Judas

Front Cover
Fortress Press, 1996 - Religion - 256 pages
This fascinating books sifts the evidence and startlingly concludes that in the earliest sources Judas was not a traitor. While the name Judas Iscariot evokes horror among many people, Klassen argues persuasively that Judas may have meant no harm in handing over Jesus to the religious authorities. The book traces the ways in which Judas is portrayed by the four writers of the gospels, showing how the picture was increasingly demonized as the later gospels were written.This is the most important study in English of Judas within the context of first-century Judaism. Klassen shows by rich reference to literature of both the ancient period and later times how the concept of Judas as traitor emerged.
 

Contents

THE NATURE OF OUR SOURCES
11
THE NAME AND ITS IDENTIFYING ROLE
28
THE ACT OF JUDAS THE TRADITIONAL POINT OF VIEW
41
JUDAS AS AN INFORMER
62
JUDAS AS SEEN THROUGH THE EYES OF MARK
77
JUDAS AS PORTRAYED BY THE GOSPEL OF MATTHEW
96
JUDAS ISCARIOT IN THE WRITINGS OF LUKE
116
THE FOURTH GOSPEL
137
JUDAS AS SEEN BY JEWISH INTERPRETERS
194
CONCLUSION
202
A SUICIDE NOTE FROM JUDAS ISCARIOT CA 30 CE
205
BIBLIOGRAPHY
209
SCRIPTURE INDEX
227
INDEX OF OTHER ANCIENT WRITINGS
232
MODERN AUTHOR INDEX
233
TOPICAL INDEX
237

THE DEATH OF JUDAS
160
THEOLOGIANS AND JUDAS ISCARIOT
177

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