cover image Judas: The Most Hated Name in History

Judas: The Most Hated Name in History

Peter Stanford. Counterpoint (PGW, dist.), $28 (320p) ISBN 978-1-61902-709-1

In April 2006, scholars announced the discovery of the Gospel of Judas to great fanfare, though the fragmentary text, likely written almost 200 years after Judas Iscariot’s death, shed little light on the most vilified of Jesus’s followers. In this pedestrian study, Stanford (The Legend of Pope Joan) sheds scant new light on Judas, simply retracing older scholarship on the disciple in order to answer questions about Judas’s name’s association with betrayal and about whether or not he was an essential part of God’s scheme of enacting Jesus’s death and resurrection. Stanford moves through the canonical gospels of Mark and Matthew, uncovering the passages in which the writers establish Judas’s part in Jesus’s story. Stanford then describes medieval images of Judas that present him as Satan’s tool, further cementing his reputation as an opponent of Jesus and, later, the Church. Other books, including Reynolds Price’s portrait of Judas in A Serious Way of Wondering: The Ethics of Jesus Imagined, provide a more imaginative and complex view of the disciple. Stanford’s newest book, unfortunately, doesn’t rise above a superficial glance. (Jan.)