We are not told whether or not Aeneas was a believer. Possibly he was a man who lay by the side of the road, begging alms (see Acts 3:1–10). The fact that Peter goes to visit the believers in Lydda and that his name is explicitly mentioned suggests that he was one of their company (a believer).1
33 Il y trouva un homme nommé Enée, couché sur un lit depuis huit ans, et paralytique.