Pope condemns Judas as a 'greedy liar' in Easter sermon

VATICAN: Pope Benedict XVI is trying to combat efforts to rehabilitate Christianity's most hated villain after the presentation…

VATICAN: Pope Benedict XVI is trying to combat efforts to rehabilitate Christianity's most hated villain after the presentation this month of a newly discovered "gospel according to Judas".

In his first Easter sermon at St Peter's Basilica, the pope said the 13th apostle was a greedy liar: "He evaluated Jesus in terms of power and success. For him, only power and success were real. Love didn't count."

In Washington this month, the National Geographic Society unveiled a leather-bound papyrus written around 300 AD that gives Judas's side of the story behind the most notorious deception in religious history. The 26-page manuscript says Judas was singled out by Christ from the other apostles and entrusted with revealing his whereabouts to the Romans. "You will exceed all of them," the papyrus quotes Jesus as saying. "For you will sacrifice the man that clothes me."

Theologians had been debating the role of Judas long before the release of extracts from the manuscript. One modern theory is that, like many followers of Christ, Judas expected his master to be an earthly liberator and led the Romans to him - not for the 30 pieces of silver, but to try to force him to use his powers. The pope's allusions to power and success may have been a nod in that direction. But otherwise his interpretation was strictly orthodox.

READ MORE

"The money was more important than communion with Jesus, more important than God and his love," he told a congregation in the Basilica of St John Lateran.

The pontiff made no specific allusion to the papyrus, but his sermon was clearly intended to counter it. The pope said the renegade apostle's lies had cast him into a hopeless, downward spiral. "He became hardened, incapable of conversion, of the trusting return of the prodigal son, and threw away his ruined life."

Writing in Corriere della Sera, the journalist Vittorio Messori, who wrote a book with the pope, said the pontiff's approach was "the strictest interpretation of the mystery of the betrayal". Even his predecessor, John Paul II, had seen some hope for Judas in his book, Crossing the Threshold of Hope, published in 1994.

A gospel written on behalf of history's most reviled traitor is known to have existed because its arguments were condemned by early guardians of Christian orthodoxy. The papyrus revealed this month purports to be a copy into the ancient Coptic language of a Greek version written about 100 years earlier.