The authors of the canonical Gospels describe the story of Judas Iscariot in approximately the same way, with Mark and Matthew noting that Judas called Jesus only a Teacher, a Rabbi, but never the Lord.
He was called by Christ among the first 12 apostles, appointed treasurer of their community, was distinguished by practicality and was a fraud; he voluntarily decided to betray the Lord and informed the high priests about it. At the Last Supper, in a brief conversation, Jesus denounced Judas’ intentions, but did not stop him. After a hypocritical kiss in the Garden of Gethsemane and realizing what it led to, Judas returned the pieces of silver he received and committed suicide (only Matthew the Evangelist writes about this). It is worth to note that his act was a sign of remorse and regret for his mistake, but not repentance before the Lord.
In theology, there are many versions as to what prompted Judas to betray Jesus. Those include his avarice, obsession with the devil, disappointment in Jesus as the Messiah, a provocation that prompted his actions, and the desire to avoid the future martyrdom of the followers of Christ.
A deeper reason lies in his misunderstanding of the true meaning of Christ’s teaching. The Greek theologian Origen Adamantius directly called Judas an instrument of the devil, however, admitted that he could not “expel the teaching of Jesus from his heart, ” which is why he was horrified by what he had done.
Basil the Great notes the tragic image of Judas as a disciple who failed to maintain and justify his calling.
John Chrysostom in one of his “homilies” urges:
He was called by Christ among the first 12 apostles, appointed treasurer of their community, was distinguished by practicality and was a fraud; he voluntarily decided to betray the Lord and informed the high priests about it. At the Last Supper, in a brief conversation, Jesus denounced Judas’ intentions, but did not stop him. After a hypocritical kiss in the Garden of Gethsemane and realizing what it led to, Judas returned the pieces of silver he received and committed suicide (only Matthew the Evangelist writes about this). It is worth to note that his act was a sign of remorse and regret for his mistake, but not repentance before the Lord.
In theology, there are many versions as to what prompted Judas to betray Jesus. Those include his avarice, obsession with the devil, disappointment in Jesus as the Messiah, a provocation that prompted his actions, and the desire to avoid the future martyrdom of the followers of Christ.
A deeper reason lies in his misunderstanding of the true meaning of Christ’s teaching. The Greek theologian Origen Adamantius directly called Judas an instrument of the devil, however, admitted that he could not “expel the teaching of Jesus from his heart, ” which is why he was horrified by what he had done.
Basil the Great notes the tragic image of Judas as a disciple who failed to maintain and justify his calling.
John Chrysostom in one of his “homilies” urges: