The character of Judas looms large in the story of Jesus' Passion this week. He raises questions for us as we ponder. The gospel passages at Mass feature him on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Judas Iscariot went to the chief priests and said, “What are you willing to give me if I hand him over to you?” They
paid him thirty pieces of silver, and from that time on he looked for an
opportunity to hand him over. (Matthew 26:14-16)
Judas is a question mark: why did he do it? Matthew tells us what Judas did, but he doesn’t tell us why. Down through the centuries, readers and commentators, librettists and screen writers have filled in the blanks: he did it for the money, he did it because Jesus had failed to live up to his expectations of a political messiah, he did it because the devil made him do it, he did it...well, no one knows why he did it.
As we read, Judas becomes a mirror the Gospel holds up
to us. In it we see the face of our own betrayals looking back at us. Piety may
forbid us to see anything but horror in Judas for what he did. After all, he
sold Jesus to his torturers and murderers. But honesty requires us to admit
that he is not alone in having sold for small change the one thing that
mattered. How many of us have sold our prayer for entertainment, our integrity
for power or prestige, our life’s work for an easy ride? Is selling God’s gifts
for a handful of trifles any less heinous really than selling the Savior?
Come now, you’re probably saying, there’s no
comparison. I’ve made my little compromises, sure, but nobody died for it. Is
that really true? Jesus, Son of God, died in a few hours on one particular
afternoon whose echoes have reverberated among believers and doubters alike
ever since, but we, now made children of God, die no less decisively when we
trade away our own God-given truth over a lifetime of little compromises. St.
Basil the Great defines sin as the use of God's gifts for purposes other than
those for which they were given. Most grievous, he says, is the misuse of
love—our love for God, our love for those among whom we were planted in this
world, our love for those to whom we can offer some service through the talents
and tasks God has given us. A gifted storyteller puts the gift to use writing
trash for cash. A gifted artist devotes
a lifetime to producing commercials peddling luxuries rather than painting
great masterpieces. A gifted singer
forces a soaring voice into a style that damages it for the sake of a place in
the top ten. A gifted parent sacrifices
time for the family in favor of clean and lovely surroundings or a weekend in
front of the TV or a fishing trip. Not major crimes, surely? Ah, but the
serpent’s tooth poisons by small bites. And the serpent’s whisper is well
disguised as “everybody does it” or “you owe it to yourself ” or “come on—be
practical.”
After a while, maybe, we forget we have options. The
good news that seems to have fallen on deaf ears in the tragic Judas is laid
out before us during Holy Week in all its urgency. We may well have our little
stash of silver coins hidden somewhere, rewards for our betrayals of true
selves, but it’s never too late to trade them in again for forgiveness,
freedom, life. The loss may be painful, the prospect of change frightening, the
way back long and hard. But the offer is always there.
It was there for Judas. Jesus forgave Peter, who
denied him, and the other disciples who abandoned him, and even the men with
hammer and nails who crucified him. Surely he was just as ready to forgive
Judas. Why didn’t Judas accept? Why didn’t he allow the Savior to save him from
his own despair? Why did he hang himself after three years in the company of
God’s mercy made flesh (Matt 27:5)? I wonder if it was because he had so eroded
his soul with a lifetime of betrayals that he could no longer see the
outstretched hand. Having walled himself into the very small cell of his own
self-interest and shame, perhaps he could no longer recognize that the door
stood open. And who knows? Maybe, in the privacy of one of those moments of
anguish and mercy that go unreported by the evangelists--who had reason to
think ill of Judas anyway--God's finally managed to pry open Judas' fist and
fill it with something far better than thirty pieces of silver. I hope so. But
what went on for Judas in his darkness remains as much a question as his
motives.
If Judas is question, puzzle, thorn in the flesh of the
Christian mind, he is also, like all of us, mystery. How many of us can really
fathom in ourselves the depths where betrayal and grace meet? I would rather
not reduce Judas to a simple explanation. I would rather allow him to remain a
mirror. If I can’t see into his soul, perhaps he can let me see into mine. My
prayer is for the courage to look.
Reprinted from Sauntering Through Scripture: A Book of Reflections by Sister Genevieve Glen, OSB. Published by The Liturgical Press: Collegeville, MN, 2018. Reprinted with permission from the Liturgical Press. Copyright 2018 by the Abbey of St. Walburga.
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