Confessing Judas
MANY WERE called, only
seven responded.
As it was with our early
vocation at the Mater Boni Consilii Seminary where we ended unchosen, so it was
with our planned retreat at a Fontana villa last Friday.
Still, this did not
detract us from our pursuit for some spiritual advancement, with the Rev. Fr.
Cito Carlos as most able guide.
The Mass Among Charlie celebrated was beautiful
in its simplicity. His homily though seared our very soul. It was all about
Judas, eternally damned antagonist in the drama of Christian salvation.
“I do not approve of the
Holy Week tradition of blasting Judas in effigy. It rankles of vengeance which
is most un-Christian,” he said, even as he hastened that he had no intention of
justifying Judas’ betrayal.
An “expanded perspective
to draw some lessons, if not inspiration, from,” he said of his take on the
kissing-betrayer, which he admitted he drew from our pre-Mass pleasantries on
how he came to be our retreat master.
He chuckled upon learning
he was the fourth priest we approached to conduct our retreat, all the other
three deeming we were beyond salvation, only half-jokingly. Hence the Judas
model – not for us to emulate but to learn from.
“Yes, Judas made a deal
with the chief priests for 30 pieces of silver to deliver Jesus to them but on
condition that he should not be harmed,” Among
Charlie reminded us. “The deal went sour when Jesus was lashed, scourged,
and inflicted with all sorts of pain and insults.”
So Judas wanted out of the
deal by returning to the priests the payment, woefully sorry for what he had
done.
Indeed, Matthew 27:3-5: “Then
Judas, which had betrayed him, when he saw that he was condemned, repented
himself, and brought again the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and
elders, saying, ‘I have sinned in that I
have betrayed the innocent blood.’ And they said, ‘What is that to us? See
thou to that.’ And he cast down the pieces of silver in the temple, and
departed, and went and hanged himself.”
Suicide is abominable in
the eyes of God. So Judas compounded his already most heinous crime of
betraying the Son of God by killing himself.
But did Judas really hang
himself in remorse for what he did?
Acts 1:18-19: “Now this
man 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.”
Some apparent contradiction
there with Matthew 27:3-5 on the death of Judas and the place of circumstance,
which the succeeding verses – Matthew 27:6-8 – had as: “And the chief priests
took the silver pieces, and said, ‘It is not lawful for us to put them into the
treasury, because it is the price of blood.’ And they took counsel, and bought
with them the potter's field, to bury strangers in. Wherefore that field was
called, the field of blood, unto this day.”
Need to find some gospel
harmonist to synthesize those seeming contradictions.
My seminary brother Boiti
Portugal took a tack different from mine in our reflection on Judas: “My
mind... is in darkness! My God... God, I'm sick! I've been used! And you knew!
You knew all the time! God, I will never know why you chose me for your crime!
Your foul, bloody crime! My God, you have murdered me! Murdered me! Murdered
me! Murdered me! Murdered me! Murdered...”
Not from Matthew, Luke,
Mark or John, not even from Paul, but from Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice –
the rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar.
Yeah, instantly came to
mind there the doggone dogma of an agnostic past: “Without Judas there is no
salvation.” As instantly denounced as extreme unorthodoxy, twisted theology,
damned heresy.
So dared we flirted with some
things far beyond our theological limits. When we lacked the simple courage to
go to confession!
One of the guys, I think
it was Boss Tayag, asked if we could just write down our sins on paper to be
read in silencio by Among Charlie and burned after the Confiteor. The smoke of our contrition
rising to the heavens there.
On the other hand,
tech-savvy as he is, Ashley Manabat suggested we just text Among our sins and he would text back to us his absolution and our
penance. E-confession, anyone?
Aye, verily doing a St.
Augustine in his own Confessions we
were all there: “Da mihi castitatem et
continentiam, sed noli modo (Give me chastity and continence, but not just
yet)!”
In the end, Among Charlie issued a general
absolution – with the condition that we should go to confession at the earliest
time possible.
And everybody went to
communion. But me. Unable, unwilling to let go of Judas. As yet.
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