Apostle
(one sent forth), in the New Testament originally the official name of those twelve of the disciples whom Jesus chose to send
forth first to preach the gospel and to be with him during the course of his ministry on earth. The word also appears to have
been used in a non-official sense to designate a much wider circle of Christian messengers and teachers See (2 Corinthians 8:23; Philemon 2:25) It is only of those who were officially designated apostles that we treat in the article. Their names are given in (Matthew 10:2-4) and Christ’s charge to them in the rest of the chapter. Their office.— (1) The original qualification of an apostle, as
stated by St. Peter on the occasion of electing a successor to the traitor Judas, was that he should have been personally
acquainted with the whole ministerial course of our Lord from his baptism by John till the day when he was taken up into heaven.
(2) They were chosen by Christ himself (3) They had the power of working miracles. (4) They were inspired. (John 16:13) (5) Their world seems to have been pre-eminently that of founding the churches and upholding them by supernatural power
specially bestowed for that purpose. (6) The office ceased, a matter of course, with its first holders-all continuation of
it, from the very condition of its existence (cf. (1 Corinthians 9:1)), being impossible. Early history and training .—The apostles were from the lower ranks of life, simple and uneducated;
some of them were related to Jesus according to the flesh; some had previously been disciples of John the Baptist. Our Lord
chose them early in his public career They seem to have been all on an equality, both during and after the ministry of Christ
on earth. Early in our Lord’s ministry he sent them out two and two to preach repentance and to perform miracles in his name
Matt 10; Luke 9. They accompanied him in his journey, saw his wonderful works, heard his discourses addressed to the people, and made inquiries
of him on religious matters. They recognized him as the Christ of God, (Matthew 16:16; Luke 9:20) and described to him supernatural power (Luke 9:54) but in the recognition of the spiritual teaching and mission of Christ they made very low progress, held back as they were
by weakness of apprehension and by national prejudices. Even at the removal of our Lord from the earth they were yet weak
in their knowledge, (Luke 24:21; John 16:12) though he had for so long been carefully preparing and instructing them. On the feast of Pentecost, ten days after our Lord’s
ascension, the Holy Spirit came down on the assembled church, Acts 2; and from that time the apostles became altogether different men, giving witness with power of the life and death and resurrection
of Jesus, as he had declared they should. (Luke 24:48; Acts 1:8,22; 2:32; 3:15; 5:32; 13:31) Later labors and history.—First of all the mother-church at Jerusalem grew up under their hands, Acts 3-7, and their superior dignity and power were universally acknowledged by the rulers and the people. (Acts 5:12) ff. Their first mission out of Jerusalem was to Samaria (Acts 8:5-25) where the Lord himself had, during his ministry, sown the seed of the gospel. Here ends the first period of the apostles’
agency, during which its centre is Jerusalem and the prominent figure is that of St. Peter. The centre of the second period
of the apostolic agency is Antioch, where a church soon was built up, consisting of Jews and Gentiles; and the central figure
of this and of the subsequent period is St. Paul. The third apostolic period is marked by the almost entire disappearance
of the twelve from the sacred narrative and the exclusive agency of St. Paul, the great apostle of the Gentiles. Of the missionary
work of the rest of the twelve we know absolutely nothing from the sacred narrative.