1. Introduction
… And they say Judas the betrayer had meticulous knowledge of these things, and since only he among all the other [disciples] knew the truth, he accomplished the mystery of the betrayal: through him all things, both earthly and heavenly, were dissolved, they say. And they adduce a work of fiction to this effect, calling it ‘The Gospel of Judas’.Footnote 1
For a short while after the Gospel of Judas from Codex Tchacos was published in 2006, it seemed as if Irenaeus' testimony was confirmed.Footnote 2 There was indeed a gnostic Gospel of Judas in which Judas excelled all other apostles in knowledge and brought about salvation by his betrayal of Jesus. Actually, it was not just an issue of excelling the other disciples; as in proto-orthodox Christianity, in the new gospel Judas and the disciples were understood to be opposed, only this time Judas was on the right side. Not long after the initial publication of the Gospel of Judas, however, this interpretation, presented by the National Geographic team who edited the manuscript, was challenged by many scholars.Footnote 3 It was argued that the ‘positive Judas’ reading of the text could only be sustained through problematic, or downright mistaken, readings of the Coptic. For instance, at 44.20, Jesus calls Judas a ‘demon’ (ⲇⲁⲓⲙⲱⲛ; the original editors first translated this as ‘spirit’, arguing that it underlines Judas' true spiritual nature);Footnote 4 at 46.24, Jesus makes it clear to Judas that he will not ascend to the holy kingdom (the original editors reconstructed and translated the exact opposite);Footnote 5 and at 46.18, Judas complains to Jesus that he has separated him apart from that (holy) generation (ⲁⲕⲡⲟⲣϫⲧ̅ ⲉⲧⲅⲉⲛⲉⲁ ⲉⲧⲙ̅ⲙⲁⲩ, the original editors read ‘apart for’).Footnote 6 Moreover, when Jesus tells Judas that he will excel the evil disciples who sacrifice to Saklas (56.18), the original editors understood Jesus' words as implying that Judas will be better than the other disciples, while the new reading argued – quite logically – that if the disciples are evil, Judas could only ‘excel’ them (ⲣ̅ ϩⲟⲩⲟ ⲉ-, literally ‘do more than’) by becoming more evil, and would thus be the most evil character in his own gospel.Footnote 7 On this interpretation then, Judas and the disciples are not opposed but simply vary in their degree of iniquity – Judas clearly the leader of the group. If that is so, what was the point of the gospel? Among others, April DeConick argued that the gospel was a gnostic parody on the sacrificial theology of the proto-orthodox church.Footnote 8 According to this interpretation, its message can be summarised by the following: ‘if indeed the death and sacrifice of Jesus are the salvific events in your belief, you proto-orthodox Christians should admire – rather than curse – Judas, for without him it would never have happened; thus, here is your gospel and here is your hero’.
I have used a very broad brush to paint the differences between the disparate positions on this enigmatic gospel, and it must be admitted that ever since its original publication and subsequent criticisms, the lines separating these positions have become less sharply defined. While it is clear that the pendulum lies currently within the ‘evil Judas’ camp, the most recent publications on this gospel strangely let Judas' disposition fade into the background, faintly implying that it is ‘ambiguous’ in some sense.Footnote 9 Thus, Louis Painchaud, who in 2008 argued that this gospel clearly demonstrates why and how Judas surpasses all the other apostles in iniquity, now argues that ‘the Gospel of Judas is not at heart intended to praise or blame its titular disciple, nor is it meant to argue for his condemnation or rehabilitation’.Footnote 10 This is also true of recent studies that imply a degree of positivity to Judas; Philippa Townsend underlines both the ambivalence of Judas' character and its possible dissociation from his actions, and Lance Jenott, in his recent book on the gospel, suggests ‘shifting the focus of discussion away from the character of Judas Iscariot and toward … the immoral character of Jesus’ twelve disciples'.Footnote 11
I am afraid, however, that that would not do. The valuation of both Judas and his actions are crucial in a gospel that is named after him: he is the main protagonist (the other disciples are not even mentioned by name, and they only speak as a group), he is the one who receives the gnostic revelation, and it is his actions that bring the gospel to a close. Therefore, any interpretation of any aspect of the Gospel of Judas which tries to lay aside Judas is quite dubious. The aforementioned publication by Painchaud is a case in point: while it is clear that he believes Judas to be an evil character in his gospel, Painchaud's own interpretations of the overall structure of the gospel – otherwise quite convincing and sound – are undermined once he lets this issue fall into the background. Painchaud argues that the Gospel of Judas
is always organized in antithetical pairs – the god of the disciples and the Father of Jesus, the holy generation and the other generations, Judas and the other disciples. The decision to use a bipartite form and to present the material in antithetical pairs is perfectly coherent with the goal of the work, namely to lead the reader to make a choice between two opposed modes of behaviour.Footnote 12
One can hardly agree more, but this bipartite division clearly puts Judas on the good side, together with the father of Jesus and the holy generation. And since Painchaud himself also stresses that ‘this stark work has no place for a tertium quid’,Footnote 13 the reader would have no other option than to choose Judas.Footnote 14
2. The Death of Jesus in the Gospel of Judas
I would therefore argue that the question regarding Judas' character and actions should not be ignored or allowed to fade into the background. Instead, I suggest reformulating it by addressing the most important event in this gospel. The Gospel of Judas culminates in the betrayal and the implied crucifixion and death of Jesus: what is the meaning of this event for the author of the gospel? If we now go back to both the positive and the negative understandings of Judas that have been suggested, we will immediately see that the betrayal and its outcome are a recurrent weakness in each and every one of them. The early interpreters of a positive Judas understood Jesus' crucifixion mostly in terms of freeing the gnostic soul from the body. Thus, Judas' ‘sacrifice’ of Jesus helps the latter to be freed from the body and to return to his heavenly abode.Footnote 15 A more nuanced version of such an understanding, brought forward by Elaine Pagels and Karen King, is that ‘when Jesus tells Judas to “sacrifice the human being who bears me,” he is asking Judas to help him demonstrate to his followers how, when they step beyond the limits of earthly existence, they, like Jesus, may step into the infinite – into God.’Footnote 16 However, both suggestions fail to convince. Jesus is already quite free in this gospel and is hardly in any need of Judas' help.Footnote 17 And, on the whole, the gospel's valuation of sacrifice is conspicuously negative;Footnote 18 if the very sacrifice of Jesus is to be understood as inherently different from all the other sacrifices in this gospel – as has indeed been suggested recentlyFootnote 19 – we should expect some indication of that, faint though it might be, in the text.
But what about the evil Judas? What is the meaning of Jesus' death according to this understanding? Admittedly, by arguing that the disciples and Judas are on an equal footing and only differing in their degree of iniquity, these interpreters stand on firmer ground regarding the gospel's view on sacrifice. All sacrifice is evil, and the sacrifice of Jesus is the worst. But why is it the worst? It must be noted that within the evil Judas interpretation, the betrayal, crucifixion and death of Jesus are ultimately meaningless and pointless in themselves. It is clear that Jesus (or his holy generation) cannot be harmed by that. And actually, the argument of these ‘evil Judas’ interpreters is not that the archons tried to harm Jesus in any way, and thus Judas' actions are evil in themselves. The argument, propounded by April DeConick and Louis Painchaud among others, is rather that the crucifixion initiated sacrificial theology and thus instigated the utterly wrong cult and belief of proto-orthodox Christianity regarding the death of Christ (which, it should be underlined again, is ultimately meaningless in itself, from a gnostic standpoint).Footnote 20 My sense is that such an interpretation could be credible if, and only if, it can be shown from the text that the sacrificial understanding of Jesus' death was a well-planned conspiracy contrived by Saklas and his archons in order to counteract the gnostic salvation brought by Jesus. That is, one should be able to demonstrate that the evil god, upon witnessing that Jesus was bringing a message of salvation from the true god, devised a well-crafted deception in collaboration with Judas to counteract this salvation by effecting the idea that Jesus is his son and messenger, and that Jesus' sacrifice will bring salvation to humanity. However, tempting as this understanding can be, I fail to see any corroboration for such a remarkable interpretation within the text. Not only is there an absence of any well-planned craft going on, it is fairly clear that both the disciples and – more importantly – that ‘thirteenth demon’ Judas are completely at a loss as to what is happening.Footnote 21 The disciples beg Jesus to save them (42.4–5), and Judas objects to the idea that his seed is under the control of the archons (46.6–7). He reflects on things exalted (35.22–3), and actually asks (and receives) a reward from Jesus for what he would do (46.16–25). Thus, while the deception of sacrificial theology may lie in the background of this gospel as a pious gnostic afterthought, it does not seem to dominate the events as they occur in the gospel itself.
3. Salvific Dissolution
So what is the meaning of Jesus' crucifixion and death in the Gospel of Judas? These events must carry an important and crucial meaning as the gospel is constructed into a well-crafted crescendo that culminates in Jesus' betrayal. Let us return to Irenaeus. What exactly does he say about the Gospel of Judas? Is there something in our gospel that goes against Irenaeus' testimony? Note that Irenaeus knows nothing of Judas being a close or intimate collaborator of Jesus, of Judas freeing Jesus from his body, of Judas being saved, or of sacrificial theology. Irenaeus argues only that in this gospel it is Judas alone who had true knowledge over against the other disciples, and that he accomplished ‘the mystery of the betrayal’ (proditionis mysterium). Both statements are corroborated in our gospel: Jesus invites Judas to ‘step away from the others and I shall tell you the mysteries of the kingdom’ (35.23–5; see also 47.1); Judas receives a superior vision of the heavenly place that is reserved for the holy (45.14–20); and, of course, Judas accomplishes the betrayal at the end of the gospel (58.24–6). So, perhaps – just perhaps – Irenaeus was also right as far as the meaning of the betrayal is concerned? Irenaeus argued that the crucifixion of Jesus had ‘thrown into confusion’ or ‘dissolved’ (dissoluta) all things, both heavenly and earthly. That is, it caused a turbulence in the archontic world that, we may presume, let the Gnostics (and perhaps the rest of humanity as well) see through the lie of Saklas' world and into the gnostic truth. In the Gospel of Mary we find a very similar formulation intimately related to the salvific work of Christ on earth, when the soul counters the gnostic archons by saying: ‘I have recognised that everything is being dissolved, both the earthly and the heavenly (things).’Footnote 22 While the Gospel of Mary does not specifically mention the crucifixion in this context, we find the dissolution and crucifixion inextricably connected in the Second Treatise of the Great Seth. Here, the crucifixion – even though it is done by the evil archons in their confused attempt to destroy Jesus – has a reverse effect (58.13–59.14):
I was the one whose cross the world (κόσμος) did not accept, (my) apparent exaltation, my third baptism in an apparent image (εἰκών), when they had fled from the fire of the seven authorities (ἐξουσία). And the sun of the powers of the archons (ἄρχων) set, darkness overtook them, and the world (κόσμος) became poor. After they bound him with many restraints, they nailed him to the cross, and they fastened him with four nails of bronze. The veil of his temple he tore with his hands. There was a trembling that overcame the chaos (χάος) of the earth, for the souls (ψυχή) which were in the sleep below were released, and they were resurrected. They walked about boldly, having laid aside jealousy of ignorance and unlearnedness beside the dead tombs, having put on the new man, having come to know that blessed and perfect one of the eternal and incomprehensible Father and of the boundless light, which I am. When I came to my own and joined them with myself, there was no need (χρεία) for many words, for (γάρ) our thought (ἔννοια) was with their thought (ἔννοια).Footnote 23
And while Judas' role in this salvific dissolution is not mentioned by the author of the Second Treatise of the Great Seth, the Nag Hammadi Concept of Our Great Power does not fail to note his role. Moreover, clearly echoing Jesus' proclamation in the Gospel of Judas on how Judas's ‘wrath has been kindled’ (ⲡⲉⲕϭⲱⲛⲧ̅ ⲁϥⲙⲟⲩϩ, 56.22), the author of the Concept of Our Great Power stresses how fire seized Judas' soul (ⲁⲩⲕⲱϩⲧ̅ ϫⲓ ⲉⲧⲉϥⲯⲩⲭⲏ):
Then (τότε) a great turmoil arose; the archons roused their wrath against him and wished to deliver him to the ruler of Hades. Then (τότε) they came to know one of his followers; a fire had seized his soul (ψυχή). He handed over (παραδιδόναι) him without anyone's knowledge. They acted and seized him; they themselves brought their judgement upon themselves. And they handed over (παραδιδόναι) him (i.e. Christ) to the ruler of Hades but gave him (i.e. Judas) to Sasabek and Berot. He (i.e. Christ) had prepared himself to go down and confound (ἐλέγχειν) them. Then (τότε) the ruler of Hades took him, but the manner (τρόπος) of his flesh (σάρξ) he could not hold, to show it to the archons. But (ἀλλά) he kept repeating: ‘Who is this? What is he? His word (λόγος) has annulled the law (νόμος) of the aeon …’ The archons inquired into what has taken place. They did not know that this was the sign (σημεῖον) of their destruction and was the change of the aeon. The sun set in the daytime; they day was darkened. The demons (δαιμόνιον) shuddered. And after these things he will appear ascending, and the sign (σημεῖον) of the aeon will come to appear, and the aeons will melt away. And blessed (μαϰάριος) will be those who will understand (νοεῖν) … And they will be revealed and be blessed because they will have understood (νοεῖν) the truth.Footnote 24
Considering these parallels, then, it may not be far-fetched to suggest that Irenaeus was right regarding the effect of Judas' betrayal as well, and the crucifixion of Jesus in the Gospel of Judas was salvific (according to the Gnostics) since it started a process of dissolution that gave away the lie of the archontic world and allowed the salvation of the holy generation. The fragmentary state of Codex Tchacos prevents a definite conclusion, but it is important to note that the Gospel of Judas shares much of its imagery with the Second Treatise of the Great Seth and The Concept of Our Great Power.Footnote 25 Moreover, there is nothing in the gospel that contradicts such an understanding, and, most importantly, the main motif of the work even seems to recommend it; the stars, as a part of the archontic world, are evil, but at the same time they ‘bring everything to completion’ (40.17–19) and thus initiate an apocalyptic salvation. While the holy generation will ultimately rest in the place where neither the sun nor the moon rule (45.20–1), this is clearly not the present situation. Each disciple has a star (42.7–8), including Judas. The disciples' stars lead them to their atrocious activity (38.1–40.18), thus drawing near the dissolution, perhaps even in the sense of Mitzvah HaBaa BeAvera, or salvation through sin.Footnote 26 But the star of Judas instructs him to betray Jesus (56.23), and leads the way after Jesus when he enters into the cloud (57.15–20), thus prefiguring his betrayal and crucifixion which will trigger the salvific dissolution. Both the disciples and Judas have a part in initiating the salvific dissolution, then, with the important distinction that the disciples do this inadvertently and unknowingly, while Judas has gnōsis.
4. The Mystery of the Betrayal
But could the issue thus be decided? Do we have an utterly positive Judas who knowingly brings salvation through his betrayal? My answer is no … and yes. While it is obvious that Judas' actions are good and they should necessarily interact with his character, and while Judas does receive gnōsis from Jesus, he is evidently not considered as a gnostic disciple in this gospel: it is clearly stated that he will never belong to the holy generation (45.11–19 and 46.25–47.1). But how could that be explained? My suggestion is that this gospel is actually the explanation of this very paradox, but that it is perhaps not entirely clear and – due to the state of the manuscript – is quite a fragmentary explanation. It may be that this work was composed by a gnostic who inquired into a question which the writers of the New Testament and other early proto-orthodox Christians rarely tackled: assuming that Jesus' crucifixion was crucial to salvation, how should Judas be evaluated?
4.1 The New Testament and Later Christian Sources
The earliest sources on Jesus' crucifixion are notoriously silent regarding the role and motive of Judas in this event. Paul apparently knows nothing of Judas or of a betrayal. To be sure, he is aware that Jesus was ‘handed over’ to be crucified, but, quite logically from the perspective of a person who believed in the salvation of the cross, when he does ascribe this ‘handing over’ to someone, it is either to Jesus himself (Gal 2.20: παραδόντος ἑαυτόν) or to God (Rom 8.32: ὁ θεὸς … ὑπὲρ ἡμῶν πάντων παρέδωκεν αὐτόν).Footnote 27 It was left to later sources to set the record straight. While Mark still preserved some ambiguity in Jesus' famous prophecy that ‘the Son of Man goes as it is written of him, but woe to that one by whom the Son of Man is betrayed! It would have been better for that one not to have been born’ (Mark 14.21 NRSV) – an ambiguity that was to be taken over by Luke (22.22) and Matthew (26.24) – later sources almost uniformly and unequivocally stressed the malevolence of Judas.Footnote 28 This is evident in Luke-Acts and Matthew, who make sure Judas will not go unpunished and inform us of his death either by suicide (Matt 27.5) or by a gruesome ‘accident’ (Acts 1.18). As Arie Zwiep notes, since there are ‘no uninterpreted versions of Judas' death’, both Luke and Matthew as well as later Christian tradition stressed the terrible end of Judas in conformity with Jewish and Greco-Roman literary conventions of theodicy: ‘a wicked man will die a wicked death’.Footnote 29 And even though the Gospel of John begs to differ here and does not mention Judas' horrific end, the author of this gospel still employs the utmost Greco-Roman character typing in order to accentuate Judas' guilt.Footnote 30 Later sources would only increase Judas' malevolence to absurd proportions, by looking either to the past, at the wicked and demon-ridden child he was, or to his prolonged suffering and appalling aftermath.Footnote 31
4.2 The Gospel of Judas
Unbounded by the New Testament authors' portrayal of an evil Judas, being at a safe distance from the historical event, and also having a very different understanding of death in general – and the (apparent) death of Jesus in particular (cf. 56.19–20) – the author of the Gospel of Judas took a different route to try and explain Judas' character and motives. This author reasoned that Judas could not be that bad as he contributed to salvation and he also opposed the proto-orthodox. While my enemy's enemy is not always necessarily my friend, he may have some good points.Footnote 32 Further, our author reasoned, in order to initiate salvation, Judas had to know something about the gnostic world (as opposed to the proto-orthodox), and this knowledge could have been provided by no one other than Jesus himself. Such a knowledge may have caused Judas to entertain some hopes for salvation, but since our author did not find any rationale or precedent for such a claim they probably refrained from making this further step. The author did reason, however, that Judas was entitled for something in exchange for his service, and he received it. Such a scenario appears to me to be the only one that provides a sufficient explanation for the following, otherwise opaque, interchange between Jesus and Judas (46.12–23):
‘… you will grieve much when you see the kingdom and all its generation.’ When Judas heard this he said to him, ‘What is the advantage that I have received? For you have set me apart from that generation.’ Jesus answered and said, ‘You will become the thirteenth, and you will be cursed by the other generations, and you will come to rule over them …’Footnote 33
The Coptic word ϩⲟⲩⲟ which has been translated as ‘advantage’ could just as easily have been translated as ‘profit’,Footnote 34 stressing further that Judas believed he should be rewarded by Jesus for what he would do (and thus could hardly be the extremely evil Judas that tried to block salvation) and that Jesus, while agreeing that Judas should be rewarded, would only allow him a second prize (and thus can hardly have considered Judas his closest and most trusted collaborator).Footnote 35 This is probably the conclusion that our gnostic author was able to devise: while Judas was helpful in bringing about salvation, and knew what he was doing, he was no gnostic. The other disciples, cattle no less than the cattle they lead astray on the altar (39.25–8), were not even worthy of consideration and now ignorantly blame everything on Judas. The author of the gospel added a finishing touch changing Judas' aftermath: since he was not evil, gruesome death did not seem apt. On the contrary, he could even be imagined as the first ‘internal’ martyr, as the first to feel the violence of the proto-orthodox church.Footnote 36 Thus he did not burst open by falling in his own field as in Acts, much less did he hang himself as in Matthew, but was rather stoned by the other disciples (44.26–45.1), only to eventually become their ruler.Footnote 37
Where, then, does that leave us? It leaves us with a gospel that clearly corroborates its contemporary description by Irenaeus while being the thought experiment of a gnostic who believed in the salvific dissolution brought through the crucifixion of Christ, as portrayed in the Second Treatise of the Great Seth and directly aligned with Judas' action in the Concept of our Great Power. In the former, Judas is not mentioned, and the latter only enigmatically refers to his role and proceeds to lay all the blame on the archons. Consequently, such lacunae may have been exactly what motivated our author to inquire after Judas' motives, role and aftermath, and to produce a document like the Gospel of Judas. It was thus not a parody – and that solves the problem that we have no parallel for such a parodic writing – and Judas was not evil – which in turn solves the problem that we have no example of a gospel ascribed to an evil character.Footnote 38 The writer of this gospel tried to tackle a question that, as we have seen, very few other early Christians had dared to address directly. While Paul could only ascribe Jesus' ‘handing over’ to Jesus himself (Gal 2.20) or to God (Rom 8.32), and Mark's gospel still faintly stresses the ambiguity of Judas and his actions (Mark 14.21), later proto-orthodox Christian tradition almost unequivocally accentuated Judas' iniquity and his dismal aftermath to preposterous dimensions, as though exaggeration or shouting the loudest might successfully banish any intimidating ambiguity.Footnote 39 The author of the Gospel of Judas, on the other hand, apparently had the integrity to acknowledge directly that without Judas' betrayal there would have been no salvation and to inquire how this was possible without recasting the Judas affair as ‘a divine trick at the unfortunate cost of a human individual’.Footnote 40 The solution our author provided to this ‘mystery of the betrayal’ may be judged to be either a modest success or a glorious failure. But at least they tried.