Christianity: Details about 'Desposyni'
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The Desposyni (from Greek, "belonging to the Master") was a sacred name reserved only for Jesus' blood relatives. In Ebionite belief, this included his mother Mary, his father Joseph, his unnamed sisters, and his brothers James the Just, Joses, Simon and Jude; in modern mainstream Christian belief, Mary is counted as a blood relative, Joseph only as a foster father and the rest as half brothers or cousins. It is questionable whether all their descendants up to twenty generations were to be counted among the desposyni or whether that would have rendered the term absurd. If Jesus was married to Mary Magdalene, a controversial belief held by some Gnostic sects which is only indirectly corroborated by the apocryphal Gospel of Philip, their child or children would have been the most revered among the desposyni. According to author Malachi Martin, every early community of Judean followers of Jesus, whether it was Nazarene or Ebionite, was governed by a desposynos as a patriarch, and each of them carried one of the names traditional in Jesus' family but no one was ever named after him. As some asserted their descent from both king David and high priest Aaron, all male desposyni could have laid claim to both the throne and the office of high priest of Jerusalem. However, the Roman occupation of Palestine, with the collaboration of the Judean establishment, made any attempt by a desposynos to rise to or seize political and religious power impossible or limited in scope. Historical accountsHegesippus (c.110–c.180) wrote five books of Commentaries on the Acts of the Church. They are lost, but a few fragments are quoted by Eusebius in Historia Ecclesiae, 3.20. Among them is the following relation, ascribed to the reign of Domitian (81–96):
Other known relatives of Jesus include Simeon, the second bishop of Jerusalem, who was the son of Joseph's brother Clopas (mentioned by Eusebius, H.E. 3.11,32), and three Nestorian bishops of Seleucia on the Tigris in the 3rd century (according to the 13th century Syrian historian, Gregory Barhebraeus). See also
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Desposyni
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