|
The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ by Anne Catherine Emmerich
CHAPTER XIV.
The Despair of Judas.
|
WHILST the Jews were conducting Jesus to Pilate, the traitor Judas
walked about listening to the conversation of the crowd who followed,
and his ears were struck by words such as these: They are taking him
before Pilate; the High Priests have condemned the Galil?an to death;
he will be crucified; they will accomplish his death; he has been
already dreadfully ill-treated; his patience is wonderful; he answers
not; his only words are that he is the Messiah, and that he will be
seated at the right hand of God; they will crucify him on account of
those words; had he not said them they could not have condemned him to
death. The miscreant who sold him was one of his disciples, and had a
short time before eaten the Paschal lamb with him; not for worlds would
I have had to do with such an act; however guilty the Galil?an may be,
he has not at all events sold his friend for money; such an infamous
character as this disciple is infinitely more deserving of death.'
Then, but too late, anguish, despair, and remorse took possession of
the mind of Judas. Satan instantly prompted him to fly. He fled as if a
thousand furies were at his heel, and the bag which was hanging at his
side struck him as he ran, and propelled him as a spur from hell; but
he took it into his hand to prevent its blows. He fled as fast as
possible, but where did he fly? Not towards the crowd, that he might
cast himself at the feet of Jesus, his merciful Saviour, implore his
pardon, and beg to die with him,--not to confess his fault with true
repentance before God, but to endeavour to unburden himself before the
world of his crime, and of the price of his treachery. He ran like one
beside himself into the Temple, where several members of the Council
had gathered together after the judgment of Jesus. They looked at one
another with astonishment; and then turned their haughty countenances,
on which a smile of irony was visible, upon Judas. He with a frantic
gesture tore the thirty pieces of silver from his side, and holding
them forth with his right hand, exclaimed in accents of the most deep
despair, Take back your silver--that silver with which you bribed me to
betray this just man; take back your silver; release Jesus; our compact
is at an end; I have sinned grievously, for I have betrayed innocent
blood.' The priests answered him in the most contemptuous manner, and,
as if fearful of contaminating themselves by the contact of the reward
of the traitor, would not touch the silver he tended, but replied, What
have we to do with thy sin? If thou thinkest to have sold innocent
blood, it is thine own affair; we know what we have paid for, and we
have judged him worthy of death. Thou hast thy money, say no more.'
They addressed these words to him in the abrupt tone in which men
usually speak when anxious to get rid of a troublesome person, and
instantly arose and walked away. These words tilled Judas with such
rage and despair that he became almost frantic: his hair stood on end
on his head; he rent in two the bag which contained the thirty pieces
of silver, cast them down in the Temple, and fled to the outskirts of
the town.
I again beheld him rushing to and fro like a madman in the valley of
Hinnom: Satan was by his side in a hideous form, whispering in his ear,
to endeavour to drive him to despair, all the curses which the prophets
had hurled upon this valley, where the Jews formerly sacrificed their
children to idols.
It appeared as if all these maledictions were directed against him, as
in these words, for instance: They shall go forth, and behold the
carcases of those who have sinned against me, whose worm dieth not, and
whose fire shall never be extinguished.' Then the devil murmured in his
ears, Cain, where is thy brother Abel? What hast thou done?--his blood
cries to me for vengeance: thou art cursed upon earth, a wanderer for
ever.' When he reached the torrent of Cedron, and saw Mount Olivet, he
shuddered, turned away, and again the words vibrated in his ear,
Friend, whereto art thou come Judas, dost thou betray the Son of Man
with a kiss?' Horror filled his soul, his head began to wander, and the
arch fiend again whispered, It was here that David crossed the Cedron
when he fled from Absalom. Absalom put an end to his life by hanging
himself. It was of thee that David spoke when he said: "And they repaid
me evil for good; hatred for my love. May the devil stand at his right
hand; when he is judged, may he go out condemned. May his days be few,
and his bishopric let another take. May the iniquity of his father be
remembered in the sight of the Lord; and let not the sin of his mother
be blotted out, because he remembered not to show mercy, but persecuted
the poor man and the beggar and the broken in heart, to put him to
death. And he loved cursing, and it shall come unto him. And he put on
cursing like a garment, and it went in like water into his entrails,
and like oil into his bones. May it be unto him like, a garment which
covereth him; and like a girdle, with which he is girded continually."'
Overcome by these terrible thoughts Judas rushed on, and reached the
foot of the mountain. It was a dreary, desolate spot filled with
rubbish and putrid remains; discordant sounds from the city
reverberated in his ears, and Satan continually repeated, They are now
about to put him to death; thou hast sold him. Knowest thou not the
words of the law, "He who sells a soul among his brethren, and receives
the price of it, let him die the death"? Put an end to thy misery,
wretched one; put an end to thy misery.' Overcome by despair Judas tore
off his girdle, and hung himself on a tree which grow in a crevice of
the rock, and after death his body burst asunder, and his bowels were
scattered around.
|