Career
According to Acts 9:10, Ananias was living in Damascus. In Paul"s speech in Acts 22, he describes Ananias as "a devout man according to the law, having a good report of all the Jews" that dwelt in Damascus (Acts 22:12). According to F. F. Bruce, this indicates that he was not one of the refugees from the persecution in Jerusalem described in Acts 8:1.
Healing of Saul
During his conversion experience, Jesus had told Paul (who was then called Saul) to go into the city and wait.
Jesus later spoke to Ananias in a vision, and told him to go to the "street which is called Straight", and ask "in the house of Judas for one called Saul, of Tarsus". (Acts 9:15). When Ananias went in to Saul and laid his hands on him, the "scales" of dead tissue on the surface of his eyes fell off, and he looked up at Ananias.
After additional instruction, Saul was baptized. (Acts 9:18; 22:16)
According to Roderick L. Evans, Ananias was a prophet despite being mentioned as a disciple.
In his opinion on New Testament prophets, biblical figures who receive a message from God or reveal future events are considered prophets despite alternative titles such as apostle or disciple.
Anglican priest and theologian Edward Carus Selwyn recognized Ananias as a prophet as well as the seventy disciples and the apostles allocated with different tasks. F. F. Bruce suggests that Ananias "has an honoured place in sacred history, and a special claim upon the gratitude of all who in one way or another have entered into the blessing that stems from the life and work of the great apostle."Ananias is also listed by Hippolytus of Rome and others as one of the Seventy Disciples whose mission is recorded in Luke 10:1-20. According to Catholic tradition, Ananias was martyred in Eleutheropolis.
In the 2004 edition of the, Ananias is listed under 25 January as a saint commemorated on the same day as the Feast of the Conversion of Street Paul.