He may not have intended for Jesus to be tortured and killed, but the plain fact is, he rejected Jesus and the Father long before this deed. He had three years to sit at the feet of Jesus and allow his heart to be tenderized, but he would not. He stole from the money bag, and plotted manipulaton of his Teacher. Full knowledge does not mean he could see all the possible outcomes. Full knowledge means that one knows that certain acts are considered wrong.
Good Sunday to you, guanophore!
1859 Mortal sin requires full knowledge and complete consent. It presupposes knowledge of the sinful character of the act, of its opposition to God’s law. It also implies a consent sufficiently deliberate to be a personal choice. Feigned ignorance and hardness of heart133 do not diminish, but rather increase, the voluntary character of a sin.
You proposed that Judas was seeking to have Jesus be put into power (a theory as good as any). This is not “wrong” in his eye, correct? As you may remember, I don’t think that Judas wanted Jesus in power. Instead, I am thinking that he saw Jesus as a threat. In either case, Judas did not know that what he was doing was wrong, for if he saw Jesus as a threat, then he intended to dispose of that threat. If Judas saw Jesus as a power he wanted to assist, (to his own benefit) then he was still not seeing “the sinful character of the act.” In either case, then, he was not seeing “sinful character”, he was seeing a benefit. Feel free to disagree!
Again, when Jesus said, “Forgive them, for they know not what they do.” What did the crowd not know? I am really interested in your answer to that question.
Are you suggesting that your “observations” are not filtered by your belief system?
Are you detecting a splinter in my eye? Sure, I may have a few.
You don’t think your conviction that no one ever knowingly or willingly rejects God changes the way you evaluate behavior?
It is not a “conviction”. It is a conclusion based on observation. As you can see from this post, it is a well-founded conclusion, even though it remains temporary.
No, OS, you misapplied the statement of Jesus to “the crowd”. His statement was made in regard to those who were crucifying him.
Is there a scripture scholar you know of that says Jesus’ statement, “Forgive them, bor they know not what they do” was not applied to all those who wanted Him crucified? I’m not ruling it out, but your version is the first I have ever heard. Can you provide a link , maybe?
“We” speculated no such thing. Judas knew that his actions were wrong. He convinced himself that the outcome would make the means worthwhile. A person does not say “I have betrayed innocent blood” if one thinks otherwise.
My error on the “we”! Yes, Judas realized his error afterwards. Before that, he was more blind, or ignorant, or both.
Judas rejected God’s unmerited grace.
So, what reasons did Judas have for rejecting God’s grace?
You think he killed himself by accident?!
Of course not, friend. However, if he was able to see his own value, he would not have killed himself. He would have saved the temple.
When Jesus said "forgive them, for they know not what they do, what did the crowd crucifying Him not know?
And your speculations must be informed by your confirmational bias.
There’s that speck again.
Thomas has the right response. He falls to the feet of Jesus and prays “Oh Lord, help my unbelief!” Judas could have thrown himself on God’s mercy, could have asked God to help his blindness. We can all do this. God gives every human soul sufficient grace to be saved.
A person will only ask for help with their blindness if A)they know they are blind and B) they do not want to be blind. Why would they want to be blind, guanophore? Wait, I know, you are going to say “pride”:
quanophore said:
“Pride is the excessive love of one’s own excellence. … that frame of mind in which a man, through the love of his own worth, aims to withdraw himself from subjection to Almighty God, and sets at naught the commands of superiors. It is a species of contempt of God and of those who bear his commission.”
Well, love of self is not a bad thing, for Jesus asks us to “love our neighbor as our selves”, which makes for great love of neighbor! But you have something there, “pride” being the “aim to withdraw himself from subjection to Almighty God.” So, the next question is “why does he aim to withdraw himself from subjection?”. We cannot answer “because of pride” because that is what you are defining as the “aim” in itself; it is like saying “he has pride because he has pride”. To what purpose does the human ever withdraw himself from subjection?
Oh, and as far as your description of my analysis as “psychobabble”, that is what I am asking you to critique. If you do not agree with part of it, rather than insult it, you could propose observations. Are you familiar with the reason for people dismissing psychology and other sciences?
motherjones.com/politics/2011/03/denial-science-chris-mooney?page=4
Studies show that we get a neurological “happy” lift when we dismiss views that oppose our beliefs. What happens in the mind is no different than winning a game. It’s like “his views are worthless, I win!”
Now, have you just read that last paragraph and thought, “his views are worthless, I win!”?
If so, confirmation.
As long as it is all with love, friend.
John 13:34-35New International Version (NIV)
34 “A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. 35 By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.”