartyr CatholicSaints Info 15 November 2014 Retrieved 19 February 2020 Augustine City of God Book XXII Chapter 8 accessed 3 July 2021 Oxford Dictionary of Saints ed David Hugh Farmer corr ed Oxford Clarendon Press 1979 p 361 ISBN 0198691203 Handbook of dates for students of British history ed C R Cheney New rev ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2000 pp 59 85 ISBN 0521770955 The Calendar The Church of England Retrieved 27 March 2021 Finding of the relics of Saint Gamaliel oca org Retrieved 15 July 2022 Uncovering of the relics of the Holy Protomartyr and Archdeacon Stephen oca org Retrieved 15 July 2022 a b THE TRANSFER FROM JERUSALEM TO CONSTANTINOPLE OF THE RELICS OF THE HOLY FIRSTMARTYR STEPHEN holytrinityorthodox com Retrieved 15 July 2022 a b Orthodox Calendar HOLY TRINITY RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH a parish of the Patriarchate of Moscow holytrinityorthodox com Retrieved 15 July 2022 Translation of the relics of the Protomartyr and Archdeacon Stephen from Jerusalem to Constantinople oca org Retrieved 15 July 2022 St Stephen s Cathedral Stephansdom U S News amp World Report Retrieved 12 January 2020 St Stephen s Green PDF Phoenix Park The Office of Public Works Archived from the original PDF on 22 October 2015 Retrieved 12 January 2020 Santo Stefano Rotondo Rome Italy Frequently asked questions Big Ben and Elizabeth Tower UK Parliament St Stephen s Church Renton WA St Stephen Protomartyr Catholic Church St Louis Missouri St Stephen s Church Providence RI St Stephen the Martyr Catholic Church Omaha NE St Stephen Lutheran Church Milwaukee Guild of St Stephen accessed 21 March 2018External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint Stephen nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Stephanus Saint Stephen the First Martyr Benedict XVI Reflection on the Life and Death of Saint Stephen Colonnade Statue in St Peter s Square Saint Stephen in the Ecumenical Lexicon of Saints Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saint Stephen amp oldid 1206744004, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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