IT WILL HELP ME
very greatly in my delicate work of examining the character of the betrayer
of our Lord if there be an understanding between us that it is not presumptuously
supposed on either side that every difficulty can be explained, and that
perfect unanimity can be secured on every point; and especially if it be
further understood that my object is not to set up or defend any theory
about Judas Iscariot, but solemnly to inquire whether his character was
so absolutely unlike everything we know of human nature as to give us no
help in the deeper understanding of our own; or whether there was not even
in Judas something that, at its very worst, was only an exaggeration of
elements or forces that may possibly be in everyone of us.
We always think of him as
a monster; but what if we ourselves be- at least in possibility- as monstrous
and as vile? Let us go carefully through his history, and see. My purpose
is to cut a path as straight as I may be able to go, through the entangled
and thorny jungle of texts which make up the history of Iscariot; I propose
to stop here and there on the road, that we may get new views and breathe
perhaps an uncongenial air; and though we may differ somewhat as to the
distance and form of passing objects, I am quite sure that when we get
out again into the common highways we shall resume our unanimity, and find
it nonetheless entire and cordial because of what we have seen on the unaccustomed
and perilous way. First of all, then, let us try to get a clear knowledge
of the character of Judas Iscariot, the disciple, and apostle, and betrayer,
of the Son of God.
Expository
"Have not I chosen you twelve,
and one of you is a devil?" (John 6:70). Who, then, will say that the
men with whom Christ began His new kingdom were more than men-not bone
of our bone and flesh of our flesh, but a princely sort, specially created
and quite away from the common herd in sympathy and aim? He chose twelve
men who fairly represented human nature in its best and worst aspects-they
represented gentleness, ardor, domesticity, enterprise, timidity, courage-and
one of them was a devil. Not a devil in the sense of being something else
than human. Judas was a man like the others, but in him there was a preeminent
capacity for plotting and attempting the foulest mischief
We are certainly not to understand
that our Lord chose twelve men who, with one exception, were converted,
intelligent, sanctified, and perfect; nor is it by any means certain that
our Lord chose even the most intellectual and influential men that it was
possible for Him to draw into His service. I do not know that we are entitled
to regard the Apostles as in all respects the twelve best men of their
day; but I think we may justly look upon them as an almost complete representation
of all sides of human nature. And as such they utterly destroy the theory
that they were but a coterie-men of one mean stamp, without individuality,
force, emphasis, or self-assertion; padding, not men; mere shadows of a
crafty empiric, and not to be counted as men.
On the contrary, this was
a representative discipleship; we were all in that elect band; the kingdom
of God, as declared in Christ Jesus, would work upon each according to
his own nature, and would reveal every man to himself. A very wonderful
and instructive thing is this, that Jesus Christ did not point out the
supremely wicked man, but merely said, "One of you is a devil." Thus a
spirit of self-suspicion was excited in the whole number, culminating in
the mournful "Is it I?" of the Last Supper: and truly it is better for
us not to know which is the worst man in the church-to know only that judgment
will begin at the house of God, and to be wondering whether that judgment
will take most effect upon ourselves.
No man fully knows himself
Jesus Christ would seem to be saying to us-At this moment you appear to
be a child of God: you are reverent, charitable, well-disposed; you have
a place in My visible kingdom-even a prominent place in the pulpit, on
the platform, at the desk, in the office; appearances are wholly and strongly
in your favor, yet, little as you suspect it, deep under all these things
lies an undiscovered self-a very devil, it may be; so that even
you, now loud in your loyalty and zealous beyond all others in pompous
diligence, may in the long run turn around upon your Lord and thrust a
spear into His heart!
Can it be that the foremost
sometimes stumble? Do the strong cedars fall? May the very star of the
morning drop from the gate of heaven? Let the veteran, the leader, the
hoary Nestor, the soldier valiant beyond all others, say, "Lord, is it
I?" Which of us can positively separate himself from Judas Iscariot and
honestly say-His was a kind of human nature different from mine? I dare
not do so. In the betrayer I would have every man see a possibility
of himself-himself it may be, magnified in hideous and revolting exaggeration,
yet part of the same earth heaved, in the case of Judas, into a great hill
by fierce heat, but on exactly the same plane as the coldest dust that
lies miles below its elevation. Iscariot's was a human sin rather than
a merely personal crime. Individually I did not sin in Eden, but humanly
I did; personally I did not covenant for the betrayal of my Lord, but morally
I did-I denied Him, and betrayed Him, and spat upon Him, and pierced Him;
and He loved me and gave Himself for me!
Of course the question will
arise, Why did our Lord choose a man whom He knew to be a devil? A hard
question; but there is a harder still-Why did Jesus choose you? Could you
ever make out that mystery? Was it because of your respectability?
Was it because of the desirableness of your companionship? Was it because
of the utter absence of all devilishness in your nature? What if Judas
did for you what you were only too timid to do for yourself? The Incarnation
with a view to human redemption, is the supreme mystery; in comparison
with that, every other difficulty is as a molehill to a mountain. In your
heart of hearts are you saying, "If this man were a prophet, he would know
what manner of man this Judas is, for he is a sinner"? O self-contented
Simon, presently the Lord will have somewhat to say to you, and His parable
will smite you like a sword.
"The Son of man goeth
as it is written of him: but woe unto that man by whom the Son of man is
betrayed!" (Matt. 26:24). 1 think we shall miss the true meaning and
pathos of this passage if we regard it merely as the exclamation of a man
who was worsted for the moment by superior strength, but who would get
the upper hand by-and-by, and then avenge his humiliation. These words
might have been uttered with tears of the heart—Woe will be the portion
of that man who betrays me; yes, woe upon woe, even to remorse and agony
and death; the chief of sinners, he will also be chief of sufferers; when
he sees the full meaning of what he has done, he will sink under the intolerable
shame, he will give blood for blood, and be glad to find solace in death.
And if our hearts be moved
at all to pitifulness in the review of this case, may we not find somewhat
of a redeeming feature in the capacity for suffering so deep and terrible?
Shall we be stretching the law of mercy unduly if we see in this self-torment
a faint light on the skirts of an appalling cloud? I do not find that Judas
professed or manifested any joy in his grim labor; there is no sound of
revel or mad hilarity in all the tragic movement; on the contrary, there
is a significant absence, so far as we can judge from the narrative, of
all the excitement needful for nerving the mischievous man to work out
purposes which he knows to be wholly evil. AH the while, Judas would seem
to be under a cloud, to be advancing stealthily rather than boisterously;
he was no excited Belshazzar whose brain was aflame with excess of wine-though
he, too, trembled as if the mystic hand were writing letters of doom upon
the old familiar scenes: so excited is he that a word will send him reeling
backward to the ground, and if he do not his work "quickly" he will become
sick with fear and be incapable of action; as it is, he has only bargained
to "kiss" the Victim, not to clutch Him with a ruffian's grasp. Then came
the intolerable woe!
This great law is at work
upon our lives today. Woe to the unfaithful pastor; woe to the negligent
steward; woe to the betrayer of sacred interests; woe to them that call
evil good and good evil-to all such be woe; not only the woe of outward
judgment—-divine and inexorable-but that, if may be, still keener, sadder
woe of self-contempt and self-damnation. With such sorrow no stranger may
intermeddle. The lesson to ourselves would seem to be this-Do not regard
divine judgment merely as measure for measure in relation to your sin-that
is to say, so much penalty for so much guilt. It is more than that-it is
a quickening of the man into holy resentment against himself, an arming
of the conscience against the whole life, a subjective controversy which
will not be lulled into unrighteous peace, but will rage wrathfully and
implacably until there shall come repentance to life or remorse to death.
Shall I startle you if I
say that there is a still more terrible state than that of such anguish
as Iscariot's? To have worn out the moral sense, to have become incapable
of pain, to have the conscience seared as with a hot iron, to be "Past
feeling"—that is the consummation of wickedness. That there is a
judicial and outward infliction of pain on account of sin, is of course
undoubted; but while that outward judgment may actually harden the sinner,
the bitter woe which comes of a true estimate of sin and of genuine contrition
for its enormity may work out a repentance not to be repented of. If, then,
any man is suffering the pain of just self-condemnation on account of sin;
if any man's conscience is now rising mightily against him and threatening
to tear him in pieces before the Lord, because of secret lapses or unholy
betrayals, because of long-sustained hypocrisy or self-seeking faithlessness,
I will not hurriedly seek to ease the healthy pain; the fire will work
to his purification, and the Refiner will lose nothing of the gold. But
if any man, how eminent soever in ecclesiastical position, knows that he
has betrayed the Lord, and conceals under a fair exterior all that Ezekiel
saw in the chamber of imagery, and is as a brazen wall against every appeal-hard,
tearless, impenetrable, unresponsive-I do not hesitate to say that I would
rather be numbered with Judas than with that man.
"It had been good for
that man if he had not been born" (Matt. 26:24). Then why was he born?
is the question, not of impatient ignorance only, but of a certain moral
instinct which God never fails to respect throughout the whole of His relationship
with mankind, and which He will undoubtedly honor in this instance. Take
the case as it is ordinarily put: Judas, like the rest of us, had no control
over his own birth; he found himself in a world in whose formation he had
no share; he was born under circumstances which, as to their literal and
local bearing, can never be repeated in all the ages of time.
So far as we can gather from
the narrative, Jesus spoke to him no word of sympathy, never drew him aside,
as He drew Peter, to tell him of preventing prayer, but to all appearance
left him to be the blind and helpless instrument of the devil, and then
said, "It had been good for that man if he had not been born." This cannot
be the full meaning of the words. Instantly we repeat the profound inquiry
of Abram, "Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" He may, and
must, transcend our understanding; He will, by the very nature of the case,
dazzle and confound our imagination by the unsuspected riches and glory
of His many mansions; but He must not trouble our sense of right
if He would retain our homage and our love.
Personally, I can have no
share in the piety that can see any man condemned under such circumstances
as have just been described; it is not enough to tell me that it is some
other man and not myself who suffers-a suggestion ineffably mean even if
it were true; but it is not true; I do suffer: a tremendous strain is put
upon my sensibilities, and I cannot, without anguish, see any man arbitrarily
driven into hell. Upon his face, writhing in unutterable torture, is written
this appeal, "Can you see me, bone of your bone and flesh of your flesh,
thus treated, weighed down, crushed, damned, by a power I am utterly unable
either to placate or resist!" That man may be my own father, my own child,
my most familiar friend; and though he be a stranger, of name unknown,
he has at all events the claim of our common humanity upon me. I have purposely
put the case in this strong way, that I may say with the more emphasis
that I see no such method of government revealed in the narrative now under
consideration. If I saw anything like it in any part of the Word of God,
I should say, "My understanding is at fault, not God's justice; from what
I know of His method within the scope of my own life, I know and am sure
that righteousness and judgment are the habitation of His throne, and that
His mercy endureth forever." I see things that are mysterious, incomprehensible,
baffling; I come upon Scriptures which utterly defy all scholars and interpreters;
but this is the confidence that I have—"the Judge of all the earth will
do right."
As to the particular expression
in the text, two things may be said:
First, it is well known that
the Jews were in the habit of saying, "It had been good for that man had
he not been born,"—it was a common expression of the day, in speaking of
transgressors, and did not by any means imply a belief in the final destruction
or damnation of the person spoken of.
Secondly, this passage
has again and again exactly expressed our own feeling in many crises of
our own life: it must be forever true that non-existence is better
than sinfulness. When the he was on our lips, when part of the price was
laid down as the whole, when we dishonored the vow we made in secret with
God, when we rolled iniquity under our tongue as a sweet morsel-at that
time it had been good for us if we had not been born.
Such, indeed, is the only
form of words equal to the gravity of the occasion; better we say, again
and again, not to have been born than to have done this; if this be the
end of our being, then has our life been a great failure and a mortal pain.
I hold that these words were spoken not so much of Judas the man
as of Judas the sinner, and that consequently they apply to all
evil-doers throughout all generations, and are in reality the most tender
and pathetic admonition which even Christ could address to the slaves of
sin.
We may get some light upon
this expression by considering the fact that "it repented the Lord that
He had made man." In studying all such passages we must have regard to
the order of time. St. Paul said, "If in this life only we have hope, we
are of all men most miserable." So, if we break off our own life at certain
points, we shall say the same thing of ourselves; and if we interrupt human
history, so that one fact shall not be allowed to explain another, it would
be easy to find sections which would prove alike the disorder and malignity
of the Divine government.
We know what this means in
some of the works of our own hands. Thus, for example: You undertook to
build a house for the Lord, and your heart was full of joy as you saw the
sacred walls rising in your hopeful dreams; but when you came to work out
your purpose, you came upon difficulty after difficulty-promises were broken,
contracts were trifled with, the very stars in their courses seemed to
fight against you, and at length, after many disappointments and exasperations,
you said, "It repents me; it gives me pain, it grieves me, that I began
this house." Such is the exact state of your feeling at that particular
moment. But other influences were brought to bear upon the situation, resources
equal to the difficulty were developed, and when the roof covered the walls,
and the spire shot up into the clouds, you forget your pains and tears
in a great satisfaction. You will say that God foresaw all the difficulty
of building the living temple of manhood, that the whole case was clearly
before Him from eternity; that is, of course, true; but the pain of ingratitude
is nonetheless keen because the ingratitude itself was foreknown.
Take the case of Jesus Christ,
God manifest in the flesh, as an illustration. He foresaw all the triumphs
of His cross-all heaven thronged with innumerable multitudes out of every
kindred and people and tongue-yet He prayed that the cup might pass from
Him, and He needed an angel to help Him in the time of His soul's sorrow.
In magnifying God's omniscience we must not overlook God's love; nothing,
indeed, could surprise His foreknowledge, yet it grieved Him at the heart
that He had made man; and He called upon the heavens to hear and upon the
earth to be astonished, because His children had rebelled against Him!
"This he said, not that
he cared for the poor, but because he was a thief and had the bag, and
bare what was put therein" (John 12:6). It is more to the credit of
the apostles themselves that this should be regarded as an afterthought
than as an undoubted conviction, or an established fact, at the time that
Judas sat with them at the Paschal Supper, or even at the time that he
asked why the ointment was not sold for the benefit of the poor. This is
more evident from the fact that the writer indicates Judas as the betrayer,
whereas at the moment of the test his identity was not established. There
is no mystery about the insertion of this explanatory suggestion, for we
all know how easy it is after a character has fully revealed itself
to go back upon its separate acts and account for them by their proper
motives-motives unknown at the time of the action, but plainly proved by
subsequent revelations of character. This was probably the case in the
instance before us: else why did the disciples allow Judas to keep the
bag? Why did they not humble and exhaust him by an incessant protest against
his dishonesty? And why did not our Lord, instead of mildly expostulating,
say to Judas as He once said to Peter, "Get thee behind me, Satan"?
Here, then, is a great law
within whose operation we ourselves may be brought-the law of reading the
part in the light of the whole, and of judging the isolated act by the
standard of the complete character. Illustrations of the working of this
law will occur to you instantly. Let a man eventually reveal himself as
having unworthily filled prominent positions in the church-let his character
be proved to have been corrupt, and then see what light is thrown upon
words and deeds which at the time were not fully understood. How abundant
then will be such expressions-these in recounting his utterances:
"He advised prudence and
care and very great caution in working out church plans; he counseled concentration;
he deprecated romantic schemes: this he did (as we now can see),
not that he was a lover of Prudence or a worshiper of Wisdom, but because
he was a thief, and he feared that bold and noble schemes would shame him
into reluctant generosity."
"He urged that the church
should be built with the least possible decoration or ornament; he spoke
strongly against colored glass and elaborate enrichment: and this he did
(as we can now see), not that he was devoted to Simplicity or absorbed
in spiritual aspiration, but because he was a thief, and feared that every
block of polished marble would increase the sum which his respectability
would be expected to subscribe."
"He denounced all heretical
tendencies in the Christian ministry; he knew heterodoxy afar off; he never
ceased to declare himself in favor of what he supposed to be the Puritan
theology: and this he did, not that in his heart of hearts he cared for
the conservation of orthodoxy, but because he was a thief, and had a felonious
intent upon the reputation of independent thinkers whose shoelaces he was
not worthy to unloose."
All this comes out after
a man has revealed himself as Judas did. But let me also say that the "thief'
may be dictating our speech even when we least suspect it, certainly where
there may never be such a disclosure as there was in the case of Judas.
There are conditions under which we hardly know what influence it is that
colors our judgment and suggests our course-may it not be the "thief' that
underlies our consciousness, and so cunningly touches our life as never
to excite our suspicion or our fear? We know how subtle are the workings
of self-deception, and perhaps even the godliest of us would be surprised
to know exactly the inspiration of some of our most fervent speeches-surprised
to find that though the outward orator seemed to be an earnest man, the
inner and invisible speaker is the "thief' that prompted Judas! Who, then,
can stand before the Lord, or be easy in the presence of His holy law?
It is under such inquiries that the strongest man quails, and that the
swiftest of Gods messengers humbly prays, "Enter not into judgment with
thy servant, 0 Lord; for in thy sight shall no flesh living be justified."
"Then one of the twelve,
called Judas Iscariot, went unto the chief priests, And said unto them,
What will ye give me, and I will deliver him unto you?" (Matt. 26:14-15).
Why should there have been any bargaining, or why should there have been
any difficulty about the arrest of Christ? We must look to an earlier verse
for the solution. The chief priests, the scribes, and the elders, had met
for consultation in the palace of the high priest, Caiaphas, and the principal
question was, not how they might take Jesus, but how they might take Him
by subtilty, by craft, deceit, guile, as if they would have secretly murdered
Him if they could-murdered Him in the darkness, and in the morning have
wiped their mouths as innocent men! Judas would appear to have gone to
them secretly, and offered himself as one who knew the haunts and times
and methods of Christ; and in doing so he showed the weak and vicious side
of his nature, his covetousness, his greed, his love of money-and herein
his guilt seems to culminate in an aggravation infernal and unpardonable.
But are we ourselves verily
clear in this matter? Are we not every day selling Christ to the highest
bidder? When we stifle our convictions lest we should lose a morsel of
bread; when we are dumb in the presence of the enemy lest our words should
be followed by loss of domestic comfort or personal honor; when we soften
our speech, or hide the Cross, or join in ungodly laughter that we may
avoid an ungodly sneer, we are doing in our own way the very thing which
we rightly condemn in the character of Judas.
"Then Judas which had
betrayed him, when he saw that he was condemned, repented himself and brought
again the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and elders, Saying,
I have sinned in that I have betrayed the innocent blood: ... And he cast
down the silver pieces in the temple, and departed, and went and
hanged himself" (Matt. 27:3-5). Is there not a tone in these words
with which we are familiar? Is there not, indeed, something of our own
voice in this mournful story? Let us look at it carefully:
"When he saw"—that,
at least, is familiar! Not until our actions are set a little off do we
see all their relations and all their meaning; in their progress we are
too near them to get their full effect; if we take but one step back we
shall be affrighted by the very actions of which the doing gave us a kind
of frenzied joy. We make our own ghosts. We shut the eyes of our minds
while we are doing certain things; and when the last touch is given to
the deed, we are taught by the bitterness of experience that Temptation
destroys our sight and that Guilt restores it. Recall the case of Adam
and Eve—"'And the eyes of them both were opened"! Very short and cloudy
is the sight of the body: how keen, how piercing, is the sight of a self-convicted
soul! Before that discerning vision the air is full of eyes, and the clearest
of all days is dark with menaces and gathering thunders.
"When he saw that he was
condemned." At that moment the surprise of Judas himself was supreme
and unutterable: evidently he did not expect that this catastrophe would
supervene. He may, indeed, have said to himself-as a man of inventive and
daring mind would be likely to say-I am quite sure, from what I have seen
of His miracles, that He will prove Himself more than a match for all His
enemies; He has done so before, and He will do it again. They said they
would cast Him down from the brow of the hill, but He went through the
midst of them like a beam of light, and when they took up stones to stone
Him, their hands were held fast by that strong will of His. He has provoked
them to their face, heaped up all their sins before them, taunted and goaded
them to madness, and yet He held them in check and played with them as
He listed; it will be so again. Besides, He may just want a plan like mine
to bring things to a point; I will put Him into the hands of these men,
then will He shake them off, proclaim His kingdom, drive away the spoiler
from the land of the Hebrews, and we shall come into the enjoyment of our
promised reward. Judas may not have used these words, but in effect they
are being used by sinners every day! This is the universal tongue of self-deception,
varying a little, it may be, in the accent, but in substance the same all
the world over; a putting of one thing against another, a balancing of
probabilities, an exercise of self-outwitting cunning; a secret hope that
something can be snatched out of the fire, and that the flames can be subdued
without undue damage this is the method of sinfulness of heart, a method
confounded every day by the hand of God, yet every day coming up again
to fresh attempts and renewed humilations.
"When he saw that he was
condemned he repented himself." Is there not hope of a man who is
capable of any degree of repentance, even when repentance takes upon itself
the darker shade of horror and remorse? I know what the word is which is
translated "repented," and I remember with joy that it is the word which
is used of the sin who said he would not go, and afterward repented and
went; it is the word which Paul used of himself on one occasion in writing
to the Corinthians. But even if the word be rendered "was filled with remorse
and shame and despair," I should say, "So much the better for Judas." Under
such circumstances I should have more hope of a man who had absolutely
no hope of himself, than of a man who could sufficiently control himself
to think that even such a sin-infinite in wickedness as it must have appeared
to his own mind—-could ever be forgiven. It is easy for us who never experienced
the agony to say what Judas ought to have done: how he ought to have wept
and prayed and sought forgiveness as we now should seek it-we cannot intermeddle
with his sorrow, nor ought we harshly to judge the method of his vengeance.
"I have sinned in that
I have betrayed the innocent blood." Not, "I was hurried into this
by others"; not, "Others are as much to blame as I am"; but, "I did it,
and I alone." Not, "I have made a mistake"; not, "This is a great error
on my part"; but, "I have sinned"-the very word which he might have heard
in his Lord's parable of the Prodigal Son-the word which our Father in
heaven delights to hear! "If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just
to forgive us our sins, for His mercy endureth forever." "If thy brother
turn again, saying, I repent, forgive him"-Judas repented himself "How
often shall I forgive him. Seven times. Seventy times seven"! And shall
I forgive him the less because his repentance has deepened into remorse,
and he has lost all hope of himself? Surely the more on that very account.
And if he slay himself because of his sin against me? Then must I think
of him with still more tender pity, nor cloud his memory with a single
suspicion.
And here let me say, as to
the spiritual application of this matter, I have no faith in the moral
value of fine-drawn distinctions between repentance and despair; my belief
is that until we reach the point of self-despair as to our sin against
Christ, we can never know the true meaning or realize the true joy of repentance.
That Judas should have slain himself with his own hand is, in my view of
the case, wholly in his favor. It must have appeared to him, indeed, to
be the only course open to him; floods of tears he could never set against
the blood of an innocent man; to cry and moan and weep bitterly, would
be just to aggravate the appalling crime. With a stronger light beating
on our life than ever Judas was permitted to enjoy, guarded by all the
restraints of Christian civilization, living under the ministry of the
Holy Spirit, we are by so much unable to sympathize with the intolerable
horror which destroyed the self-control of the Betrayer of our Lord.
So far as I can think myself
back into the mental condition of Judas, his suicide seems to me to be
the proper completion of his insufferable self-reproach. And yet that self-control
was preserved long enough to enable Judas Iscariot to utter the most effective
and precious eulogy ever pronounced upon the character of Jesus Christ.
How brief, how simple, how complete-"innocent blood"! If the proper interpretation
of words is to be found, as it undoubtedly is, in circumstances, then these
two words are fuller in meaning and more tender in pathos than the most
labored encomium could possibly be. Consider the life which preceded these
words, and you win see that they may be amplified thus: "I know Jesus better
than any of you can know Him; you have only seen Him in public, I have
lived with Him in private. I have watched His words as words of man were
never watched before. I have heard His speeches meant for His disciples
alone. I have seen Him in poverty, weariness, and pain of heart; I have
heard His prayers at home. I trusted that it had been He who would have
redeemed Israel from patriotic servility. I curse myself, I exonerate Him-His
is innocent blood!"
How glad would the Jews have
been if Christ had been witnessed against by one of His own disciples!
They would have welcomed his evidence; no gold could have adequately paid
for testimony so direct and important; and Judas loved gold. Yet the holy
truth came uppermost; Judas died not with a he in his right hand, but with
the word of truth upon his lips, and the name of Christ was thus saved
from what might have been its deepest wound.
"Those that thou gavest
me I have kept, and none of them is lost, but the son of perdition" (John
17:12). At the first glance these words would seem to put the fate
of Judas Iscariot beyond all controversy, yet further consideration may
show how mercy may magnify itself even in this cloud. Judas is called "the
son of perdition"; true, and Peter himself was called Satan by the same
Lord. And if Judas was "the son of perdition," what does Paid say of all
mankind? Does he not say, "We are by nature the children of wrath,
even as others"? But in this case "the son of perdition" is said to be
"lost"; but does the word lost necessarily imply that he was in hell? "We
have all erred and strayed like lost sheep"; "the Son of man came
to seek and to save that which was lost"; and, "there is joy in the presence
of the angels of God over one sinner that repenteth [Judas repented himself],
more than over ninety and nine just persons that need no repentance." It
is our joy to believe that wherever repentance is possible, mercy is possible;
and it is heaven to us to know that where sin abounded, grace did much
more abound. And are we quite sure that there is no ray of hope
falling upon the repentant and remorseful Judas from such words as these:
"And this is the Father's will which hath sent me, that of all which He
hath given me [and that He gave him Iscariot is clear from the very passage
we are now considering] I should lose nothing, but should raise it up again
at the last day" (John 6:39)? But there is still more light to be thrown
on this great gloom. Take this passage (John 18:8-9): "Jesus answered,
I have told you that I am he if therefore ye seek me, let these go their
way; that the saying might be fulfilled which he spake, Of them which thou
gavest me I have lost none."
Now suppose that the ruffians
had answered, "No, we will not let these go their way; we will slay them
with the sword at once"—would it follow that Jesus Christ had lost His
disciples in the sense of their having been destroyed in unquenchable fire?
The suggestion is not to be entertained for a moment, yet this is the very
"saying" which is supposed to determine the damnation of Judas! As I read
the whole history, I cannot but feel that our Lord was especially wistful
that His disciples should continue with Him throughout His temptation,
should watch with Him, that in some way, hardly to be expressed
in words, they should help Him by the sympathy of their presence-in
this sense He was anxious to "lose none"; but He did lose the one into
whom Satan had entered, and He refers to him not so much for His own sake
as that He may rejoice the more in the constancy of those who remained.
But the whole reference, as it seems to me, is not to the final and eternal
state of men in the unseen world, but to continuance and steadfastness
in relation to a given crisis.
"This ministry and apostleship,
from which Judas by transgression fell, that he might go to his own place"
(Acts 1:25 ). One reputable scholar has suggested that the words "go
to his own place" may refer to Matthias, and not to Judas; but the suggestion
does not commend itself to my judgment. I think we should lose a good deal
by accepting this interpretation. I hold that this is an instance of exquisite
delicacy on the part of Peter: no judgment is pronounced; the fall is spoken
of only as official and as involving official results, and the sinner himself
is left in the hands of God. It is in this spirit that Peter speaks of
Judas:
Owning his weakness,
His evil behavior,
And leaving with meekness
His sins to his Savior.
Practical
Such a study as this can hardly
fail to be fruitful of suggestion to the nominal followers of Christ in
all ages. What are its lessons to ourselves-to ourselves as Christians,
ministers, office-bearers, and stewards of heavenly mysteries?
1. Our first lesson will
be found in the fact that when our Lord said to His disciples, "One of
you shall betray me , every one of them began to say, "Is it I?" Instead
of being shocked even to indignation, each of the disciples put it to himself
as a possibility; "it may be I; Lord, is it I?" This is the
right spirit in which to hold all our privileges. We should regard it as
a possibility that the strongest may fall, and even the oldest may
betray His trust. "Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he
fall."
Do you suppose that there
was but one betrayal of the Lord once for all, and that the infamous
crime can never be repeated? "I tell you, nay"! There are predictions yet
to be realized—"There shall be false teachers among you, who privily shall
bring in damnable heresies, even denying the Lord that bought them";—"Lord,
is it IT It shall surely be more tolerable for Judas Iscariot in the day
of judgment than for that man! living in the light of. gospel day; professing
to have received the Holy Spirit; ordained as a minister of the Cross;
holding office in the Christian church-"it is impossible for those who
were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made
partakers of the Holy Spirit, and have tasted the good Word of God, and
the powers of the world to come, if they shall fall away, to renew them
again to repentance; seeing that they crucify to themselves the Son of
God afresh, and put Him to an open shame." "Lord, is it I?"
"In the last days perilous
times shall come; men shall be traitors"—"Lord, is it I?" Governing our
life by this self-misgiving spirit, not thinking all men sinful but ourselves,
we shall be saved from the boastfulness which is practical blasphemy, and
our energy shall be kept from fanaticism by the chastening influence of
self-doubt. Looking upon all the mighty men who have made shipwreck of
faith and a good conscience-Adam, Saul, Solomon, Judas-let us be careful
lest after having preached to others we ourselves should be cast away.
It is true that we cannot
repeat the literal crime of Judas, but there are greater enormities than
his! We can outdo Judas in sin! "Whosoever speaketh a word against the
Son of man it shall be forgiven him, but whosoever speaketh against the
Holy Spirit it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world, nor in
the world to come" (Matt. 12:32). We cannot sell the body, but we can grieve
the Spirit! There can be no more coverianting over the Lords bones, but
we can plunge a keener spear into His heart than that which drew forth
blood and water from His side; we cannot nail Him to the accursed tree,
but we can pierce Him through with many sorrows.
Judas died by the vengeance
of his own hand; of how much sorer punishment, suppose, shall he be thought
worthy, who has done despite to the Spirit of Grace? Judas shall rise in
judgment with this generation, and shall condemn it, because when he saw
the error of his ways he repented himself, and made restitution of his
unholy gains; but we have rolled iniquity under our tongue as a sweet morsel,
we have held our places in the sanctuary while our heart has been the habitation
of the enemy! It will be a fatal error on our part if we suppose that human
iniquity reached its culmination in the sin of Judas, and that after his
wickedness all other guilt is contemptible in magnitude and trivial in
effect. Jesus Christ teaches another doctrine: He points to a higher crime-that
higher crime, the sin against the Holy Spirit, He leaves without specific
and curious definition that out of its possibility may come a continual
fear, and a perpetual discipline. Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God, whereby
you are sealed to the day of redemption!
2. Our second lesson is a
caution against mere intellectual sagacity in directing the affairs of
the Christian kingdom. It is admitted on all hands that Judas Iscariot
was far ahead of the other apostles in many intellectual qualities, yet
"Judas by transgression fell." How self-controlled he was, how stealthy
was his step, how lingering and watchful his cunning! And if Whately and
De Quincey be right in the suggestion that he merely wanted to force the
Lord to declare Himself the Prince of princes and make Israel glad by despoiling
the oppressor, it discovers the instinct of statesmanship, and shows how
his strategic ambition sought to ensnare the Roman fowler in his own net.
Judas is supposed to have
reasoned thus with himself: This Jesus is He who will redeem Israel; the
whole twelve of us think so; yet He hesitates, for some reason we cannot
understand; His power is astounding, His life is noble. This will I do,
I will bring things to a crisis by going to the authorities and making
them an offer. I believe they will snatch at my proposition, and when they
come to work it out He will smite them with His great power, and will avenge
the insult by establishing His supremacy as King and Lord of Israel. As
a matter of fact we know that this kind of reasoning has played no small
part in the history of the church. The spiritual kingdom of Christ has
suffered severely at the hands of men who have been proud of their own
diplomacy and generalship; men fond of elaborating intricate organizations,
of playing one influence against another, and of making up for the slowness
of time by dramatic surprises alike of sympathy and collision. It is for
this reason that I cannot view without alarm the possible misuse of congresses,
conferences, unions, and councils: these institutions will only be of real
service to the cause of the Cross in proportion as spiritual influence
is supreme-once let political sagacity, diplomatic ingenuity, and official
adroitness in the management of details, become unduly valued, and you
change the center of gravity, and bring the church into imminent peril.
Unquestionably human nature
loves dexterity and will pay high prices for all kinds of conjuring, and
loudly applaud the hero who does apparent impossibilities. From this innate
love of mere cleverness may come betrayals, compromises, and casuistries
which crucify the Son of God afresh. Judas looked to the end to vindicate
if not to sanctify the means; and this is the policy of all dexterous managers,
the very soul of Jesuistry, and a chosen instrument of the devil. I do
not pray for a leader, fertile in resource, supple and prompt in movement.
My prayer is for a man of another stamp, even for an Inspirer, who,
by the ardor of his holiness, the keenness of his spiritual insight, and
the unction of his prayers, shall help us truthward and heavenward. Under
his leadership we shall hear no more about secularities and temporalities,
but every action-the opening of the doors and the lighting of the lamps
of the sanctuary-shall be done by hands which were first outstretched in
prayer. Not the crafty Judas, but the loving John will help us best in
all our work; not the man inexhaustible in tricks of management, but the
man of spiritual intelligence and fervor, will deliver us most successfully
in the time of straits and dangers. Managers, leaders, draftsmen, and pioneers,
we shall of course never cease to want, and their abilities will always
be of high value to every good cause; yet one thing is needful above all
others—closeness to the dear Lord, and daily continuance in prayer.