Companions of the Apostle Paul
Andronicus and Junia belong to the first generation of Christian believers, the circle of relatives and co-workers gathered around the Apostle Paul. Paul calls them his 'kinsmen' and 'fellow prisoners,' indicating both a family tie and a share in the sufferings of the apostolic mission. His remark that they 'were in Christ before me' places their conversion earlier than his own, marking them among the very earliest followers of the faith.
The phrase Paul uses of them — 'of note among the Apostles' — has long been the subject of discussion, with interpreters divided over whether it ranks them as apostles in their own right or simply as figures well regarded by the apostles. The Eastern Church receives them firmly as apostles, numbering Andronicus among the Seventy and honoring Junia as his fellow-laborer in the same work.