What did Judas Betray?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 29 เม.ย. 2024
  • Visit www.bartehrman.com/courses/ to shop from Bart Ehrman’s online courses and get a special discount by using code: MJPODCAST on all courses.
    The Gospels agree that Judas Iscariot betrayed Jesus, even if they don't agree on why he did it. But is their view about what he did plausible? That he told the authorities where they could find Jesus without any crowds around? There are, in fact, reasons for thinking that Judas did something far more sinister, that he revealed a key teaching of Jesus given to his closest followers but he did not proclaim in public. Did Judas reveal a secret teaching that led to Jesus' crucifixion?
    Megan asks Bart:
    - What career path would you have chosen if you hadn't pursued academia?
    - Can you briefly tell us who Judas Iscariot was and what his name means?
    - Why is it important to talk about Judas and his role in the New Testament?
    - Do the four canonical gospels have significant differences in what they say about Judas?
    - Could you give an example of one of the contradictions?
    - Some scholars argue that there never was a Judas Iscariot, that he is a figure invented by the Christians. Do you agree with that view?
    - The gospels describe how Judas identified Jesus for the Roman authorities, which has always been a point of confusion for me. It doesn’t seem that Jesus was particularly quiet, or interested in avoiding attention, so why did the authorities need Judas to point him out to them?
    - If Judas wasn’t actually employed to simply point Jesus out to the authorities, then what information could he actually have provided that led to Jesus’ arrest?
    - Would just the use of the term messiah have been enough to trigger an arrest?
    - Why do you think Judas betrayed that Jesus was calling himself the messiah, not his location?
    - What are your reasons for thinking that Jesus is teaching this information privately?
    - The million dollar question: why would Judas turn on his leader, especially if Judas is being promised a throne in the future kingdom? Obviously, we can’t know for certain, but what are some of the motives that have been ascribed to him over the years?
    - Which motive do you find most compelling?
    - Do you think Judas was expecting the crucifixion as the outcome?

ความคิดเห็น • 739

  • @Valdagast
    @Valdagast 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +129

    "we don't know" are the most important words any intellectually honest man can say

    • @jeffryphillipsburns
      @jeffryphillipsburns 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      How about “ *I* don’t know”? “WE don’t know” requires no humility whatsoever.

    • @alg11297
      @alg11297 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Don't you think the story should have internal consistency?

    • @kevin6293
      @kevin6293 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      By “honest” you must mean “lazy”

    • @alg11297
      @alg11297 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@kevin6293 I must

    • @kevin6293
      @kevin6293 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@alg11297 you’re smart

  • @quietjarvis
    @quietjarvis 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +11

    This episode was absolutely fascinating and thought-provoking.
    The whole idea of jewish messianic movements in the 1st century should be addressed in a future video

  • @djparn007
    @djparn007 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +10

    I agree with the idea that Judas was trying to kick-start the return of the kingdom of god. It never made sense to me that he did it only for money. Thank you, Bart and Megan. 👍👍👍

  • @readingbetweentheframes
    @readingbetweentheframes 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +40

    I would really love to see Bart tackle the lines where Jesus calls out to God “why have you forsaken me.” It’s especially chilling in the context of him not being resurrected and seems to be an odd thing to just write in.

    • @venenareligioest410
      @venenareligioest410 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

      Seven different versions, in different places in the Gospel accounts: three in Luke, one in Matthew and Mark, and three in John. Probably (allegedly) one of the most profound utterances in the history of mankind and they have to embellish and lie about it! Did it happen at all???
      Luke 23:34: And Jesus said, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do." And they cast lots to divide his garments.
      Luke 23:43: And he said to him, "Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise."
      John 19:26-27: When Jesus saw his mother and the disciple whom he loved standing nearby, he said to his mother, "Woman, behold, your son!" Then he said to the disciple, "Behold, your mother!" And from that hour the disciple took her to his own home.
      Matthew 27:45-46: Now from the sixth hour there was darkness over all the land until the ninth hour. And about the ninth hour Jesus cried out with a loud voice, saying, "Eli, Eli, lema sabachthani?" that is, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"
      Mark 15:33-34: And when the sixth hour had come, there was darkness over the whole land until the ninth hour. And at the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice, "Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachthani?" which means, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"
      John 19:28: After this, Jesus, knowing that all was now finished, said (to fulfill the Scripture), "I thirst."
      John 19:30a: When Jesus had received the sour wine, he said, "It is finished," and he bowed his head and gave up his spirit.
      Luke 23:45b-46: And the curtain of the temple was torn in two. Then Jesus, calling out with a loud voice, said, "Father, into your hands I commit my spirit!" And having said this he breathed his last.

    • @MrRainrunner
      @MrRainrunner 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      I would to!
      I'm pretty sure that is what the movie "The Last Temptation of Christ" was all about.. The line indicates doubt, which Jesus could not have...the movie/story lets Jesus play that doubt out and in the end, he reconciles the doubt and willingly "dies for our sins". That said, I am an atheist and do not believe in the bible whatsoever but thought the movie was brilliant...in the way it dealt with that obvious contradiction.

    • @russellmiles2861
      @russellmiles2861 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      The Trinity is the theological construct to resolve this issue
      The more interesting thing is as the Disciples are asleep - the author says this 3 times - who would hear this prayer
      The answer is the author who casts himself as the Naked man
      This sounds so like a mythical tale ... It was just made up.

    • @davidk7529
      @davidk7529 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      He covered that exact thing in depth and detail in one of his courses, and I think he might have mentioned it on the podcast at one point. It is a pretty weird story behind the totally different versions and translations and theology drivers for just that one line in that one scene that isn’t even consistent across the canonic gospels.

    • @theswan1852
      @theswan1852 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      I'm sure Ehrman has a vid about that if you look. Years ago. The 7 things is in the title.

  • @jeremiahrajanesan829
    @jeremiahrajanesan829 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    Megan is spot on! This question@21.30 has been plaguing me for long time.For such a public figure like Jesus why Judas is required to identify,follow and arrest !

    • @michaeltelson9798
      @michaeltelson9798 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Once Judea became a Roman province and not a client kingdom the question of sedition comes up. Caesar was the titular ruler of Judea and if the people are proclaiming someone with a title reserved for Judean kings that would be sedition in their eyes.
      Crucifixion was a punishment reserved for sedition by non Romans. Roman citizens were beheaded. The labeling of “King of the Jews” attest to that theory.
      The 2 robbers on the crosses were probably escaped slaves that became robbers as other punishments were reserved for robbers not as public. Public punishment of slaves was used to keep them in line as slaves weren’t marked as slaves although proposed rules were made but not put into effect.

    • @darrellcriswell9919
      @darrellcriswell9919 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Unlikely Jesus was well known, maybe had about one hundred followers. The two others on the cross were almost certainly insurrectionists like Jesus, that is what people were crucified for.

    • @saminhaque13-52
      @saminhaque13-52 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Crucification was a method of execution that was reserved for high-profile criminals. According to Josephus, that execution method was used by the kings of Judea in coordination with roman authorities to execute dissidents, critics or subversive individuals. One of the chief institution of Judea that represented the ethnic population was the office of the high priest. Josephus portrays the office of the high priest and Roman governors and legates to be in constant communication with each other, especially after Herod Archelaus was ousted. Josephus' account of jewish history under the romans is replete with intrigues surrounding the office of the high priest, as it was the most prestigious position that could be gained without a fixed hereditary lineage. Priests conspired against other priest to make them fall out of favour in relation to the roman authority. This is what happened with Ananias and Jonathan. Numerous times, the chief priests used this relationship with the Roman governor to remove their enemies or individuals they found problematic. The most common method of execution for Jewish dissidents against the priestly establishment was stoning, but crucifixion was also used when they wanted to make an example out of someone. In return, the high priest would agree to be loyal and supportive of the roman rule. This was one of numerous tacit agreements between these two highly influential offices to maintain and exert their power.

    • @saminhaque13-52
      @saminhaque13-52 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It had been just a few days since he came back to Jerusalem; he wasn't a very famous public figure, not as much as temple officials. He was viewed more as thorn on the side of the Jewish establishment who could rally the support of the crowd in public confrontations due to his edifying and wise words. He never posed a serious threat to their authority, but had repeatedly offended them and denounced their practices (such as allowing money lenders in the temple), and they wanted to prevent public opinion from turning against them- it hadn't by that point, since the public ended up enthusiastically supporting Jesus' crucifixion. Their motivation was most likely due to a sense of indignation against him, and to prevent their popularity from waning further. Now, as for the ease of identification- we know that Jesus wore similar clothes to his disciples, he did not take adornments or flamboyant displays like the jewish priests. Confrontations between Jesus and the jewish leaders was not a regular or daily occurrence, but happened on a specific number of times- most of them were more busy with other religious duties. Putting all these facts together, it can be contended that the priests weren't sure of their ability to single out and spot Jesus amongst his disciples, especially at night time (they didn't want to create a fuss during daytime), thus they recruited the services of one of the close disciples to pick out Jesus for them

  • @leedoss6905
    @leedoss6905 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +10

    Look for the guy with the ring around his head.

  • @T-41
    @T-41 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    Thank you Dr. Ehrman for another interesting and thought provoking program. I learn something always.

  • @MisterJang0
    @MisterJang0 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I once tripped and fell down in a parking lot. My only injuries were scrapes on my hands and knees. And another time I actually fainted and fell face first onto a hard tile floor, and I woke up with bleeding on one of my eyebrow ridges. Judas fell in a field, onto dirt; his guts bursting out makes literally no sense.

  • @jannetteberends8730
    @jannetteberends8730 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +29

    I learned that Judas did this because he was disappointed that Jesus wasn’t intending to start a revolt against the Romans. And was mad at him.
    His betrayal being an impulsive decision, and he regretted it sincerely very soon. I always felt sorry for the guy.
    Later, when I saw the life of Brian, the revolutionary played by John Cleese fitted this picture perfectly.

    • @ikr9358
      @ikr9358 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      It makes sense if Jesus' disciples believed that he was the Jewish Messiah, someone who was going to overthrow the Romans and create a new Jewish state.

    • @rstevewarmorycom
      @rstevewarmorycom 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      That's as much fiction as Monty Python. Xtians sitting around hypothesizing about fictional events is the height of stupidity!!

    • @jannetteberends8730
      @jannetteberends8730 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@rstevewarmorycom thank you very much for you friendly reaction.

    • @rstevewarmorycom
      @rstevewarmorycom 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@jannetteberends8730
      Well, it IS fiction, you know! So is jesus, by the way! Well over 50 choniclers, among them over 30 Roman and Greek scholars who were in Jerusalem from 25 to 38 AD precisely to study jewish cults, and who all wrote voluminously about events of the times saw: NO jesus/yeshua, NO disciples, NO ministry, NO miracles, NO teachings, and NOT ONE crucifixion of ANYBODY of jesus description was ever seen or reported by them!!!
      In fact we can find NO other writing about ANY jesus till after destruction of the temple in 70 AD, except Paul in 50 AD, he was killed in Rome along with Peter in 60 AD by Nero!! Paul was a Roman named Saul originally, who was a member or familiar with a cult in Greece and Turkey who worshipped the archangel Yeshua, which in Daniel and Zachariah in the torah was, in jewish angelology, the first created angel of yahweh, son of yahweh, and who was said to have performed the creation of the world for yahweh!!
      This cult existed long before 1 BC! Their worship ritual was praise of archangel Yeshua while eating bread and wine symbolizing his heavenly flesh and divine blood!! It was called the Lord's Supper, as all angels were addressed by jews and Greeks as Lord. Their lore has it that his ascension to the right hand of yahweh was by venturing into satan's lowest level of heaven, below the moon, and being captured and crucified by satan and his demons and in three days reanimated and escaped up to the 7th heaven to the right hand of yahweh and that he assisted in the judgment of the dead!
      This narrative by Paul, who in his validated epistles, spoke ONLY of the archangel Yeshua, but not on earth, he said he received a revelation of Yeshua Christ in his visions and dreams, he never met any jesus/yeshua on earth, never spoke of any disciples, nor miracles, nor ministry nor any teachings of this yeshua/jesus on earth, nor any disciples nor followers, except those receiving similar revelation, whom he called brothers!! He NEVER clearly spoke of any jesus ever living on earth. His yeshua archangel was solely contrived from his belief in Daniel and Zachariah, and his schizotypal visions and dreams!
      It's believed by scholars that a group of Greek speaking high rabbis of the jerusalem temple that was destroyed in the 70's AD who fled in the diaspora that followed, wrote what turned into the anonymous gospels, hijacking Paul's epistle narrative and fashioning it into a story of a fictional jesus on earth, written anonymously to protect themselves, and set back in history 50 years so there would be no witnesses to be fact-checked! And yahweh, whom the jews assumed had been killed or run off by the Romans, the jews believed yahweh's existence was tied to the temple! So these rabbis were trying to reignite a new judaism under the SON of Yahweh, one free of the temple mostly so these high priests could get their phony baloney jobs back, they had enjoyed extereme wealth and luxury and power in the jerusalem temple, and wanted it back!!
      In spreading the several gospels, the several tries to do so, each later named the 4 gospels, they inadvertantly created christianity, which when examined in just another jewish cult! But it was based solely on the ever better and more well-written stories of jesus on earth, in the 4 anonymous gospels, even set back in time 50 years so no witnesses of the events could be fact-checked, since people only lived to about 50 in that time!! But which story was all fiction!!
      Christianity was tiny for a long time. Only in the third century when Constantine's mother grew enamored of it did the Emperor start diverting money to it from pagan coffers, only then did it even start to grow. But after Constantine's death his mothers christian friends had Theodocius become emperor and he declared christianity the only legal religion! He sent his cavalry to enforce this and they went around killing pagans and stealing and burning the farms of pagans, and enslaving their wives and children and selling the girls as sex slaves!! The people hurriedly taught their kids the christian catechism just so that they did not die or be raped!!! This christianity finally grew like crazy only at the point of swords and spears and cavalry burning and torturing people in middle of the night!!! It was NOT in the beginning that it was popular or persuasive!!! Europe was christianized by extreme violence!! So were all things done back then!! "Nobles" saw the people as nought but their property!
      So you see, kids, it was ALL nothing but made-up shit, just as was every single story in the jewish torah/old testament!!!

    • @rstevewarmorycom
      @rstevewarmorycom 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@jannetteberends8730
      Well it IS only fiction! So was the jesus story!! Well over 50 choniclers, among them over 30 Roman and Greek scholars who were in Jerusalem from 25 to 38 AD precisely to study jewish cults, and who all wrote voluminously about events of the times saw: NO jesus/yeshua, NO disciples, NO ministry, NO miracles, NO teachings, and NOT ONE crucifixion of ANYBODY of jesus description was ever seen or reported by them!!!
      In fact we can find NO other writing about ANY jesus till after destruction of the temple in 70 AD, except Paul in 50 AD, he was killed in Rome along with Peter in 60 AD by Nero!! Paul was a Roman named Saul originally, who was a member or familiar with a cult in Greece and Turkey who worshipped the archangel Yeshua, which in Daniel and Zachariah in the torah was, in jewish angelology, the first created angel of yahweh, son of yahweh, and who was said to have performed the creation of the world for yahweh!!
      This cult existed long before 1 BC! Their worship ritual was praise of archangel Yeshua while eating bread and wine symbolizing his heavenly flesh and divine blood!! It was called the Lord's Supper, as all angels were addressed by jews and Greeks as Lord. Their lore has it that his ascension to the right hand of yahweh was by venturing into satan's lowest level of heaven, below the moon, and being captured and crucified by satan and his demons and in three days reanimated and escaped up to the 7th heaven to the right hand of yahweh and that he assisted in the judgment of the dead!
      This narrative by Paul, who in his validated epistles, spoke ONLY of the archangel Yeshua, but not on earth, he said he received a revelation of Yeshua Christ in his visions and dreams, he never met any jesus/yeshua on earth, never spoke of any disciples, nor miracles, nor ministry nor any teachings of this yeshua/jesus on earth, nor any disciples nor followers, except those receiving similar revelation, whom he called brothers!! He NEVER clearly spoke of any jesus ever living on earth. His yeshua archangel was solely contrived from his belief in Daniel and Zachariah, and his schizotypal visions and dreams!
      It's believed by scholars that a group of Greek speaking high rabbis of the jerusalem temple that was destroyed in the 70's AD who fled in the diaspora that followed, wrote what turned into the anonymous gospels, hijacking Paul's epistle narrative and fashioning it into a story of a fictional jesus on earth, written anonymously to protect themselves, and set back in history 50 years so there would be no witnesses to be fact-checked! And yahweh, whom the jews assumed had been killed or run off by the Romans, the jews believed yahweh's existence was tied to the temple! So these rabbis were trying to reignite a new judaism under the SON of Yahweh, one free of the temple mostly so these high priests could get their phony baloney jobs back, they had enjoyed extereme wealth and luxury and power in the jerusalem temple, and wanted it back!!
      In spreading the several gospels, the several tries to do so, each later named the 4 gospels, they inadvertantly created christianity, which when examined in just another jewish cult! But it was based solely on the ever better and more well-written stories of jesus on earth, in the 4 anonymous gospels, even set back in time 50 years so no witnesses of the events could be fact-checked, since people only lived to about 50 in that time!! But which story was all fiction!!
      Christianity was tiny for a long time. Only in the third century when Constantine's mother grew enamored of it did the Emperor start diverting money to it from pagan coffers, only then did it even start to grow. But after Constantine's death his mothers christian friends had Theodocius become emperor and he declared christianity the only legal religion! He sent his cavalry to enforce this and they went around killing pagans and stealing and burning the farms of pagans, and enslaving their wives and children and selling the girls as sex slaves!! The people hurriedly taught their kids the christian catechism just so that they did not die or be raped!!! This christianity finally grew like crazy only at the point of swords and spears and cavalry burning and torturing people in middle of the night!!! It was NOT in the beginning that it was popular or persuasive!!! Europe was christianized by extreme violence!! So were all things done back then!! "Nobles" saw the people as nought but their property!
      So you see, kids, it was ALL nothing but made-up shit, just as was every single story in the jewish torah/old testament!!!

  • @CarlosTorres-cb5fb
    @CarlosTorres-cb5fb 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    Excellent, magistral. Thanks to both of you.

  • @johnburn8031
    @johnburn8031 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +63

    The story of Judas leading the soldiers to Jesus never made sense to me. Wasn't Jesus supposed to be a famous miracle worker?

    • @lunarlight3131
      @lunarlight3131 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      What do you mean or trying to insinuate?

    • @johnburn8031
      @johnburn8031 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +22

      @@lunarlight3131 I mean why did Judas have to point out who Jesus was?
      The Romans could have easily arrested him in public in Jerusalem. They didn't need to sneak around in secret or have Jesus pointed out to them.
      Also, didn't Jesus interact with the relgious leaders?
      They knew what he looked like.

    • @PA1606X
      @PA1606X 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Was Yoshua not first arrested by the Temple authorities?

    • @joefromtheBronx
      @joefromtheBronx 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

      Not necessarily. He spent a year perhaps preaching in Galilee, a backwater. Wasn't like some famous celebrity the Romans knew about. Ditto the local Jerusalem Jewish leaders. We don't know how many miracles he actually committed. Other people did "miracles." Doing it in public -- with crowds in town for the festival -- could have caused problems.

    • @theswan1852
      @theswan1852 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +26

      @@johnburn8031 Wanted: caucasian male, blue eyes, blonde highlights, Greek name, wears a crucifix necklace.

  • @betzib8021
    @betzib8021 2 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Maybe judas told them that Jesus was going to say, " Come to the capitol...it will be wild!"

  • @CheburashkaGenovna
    @CheburashkaGenovna 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    Kazantzakis' interpretation of "betrayal" in "The Last Temptation" has a frighteningly plausible and deeply human explanation.
    No "betrayal" - no death - no resurrection - no salvation. Therefore, Judas' deed is an indispensable part of the divine plan.

    • @unkerpaulie
      @unkerpaulie 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      So Jesus wanted himself to be executed publicly so the human sacrifice could occur? And the beating and trial was a necessary part of this human sacrifice event? I'm sure you can imagine situations where Jesus' sacrifice occurs without this whole sequence of events being very different.

    • @ThePyrosirys
      @ThePyrosirys 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​​@@unkerpaulie Jesus didn't want it at the time, but i'm not sure that there is much room for a sacrifice without death or suffering in the framework of christian theology.
      And if he wasn't killed that way (or thought to be killed way) the religion would have had to evolve in a very different way. Maybe it would have stayed jewish?

    • @theotheoth
      @theotheoth 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Hey Cheb, exactly so! I just posted a comment above recommending Kazantzakis's novel.

    • @sophiaoconnell1927
      @sophiaoconnell1927 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      @@unkerpauliewell I think the idea is that Jesus experience a nadir of suffering is what allows him to understand the human condition fully and why he is willing to sacrifice himself in the first place. It’s all up for interpretation obviously but that’s the interpretation that feels most powerful to me imo

    • @CheburashkaGenovna
      @CheburashkaGenovna 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@unkerpaulie
      Of course, as an enlightened person of the 21st century, I can...but.... I was speaking of Kazantzakis' interpretation.
      (1) In the tension of human-divine dualism of Jesus he makes a particularly close emphasis on his human side - Jesus felt strongly and agonizing painfully God's call for his mission. Again and again under physical and mental agony he tried to evade this call.
      (2) As a pious jew of antiquaty living during vivid apocalyptic culture Jesus saw the absolute necessity of compensating for sins through sacrifice, as God's justice to preserve the order of his creation.
      (3) This sacrifice had to be violent - as all sacrifices in antiquaty have been.
      (4) Expecting that he would suffer greatly and that his fear and anxiety would overwhelm him, he asked Judas, as his closest confidant, to overcome this all too human side in order to fulfil the divine mission.

  • @leoelliondeux
    @leoelliondeux 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    This is great, ty

  • @Sxcheschka
    @Sxcheschka 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    Absolutely incredible episode, can't wait to see the next episode!

  • @siddified
    @siddified 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Dr. Bart seems to be a very pleasant person and therefore the perfect messenger for debunking entrenched beliefs.

  • @jcr3208
    @jcr3208 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I used to think Jesus dying for the sins of mankind was sad. Now as I am deconstructing, it is even more sad to me that the historical Jesus preached a message that gave people hope, and then was suddenly killed for it.

  • @sloopy5191
    @sloopy5191 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Really looking forward to hearing the two experts on their respective religious texts...I am sure much will be learned.

  • @MrMattSax
    @MrMattSax 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    Jesus rides into Jerusalem simultaneously on a donkey and a colt and everyone knows him and worships him. He causes a huge disturbance. Later, nobody knows who he is and therefore need to hire someone to identify him.

    • @frankstudent
      @frankstudent 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

      lol

    • @spiritualanarchist8162
      @spiritualanarchist8162 9 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      After such a balance act between two animals , he would have been known alright.

  • @majafleur9646
    @majafleur9646 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    So cheery and merry looking, Megan!

  • @pinball1970
    @pinball1970 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Fantastic duo

  • @joefromtheBronx
    @joefromtheBronx 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I found David Brakke's book on Gnosticism approachable. Been a while since I read it but recall enjoying it.

  • @paulkoza8652
    @paulkoza8652 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I eagerly awaited this discussion. I was so glad that Megan asked the question of whether Judas really existed. Perhaps, perhaps not. I think Bart was drawing links between events of the life of Jesus involving Judas that are very hard to substantiate. I really do not believe Barts hypothesis on this matter.

  • @MatthewDoye
    @MatthewDoye 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Super excited for the Bible & Quran course.

  • @jordanvanness7586
    @jordanvanness7586 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I'd be interested to know Bart's thoughts on how Judas' betrayal relates to the preceding account of Jesus being anointed with perfume. In comparing the gospels, it always jumps out to my interpretation as an indication that Judas' betrayal was driven by a perception that Jesus did not practice what he preached. I feel as though this is advanced by the authors having different ways of explaining the story.
    In Mark, Judas goes to betray Jesus directly after the perceived waste of a perfume worth a year's salary. When he approaches the chief priests to betray Jesus, it is the priests who offer Judas money rather than him asking for it.
    If we see Matthew as building upon Mark, the author adjusts the story presented in Mark by downplaying the price of the perfume (changing from "a year's salary" to "a high price") and having Judas approach the chief priests for the purpose of asking for payment rather than them offering it.
    If we see Luke as also building upon Mark, the author instead chooses to remove any implication about the anointment leading to Judas' betrayal by moving the anointment story to a completely different part of the gospel and stating that Judas' actions were purely caused by him being possessed by Satan.
    If we see John as building upon all prior gospels, the author of John seems to double down on these changes to the story.
    Instead of just downplaying the price of the perfume, the author of John states the anointment occurred during a special celebration and the perfume had been intentionally saved for that exact moment rather than being an extravagance. Furthermore, the author explicitly states that Judas was the only one questioning the use of the perfume, and that he only did so because he was a thief who had planned to sell the perfume and pocket the money himself.
    Instead of just having Judas' betrayal be unrelated to the anointment due to a possession by Satan before the last supper, the author of John moves the possession to take place during the last supper at the command of Jesus. Not only was the betrayal purely driven by possession of Satan, but now it was unquestionably an intentional act by Jesus through divine power.
    It seems to me that the anointment of Jesus is an event which the gospel authors felt compelled to include, yet they increasingly attempted to suppress any link it had to Judas' betrayal and any questionability of Jesus' actions. I feel as though such authorial actions could make sense in response to contemporary rumors of the anointment being an event where Jesus was betrayed by a follower due to him betraying his own teachings. Refusal to omit the anointment even though it is somewhat awkward for Jesus' message seems to imply that it historically occurred. The progressive downplaying of its outcomes seen to imply that there were some who thought it reflected poorly on Jesus.
    I'd be curious to hear the perspective of a scholar on whether or not this theory holds any water. I'm sure there are many aspects beyond my understanding.

    • @felixtoulgoat3185
      @felixtoulgoat3185 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I am not a scholar, but what you are saying sounds very interesting. I think we lack some cultural context here. If Jesus had to become King of Israel, it would make sense that there had to be at least one anointment ceremony, and considering the importance of the event, it would make sense that some expenses would have had to be made; but some people would not have viewed it favorably.
      Now, considering that judaism was all but unified at that time in history, there would have been many different jewish group with many different beliefs, and in order to be recognized as the King, he would have had to be anointed several times, by different groups. That would have meant even more expenses, and even more critics. It is possible that he was close to achieve his goals when he was arrested.

  • @KarenMcAda
    @KarenMcAda 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +16

    When I was a child and asked my father about this obvious conflict between scriptures. His explanation was that Judas BLOATED while he was hanging, which is why his body burst when the rope broke. I even felt weird about that answer when I was 9 years old.

    • @lubrew5862
      @lubrew5862 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      I always ask people about the 30 pieces of silver. Did Judas give it back to the temple or did Judas keep them and buy a field. Nine times out of ten people immediately jump to how he died because they is the apologetic that is infamous. They hardly ever will stay on the topic of the actual money, they don’t have a rewritten excuse for it.

    • @theswan1852
      @theswan1852 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Fun answer.

    • @rickybailey4085
      @rickybailey4085 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I've never understood why people are confused by The explanation that he was hanging and then fell and his intestines fell out. For as smart as he is it's like bart has no idea how it's even possible. But it actually makes perfect sense when you think about the fact that if you just said somebody was walking and fell and their intestines spilled out. You would think wait, what, I need more information. Either they fell on something or they fell From really high. it explains both If he was hanging and fell

    • @BenHameen33
      @BenHameen33 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      ​@rickybailey4085 If you say he was hanged AND his guts fell out, you're writing your own book that is different from each other book.
      Did Judas return the money, or use it to buy the field?

    • @kevin6293
      @kevin6293 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It doesn’t even matter. It’s an insignificant detail.

  • @alanpennie
    @alanpennie 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    It's striking that Luke and Matthew tell discrepant but curiously similar stories about the death of Judas.
    Good indirect evidence for the *Q* hypothesis I think.
    For those fascinated by the enigma of Judas Borges presents some shockingly heretical theories (to ponder definitely not to take as *Gospel*) in his *Three Versions of Judas*.

  • @oldernu1250
    @oldernu1250 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    This wasn't Rome's first messiah suppression, no tip off was needed. Judas was incensed that Jesus--who had introduced Hellenized philosophy into Torah teaching--was not radical enough. Judas was a traditional believer who thought Jesus cult betrayed the national uprising of the messianic Comng of the New Age.

  • @michaelsintef7337
    @michaelsintef7337 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Bart’s hypothesis makes sense regarding Jesus’ declaration that the twelve were to sit on the thrones ruling the new kingdom. This thought gives meaning to the need of the Eleven disciples in Acts who find it important to choose someone to replace Judas after his death. I often wondered why they did that. But Jesus’ words give the number twelve an importance.

  • @pascalguerandel8181
    @pascalguerandel8181 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Bart..my man!👍🤠

  • @laurencepeterson8466
    @laurencepeterson8466 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    Judas is so often depicted, especially in the arts and literature, as a revolutionary, who broke with Jesus because of the latter's desire to subordinate politics to the coming of the Kingdom of God (whatever that might bring); what Bart seems to be suggest6ing at 25 minutes is that Judas may well have betrayed Jesus inasmuch as he told the religious authorities that Jesus was claiming the Messianic mantle (whether true or not?). In such a case, is Judas not the apolitical supporter of piety over politics? Great show, as always!

  • @Robert_L_Peters
    @Robert_L_Peters 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Very interesting thank you

  • @rowdyriemer
    @rowdyriemer 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    One idea that just came to mind: You don't salute officers in the field, because it might let a sniper know that the officer is an officer, making them a prime target. Maybe the Romans just followed Judas after hearing that he was one of the disciples, and when he got to the group, just noticed the difference in how he treated Jesus as opposed to the rest of the group. Then, because of circumstances, they all decided that Judas must have ratted out Jesus. Then Judas, being blamed for Jesus's death and being rejected by the other disciples just offs himself. The thirty pieces of silver is just a retcon.
    Not sure if I buy into this idea myself, but maybe...

    • @willmosse3684
      @willmosse3684 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Like how the cops identified mafia bosses after The Godfather came out, because other mobsters started kissing the boss on the hand. That might be an apocryphal story, but it’s out there…

    • @Duiker36
      @Duiker36 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Yeah, but that's like saluting the one guy who's talking while an entire crowd stands around listening. It's not hard to identify him without the salute.

    • @jeffryphillipsburns
      @jeffryphillipsburns 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      What does “retcon” mean?

    • @rowdyriemer
      @rowdyriemer 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@Duiker36 But wasn't Jesus just with his apostles, and weren't they like taking a nap or something?

    • @terryhunt2659
      @terryhunt2659 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@jeffryphillipsburns It's a standard used term in writing film/TV series scripts or story/novel series, meaning to introduce/invent new material which explains or re-interprets (or plain contradicts) something portrayed in an earlier episode so that it becomes more consistent with subsequently written material.

  • @welcometonebalia
    @welcometonebalia 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Thank you.

  • @sailorbychoice1
    @sailorbychoice1 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +12

    Has anyone else ever questioned the stated timing of the events from the time Jesus is arrested and executed?
    He got arrested late Thursday night, is taken (on foot) before the Roman Governor, sent (on foot) to see the King, Herod, sent back (on foot) to the Roman Governor was scourged, offered up to a crowd that appeared out of nowhere, then went (on foot) through the city carrying the cross just as two other people just happen to also being crucified?
    And he died before sunset Friday early enough to be laid to rest before the sabbath so his grave can be found empty the morning after the sabbath?

    • @allanwilliams2079
      @allanwilliams2079 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @sailorbychoice 1
      The Bible does not say that Jesus was arrested on Thursday night.
      Why then are you basing your argument on misinformation??
      No where in the bible does it show that Jesus died on any Friday.

    • @terryhunt2659
      @terryhunt2659 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      He was likely arrested Wednesday night, tried informally (because at night, when the Sanhedrin could not legally meet) by Ciaphas, then more formerly by Pilate early Thursday morning, crucified, and died before sunset Thursday, the beginning of the first day of Passover - also a Sabbath - which was on Friday in AD 30 and therefore immediately preceded the regular weekly Sabbath. One of the gospels (in its original Greek) describes Mary arriving at the tomb around dawn on Sunday after the Sabbaths, plural. Some translations may obfusticate this.
      Herod, visiting Jerusalem for Passover, would almost certainly have been staying in the guest suite of the (his) Palace which was Pilate's HQ; Jesus would have merely been taken across the Palace courtyard and back, not a lengthy trip.
      Jerusalem on the Thursday would have been getting _very_ crowded by people arriving for the imminent Passover, so there would have been no lack of onlookers, particularly as the likely spot for such a presentation (if it happened) was the steps (recently excavated) on the outer side of the city wall by Pilate's residence and overlooking one of the routes to the city. How many of these onlookers could have actually understood what was going on is debatable, and in any case the Saducees were entirely capable of organising a claque.
      From there, Jesus would likely have been taken directly to the crucifixion site, on the hillside across the Kidron Valley from the city (and therefore in full view): the area already had many tombs. The whole 'Via Dolorosa' procession through the City would have been geographically unnecessary, and a risky provocation. Its claimed route has been varied several times over the centuries, and it culminates in a very unlikely location within the city walls, not outside.
      The other two victims are referred to as 'lestai', translated as 'thieves' but the term then used by the Romans for Jewish guerilla insurgents fighting the Romans' occupation. There were probably regular executions of captured lestai, and these two might even have been associated with the near riot in the Temple precincts Jesus had instigated earlier in that week - the actual Jewish uprising of AD 66 began in similar circumstances.
      His body would have had to be left from Thursday dusk to Saturday dusk in the 'emergency tomb' that the rich Sanhedrin member (and Jesus supporter) Joseph of Arimathea had commandeered. Mary of Magdala, with or without female companions, would not have dared to visit a tomb in an extra-city graveyard and execution site at night, but a party of men organised by Joseph could have done so in order to move the body to a permanent tomb, almost certainly the one 2 miles away in Tapriot that we all now know about. There would likely not have been an opportunity for Joseph to keep all of Jesus' closest followers (scattered and in hiding) fully apprised, hence the women's initial confusion a few hours later.

    • @mikeharrison1868
      @mikeharrison1868 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      It's worse than that, Jim! John's date is different than that of the synoptics.

    • @jonfromtheuk467
      @jonfromtheuk467 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@terryhunt2659 the Sabbath is ALWAYS on the same day Saturday, so the AD30 date is irrelevant. The confusion lies that in Jewish reckoning the Sabbath ( Saturday) starts when it gets dark the previous day (Friday). The bible makes this clear many times.
      Genesis 2:1-3; Exodus 20:8-11; Isaiah 58:13-14; 56:1-8; Acts 17:2; Acts 18:4, 11; Luke 4:16; Mark 2:27-28; Matthew 12:10-12; Hebrews 4:1-11; Genesis 1:5, 13-14; Nehemiah 13:19.

    • @dvdrtrgn
      @dvdrtrgn 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It would take me weeks to do all that. Time works differently in the Bible.

  • @w1s86
    @w1s86 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Thank you. I learned a lot from this. As a Theravada Buddhist, I believe in the law of karma/individual responsibility. The salvation doctrine makes no sense to me. But it's great to be able to learn about the thinking behind other religions (especially from an exceptional teacher like Bart).

  • @janetstevenson203
    @janetstevenson203 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    Another explanation re Judas is grounded in normal , every day human nature: he had a huge secret and shared it with someone he shouldnt have. Not directly with the Authorities, as he was after all a peasant fisherman -who would listen him or allow him access to them.. He,though was the originating cause of the betrayal. Just a thought..
    As always the two of you make brains tick over.. Thank you.

  • @jonathandutra4831
    @jonathandutra4831 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    Hello Bart can you please do a segment on why you date the gospel of mark to 70AD ? Ide like to hear your reason for doing so, Should be pretty simple since its the somewhat "mainstream line of scholarship". Thanks !

    • @AaronGardner98
      @AaronGardner98 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I would love to hear this, too!

    • @jonathandutra4831
      @jonathandutra4831 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @AaronGardner98 IF the mainstream line of reason is based on jesus prediction of the temple then I think that's extremely problematic. From what I'm hearing it sounds like that's the argument.

    • @Bob94390
      @Bob94390 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      The mainstream thinking involves the burning of the second temple in Jerusalem in year 70, as explained here:
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gospel_of_Mark

    • @JopJio
      @JopJio 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It should be dated even later. Modern scholars the gospels later than 70.

    • @jonathandutra4831
      @jonathandutra4831 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @JopJio That don't answer anything, I asked him what's the basis for it and your just tossing numbers out there. I've heard it's dated earlier & scholars only date it around 70 based on a "presumption" which is not how we are suppose to do history, That's bad methodology.

  • @wagsman9999
    @wagsman9999 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    Fascinating discussion! I’m no longer a believer, but still enjoy the history.

  • @nathanaelsmith3553
    @nathanaelsmith3553 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    There were no CCTV, cameras, fingerprint databases, id cards or mobile phones back then so ifentifying someone who does not want to be identified by you who tou are not familiar with would be difficult. You would need someone who is familiar with them to bring them to you or you to them. So thats what happened. Even today, if the police want to arrest someone, and know where they live, they would still need a photo of them to make aure they are arresting the right person, or id from their wallet, and would probably be in radio contact with colleagues for backup. There was none of that then, so logistically it seems plausible to me that a traitor would be required as a go between.

    • @ThetennisDr
      @ThetennisDr 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I believe these technology was there and more

    • @ThetennisDr
      @ThetennisDr 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Hence they flew Jesus back and forth to herod

    • @quietjarvis
      @quietjarvis 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      But if he was a threat and had an entourage in Jerusalem was he that hard to detect?

    • @nathanaelsmith3553
      @nathanaelsmith3553 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@quietjarvis not if you intended to arrest him in front of his followers who would likely intervene to prevent you. The individuals employed by the authorities to carry out the arrest would likely never have even seen Jesus as they would not be interested in his teachings. Even if they went to his home, they would need to be able to distinguish him from his brothers and any other guests. Jesus wasn't on social media or TV like modern celebrities. They would only have a verbal description to go from. So they needed help from someone familiar with him.

    • @JopJio
      @JopJio 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Jesus alledgly had thousands of followers and was seen by the Rabbis and everyone many times. This still doesn't make sense

  • @8mycake244
    @8mycake244 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    It seems odd that in Matthew's account, the priests refused to accept blood money, but then used it to buy a field. Didn't they use the money? This, to me, seems problematic. Essentially they took the money in the end.

    • @russellmiles2861
      @russellmiles2861 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Oh the authors point is to damme the Saccracese for Jesus' death

  • @naithom
    @naithom 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I've always questioned the story of the betrayal for several reasons. Given that same amount of money was used in other places in the Old Testment, I questioned if it was more symbolic than actual. Then there was the issue of, if Jesus was omnicient, why would he choose Judas in the first place? And, if he knew what was going to occur, then was he using Judas as a prop?

    • @Bob94390
      @Bob94390 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Now you are using rational thinking. That doesn't fit so well together with faith in an invisible man and the "son" he sent to be tortured and then be dead for a week end.

    • @terryhunt2659
      @terryhunt2659 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Gospel versions of the 'Last Supper' have Jesus identifying Judas as a future traitor, and then telling him to go and do what he must. This always sounded to me like an incomplete story the tellers did not understand.
      Within (later-developed) Christianity, it has been interpreted by some as meaning Jesus knew he 'had to die to redeem everybody else's sins', so he needed Judas to 'betray' him, perhaps sincerely, or perhaps as a prearranged ploy.
      Others theorise that Jesus - influenced by interpretations of the Book of Daniel (a 2nd-century BC forgery, we now know) and similar works as prophesying the coming 'next world', i.e. one with Judea freed from the 'world' of Roman occupation (which had succeeded the 'world' of Greek occupation, which had succeeded Persian occupation, etc.) - expected an army of angels led by the mysterious heavenly 'Son of Man' to appear, save him from the cross, expel the Romans, the corrupt Priesthood and the illegitimate Herodian rulers, and maybe install him as the true 'Messiah', i.e. the legitimate, Davidic, anointed King of Judea or greater Israel.

  • @Namename-so1dj
    @Namename-so1dj 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Question: why would early gospel writers knowingly contradict the death accounts of Judas? Why not change the account, in either Acts or Matthew, to align with each other.
    Doesn’t this indicate the reluctance to edit texts ?

    • @Bob94390
      @Bob94390 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      The bible texts have been heavily edited. If you chose one old bible and put a copy of it on your left side, and then make a list of differences that can be found in other old bibles and put on your right side, you will have much more paper on your right side.

    • @Namename-so1dj
      @Namename-so1dj 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@Bob94390fair point, but why not edit obvious contradictions, such as this specific example?

    • @ThinkitThrough-kd4fn
      @ThinkitThrough-kd4fn 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Exactly! It shows they knew they weren't writing a "newspaper account" of events. Not until much later did some christians decide that everything had to be word for word true.

    • @JopJio
      @JopJio 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@Namename-so1dj they tried. They even put all 4 gospels into one

  • @johntorres2565
    @johntorres2565 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Hair is on point.

  • @dwitede
    @dwitede 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Good, thoughtful discussion Thank you.

    • @notanemoprog
      @notanemoprog 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Now that they started doing Koran, I guess it's OK to enjoy him while we have him but also time to get ready to say "buh bye" to the good Doctor...not going to end well

  • @critter5248
    @critter5248 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    this is all coming at a wonderful time, we can reach spiritual reconciliation when people actually respect religious texts as offering something of value to us without denigrating other texts that people respect, but also recognizing errors/false information/mistakes/etc without misunderstanding.

    • @iuutoob
      @iuutoob 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      "without denigrating" other faith? (as if any of them were worthy of respect!) Jesus, in the incomprehensibly vast universe, it the only son of God, the only savior, and the only soul sitting at the right hand of god. So Christians have ragging rights, at least, and might indulge in denigration, too without God judging it as a character flaw.

    • @Bob94390
      @Bob94390 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Yes, people should read the Quran, the Vedas, the Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, the bible and so on with open eyes.
      "The best cure for Christianity is reading the bible"
      - Mark Twain

    • @critter5248
      @critter5248 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@Bob94390 I am glad we agree

  • @douglaspouch5313
    @douglaspouch5313 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Just subscribed to Dr Hashmi's channel. Very interesting.

    • @notanemoprog
      @notanemoprog 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Famous last words

    • @douglaspouch5313
      @douglaspouch5313 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@notanemoprog Why's that?

  • @iosefka7774
    @iosefka7774 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    On the name: Judas is simply the Hellenised form of Judah. The -s is necessary so that it can be declined like a normal Greek word.

  • @user-dn3qf3nf3y
    @user-dn3qf3nf3y 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Unless Judas Iscariot had a tent that was abandoned? Because king David wrote, 'May their place be deserted let there be no one to dwell in their tent's.' That's from Psalms 69:25 verse that was written about more than 1 person.

  • @fearlessweaver
    @fearlessweaver 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    IF it was an invented story, it would likely trace back to 1 Corinthians, where Paul refers to the night Jesus was "betrayed" (or "turned over" ["paredideto"]). Mark may be trying to explain the meaning of that word (which may have meant something entirely different to Paul).

  • @jiyanreksa2370
    @jiyanreksa2370 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    without Judas, there is no atonement for sins
    without the devil whispering to Judas, there is no atonement for sins
    without Pontius Pilate, there is no atonement for sins
    Without the Jewish high priest, there was no atonement for sins
    Is Pontius Pilate, the Jewish high priest, Judas, and the devil meritorious or sinful?

    • @VSE4me1
      @VSE4me1 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Without God, there is no sin in the first place. Go figure.

    • @javadhashtroudian5740
      @javadhashtroudian5740 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

      They are the heroes in the Christian mythology.
      Jesus as God cannot suffer. But if you buy that Jesus had to die on the cross so you could be saved, thank God everyday for Judas and Pilot.

  • @user-dn3qf3nf3y
    @user-dn3qf3nf3y 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    The writer of the book of Acts wrote it in the Greek language is what it was borrowing from the Septuagint and making it look like apostle Peter was speaking about Psalms 69:25 verse when he never did

  • @scolexuk
    @scolexuk 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I've always thought that Judas has an unwarranted reputation as a figure of evil. But it hadn't occurred to me until watching this episode that Judas may have been unaware of the potential consequences of his betrayal. He seems to have been motivated by impatience, frustration, and lack of faith in Jesus' approach. How devastated he must have been to see his well-intentioned plan run so completely out of his control.

  • @jeffmacdonald9863
    @jeffmacdonald9863 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    It is interesting that although the two stories of Judas's death conflict, they both share the link with the naming of the Field of Blood, so they must be drawing on a common tradition that developed two separate explanations for the connection

  • @user-dn3qf3nf3y
    @user-dn3qf3nf3y 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    In Acts 1:20 verse Apostle Peter says, 'May, ("his,") (meaning Judas's) place be deserted let there be no one to dwell in it,' apostle Peter supposedly said that in Psalm's 69:25 verse it was about Judas Iscariot when it wasnt

  • @ScottyMcYachty
    @ScottyMcYachty 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    Might wanna lower the input gain on your mic, Bart. We're getting a little distortion from clipping the signal.
    A compressor will keep your signal hot and clean. Just takes a little practice to dial it in 👍🏻

  • @davecarew1116
    @davecarew1116 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    Utterly fascinating. You two are such a wonderful team. Thank you so much!

  • @lawsonj39
    @lawsonj39 18 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    I can't help comparing Judas' possible reasons for betraying Jesus to the mindset of John Lennon's murderer, Mark Chapman. Chapman apparently was a disgruntled disciple of Lennon who saw Lennon as having failed to make good on his potential or as having led the legions of his admirers astray--toward a metaphorical cliff's edge. Chapman saw himself as the catcher in the rye who was saving Lennon's fans from being led off the cliff. A charitable interpretation of Judas' motives might explore that kind of possible logic for Judas' betrayal of Jesus.

  • @donaldemilson1330
    @donaldemilson1330 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Speaking about possible reasons for Jesus’ arrest, does anyone know if there is a video where Dr. Ehrman addresses the hypothetical relationship between Jesus (and his early followers) and the Zealots?

  • @mindfunfulness3273
    @mindfunfulness3273 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    How is it possible that there was not a single reference to the Gospel of Judas in this episode? When Dr. Ehrman was speculating about the possible reasons why Judas did what he did there wasn't a reference to the possibility of what is told in the Gospel of Judas as the motives. Very strange.

    • @BrianFedirko
      @BrianFedirko 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I wrote a gnostic gospel of Judas, and emailed it to Bart, but he didn't refer to that either. Very strange, and suspect. Dr. Ehrman talks in depth of that document in other classes and videos and question periods, so maybe check one or a dozen of those out. Gr8! Peace ☮💜Love

  • @jamesbusald7097
    @jamesbusald7097 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    After the royal prosession into Jerusalem and the cleansing of the temple would the Roman Authorities need to hear that he called himself "Massiah?"

    • @Jyyhjyyh
      @Jyyhjyyh 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      You assume the gospels' accounts are entirely accurate. Maybe those events were embellished over the years and in actuality they were small scale incidents that would have flown under the Roman radar.

    • @jamesbusald7097
      @jamesbusald7097 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@Jyyhjyyh Even if they were small scale events they would have said to anyone who heard of them that Jesus was claiming to be the "Massiah."
      If those events didn't happen on some scale- is that something his followers would have made up later? Those events would be legitimate reasons for crucifixion.
      Whereas even with those events his followers tried to make him out to be inocent.

  • @gregczarlinski2811
    @gregczarlinski2811 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Please do an episode on “the last supper”

  • @zeroclout6306
    @zeroclout6306 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    It would be great if there were some timestamps. I know some people like the small talk but I'd prefer to skip it and go straight to the meat.

  • @redoktopus3047
    @redoktopus3047 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    imagine you are having your former ex-best friend swatted and you decide to join the raid and then tell the cops "i'm gonna go in there and smooch him"

  • @mugdays
    @mugdays 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    One thing that just occurred to me: When Jesus arrived in Jerusalem, he was greeted by an adoring crowd. Yet at his trial (also in Jerusalem), he has NO supporters. Where did they go?

    • @quietjarvis
      @quietjarvis 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I always had a similar thought. Was he really that reviled by the crowd cheering for barrabas' liberation? Wasn't Jesús being adored a few days prior? I mean it was passover in Jerusalem, so different crowds maybe, and more wine flowing

    • @craigfisher4863
      @craigfisher4863 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It has long been suggested that the "crucify him" crowd in Pilate's courtyard was a hand picked crowd.
      Or this whole thing with Barabas was a fiction. I believe that Dr Ehrman is in this camp.

    • @AxelGizmo
      @AxelGizmo 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@quietjarvisI always understood this in this way: a crowd, „the mob“, shouts Hosiannah now and Crucify next. They are easily swayed.

    • @michaelnewsham1412
      @michaelnewsham1412 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      If you have ever seen a big religious festival in the Middle East, India, South-East Asia etc, there will by holy men followed by disciplined ranks of followers, often dressed the same or with some distinguishing mark, and all the crowds watching the procession will cheer them on for their great piety. Then will follow a ragtag backwoods hill-preacher with a dozen disciples and a few women and other followers bringing up the rear- and all the crowds watching will cheer them on for their great piety.
      I figure most of the onlookers had no idea who he was; they cheered him on because he was part of the parade.

  • @sailorbychoice1
    @sailorbychoice1 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    I have often wondered what were the 30 shekels of silver worth in comparative value?
    Could you live a week?
    A month?
    Year?
    Retire to the suburbs in comfort with servants?

    • @bdo7915
      @bdo7915 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Lol, i as well.. Googled during the episode, concensus seems to be 4 months wages.

    • @sailorbychoice1
      @sailorbychoice1 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      @@bdo7915 That doesn't seem much of a bribe.

    • @johnburn8031
      @johnburn8031 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      It's about three months wages for an average labourer at the time.

    • @holyguacamole4058
      @holyguacamole4058 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      that story is completely made-up... there's no way a Jew won't bargain with their counterpart, and the Bible has no record of that in the story!!

    • @notanemoprog
      @notanemoprog 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@holyguacamole4058 Oh, antisemitism!

  • @Matthew-xb1zn
    @Matthew-xb1zn 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    @15:25 -- the frown of Skepticism

  • @samiq4499
    @samiq4499 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    To add, Jesus ordered his disciples to buy weapons, yet never been mentioned on the alleged trial record.

  • @susanmcdonald9088
    @susanmcdonald9088 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Dr. Ehrman, thank you for sharing your knowledge with us out here! Your debates and singular lectures are fabulous, but this platform on various topics, is singularly thought-provoking, detailed, and easier than taking a college course taking weeks & lots of money, boom, here it is! It's surely an educational system for the cost of a phone or computer, how lucky we are today! And so many especially young people, learning! Hey, how about some visuals with your talks, BEAUTIFUL art from the West, middle ages & Renaissance paintings, portraying classic myths & surely, scenes with Judas the Betrayer... But also churches & cathedrals, grand places with the stories told in pictures for most were illiterate but also, couldnt read latin or even had access to bibles, hard to believe now, those kind of controlling laws, no, you can't have access to texts, the masses could never handle such complex things on their own.
    Course, ancient democratic Athenians would spend 5 days at the great Dionysiac festival, watching the new dramatic THEATRE, geez, kids today would find unable to understand that literary genre with ease, MEDEA, ANTIGONE, OEDIPUS THE KING or even the lengthy homeric epics, sung taking a day or two, or kids would hate to sit still for any length nor have the listening skills...
    I think Dr. Ehrman, you should do one show interviewing your host! Go cuneiform! The oldest writing in the world! And pick her brain! So much in those texts, all the original biblical flood stories, etc.
    I purchased one of those Great Courses on Mesopotamian history, whoa. But i learned when we invaded Iraq, their museum of artifacts of the oldest cities, Bush forgot to protect, and it was ransacked, airports notified and some black market items recovered, plus ones the museum's emplyees had taken home & kept safe until the war over...
    I can't think of any museum anywhere in the world, more precious!
    So, I know I've suggested this documentary to you both before, because I believe like evolutionary science opened our eyes, and the science of genetics helps historical understanding, this theory eill revolutionize our understanding of the ancients! All their myths, symbols, traditions, beliefs, religions, even the cultural positions of men & women, petroglyphs, cave paintings, monumental buildings, sacrifices, EDEN, ATLANTIS, ALL from a primeval event/s SEEN GLOBALLY IN THE SKIES!
    The explanatory power of this theory, is undeniable. And will change the course of all historians, classicists, theologians & archeologists! So much we've misunderstood about them! Or chalk it up to superstitious idiots...
    But unfortunately today, narratives of aliens, visitors, "gods" are taking over the possible narratives, just another "god" explanation of unknown origin, lol. But many, are seeing the proofs they offer, buying it wholesale, when there's another explanation...
    Which is not to say there isn't a ufo phenomena. Still, we've got to get our own history & stories & symbols, right.
    th-cam.com/video/t7EAlTcZFwY/w-d-xo.htmlsi=sAIwcP8woWNwxyYZ
    SYMBOLS OF AN ALIEN SKY documentary on YT by The Thunderbolts Project, an interdisciplinary group of mythologists, engineers, astronomers, physicists, and plasma scientists!
    Part 2, also on YT, THUNDERBOLTS OF THE GODS.
    Ever wonder what those extraordinary spikey weapons held by warriors on those cunieform tablets and etched in stone, are? COSMIC THUNDERBOLTS!
    And what if they were actually witnessed in ancient skies, the planets those gods carrying cosmic weapons, and the imaginative stories & interpretations that drove societies for millenia!
    Ones we are still killing over!

  • @alcosmic
    @alcosmic 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Dr. Michael Hudson has a theory that The Romans executed Jesus because, if he were accepted as King of the Jews, he would have the ability to declare jubilee or debt forgiveness. I think that's an interesting idea, anyway.

  • @saintbrush4398
    @saintbrush4398 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    And that throw away line of the 12 ruling the tribes of Israel didnt seem lost on early Christians either. Both the Dialogue of the Savior and the Gospel of Judas contain parts where Judas is directly told that he will govern.

  • @Bunnokazooie
    @Bunnokazooie 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    I was tempted to get into Assyriology for the same reason! When I was in college, I got to talk to a prof in the field and see his personal tablets.

  • @user-do5vu3ue5v
    @user-do5vu3ue5v 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I was under the impression that it was called "potters field" - as in a field where clay could be dug to be used
    for pottery.

    • @pinky9440
      @pinky9440 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It was called potters field, and then after Judas bled on it, it became blood field.

  • @betadecay6503
    @betadecay6503 9 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

    It's weird, every time I listen to Bart I become more convinced that Jesus is completely mythological. It's the one complete argument that answers all of the problems he has to hypothesise about.

  • @marcoruorio5846
    @marcoruorio5846 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    To my knowledge there was another Judas among the apostles (Judas Thaddeus?) who went on to become a saint...the antisemitic theory does not work with this...or does it?

  • @user-dn3qf3nf3y
    @user-dn3qf3nf3y 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Read Acts 1:20 verse then compare that to Psalms 69:25 verse and you'll see that the words on in both sentences are ("different.")

  • @Brian-kr1pt
    @Brian-kr1pt 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    It's a typology of Joseph being sold into Egypt. His brothers reject him as the jews rejected Jesus. As Joseph went to Pharaoh and ruled Egypt, Jesus went to Rome and Christianity has ruled the west to this day. As Joseph brought his family to Egypt, so Jesus is supposed to redeem the jews.

  • @beingmindful9273
    @beingmindful9273 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I do find the idea that Judas wastrying ot force the issue and get Jesu and the people to start a revolution. Some version of that make so much sense.
    Given that there were excited crowds following Jesus and he was fantastically popular, why no revolution?
    Did the people look around and say to themselves 'me face a Roman soldier- no way' and fade into the background. Was Jesus as popular was portrayed? Was Judas frustrated by the apparent lack of interest and as Bart suggests - trying to promote interest in the an injustice.
    This simple betrayal leads to so many questons. TY Mega and Bart.

  • @pinky9440
    @pinky9440 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

    My old church also subscribe to the "hanged, and the rope broke" theory.

  • @user-dn3qf3nf3y
    @user-dn3qf3nf3y 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Apostle Paul writes in Romans 11:9-10 verse that same Psalms 69 verse that king David wrote but about multiple people

  • @steveferguson698
    @steveferguson698 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    If someone told me they were a New testament scholar at a cocktail party I would be thrilled and in awe. (I'm an atheist)

  • @borneternallordallah1472
    @borneternallordallah1472 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    "STILL THE THEY GOT ME LIKE JESUS..." Chuck D/Public Enemy

  • @chrisdriver7776
    @chrisdriver7776 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    7:34
    No reaction from Megan, haha.

    • @BookHen-xn2bh
      @BookHen-xn2bh 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Well, to be fair "red hair" is not all that funny.

  • @nedcassley5169
    @nedcassley5169 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Jesus promised to install Judas on a throne to rule one of the tribes of Israel.

  • @SteveMtz7
    @SteveMtz7 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Given there’s a tradition that Jesus shared knowledge through his breath with a kiss, is it possible that Judas kissing Jesus when he betrayed him was an allusion to Judas sharing the secret knowledge of Jesus’ messianic ideas with the authorities?

  • @theunlearnedastronomer3205
    @theunlearnedastronomer3205 3 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Interesting to me that Jesus, Peter and gang are always assumed to have the best of intentions, even by scholars. My take: Jesus was some sort of cult scam artist (I don't care what century you are in, but if you're healing the blind and raising the dead, you're doing some kind of parlor trick), Judas had enough of it and turned Jesus in, and Peter whacked him for it (as he did Ananias and Sapphira) and continued the scam.

  • @donmarcoalfaro6856
    @donmarcoalfaro6856 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    For the first time in my life I think I got the right answer, and Bark was wonderful at explaining it. Thank you. I believe he's dead on, very logical and quite believable incredible thinking.

  • @Ai-he1dp
    @Ai-he1dp 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Even so there were many people saying they were god at that time in that area....magan lewis possess some interesting questions that sre not quite answered here, i doubt they can be answered here, its to dangerous to say?

    • @spiritualanarchist8162
      @spiritualanarchist8162 9 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Being god wouldn't interest the Romans. Saying your King however is a thing they wouldn't liked very much.

  • @veronicatash777
    @veronicatash777 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I thought the narrative given in the Gospel of Judas was the most compelling from a magical standpoint. Someone who was giving up something significant would have to sacrifice the Lamb of God, not himself. But then that doesnt mesh with the confused Yeshua you describe.

  • @joykeebler1916
    @joykeebler1916 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    - the song AT WAR WITH THE WORLD/Foreigner

  • @user-dn3qf3nf3y
    @user-dn3qf3nf3y 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    In Psalms 69:25 verse it actually correctly reads, 'May ("their,") (meaning more than one person) place be deserted let there be no one to dwell in ("their,") tent's.' So unless Judas Iscariot was more than one person or unless he had more than one tent that no one was to dwell in how then can Acts 1:20 verse be referring to Psalms 69:25 verse?

  • @jeffmckinnon5842
    @jeffmckinnon5842 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    How do believers in the ten commandments, conclude that it is ok to staple another book to the Bible, especially after the first commandment that seems so complete in its wording...
    Who could argue that religions are a good thing to fight about, or to kill for

  • @grumpylibrarian
    @grumpylibrarian 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    1. Judas's name bearing possible etiology would be sufficient to consider him very possibly a fabrication, but that's not the extent of the argument. Mark is a novella, and Judas is a key plot figure as the betrayer. We see vastly different portrayals of the motives of Judas by people who would have no basis for determining these motives, and would be consistent if the motives had been revealed. We have evidence from Papias of yet a third account of Judas's death, signifying that Mark's lack of comeuppance for Judas had inspired a cottage industry of inventing horrible ways for him to die.
    2. The "12 thrones" is attributed to speculative reconstructions of the Q source, but this is only actually said in Matthew. Luke mentions the disciples will sit on thrones judging the 12 tribes, but does not say how many thrones. This is clear in the Greek (Luke 22:30) and every translation into English I can find, if you wanted to make an argument from lack of punctuation. It's also a strange thing to attribute to an historical Jesus, because there weren't 12 tribes available at the time to rule. This would require restoration of the lost tribes first. The passage definitely belies a spiritual event to have taken place, and not mundane conquering by a human ruler. This therefore seems to be especially likely to never come out of Jesus's own mouth. As for Matthew, he has sloppy timelines in how he relayed the pericopes of Mark and Luke all throughout the book, and this flub is entirely within character for him.
    3. Considering the charges against Jesus and the conversations between him and his accusers as any sort of evidence to Jesus's beliefs and motives assumes that the stories we have of these encounters in the gospels are in any way correct. But even if we accepted traditional, early, eyewitness authors of the gospels, none of them were present at these trials. Nor do we have any evidence of there being a public record of these proceedings. I am cool with assuming the placard reading "KING OF THE JEWS" attached above Jesus's head on the cross as a detail that is more likely to have occurred than most in the gospels, but that doesn't give us those conversations.
    4. Assuming that Judas went to the Sanhedrin with "something they wanted" presumes Jesus was A) on their radar but B) for some reason untouchable without further evidence. The local authorities DID have the power to stone Jesus for religious blasphemy. It's possible Judas was troubled and *alerted* the local constabulary of Jesus's words and actions, who then turned him over to the Romans, but it is both unnecessary and frankly unlikely for Jesus to have been some sort of "problem" for them before then. It's likely just development of foreshadowing of the novella's villains within the book of Mark.
    5. Maybe Judas himself was a country bumpkin yokel who didn't realize the implications of his betrayal, but it's absurd to think the jewish authorities weren't painfully aware that Jesus would be crucified for this. Messiahs were a dime a dozen, Rome quashed several uprisings over and around the first century, and the eventual first Roman-Jewish war was fought over messianic claims.

    • @felixtoulgoat3185
      @felixtoulgoat3185 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Condidering your 4. : after the cleansing of the Temple, it was impossible for the religious authorities not to be aware of Jesus existence. Indeed, the aim of Jesus was probably the abolition of animal sacrifice in the Temple, and it was a dealy threat to both their authority and their money. And are you sure the priests really had the authority to kill someone? When the high priest Hanan ben Hanan put James the Just to death around 30 years later, he was removed from power by the romans because he had acted on his own. Maybe the laws changed in between?

  • @yusrialtamimi1570
    @yusrialtamimi1570 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Saying "I don't know" means how knowledgeable one is about his limitations

  • @scripturaltruth7636
    @scripturaltruth7636 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    According to old dictionaries Ish Carioth
    Was a town in Judea and Ischia was an Island
    Near Naples. The word Carioth was used for
    a horse drawn carrier in the Roman Empire
    Papias: [60-130 AD. WROTE] "Judas walked about in this world a sad example of impiety; for his body having swollen to such an extent that he could not pass where a chariot could pass easily, he was crushed by the chariot, so that his bowels gushed out.“
    Acts: "Now this man [Judas] purchased a field with the reward of iniquity; and falling headlong, he burst asunder in the midst, and all his bowels gushed out. And it was known unto all the dwellers at Jerusalem; insomuch as that field is called in their proper tongue, Aceldama, that is to say, The field of blood."

  • @jamesbusald7097
    @jamesbusald7097 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

    What and where does Bart's brother teach?

    • @BookHen-xn2bh
      @BookHen-xn2bh 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I would like to know as well.

  • @ozaurelius4128
    @ozaurelius4128 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    He hung himself over or at the side of a cliff above this field. Detectives, have to consider all possibilities.

  • @user-dn3qf3nf3y
    @user-dn3qf3nf3y 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Psalms 69:25 verse wasn't about Judas Iscariot betraying Jesus. As in Acts 1:20 verse apostle Peter supposedly said that king David wrote about Judas Iscariot betraying Jesus on in Psalm's 69:25 but king David talks about more than 1 person on in Psalms 69

  • @tr48092
    @tr48092 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Do you think Judas receiving a monetary reward, whether that was 30 pieces of silver or otherwise, was historical?

  • @user-dn3qf3nf3y
    @user-dn3qf3nf3y 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    So then how could that verse Psalm's 69:25 verse be about Judas Iscariot betraying Jesus?