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Barnabas is usually identified as the cousin of Mark the Evangelist on the basis of the term "anepsios" used in Colossians 4, which carries the connotation of "cousin". Orthodox tradition holds that Aristobulus of Britannia , one of the Seventy Disciples , was the brother of Barnabas.
Prior to the origins of Islam, cousin marriage was an acceptable practice in the Middle East according to writings in the Bible. Abraham sent his servant back to his brother to get a wife for his son Isaac. Isaac eventually married his first cousin once removed Rebekah (daughter of Bethuel the son of Nahor, Abraham's brother.)
It is not the four Gospels now received as canonical. It is the single Gospel which, Islam teaches, was revealed to Jesus, and which he taught. Fragments of it survive in the received canonical Gospels and in some others, of which traces survive (e.g., the Gospel of Childhood or the Nativity, the Gospel of St. Barnabas, etc.)." [3]
Mark accompanied Barnabas and Paul on their missionary travels. [2] Mark started with them on their first trip, [3] but left them partway through. [4] Later, when planning their second trip, Barnabas and Paul could not agree about whether Mark should accompany them again, so Barnabas and Mark separated from Paul.
Scholars, both Islamic and Western agree that the narrations considering Ibrahim's lineage to Adam are mythology. [10] [page needed] Most of the lineage is borrowed from Hebrew tradition or Isra'iliyyat. It is unclear how many generations are between Ibrahim and Nuh. Nuh's son Sam is considered the ancestor of the Semitic race. [b]
Ali ibn Abi Talib (Arabic: عَلِيُّ بْن أَبِي طَالِب, romanized: ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib; c. 600–661 CE) was the cousin and son-in-law of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, and was the fourth Rashidun caliph who ruled from 656 CE to 661, as well as the first Shia imam.
Ḥamzah ibn ʿAbd al-Muṭṭalib ibn Hāshim ibn ʿAbd Manāf al-Qurashī [1] (Arabic: حَمْزَة إبْن عَبْد ٱلْمُطَّلِب; c. 568–625) [2] [3] was a foster brother, paternal uncle, maternal second-cousin, and companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.
'family of the cloak' ), are Muhammad the Islamic prophet, his daughter Fatima, his cousin and son-in-law Ali, and his two grandsons Hasan and Husayn. The name has its origins in the hadith of the cloak (Arabic: ٱلْكِسَاء , romanized: al-kisāʾ ) and the event of the mubahala , both widely reported by Sunni and Shi'i authorities as ...