Judas Iscariot
, Hebrew: ????? ?????????? "Yehuda" Y?hû?ah ?Κ-q?riyyô?
was, according to the New Testament, one of the twelve original Apostles of Jesus. Among the twelve, he was apparently designated to keep account of the "money bag" (Grk. ???ss???µ??), [1] but he is most traditionally known for his role in Jesus' betrayal into the hands of Roman authorities. [2]
His name is also associated with a Gnostic gospel, the Gospel of Judas, that exists in an early fourth century Coptic text. Judas has been a figure of great interest to esoteric groups, such as many Gnostic sects, and has also been the subject of many philosophical writings, including The Problem of Natural Evil
by Bertrand Russell and "Three Versions of Judas", a short story by Jorge Luis Borges.
The term Judas
has entered many languages as a synonym for betrayer
, and Judas has become the archetype of the betrayer in Western art and literature. Judas is given some role in virtually all literature telling the Passion story, and appears in a number of modern novels and movies.
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Etymology
In the
Greek New Testament, Judas Iscariot is called ???da? ?s?????? (Ioúdas Iskárioth) and ?s?a???t?? (
Iskari?tes). "Judas" (spelled "Ioudas" in ancient Greek and "Iudas" in Latin, pronounced 'yudas' in both) is the Greek form of the common name
Judah (?????, Y
ehûdâh, Hebrew for "God is praised"). The same Greek spelling underlies other names in the New Testament that are traditionally rendered differently in English:
Judah and
Jude.
The precise significance of "Iscariot," however, is uncertain. There are two major theories on its etymology:
- The most likely explanation derives Iscariot
from Hebrew ?????????, Κ-Qrîyôth
, or "man of Kerioth." The Gospel of John refers to Judas as "son of Simon Iscariot", [3] implying it was not Judas, but his father, who came from there. [4] Some speculate that Kerioth
refers to a region in Judea, but it is also the name of two known Judean towns. [5]
- A second theory is "Iscariot" identifies Judas as a member of the sicarii
. [6] These were a cadre of assassins among Jewish rebels intent on driving the Romans out of Judea. However, many historians maintain the sicarii
only arose in the 40s or 50s of the 1st Century, in which case Judas could not have been a member. [7]
Biblical narrative
thumb.|350px
Judas is mentioned in the
synoptic gospels, the
Gospel of John and at the beginning of
Acts of the Apostles. Mark states that the chief priests were looking for a "sly" way to
arrest Jesus. They determine not to do so during the feast because they are afraid that the people would riot; instead, they choose the night before the feast to arrest him. In the
Gospel of Luke,
Satan enters Judas at this time.
[8]
According to the account given in the Gospel of John, Judas carried the disciples' money bag
[9] and betrayed Jesus for a bribe of "thirty pieces of
silver"
[10] by identifying him with a kiss—"
the kiss of Judas"—to arresting soldiers of the High Priest
Caiaphas, who then turned Jesus over to
Pontius Pilate's soldiers.
Death
There are two different
canonical references to the remainder of Judas' life:
- The Gospel of Matthew
says that, after Jesus' arrest by the Roman authorities (but before his execution), the guilt-ridden Judas returned the bribe to the priests and committed suicide by hanging. The priests, forbidden by Jewish law from returning the money to the treasury, used it to buy the potter's field [11] in order to bury strangers. The Gospel account [12] presents this as a fulfilment of prophecy.
- The Acts of the Apostles
says that Judas used the bribe to buy a field, but fell down headfirst, and burst asunder in the midst, and all his bowels gushed out
. This field is called Akeldama or Field Of Blood
. [13]
Another account was preserved by the early Christian leader,
Papias: "Judas walked about in this world a sad example of impiety; for his body having swollen to such an extent that he could not pass where a chariot could pass easily, he was crushed by the chariot, so that his bowels gushed out."
[14] Yet another possibility is suggested by the apocryphal
Gospel of Judas
, which says that Judas had a vision in which the other eleven disciples stone him to death after they find out about the betrayal.
[15]
Raymond E. Brown gave the contradictory accounts of the death of Judas as an example of an obvious contradiction in the Bible texts: "Luke's account of the death of Judas in Acts 1:18 is scarcely reconcilable with Matt 27:3-10."
[16] This problem was one of the points that caused
C. S. Lewis, for example, to reject the view "that every statement in Scripture must be historical truth".
[17] Various attempts at harmonization have been tried since ancient times,
[18] such as that Judas hanged himself in the field, and afterwards the rope snapped, and his body burst open on the ground,
[19] or that the accounts of Acts and Matthew refer to two different transactions.
[20]
Modern scholars tend to reject these approaches
[21] [22] stating that the Matthew account is a
midrashic exposition that allows the author to present the event as a fulfillment of prophetic passages from the Old Testament. They argue that the author adds imaginative details such as the thirty pieces of silver, and the fact that Judas hangs himself, to an earlier tradition about Judas's death.
[23]
Matthew's reference to the death as fulfilment of a prophecy "spoken through Jeremiah the prophet" has caused some controversy, since it clearly paraphrases a story from the
Book of Zechariah () which refers to the return of a payment of thirty pieces of silver.
[24] Many writers, such as
Augustine,
Jerome, and
John Calvin concluded that this was an obvious error.
[25] However, some modern writers have suggested that the Gospel writer may also have had a passage from Jeremiah in mind,
[26] such as chapters 18 () and 19 (), which refers to a potter's jar and a burial place, and chapter 32 () which refers to a burial place and an earthenware jar...
[27]
Gospel of Judas
During the 1970s, a Coptic papyrus
[28] was discovered near Beni Masah,
Egypt. This has been translated and appears to be a text from the A.D. describing the story of
Jesus's death from the viewpoint of Judas. The conclusion of the text refers (in
Coptic) to the text as "the Gospel of Judas" (
Euangelion Ioudas
).
According to a 2006 translation of the manuscript of the text, it is apparently a
Gnostic account of an arrangement between Jesus and Judas, who in this telling are Gnostically enlightened beings, with Jesus asking Judas to turn him in to the Romans to help Jesus finish his appointed task from God.
In December 2007, a
New York Times
op-ed article by
April DeConick asserted that the
National Geographic
's translation is badly flawed: 'For example, in one instance the National Geographic transcription refers to Judas as a "daimon," which the society’s experts have translated as "spirit." Actually, the universally accepted word for "spirit" is "pneuma" — in Gnostic literature "daimon" is always taken to mean "demon."'
[29] The National Geographic Society responded that 'Virtually all issues April D. DeConick raises about translation choices are addressed in footnotes in both the popular and critical editions'.
[30]
Controversy
Anti-Semitism
Jewish scholar
Hyam Maccoby, espousing a purely
mythological view of Jesus, suggests that in the New Testament, the name "Judas" was constructed as an attack on the Judaeans or on the Judaean religious establishment held responsible for executing Christ.
[31] The English word "
Jew" is derived from the
Latin Iudaeus
, which, like the
Greek ???da??? (
Ioudaios
), could also mean "Judaean". In the
Gospel of John, the original writer or a later editor may have tried to draw a parallel between Judas, Judaea, and the Judaeans (or Jews) in verses , which run like this in the
King James Bible:
6:70 Jesus answered them, Have not I chosen you twelve, and one of you is a devil? 6:71 He spoke of Judas
Iscariot the son of Simon: for he it was that should betray him, being one of the twelve. 7:1 After these things Jesus walked in Galilee: for he would not walk in Jewry
, because the Jews
sought to kill him.
In Greek, the earliest extant language of the
Gospels, the words
Judas
—
Jewry
—
Jews
run like this: ???da? (
Ioudas
) — ???da?a (
Ioudaia
) — ???da??? (
Ioudaioi
). Whatever the original intentions of the original writers or editors of the Gospel of John, however, some argue that the similarity between the name "Judas" and the words for "Jew" in various European languages has helped facilitate
anti-Semitism. He has also been seen as parallel to
Judah, son of
Jacob, by such writers as
Charles Fillmore and
John Shelby Spong.
Questions and interpretation
Theological questions
Judas has been a figure of great interest to esoteric groups, such as many
Gnostic sects.
One of the questions raised is: Why did Judas betray Jesus?
[32] A common explanation is that Judas betrayed Jesus for 30 pieces of silver. One of Judas' main weaknesses seemed to be money. (John 12:4-6). Another reason is that Judas expected Jesus to overthrow Roman rule of Israel. In this view, Judas is a disillusioned disciple betraying Jesus not so much because he loved money, but because he loved his country and thought Jesus had failed it.
[33]
Other questions are: If Jesus knew Judas would betray him(, ), why did he trust him and allow himself to be betrayed?
[34]
Irenaeus records the beliefs of one Gnostic sect, the
Cainites, who believed that Judas was an instrument of the
Sophia, Divine Wisdom, thus earning the hatred of the
Demiurge. In the Hebrew bible, the book of
Zechariah, the one who casts thirty pieces of silver, as Judas does in the Gospels, is a servant of God. His betrayal of Jesus thus was a victory over the materialist world. The Cainites later split into two groups, disagreeing over the ultimate significance of Jesus in their cosmology.
Origen knew of a tradition according to which the greater circle of disciples betrayed Jesus, but does not attribute this to Judas in particular, and Origen did not deem Judas to be thoroughly corrupt (Matt., tract. xxxv).
The early anti-Christian writer
Celsus deemed literal readings of the story to be philosophically absurd, especially because Jesus knew about the treason in advance, and told of it openly to all the disciples at the Passover meal, as well as singling out who the traitor would be without attempting to stop him.
The text of the Gospels suggests that Jesus both foresaw and allowed Judas' betrayal. In April 2006, a Coptic papyrus manuscript titled the
Gospel of Judas (see above section) dating back to 200 AD, was translated into modern language, to add weight to the possibility that according to early Christian writings, Jesus may have
asked
Judas to betray him.
[35]
Philosophical questions
Judas is also the subject of many philosophical writings, including
The Problem of Natural Evil
by
Bertrand Russell and "
Three Versions of Judas", a short story by
Jorge Luis Borges. They both allege various problematic ideological contradictions with the discrepancy between Judas' actions and his eternal punishment. The damnation of Judas is not a universal conclusion, and some have argued that there is no indication that Judas was condemned with eternal punishment.
[36]
If Jesus foresees Judas' betrayal, then it may be argued that the betrayal is not an act of
free will [37], and therefore should not be punishable. Conversely, it is also argued that just because the betrayal was foretold, it does not change the fact that Judas acted in his own free will in this matter.
[38] However, , state that Judas was
divinely predestined to do what he did and had no other choice than to carry out divine orders. Was the Judas affair no more than a divine trick at the unfortunate cost of a human individual?
The question has also been approached by
Thomas Aquinas in his
Summa Theologica, which differentiates between
foreknowledge and
predestination, and argues that the
omnipotence of the divine is compatible with
free will. It has been speculated that Judas' damnation, which seems to be possible from the Gospels' text, may not actually stem from his betrayal of Christ, but from the despair which caused him to subsequently commit suicide. This position is not without its problems since Judas was already damned by Jesus even before he committed suicide (see ), but it does avoid the paradox of Judas' predestined act setting in motion both the salvation of all mankind and his own damnation.
thumb
Modern interpretations
Most Christians still consider Judas a traitor. Indeed the term
Judas
has entered many languages as a synonym for
betrayer
.
However, some scholars
[39] have embraced the alternative notion that Judas was merely the negotiator in a prearranged prisoner exchange (following the
money-changer riot in the Temple) that gave Jesus to the Roman authorities by mutual agreement, and that Judas' later portrayal as "traitor" was a historical distortion.
In his book
The Passover Plot
the British
theologian Hugh J. Schonfield argued that the crucifixion of Christ was a conscious re-enactment of Biblical
prophecy and Judas acted with Jesus' full knowledge and consent in "betraying" his master to the authorities.
The book
The Sins of the Scripture
, by
John Shelby Spong, investigates the possibility that early
Christians copied the Judas story from three
Old Testament Jewish betrayal stories. He writes, "...the act of betrayal by a member of the twelve disciples is not found in the earliest Christian writings. Judas is first placed into the Christian story by
Gospel of Mark (), who wrote in the early years of the eighth decade of the Common Era". He points out that some of Gospels, after the Crucifixion, refer to the number of Disciples as "Twelve", as if Judas were still among them. He compares the three conflicting descriptions of Judas's death - hanging, leaping into a pit, and disemboweling, with three Old Testament betrayals followed by similar suicides.
Spong's conclusion is that early
Bible authors, after the
First Jewish-Roman War, sought to distance themselves from
Rome's enemies. They augmented the
Gospels with a story of a disciple, personified in Judas as the Jewish state, who either betrayed or handed-over Jesus to his Roman crucifiers. Spong identifies this augmentation with the origin of modern
Anti-Semitism.
Theologian Aaron Saari contends in his work
The Many Deaths of Judas Iscariot
that Judas Iscariot was the literary invention of the Markan community. As Judas does not appear in the Epistles of Paul, nor in the
Q Gospel, Saari argues that the language indicates a split between Pauline Christians, who saw no reason for the establishment of an organized Church, and the followers of Peter. Saari contends that the denigration of Judas in Matthew and Luke-Acts has a direct correlation to the elevation of Peter.
[40]
and state that following his resurrection Jesus appeared to "the eleven." Who was missing? After all that had transpired one would just naturally think it was Judas. Apparently not, because in we learn that the one missing was
Thomas. Therefore the eleven had to include Judas. To further confuse things,
Paul says in that following his resurrection Jesus was seen by “the twelve.” This had to include Judas because it wasn't until after the ascension, some forty days after the resurrection (), that another person,
Matthias, was voted in to replace Judas (). So, apparently Judas neither committed suicide nor died by accident. In we are told that Judas "turned aside to go to his own place."
Another clue confirming the absence of the Judas story in the earliest Christian documents occurs in and . Here Jesus tells his disciples that they will “sit on the twelve thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel.” No exception is made for Judas even though Jesus was aware of his impending act of betrayal. The answer may lie in the fact that the source of these verses could be the hypothetical
Q document (QS 62). Q is thought to predate the gospels and would be one of the earliest Christian documents. Given that possibility, the betrayal story could have been invented by the writer of Mark.
[41] [42] [43]
Representations and symbolism
Hymnography
In the
Eastern Orthodox hymns of
Holy Wednesday (the Wednesday before
Pascha), Judas is contrasted with the woman who anointed Jesus with expensive
perfume and washed his feet with her tears. According to the
Gospel of John, Judas protested at this apparent extravagance, suggesting that the money spent on it should have been given to the poor. After this, Judas went to the chief priests and offered to betray Jesus for money. The hymns of Holy Wednesday contrast these two figures, encouraging believers to avoid the example of the fallen disciple and instead to imitate Mary's example of repentance. Also, Wednesday is observed as a day of fasting from meat, dairy products, and olive oil throughout the year in memory of the betrayal of Judas. The prayers of preparation for receiving the
Eucharist also make mention of Judas' betrayal: "I will not reveal your mysteries to your enemies, neither like Judas will I betray you with a kiss, but like the thief on the cross I will confess you."
Gospel of Barnabas
According to medieval copies of the
Gospel of Barnabas, it was Judas, not Jesus, who was crucified on the cross. It is mentioned in this work that Judas' appearance was transformed to that of Jesus', when the former, out of betrayal, led the Roman soldiers to arrest Jesus who by then was ascended to the heaven. This transformation of appearance was so identical that the masses, followers of Christ, and even the Mother of Jesus, Mary, initially thought that the one arrested and crucified was Jesus himself. The Gospel then mentions that after three days since burial, Judas' body was stolen from his grave, and then the rumours spread of Jesus being risen from the dead. When Jesus was informed in the third heaven about what happened, he prayed to God to be sent back to the earth, and so he descended and gathered his mother, disciples, and followers and mentioned to them the truth of what happened, and having said this he ascended back to the heavens, and will come back at the end of times as a just king.
Art and literature
Judas has become the archetype of the betrayer in Western culture, with some role in virtually all literature telling the
Passion story. In
Dante's
Inferno
, he is condemned to the lowest circle of
Hell, where he is one of three sinners deemed evil enough that they are doomed to be chewed for eternity in the mouths of the triple-headed
Satan. (The others are
Brutus and
Cassius, who conspired against and assassinated
Julius Caesar.)
- Judas is the subject of one of the oldest surviving English ballads, dating from the 13th century, Judas, in which the blame for the betrayal of Christ is placed on his sister.
- Edward Elgar's oratorio, The Apostles
, depicts Judas as wanting to force Jesus to declare his divinity and establish the kingdom on earth. Eventually he succumbs to the sin of despair.
- Mikhail Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita
, Judas is paid by the high priest of Judaea to testify against Jesus, who had been inciting trouble among the people of Jerusalem. After authorizing the crucifixion, Pilate suffers an agony of regret and turns his anger on Judas, ordering him assassinated. The story-within-a-story appears as a counter-revolutionary novel in the context of Moscow in the 1920s-1930s.
- Michael Moorcock's novel Behold the Man
offers an alternative, sympathetic portrayal of Judas. In the book, Karl Glogauer, the time traveler from the 20th Century who takes on the role of Christ, asks a reluctant Judas to betray him in order to fulfill the biblical account of the crucifixion.
- In Martin Scorsese's film The Last Temptation of Christ,
based on the novel by Nikos Kazantzakis, Judas Iscariot's only motivation in betraying Jesus to the Romans was to help him, as Jesus' closest friend, through doing what no other disciple could bring himself to do. It shows Judas obeying Jesus' covert request to help him fulfill his destiny to die on the cross, making Judas the catalyst for the event later interpreted as bringing about humanity's salvation. This view of Judas Iscariot is reflected in the recently discovered Gospel of Judas
.
- In C. K. Stead's novel My Name Was Judas,
Judas, who was then known as Idas of Sidon, recounts the story of Jesus and recalled by him some forty years later. Judas recalls his childhood friendship with Jesus, their schooldays, their families, their journeys with the disciples and their dealings with the powers of Rome and the Temple.
- T.Rex's 1969 album Unicorn
includes a track titled Iscariot
. The lyrics, contingent on the reader's interpretation, allude to the treasonous actions of the religious figure, and seem to express deep disappointment and anger.
- Coldplay's 2008 song Lost+
features a rap section by Jay-Z that exclaims that success is like suicide, comparing Jesus's betrayal by Judas to that of Brutus and Caesar.
References
- {{Bibleverse||John|12:6|31}}, {{Bibleverse||John|13:29|31}}
- {{Bibleverse||Matthew|26:14|16}}, {{Bibleverse||Matthew|26:47|56}}, {{Bibleverse||Mark|14:10|11}}, {{Bibleverse||Mark|14:42|52}}, {{Bibleverse||Luke|22:1|5}}, {{Bibleverse||Luke|22:47|53}}, {{Bibleverse||John|13:18|30}}, {{Bibleverse||John|18:1|11}}
- {{bibleverse||John|6:71}} and {{bibleverse||John|13:26}}
- Richard Bauckham, ''Jesus and the Eyewitnesses: The Gospels as Eyewitness Testimony'', Eerdmans (2006), p. 106.
- New English Translation Bible, n. 11 in Matthew 11.
- Bastiaan van Iersel, ''Mark: A Reader-Response Commentary'', Continuum International (1998), p. 167.
- Brown, Raymond E. (1994). ''The Death of the Messiah: From Gethsemane to the Grave: A Commentary on the Passion Narratives in the Four Gospels v.1 ''pp. 688-92. New York: Doubleday/The Anchor Bible Reference Library. ISBN 0-385-49448-3; Meier, John P. A Marginal Jew: Rethinking the Historical Jesus
(2001). v. 3, p. 210. New York: Doubleday/The Anchor Bible Reference Library. ISBN 0385469934.
- BibleGateway.com - Passage Lookup: Luke 22:3
- {{bibleverse||John|12:6|131}}
- {{bibleverse||Matthew|26:14|131}}
- (Greek, ''ton agron tou kerameos'', {{Polytonic|t?? a???? t?? ?e?aµ???}})
- {{nasb|Matthew|27:9-10|Matthew 27:9-10}}
- Acts 1:18.
- (Papias ''Fragment'' 3, 1742-1744).
- Judas Iscariot
- Raymond E. Brown, ''An Introduction to the New Testament'', p. 114.
- letter to Clyde S. Kilby, 7 May 1959, quoted in Michael J. Christensen, ''C. S. Lewis on Scripture'', Abingdon, 1979, Appendix A.
- E.g. Alfred Edersheim concluded, "there is no real divergence." Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah, 5.xiv, 1883.
- Easton’s Bible Dictionary: Judas
- The purchase of "the potter's field", Appendix 161 of the Companion Bible
- Charles Talbert, ''Reading Acts: A Literary and Theological Commentary'', Smyth & Helwys (2005) p. 15.
- Frederick Dale Bruner, Matthew: A Commentary, Eerdmans (2004), p. 703.
- "Saving Judas"—A social Scientific Approach to Judas’s Suicide in Matthew 27:3–10
- Vincent P. Branick, ''Understanding the New Testament and Its Message'', (Paulist Press, 1998), pp. 126-128.
- Frederick Dale Bruner, ''Matthew: A Commentary'' (Eerdmans, 2004), p. 710; Augustine, cited in the ''Catena Aurea'': "It might be then, that the name Hieremias occurred to the mind of Matthew as he wrote, instead of the name Zacharias, as so often happens" [1]; Jerome, ''Epistolae'' 57.7: "This passage is not found in Jeremiah at all but in Zechariah, in quite different words and an altogether different order" [1]; John Calvin, ''Commentary on a Harmony of the Evangelists, Matthew, Mark and Luke'', 3:177: "The passage itself plainly shows that the name of Jeremiah has been put down by mistake, instead of Zechariah, for in Jeremiah we find nothing of this sort, nor any thing that even approaches to it." [1].
- Donald Senior, ''The Passion of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew'' (Liturgical Press, 1985), pp. 107-108; Anthony Cane, ''The Place of Judas Iscariot in Christology'' (Ashgate Publishing, 2005), p. 50.
- See also Maarten JJ Menken, 'The Old Testament Quotation in Matthew 27,9-10', ''Biblica'' '''83''' (2002): 9-10.
- "Judas 'helped Jesus save mankind'," BBC News Website, published 2006/04/07 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/americas/4882420.stm).
- April D. Deconick, 'Gospel Truth', ''New York Times'', 1 December 2007.
- Statement from National Geographic in Response to April DeConick's New York Times Op-Ed "Gospel Truth".
- Hyam Maccoby, Antisemitism And Modernity, Routledge 2006, p. 14.
- Dictionary of Jesus and the Gospels
- Dictionary of Jesus and the Gospels
- Judas and the choice of Matthias: a study on context and concern of Acts 1:15-26, Arie W. Zwiep
- Associated Press, "Ancient Manuscript Suggests Jesus Asked Judas to Betray Him," Fox News Website, Thursday, April 06, 2006.
- http://www.tentmaker.org/Dew/Dew3/D3-JudasIscariot.html
- Predestination & free will: four views of divine sovereignty & human freedom
- Exploring the gospel of John: an expository commentary
- Dirk Grützmacher: ''The "Betrayal" of Judas Iscariot : a study into the origins of Christianity and post- temple Judaism'', Edinburgh 1998 (Thesis (M.Phil) --University of Edinburgh, 1999).
- Saari, Aaron Maurice. ''The Many Deaths of Judas Iscariot: A Meditation on Suicide'' London: Routledge, 2006.
- JUDAS ISCARIOT, BETRAYER or ENABLER, FACT OR FICTION?.
- Q 22:28,30 By Paul Hoffmann, Stefan H. Brandenburger, Christoph Heil, Ulrike Brauner, International Q Project, Thomas.
- Jesus, apocalyptic prophet of the new millennium By Bart D. Ehrman.