perdition: a state of punishment which goes on forever, suffered by evil people after death; damnation; hell
Jesus, when he was praying to his Father said, "While I was with them in the world, I kept them in thy name: those that thou gavest me I have kept, and none of them is lost, but the son of perdition; that the scripture might be fulfilled." [John 17:12, KJV]
The son of perdition he was referring to is Judas, a name that now means "traitor". People naturally assign Judas to hell and most feel that is his proper place. But some are bothered by the other part of the verse that says he was destined from before his birth to betray Jesus.
Judas Isacariot, son of Simon, was a zealot, a member of a political movement in Jesus' day. In between the Old Testament and the New Testament, Israel ended up under Roman rule until Judas Maccabaeus led a successful rebellion and they were independent for nearly 100 glorious years. Hanukkah celebrates one of the miracles from that time when the oil supply in the temple did not run out and the flame kept burning. In those days, you could be proud to be a Jew, an Israelite, a chosen people, a tiny nation who stood up to the Roman Empire.
By the time Judas was born, they were back under Roman rule, hating it and longing for the days of King David, the days of Judas Maccabaeus. Some of the zealots became known as "sicarii" or dagger-men (aka assassins) and because Judas is called Isacariot, he was probably one of them. They fought for independence by stealthily stabbing Romans and Roman sympathizers in crowded places. They saw themselves as freedom fighters. Rome called them terrorists and crucified any they caught.
One day Judas Iscariot encountered a rabbi who said, "Follow me!" and that rabbi was Jesus.
Judas followed for three years and listened to Jesus talk about the coming kingdom of God with a glowing heart. He saw Jesus heal people, cast out demons and raise the dead!! He knew he was in the company of the long awaited Messiah. They traveled up and down Israel and he saw thousands beg Jesus to be their king.
But Jesus always refused. Often just when the crowd reached a hysterical pitch of excitement and it looks like things were gonna happen, Jesus would...fade into the woodwork, disappear, drop out of sight. And Judas had to wait another day.
Every spring, Jews from all over the world come to Jerusalem to celebrate the Passover. At that time, the city of David become a seething mass of people gathered to remember the glorious day when the Angel of Death killed all the Egyptian first born males but "passover"ed the Jews, the glorious day when Moses told Pharaoh, "Let my people go!" To the Romans, it was a nightmare of crowd control.
One Passover, Jesus came to Jerusalem in the same way an Israelite king would in the days of David, riding on a donkey. The people filled the streets, waving palm branches and shouting "Hosanna!" ("Save!") "Blessed is he who comes in the name of the LORD!" "Blessed is the coming kingdom of our father David!" "Hosanna in the highest!" Judas walked behind with tears in his eyes and his heart bursting with pride and excitement. This is it!
Then Jesus went to the temple and drove out the people who changed Roman coins into Jewish shekels and gouged the Jews in the process. This is it!
Then they gathered in an upper room for the Passover meal and Jesus started talking about serving others and loving one another and...that he was going away; they will be sad but not for long. This is NOT it.
The bible says Satan entered Judas at the feast and he got up from his spot beside Jesus and betrayed him. He sold Jesus to the authorities for 30 pieces of silver and betrayed him with a kiss in a garden as pretty and peaceful as Eden. Then he watched.
He watched as Jesus went quietly like a lamb to the butcher's block to be mocked, beaten and crucified. He watched his friends flee the scene. He waited for the people to rise up and revolt. Instead, they who shouted "Hosanna!" yesterday now shouted, "Crucify him!" He watched his dream die and he too died. He had betrayed an innocent man.
He returned the money and he hung himself. Prophecy fulfilled.
But I don't think Judas is rotting in hell. A better rendition of what Jesus said is "While I was with them, I protected them and kept them safe by that name you gave me. None has been lost except the one doomed to destruction so that Scripture would be fulfilled." meaning Satan was all out to kill Jesus and his disciples but all the disciples, except Judas, will survive that horrific night.
On the cross, Jesus said, "Father forgive them for they know not what they do." He said it for the Roman soldiers who were executing him, for the nation of Israel who had rejected him, for his disciples who had abandoned him, for the thief beside him who died believing and for the other thief beside him who died cursing. And he said it for Judas.
Judas: zealot, sicarii, friend, betrayer, human. It was for such a person as he that God came in person to save. Judas is one of us.
for Adam
The morning after Palm Sunday, 2005