I feel so sad and moved with pity for judas

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In my experience, criminals generally keep being criminals. Psychopaths remain psychopaths.
Has anyone suggested that Judas was a ‘criminal’ or a ‘psychopath’?
The unrepentant GENERALLY remain set in their ways.
Except when they repent. Which Judas did. (His problem was that, having repented, he nevertheless continued to despair.)
It’s just that I see very little evidence and if it does happen then its very uncommon imo.
Sit in a church some day while confession is going on. You’ll see evidence of a whole lot of repenting going on… 👍
 
Has anyone suggested that Judas was a ‘criminal’ or a ‘psychopath’?
Yes. The Gospel writer who said he was a thief.

Judas wasn’t an average Joe Schmo, was he? He was in contact with Jesus Christ, was his disciple, yet he turned his back on him in a most callous sort of way for wealth. How could a person be in the vicinity of such spiritual greatness, and yet turn traitor in such a… profound way. It seems to suggest Judas never had an inkling of true spirituality to begin with. It seems as though his apostleship was merely a cover for material gain. How could he be in any sense “spiritual”, one of Jesus select followers, and then… “oh, I’m going to give up my inheritance, and betray my master in the most ungrateful, ungracious way imaginable because… even though I’ve tried to be spiritual, I really just want the cash…”

I think there is a lot of grounds to think Judas, if he existed, was a psychopath. And yet Jesus had the foresight to make him a disciple. I don’t see where free will figures into this at all either, by the way.
Except when they repent. Which Judas did. (His problem was that, having repented, he nevertheless continued to despair.)
There is curve though regarding to what extent human beings are compromised in their moral life. I feel I have no reason to assume Judas, if he existed, was on the “normal” end of the curve. I tend towards psychopathy/criminality, not that he was an average Joe Schmo.
Sit in a church some day while confession is going on. You’ll see evidence of a whole lot of repenting going on…
Yes, but again, most people who are hardened criminals don’t go to confession. And I have such people in mind.
 
Yes, but again, most people who are hardened criminals don’t go to confession. And I have such people in mind.
However the ones that do tend to go all-in and repent spectacularly. I’ve got a few saints in mind who weren’t exactly the holiest of people before their conversions 😉
 
However the ones that do tend to go all-in and repent spectacularly. I’ve got a few saints in mind who weren’t exactly the holiest of people before their conversions 😉
That is true, and I brought that up with “born again” Christians. However, barring such a change of heart, I gather not many commit suicide because of “regret.” I don’t see any evidence that Judas became “born again” after he sold Jesus and, if he did, why did he despair? ESPECIALLY given how he would have KNOWN much, much, MUCH more about the “Gospel of Grace” than almost anyone else at that time!
 
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That’s fair enough and i understand your point, however I’m not surprised that Judas despaired and killed himself. I personally was a very zealous Catholic in love with Jesus and my faith before falling away and betraying our Lord in awful ways. Despite knowing Him and loving Him previously I fell into despair and if my depression had been more severe I may well have eventually killed myself. Thankfully God rescued me from that and I will be forever grateful for what He has done for me, but I can relate to the despair. Granted I was never an Apostle but honestly I don’t think that really changes much. Peter was the Prince of Apostles and denied our Lord.
 
There’s something I wonder about this despair… If Christians really believe there is a Hell, and that there is a pain far worse than anything here and now… why is that a reason to take their life? To get out of the present predicament… but that’s like going out of the frying pan and into the fire… I suppose one’s will is weak, and it finally cracks… I suppose, in light of this, I can see why suicide is regarded as truly mad by many.

I hope you remain well. I have also come very, very close to killing myself, and I do believe in a God and grace… but a lot of our strength has to come from one’s own determination and willpower. We have to depend on God and on ourselves, for God truly helps those who help themselves.
 
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At least in my experience, I lost all hope of getting to Heaven and ‘knew’ I was going to Hell, so I stopped caring. Also in a way suicide can be a twisted kind of ‘justice’ performed on oneself. Of course this is wrong and God gives everyone the chance to repent and come back to Him- nobody goes to Hell without choosing to be there- but despair is a weird thing. It messes with your head and even when you intellectually know the truth you just can’t grasp it and almost forget about it in a way.
 
Can they show scientifically that he definitely existed?
That’s meaningless… Even Jesus has more to do than merely Exist…

science is an exercise of homo sapiens; an investigation into the physical realm.

Faith means… you drop all your demands when considering the Spiritual domain
and view what’s self-evident via Reason … And then? Jump in without any crutches…

Only Then - does a Door open.
 
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“Before man is life and death, good and evil, that which he shall choose, shall be given him.” (Ecclesiasticus 15: 18.)

“What things a man shall sow, those also shall he reap.” (Gal 6:8.)
 
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Yes. The Gospel writer who said he was a thief.
Sure, but it reads like “he was always a bum, anyway.” It has the ring of someone who’s hurt and therefore says something that proceeds from that pain, rather than from a rational point of view. YMMV.
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Dimmesdale:
He was in contact with Jesus Christ, was his disciple, yet he turned his back on him in a most callous sort of way for wealth.
Well, that’s not really the way the narrative plays out, is it? In only one of the Gospels do we see Judas asking “what will you give me if I hand him over to you?”. In all the others, only after they accept Judas’ proposal do they make an offer of payment. So, the majority opinion of the evangelists is that Judas did this out of a desire to hand Jesus over, and not from the desire to make a quick buck.

So… the question becomes “why did Judas do it?”

We can only speculate, of course, but the conjecture that I’ve come across that makes the most sense, actually contextualizes in a way that shows motivation rather than callous disregard. I would agree with those who say that it makes little sense to think that, after three years, Judas just wanted better pay.

One conjecture starts with the premise that Judas was becoming disillusioned with Jesus; it suggests that perhaps Judas was looking for a Messiah who would initiate an armed uprising against the secular enemies of the Jews. That leads to two possibilities:
  • Judas no longer believes that Jesus is the guy to start the uprising. So, he needs to find a ‘new’ revolutionary. But, with Jesus on the scene, it will be difficult to get the people behind someone new. So, Judas actually does want Jesus to get taken down a peg.
  • Judas still believes in Jesus, but he’s getting impatient. So, perhaps Judas wants to catalyze Jesus into action, by forcing Him to act when the Jewish leadership arrests him.
In either case, Judas later feels remorseful: maybe he never intended Jesus to be killed; maybe he realizes that he should have just let Jesus do His own thing; maybe he just reconsidered his actions. In any case, his reaction is two-fold: remorse and despair.

That doesn’t read – to me, at least! – as “psychopath.” It sounds a whole lot more human (and flawed) and reasonable.
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Dimmesdale:
Yes, but again, most people who are hardened criminals don’t go to confession. And I have such people in mind.
From what I hear, from priests and deacons who minister to prisons… you might be surprised.
There’s something I wonder about this despair… If Christians really believe there is a Hell, and that there is a pain far worse than anything here and now… why is that a reason to take their life? To get out of the present predicament… but that’s like going out of the frying pan and into the fire…
Except that, if you’ve despaired to the point where you think that hell is inevitable, then suicide doesn’t seem like a worse option for you. “Truly mad”, indeed, but nevertheless, sometimes people do find themselves in the throes of such a depression…
 
I’m with you on this one. I’ve always felt really sorry for Judas.
I don’t “feel sorry” for Judas. He wasn’t forced to steal from the poor. If he thought Our Lord needed to be turned in, he could have done it for free. Instead, he took money for an act of treachery.

I do feel that it is right to have the same hope of mercy for Judas as for anyone else who seems to have died in the ultimate act of despair. He did come to regret what he did; in that, there is some cause for hope. I hope that God, whom the Church teaches always has ways to offer the opportunity for salutory repentance that are unknowable to us, has reached Judas with such an offer. Having said that, God is just. We have to accept that God will handle Judas according to God’s will…according to both infinite mercy and infinite justice.
 
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Sure, but it reads like “he was always a bum, anyway.” It has the ring of someone who’s hurt and therefore says something that proceeds from that pain, rather than from a rational point of view. YMMV.
Not sure I understand, but I guess I’ll look into it some more. You’ve given me some homework.
Well, that’s not really the way the narrative plays out, is it? In only one of the Gospels do we see Judas asking “what will you give me if I hand him over to you?”. In all the others, only after they accept Judas’ proposal do they make an offer of payment. So, the majority opinion of the evangelists is that Judas did this out of a desire to hand Jesus over, and not from the desire to make a quick buck.

So… the question becomes “why did Judas do it?”

We can only speculate, of course, but the conjecture that I’ve come across that makes the most sense, actually contextualizes in a way that shows motivation rather than callous disregard . I would agree with those who say that it makes little sense to think that, after three years, Judas just wanted better pay.
Let’s see what those other reasons could be then.
two possibilities:
  • Judas no longer believes that Jesus is the guy to start the uprising. So, he needs to find a ‘new’ revolutionary. But, with Jesus on the scene, it will be difficult to get the people behind someone new. So, Judas actually does want Jesus to get taken down a peg.
  • Judas still believes in Jesus, but he’s getting impatient. So, perhaps Judas wants to catalyze Jesus into action, by forcing Him to act when the Jewish leadership arrests him.
Um, …ok. This seems weird… Just how much knowledge did Judas have as to the identity and mission of Jesus? He was with him three years, right? Witnessed at least some of his miracles, right? Why did he want an uprising? Did he believe Jesus was God and was going to eventually judge and restore the universe? If not, then what did he know that was Christian. Was Judas… impatient? Are believers nowadays impatient, that God is taking too long? Do believers think they can force God’s hand?

There are reports even now of holy men who have a magnetic aura about them, even without the addition of great miracles. Their presence is itself miraculous. Yet Judas became disillusioned with Jesus, who is supposedly above them all; that this faultless being of absolute love was not the real deal… that some other guy must have had some better plan.

Sorry, but this doesn’t make sense to me.

Also, perhaps Judas did sell Jesus out, but it was part of the plan to do so, because Jesus in some sense had to die on the cross… So maybe Judas was just an instrument of the divine will and we can’t blame him… That may seem “blasphemous” but if it was really Jesus’ destiny, then maybe that’s just what happened? Who can tell?
 
Just how much knowledge did Judas have as to the identity and mission of Jesus? He was with him three years, right? Witnessed at least some of his miracles, right?
He had as much knowledge as the other eleven apostles. And, the Gospels are pretty clear that they were pretty confused, too. The whole point of the Gospels is that you have no understanding who Jesus is, until you understand His passion, death, and resurrection !!!
Why did he want an uprising?
Many wanted an uprising against the Romans, as a fulfillment of OT prophecy.
Did he believe Jesus was God
Not all did. That realization is a post-resurrection reality. We can, all too easily, project our own 21st century understanding on the characters in the Gospels!
Was Judas… impatient? Are believers nowadays impatient, that God is taking too long? Do believers think they can force God’s hand?
Absolutely. As an example, look at the Christians who are attempting to force the end of the world by virtue of getting all Jews to resettle in the Promised Land. What? You thought they were doing that out of a general sense of altruism? 😉
Yet Judas became disillusioned with Jesus, who is supposedly above them all; that this faultless being of absolute love was not the real deal… that some other guy must have had some better plan.

Sorry, but this doesn’t make sense to me.
The thought is that he either wanted to push Jesus to put it in high gear, or decided that Jesus wasn’t gonna do it at all.
if it was really Jesus’ destiny
We, as Christians, don’t believe in ‘destiny’, as such, at least in terms of “things you must do which you have no control over.”
 
He had as much knowledge as the other eleven apostles. And, the Gospels are pretty clear that they were pretty confused, too. The whole point of the Gospels is that you have no understanding who Jesus is, until you understand His passion, death, and resurrection !!!
It seems to me Jesus was a rather poor teacher then. Then again, I suppose nowadays there are holy men who talk in riddles. So, ok, God even when he incarnates reveals himself by degrees. I suppose that’s legit… doesn’t speak to my own sense of rationality and fairness at all though.
Many wanted an uprising against the Romans, as a fulfillment of OT prophecy.
It seems more rational to trust in God’s own timing though, isn’t it?

Not one hair turns white or black without God’s controlling hand, I think that’s a saying of Jesus, no?
Not all did. That realization is a post-resurrection reality. We can, all too easily, project our own 21st century understanding on the characters in the Gospels!
Alright, well, I’m not sure what to make of that.
Absolutely. As an example, look at the Christians who are attempting to force the end of the world by virtue of getting all Jews to resettle in the Promised Land. What? You thought they were doing that out of a general sense of altruism? 😉
It seems absurd to me that we could “force” God’s hand. I would have assumed the earliest apostles would have at least had a basic understanding of God’s “sovereignty/power.” But alas, I suppose they were not systematic theologians.
The thought is that he either wanted to push Jesus to put it in high gear, or decided that Jesus wasn’t gonna do it at all.
It still seems to me, that if Judas was spiritually receptive in any sense to Jesus or God or higher ideals, he would have trusted Jesus instead of following his own wishes/whims/desires. If he really WASN’T a mere criminal or psychopath… So, it still doesn’t make much sense to me. Why was an uprising all that important to him? Why not trust Jesus’ plan, especially on the strength of visible miracles?
We, as Christians, don’t believe in ‘destiny’, as such, at least in terms of “things you must do which you have no control over.”
Alright.
 
It seems to me Jesus was a rather poor teacher then.
As they say, “it’s a poor workman who blames his tools.” I know plenty of students who failed classes taught by brilliant and effective teachers. 🤷‍♂️
It seems more rational to trust in God’s own timing though, isn’t it?
Yeah? How’s that working out for you these days, as you sit at home waiting for the pandemic to fizzle out? Me, I can more profoundly understand “impatience with God’s timing”, given the frustrating events of this year…
Alright, well, I’m not sure what to make of that.
It’s funny. When I teach Scripture, one common reaction is “yeah, yeah, yeah… I know all that! What new info do you have for me?” We think (reasonably or otherwise) that we know it all, with respect to God’s Word, and it colors our approach to it…
But alas, I suppose they were not systematic theologians.
Fishermen, tax collectors, common folk. 👍
It still seems to me, that if Judas was spiritually receptive in any sense to Jesus or God or higher ideals, he would have trusted Jesus instead of following his own wishes/whims/desires. If he really WASN’T a mere criminal or psychopath
I know plenty of folks who are neither ‘criminals’ nor ‘psychopaths’ who are followers of Jesus (and therefore, at least putatively “receptive in any sense to Jesus”), and who follow their own wishes/whims/desires. Not all that out-of-the-ordinary… 🤔
 
As they say, “it’s a poor workman who blames his tools.” I know plenty of students who failed classes taught by brilliant and effective teachers.
How simple would it have been for Jesus to say “I am God’s Son - and therefore, God Himself”! Maybe not the subtlest thing to say, but, straightforward. How many people could fail that question, then?
Yeah? How’s that working out for you these days, as you sit at home waiting for the pandemic to fizzle out? Me, I can more profoundly understand “impatience with God’s timing”, given the frustrating events of this year…
I control what I can. If I was a teacher, I would give my students a good dose of reality - what they can and can’t control…

Jesus must have left poor Judas to fend on his own and be victim to illusion. That to me seems a fault on Jesus’ part, then.
It’s funny. When I teach Scripture, one common reaction is “yeah, yeah, yeah… I know all that! What new info do you have for me?” We think (reasonably or otherwise) that we know it all, with respect to God’s Word, and it colors our approach to it…
True enough.
Fishermen, tax collectors, common folk
If Jesus didn’t bother to delineate even basic facts about the faith though, then why should the Church bother with catechizing young boys and girls? Do we have more authority than Jesus did? Are the facts even that important?
I know plenty of folks who are neither ‘criminals’ nor ‘psychopaths’ who are followers of Jesus (and therefore, at least putatively “receptive in any sense to Jesus”), and who follow their own wishes/whims/desires. Not all that out-of-the-ordinary…
Yeah… they weren’t in the presence of “Love itself” though… All I can really say is, I was under the impression that the “author of truth” was a greater source of… truth.

You’ve enlightened me but… I’m actually less impressed now than before.
 
How simple would it have been for Jesus to say “I am God’s Son - and therefore, God Himself”! Maybe not the subtlest thing to say, but, straightforward. How many people could fail that question, then?
That would have changed the dynamic of His whole ministry. So… your problem isn’t with Judas so much as with Jesus?
Jesus must have left poor Judas to fend on his own and be victim to illusion. That to me seems a fault on Jesus’ part, then.
God is at fault when we sin. Got it. 😉
If Jesus didn’t bother to delineate even basic facts about the faith though, then why should the Church bother with catechizing young boys and girls? Do we have more authority than Jesus did? Are the facts even that important?
Well… He did. To the apostles, generally, not the crowds. After His death and resurrection, that’s when He told the apostles to teach what He had taught them. So… that’s why we do!

And so, we do it specifically because of Jesus’ authority! And yes… the facts do matter!
You’ve enlightened me but… I’m actually less impressed now than before.
LOL! Well, that’s what I get for trying… 🤦‍♂️
 
That would have changed the dynamic of His whole ministry. So… your problem isn’t with Judas so much as with Jesus?
I’m not saying he should have proclaimed to one and all in a loud, bold, vociferous voice that “I AM God” but… to his inner circle, to his most trusted lieutenants, why not make such a disclosure? What reason was there not to? At any rate, from what I know of the Gospels, he performed great miracles AND claimed to forgive sins, and so acted in the person of God… Surely there must have been at least rumors that he was a powerful being… perhaps Yahweh himself appearing as a human… In that, I don’t see why he couldn’t disclose that he was God… At any rate, I think even 12 uneducated commoners, if they were devout Jews, over three, years, together, could at least arrive at the speculation that, yes, given ALL this he may as well be God incarnate…
Well… He did . To the apostles, generally, not the crowds. After His death and resurrection, that’s when He told the apostles to teach what He had taught them. So… that’s why we do!

And so, we do it specifically because of Jesus’ authority! And yes… the facts do matter!
…And yet he couldn’t get the most basic, fundamental fact off the ground… that he was God - to his closest confidants… Even though he forgave sins, called the Jewish God his Father (not ‘our’ Father) and acted in the person of God for all intents and purposes, at least as recorded in the Gospels…

I agree with you the facts matter, and that’s one reason why I’m going to maintain my skepticism, because these Gospels have not convinced me of the truth of their claims, Judas or no Judas. 😉
 
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I’m not saying he should have proclaimed to one and all in a loud, bold, vociferous voice that “I AM God”
Nor should you. Jesus is the Messiah - Sent from God…
If any have problem with Jesus or Scriptures,
their problem is neither Jesus nor Scriptures.

_
 
I’m not saying he should have proclaimed to one and all in a loud, bold, vociferous voice that “I AM God” but… to his inner circle, to his most trusted lieutenants, why not make such a disclosure?
Umm… remember the Transfiguration? That was pretty much “disclosure to the inner circle”, no?
Surely there must have been at least rumors that he was a powerful being… perhaps Yahweh himself appearing as a human…
No. That would’ve been considered blasphemy and, in fact, that’s precisely what the high priest accused Him of at the trial!

The rumors were that he was a reincarnation of John the Baptist, or Elijah having returned as prophesied, or a teacher/healer the likes of which they had never seen. They would have never guessed “God”. In fact, when Peter says it (in Mt 16), Jesus admits that this didn’t come from Peter’s mind, but that it came from God’s inspiration.
In that, I don’t see why he couldn’t disclose that he was God…
They would have stoned him, or at least, written him off as a lunatic. When you hear contemporary stories of folks who pop up and declare themselves to be God, what’s your impression?
At any rate, I think even 12 uneducated commoners, if they were devout Jews, over three, years, together, could at least arrive at the speculation that, yes, given ALL this he may as well be God incarnate…
“12 devout Jews” would never come up with that conclusion. At best, they’d say “hmm… Messiah?”, but never “hmm… G-d himself?”
…And yet he couldn’t get the most basic, fundamental fact off the ground… that he was God - to his closest confidants…
Again: He did. The Transfiguration.
I agree with you the facts matter, and that’s one reason why I’m going to maintain my skepticism, because these Gospels have not convinced me of the truth of their claims
The ironic thing is… I’ve gone straight to those very same Gospels to refute the claims of the things you say Jesus didn’t do! 🤔 🤣
 
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