Righteous 1st century

Righteous Abibas

1st century

Also known as Abibus · son of Gamaliel

The son of Gamaliel, baptized in his youth, whose relics were found together with those of Stephen, Gamaliel, and Nikodemos.

Feast Day
August 2
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Commemorated as

The Righteous Abibas, Son of Gamaliel

Life

Abibas (also rendered Abibon or Abibus) was, by ecclesiastical tradition, the son of the Pharisee Gamaliel, the teacher of the Apostle Paul named in the Acts of the Apostles. A figure of the Apostolic Age in Roman Palestine, he is venerated in the Orthodox Church as one of the Righteous, his memory bound inseparably to that of his father and to the discovery of the relics of the Protomartyr Stephen.

Tradition relates that Abibas was baptized in his youth, together with his father Gamaliel and Nicodemus, and that he reposed of natural causes at the age of twenty, dying before his father. He was buried on Gamaliel's estate at Caphargamala outside Jerusalem, where his father and Nicodemus were also interred alongside the body of Saint Stephen. His feast and the principal account of his life are tied to the finding of these relics in the early fifth century.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. 1st century Baptism in youth By tradition, Abibas is baptized together with his father Gamaliel and with Nicodemus.
  2. 1st century Repose Abibas reposes of natural causes at the age of twenty and is buried at Caphargamala on Gamaliel's estate, dying before his father.
  3. 415 Finding of the relics The relics of Abibas are uncovered together with those of Stephen, Gamaliel, and Nikodemus at Caphargamala after Gamaliel reveals the burial site to the priest Lucian in a dream.
  4. 428 Translation to Constantinople The relics of Stephen, Gamaliel, Abibas, and Nikodemus are transferred from Jerusalem to Constantinople and placed in the church of the holy deacon Laurence.

Contributions & Legacy

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Life and Baptism

According to ecclesiastical tradition, Abibas was the second son of Gamaliel, a prominent member of the Sanhedrin in first-century Jerusalem and the teacher under whom the Apostle Paul had studied. The same tradition holds that Gamaliel, together with Abibas and Nicodemus, received baptism at the hands of the Apostles Peter and John.

Abibas is said to have reposed at the age of twenty, of natural causes, dying before his father. He was buried at Caphargamala (Capergamela), an estate belonging to Gamaliel about twenty miles from Jerusalem. By his own will Gamaliel was later buried in the same place, having earlier laid there the body of his baptized son and, with Nicodemus, the relics of the Protomartyr Stephen.

Relics & Shrines

The body of Abibas was uncovered in the year 415, together with those of Saints Stephen, Gamaliel, and Nikodemus, at Caphargamala. By the traditional account the discovery came about during the time of John, Patriarch of Jerusalem, when Gamaliel appeared three times in a dream to Lucian, a priest at Caphargamala, and at length revealed to him everything concerning the burial of all four saints.

The synaxarion relates that when the burial cave was opened, a strong, sweet-smelling fragrance from the relics of the saints permeated the entire place. In 428 the relics of Saints Stephen, Gamaliel, Abibas, and Nikodemus were transferred from Jerusalem to Constantinople and placed in the church of the holy deacon Laurence.

Veneration

Abibas is commemorated in the Orthodox Church on August 2, the day on which the finding of his relics and those of his companions is observed. Belonging to the undivided Church of the first century, he is also venerated in the Roman Catholic tradition, where the feast of the finding of the relics is reckoned on August 3; a separate commemoration on December 2 is especially kept at Pisa.

His memory is closely joined to the August 2 cluster of commemorations in the Orthodox calendar, which also marks the finding of the relics of Saint Gamaliel and of the Righteous Nicodemus and the translation of the relics of the Protomartyr and Archdeacon Stephen from Jerusalem to Constantinople.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints