P1565:9, 139:12.1
Judas Iscariot, the twelfth apostle, was chosen by Nathaniel. He was born
in
Kerioth, a small town in southern Judea. When he was a lad, his parents
moved to Jericho, where he lived and had been employed in his father's various
business enterprises until he became interested in the preaching and work
of John the Baptist. Judas's parents were Sadducees, and when their son joined
John's disciples, they disowned him.
P1566:1, 139:12.2
When Nathaniel met Judas at Tarichea, he was seeking employment with a fish-drying
enterprise at the lower end of the Sea of Galilee. He was thirty years of
age and unmarried when he joined the apostles. He was probably the
best-educated
man among the twelve and the only Judean in the Master's apostolic family.
Judas had no outstanding trait of personal strength, though he had many outwardly
appearing traits of culture and habits of training. He was a good thinker
but not always a truly honest thinker. Judas did not really understand
himself; he was not really sincere in dealing with himself.
P1566:2, 139:12.3
Andrew appointed Judas treasurer of the twelve, a position which he was eminently
fitted to hold, and up to the time of the betrayal of his Master he discharged
the responsibilities of his office honestly, faithfully, and most efficiently.
P1566:3, 139:12.4
There was no special trait about Jesus which Judas admired above the generally
attractive and exquisitely charming personality of the Master. Judas was never
able to rise above his Judean prejudices against his Galilean associates;
he would even criticize in his mind many things about Jesus. Him whom eleven
of the apostles looked upon as the perfect man, as the "one altogether lovely
and the
chiefest among ten thousand," this self-satisfied Judean often dared
to criticize in his own heart. He really entertained the notion that Jesus
was timid and somewhat afraid to assert his own power and authority.
P1566:4, 139:12.5
Judas was a good business man. It required tact, ability, and patience, as
well as painstaking devotion, to manage the financial affairs of such an idealist
as Jesus, to say nothing of wrestling with the
helter-
skelter business methods
of some of his apostles. Judas really was a great executive, a farseeing and
able
financier. And he was a stickler for organization. None of the twelve
ever criticized Judas. As far as they could see, Judas Iscariot was a matchless
treasurer, a learned man, a loyal (though sometimes critical) apostle, and
in every sense of the word a great success. The apostles loved Judas; he was
really one of them. He must have believed in Jesus, but we doubt whether
he really loved the Master with a whole heart. The case of Judas illustrates
the truthfulness of that saying: "There is a way that seems right to a man,
but the end thereof is death." It is altogether possible to fall victim to
the peaceful deception of pleasant adjustment to the paths of sin and death.
Be assured that Judas was always
financially loyal to his Master and his fellow
apostles. Money could never have been the motive for his betrayal of the Master.
P1566:5, 139:12.6
Judas was an only son of unwise parents. When very young, he was pampered
and
petted; he was a spoiled child. As he grew up, he had exaggerated ideas
about his self-importance. He was a poor loser. He had loose and distorted
ideas about fairness; he was given to the indulgence of hate and suspicion.
He was an expert at misinterpretation of the words and acts of his friends.
All through his life Judas had cultivated the habit of getting even with those
whom he fancied had mistreated him. His sense of values and loyalties was
defective.
P1566:6, 139:12.7
To Jesus, Judas was a faith adventure. From the beginning the Master fully
understood the weakness of this apostle and well knew the dangers of admitting
him to fellowship. But it is the nature of the Sons of God to give every created
being a full and equal chance for salvation and survival. Jesus wanted not
only the mortals of this world but the onlookers of innumerable other worlds
to know that, when doubts exist as to the sincerity and wholeheartedness of
a creature's devotion to the kingdom, it is the invariable practice of the
Judges of men fully to receive the doubtful candidate. The door of eternal
life is wide open to all; "whosoever will may come"; there are no restrictions
or qualifications save the faith of the one who comes.
P1567:1, 139:12.8
This is just the reason why Jesus permitted Judas to go on to the very end,
always doing everything possible to transform and save this weak and confused
apostle. But when light is not honestly received and lived up to, it tends
to become darkness within the soul. Judas grew intellectually regarding Jesus'
teachings about the kingdom, but he did not make progress in the acquirement
of spiritual character as did the other apostles. He failed to make satisfactory
personal progress in spiritual experience.
P1567:2, 139:12.9
Judas became increasingly a brooder over personal disappointment, and finally
he became a victim of resentment. His feelings had been many times hurt, and
he grew
abnormally suspicious of his best friends, even of the Master. Presently
he became
obsessed with the idea of getting even, anything to avenge himself,
yes, even betrayal of his associates and his Master.
P1567:3, 139:12.10
But these wicked and dangerous ideas did not take definite shape until the
day when a grateful woman broke an expensive box of incense at Jesus' feet.
This seemed wasteful to Judas, and when his public protest was so
sweepingly
disallowed by Jesus right there in the hearing of all, it was too much. That
event determined the mobilization of all the accumulated hate, hurt, malice,
prejudice, jealousy, and revenge of a lifetime, and he made up his mind to
get even with he knew not whom; but he crystallized all the evil of his nature
upon the one innocent person in all the sordid drama of his unfortunate
life just because Jesus happened to be the chief actor in the episode which
marked his passing from the progressive kingdom of light into that self-chosen
domain of darkness.
P1567:4, 139:12.11
The Master many times, both privately and publicly, had warned Judas that
he was slipping, but divine warnings are usually useless in dealing with embittered
human nature. Jesus did everything possible, consistent with man's moral freedom,
to prevent Judas's choosing to go the wrong way. The great test finally came.
The son of resentment failed; he yielded to the sour and sordid dictates of
a proud and vengeful mind of exaggerated self-importance and swiftly plunged
on down into confusion, despair, and depravity.
P1567:5, 139:12.12
Judas then entered into the base and shameful intrigue to betray his Lord
and Master and quickly carried the nefarious scheme into effect. During the
outworking of his
anger-conceived plans of traitorous betrayal, he experienced
moments of regret and shame, and in these lucid intervals he
faintheartedly
conceived, as a defense in his own mind, the idea that Jesus might possibly
exert his power and deliver himself at the last moment.
P1567:6, 139:12.13
When the sordid and sinful business was all over, this renegade mortal, who
thought lightly of selling his friend for thirty pieces of silver to satisfy
his
long-nursed craving for revenge, rushed out and committed the final act
in the drama of fleeing from the realities of mortal existence -- suicide.
P1567:7, 139:12.14
The eleven apostles were horrified, stunned. Jesus regarded the betrayer only
with pity. The worlds have found it difficult to forgive Judas, and his name
has become
eschewed throughout a far-flung universe.