Please, get familiar with the WITNESSES of antiquity. Writings attributed to Jerome and Papias show that James the Apostle was NOT the brother of Jesus.
James the Apostle could NOT be the brother of Jesus when it is claimed his father was Alphaeus and his mother was the sister of Mary.
Jacob was an exceedingly common Jewish male name. There is no reason to posit Ya'qob bar-Yosef (brother of Yeshua bar-Yosef) as the same person as either Ya'qob bar-Zevadiyah (brother of Yohanneh bar-Zevadiyah) or Ya'qob bar-Hilfai. The three are readily distinguished in the gospels. Ya'qob bar-Zevadiyah has Yohanneh as his brother in Matthew 4:21, 10:2, 17:1, and as a group they are nicknamed Bne-Rgashy "sons of tumult" (Mark 3:17). Meanwhile this group listed in Matthew 10:2 is distinguished from Ya'qob bar-Hilfai in the next verse (10:3). The mention of Levi bar-Hilfai in Mark 2:2 suggests the possibility that Levi and Ya'qob were brothers though they we nowhere designated as such (as there could have been more than one Hilfai, as there were multiple people named Yosef and Ya'qob). Then Yeshua, Yosef, and Ya'qob were listed as brothers and the sons of Maryam and Yosef in Matthew 13:55, and in 27:56 Maryam the mother of Yosef and Ya'qob is distinguished from the mother of sons of Zevadiyah --- again implying a distinction between two different James. There is also a distinction between multiple James in Acts. In Acts 1:13, the apostle Ya'qob (listed adjacent to Yohanneh, customary for the sons of Zevadiyah) is explicitly distinguished from Ya'qob bar-Hilfai. Then in Acts 12:2, Ya'qob bar-Zevadiyah, brother of Yohanneh, is put to death, requiring the Ya'qob mentioned in chapters 15 and 21 to be some other Ya'qob (i.e. Ya'qob bar-Yosef).
Paul is more ambiguous, but the mention of the appearance of Christ to Ya'qob as separate from the previous appearance to the Twelve (1 Cor. 15:5-7) implies that this Ya'qob was probably not part of the Twelve (which included the sons of Zevadiyah), but part of the wider group of apostles ("James, and then the rest of the apostles"); so this supports the distinction of multiple James. And then in Galatians 1:18-20, the James mentioned there is dubbed "James, the brother of the Lord", which is a specification that typically is aimed as clarification (such as "James, brother of John" in Acts 12:2 for the son of Zevadiyah and "Jude, brother of James" in Jude 1:1 for the son of Yosef). This is distinct from Paul's fraternal use of "dear brother" (always "my" or "our" brother, never the brother of someone else), and the latter sense doesn't work well in the context, with James designated in this manner and not Cephas (while both are mentioned on the same level in Gal. 2:9 as the esteemed pillars; note also 1 Cor. 9:5). Also it is noteworthy that James is specified in chapter 1 but not chapter 2. In chapter 1, Paul describes his visit to Jerusalem three years after his conversion in the 30s C.E., a time when Ya'qob bar-Zevadiyah was still alive, and so specifying James as the one who was the brother of Jesus would have distinguished him from the son of Zevadiyah. Paul's visit to Jerusalem in chapter 2 some fourteen years later would have been after Ya'qob bar-Zevadiyah's death (in 44 C.E., if the scenario in Acts is to be accepted), Paul just refers to "James" multiple times without specification, and grouped presumably with Yohanneh bar-Zevadiyah as one of the Jerusalem pillars, as without the other James, James the Just would have been the most prominent James in Jerusalem. Similarly one can find that in Acts, once Ya'qob bar-Zevadiyah dies, the specifications are dropped and thenceforth we just find references to "James" (12:17, 15:13, 21:18).
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