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Saint profile

St. Cleophas, Disciple of the Lord

1st Century

Associated with Protection; patronage includes Disciples, pilgrims, travelers, those seeking faith in the risen Christ.

Protection
Life dates1st Century
Feast daySeptember 25
PatronageDisciples, pilgrims, travelers, those seeking faith in the risen Christ

Biography and devotion

St. Cleophas, Disciple of the Lord: life, patronage, and devotion

St. Cleophas, or Cleopas, is honored as a disciple of the Lord and is traditionally identified with one of the two disciples who met the risen Christ on the road to Emmaus. His feast is commonly kept on 25 September. Because the Gospel gives only a brief glimpse of him, his importance rests not in a long public career but in one of the most luminous resurrection scenes in Scripture.

In the Gospel of Luke, two disciples leave Jerusalem after the crucifixion, sorrowful and confused. They had hoped that Jesus would redeem Israel, but His death seemed to have crushed their expectation. As they walk toward Emmaus, the risen Christ comes near, though their eyes are kept from recognizing Him. He listens to their grief, rebukes their slowness of heart, and explains Moses and the prophets as pointing to the Messiah’s suffering and glory.

When they reach the village, the disciples urge Him to stay. At table He takes bread, blesses, breaks, and gives it to them. In that moment their eyes are opened, and they recognize Him. He vanishes from their sight, and they return to Jerusalem to announce what had happened and how He was made known in the breaking of the bread.

Christian tradition has long seen this scene as deeply Eucharistic. Cleophas becomes a patron-like figure for pilgrims, travelers, discouraged disciples, and all who need to recognize Christ in Scripture and the breaking of bread. The encounter shows the pattern of Christian faith: sorrow is met by the Lord, Scripture is opened, hospitality receives grace, and the Eucharistic sign reveals the risen Christ.

Some traditions identify Cleophas with Clopas, a relative of St. Joseph or the husband of Mary of Clopas, though these identifications are not certain. What remains clear is the Gospel memory. Cleophas was a disciple whose sadness became witness because Christ walked with him, taught him, and made Himself known at table.

Emmaus also has a Eucharistic meaning that made Cleophas beloved in Christian preaching. The disciples knew Christ first through Scripture explained and then through bread blessed, broken, and given. The pattern resembles the movement of the Mass: the Word opens the heart, and the breaking of bread reveals the Lord. Cleophas’s story therefore belongs not only to Easter history but to the daily life of the Church, where disappointed disciples still meet Christ in Scripture and the Eucharist.

At a glance

Life dates
1st Century
Feast day
September 25
Patronage
Disciples, pilgrims, travelers, those seeking faith in the risen Christ

Relic in the Chasing Saints collection

A relic of St. Cleophas, Disciple of the Lord is present in the Chasing Saints Relic Collection. Private registry details, certificate IDs, provenance notes, and storage information are intentionally not shown publicly.

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