A.B.D
Arabic Bible Dictionary
JUDAS
JUDAS the Graecized form of Judah. (1.) The patriarch (Matthew 1=>2,
3).
(2.) Son of Simon (John 6=>71; 13=>2, 26), surnamed Iscariot, i.e., a man of
Kerioth (Joshua 15=>25). His name is uniformly the last in the list of the
apostles, as given in the synoptic (i.e., the first three) Gospels. The evil of
his nature probably gradually unfolded itself till “Satan entered into him”
(John 13=>27), and he betrayed our Lord (18=>3). Afterwards he owned his
sin with “an exceeding bitter cry,” and cast the money he had received as
the wages of his iniquity down on the floor of the sanctuary, and
“departed and went and hanged himself’ (Matthew 27=>5). He perished in
his guilt, and “went unto his own place” (Acts 1=>25). The statement in
Acts 1=>18 that he “fell headlong and burst asunder in the midst, and all his
bowels gushed out,” is in no way contrary to that in Matthew 27=>5. The
sucide first hanged himself, perhaps over the valley of Hinnom, “and the
rope giving way, or the branch to which he hung breaking, he fell down
headlong on his face, and was crushed and mangled on the rocky pavement
below.”
Why such a man was chosen to be an apostle we know not, but it is
written that “Jesus knew from the beginning who should betray him”
(John 6=>64). Nor can any answer be satisfactorily given to the question as
to the motives that led Judas to betray his Master. “Of the motives that
have been assigned we need not care to fix on any one as that which
simply led him on. Crime is, for the most part, the result of a hundred
motives rushing with bewildering fury through the mind of the criminal.”
(3.) A Jew of Damascus (Acts 9=>11), to whose house Ananias was sent.
The street called “Straight” in which it was situated is identified with the
modern “street of bazaars,” where is still pointed out the so-called “house
of Judas.”
(4.) A Christian teacher, surnamed Barsabas. He was sent from Jerusalem
to Antioch along with Paul and Barnabas with the decision of the council
(Acts 15=>22, 27, 32). He was a “prophet” and a “chief man among the
brethren.”