By Johann Peter Lange
Edited by Rev. Marcus Dods
THE HISTORICAL DELINEATION OF THE LIFE OF JESUS.
THE FINAL SURRENDER OF CHRIST TO THE MESSIANIC ENTHUSIASM OF HIS PEOPLE.
Section III the banquet at Bethany, and the anointing. the betrayal (Mat 26:6-16; Mar 14:3-11; Luk 22:1-6; Joh 12:1-11)
In the Old Testament arrangement
of life, the work-days precede
the rest-days; the holiday is
earned, and is therefore only a
lawful repose. In the New
Testament arrangement, on the
contrary, the Sundays precede
the work-days, not only in the
ordering of the church-life, but
also variously in the way of
inward self-direction. Certainly
Sundays must also again follow
the weeks of work; and, indeed,
ever loftier and brighter in
proportion as the labours have
been more definite. Even to the
Lord Himself was appointed a
Sunday’s repose for His
refreshing and strengthening
before His last great week’s
work. It was prepared for Him by
the souls of disciples, in whom
His Spirit had already begun
effectually to operate as the
living Spirit of Christianity.
The first portion of this holy
day was prepared for Him by His
friends in Bethany, probably on
the evening of the last Saturday
of His pilgrimage, which already
belonged to the next Sunday. The
second portion of this holy day
was the festal entry into
Jerusalem, which thousands of
adorers prepared for Him. It was
now to be manifest how the love
of Christ triumphs; how it calls
forth, in the midst of the old,
cold, selfish world, a new one.
In fair presages should appear
to His soul the great Sunday of
thankful, happy, as of
sorrowful, sacrificing, and
praising love, and of every
Sunday-jubilee of the new
covenant, as it should originate
with His institution—and
strengthen His soul to
accomplish with stedfastness the
last mournful journey.
In Bethany His friends made Him
an evening entertainment. The
two first Evangelists write with
something of mystery, ‘it was in
the house of Simon the leper;’
we have seen what might have led
to this. But from the
observation, that He had come to
Bethany, where Lazarus dwelt,
that there a banquet had been
provided for Him, and that
Martha had waited there, John
allows us to conclude that the
family of Lazarus was at least
very much at home in that house,
even although we attach no
weight to the conjecture, that
Martha perhaps had been a widow
of that Simon.1 The brother and
sisters, to whom it had been
appointed to prepare for the
Lord the last friendly asylum in
His pilgrimage on earth,
evidently form the centre of
this circle, and each one is
effective in his degree. Martha
finds her soul’s delight in
ministering to the Lord, and
Lazarus could not contribute to
His glorification more
effectually than by sitting at
the table among the guests,
cheerful and in health, a
blossom of resurrection which
proclaims His Master as the
Prince of Life. But just as
Martha, by her ministry, causes
the Lord to be acknowledged as
the true Son of man, the traveller who has wandered far,
who is weary, and in need of the
festal refreshment,—and just as
Lazarus glorifies Him as the
mighty Prince of Life,—so Mary,
with the ointment with which she
adorns Him, celebrates His holy
death, although as yet only with
dim consciousness, yet with deep
and foreboding sorrow.
Silently she steps forth with an
alabaster casket in her hand,
which contains a pound2 of
genuine3 ointment of spikenard
of high value, she advances to
the Lord’s place, breaks off the
closed top of the casket,4 and
allows a portion of the ointment
to flow over His head. Then she
kneels down and anoints His feet
also. Richly she applies the
rich gift, as though she would
withhold nothing. And as that
great sinner had wiped the feet
of Jesus with the hair of her
head, so also did she. She
rejoiced in this adornment of
her head, which she obtained
from the overflow of the
ointment from His feet; for she
felt what He was, what she owed
to Him, and how ready she was to
follow Him through suffering and
death. John writes in lively,
undying recollection-the whole
house was full of the odour of
the ointment.
Mary knew well in spirit what
she was doing. She would and
must fulfil this extraordinary
work, and she knew that it would
be pleasing to the Lord, yea,
that it would afford Him a great
refreshment. The expense seemed
to her as nothing in respect of
the importance of the moment.
The offering entirely
disappeared from her eyes when
she considered the heavenly
bliss of the grace that she had
received, in the divine
appointment, to show respect at
this moment to that greatly
misapprehended One, the faithful
witness of God, with these
unwonted, nay, royal honours.
She held at this hour a deeply
mysterious office, in the name
of all angels and good
spirits—of all elect souls of
Christian humanity—yes, it may
be said, by the most secret
commission of the Father in
heaven Himself, as in the
loftiest consecration of the
Holy Spirit, who made her the
priestess to anoint the great
High Priest for His
death-journey. She anointed the
Lord, with the presentiment of,
as well as with the spiritual
and divinely beautiful sympathy
with, that death itself. Her
action was entirely a prophetic
one. She was conscious of what
she did.
But how greatly must she have
been amazed when she perceived
that even the nobler members of
the band of disciples did not
understand her, and that at one
point of their circle a murmur
of indignation had broken out
which was gradually spreading,
as if it would pervade the
entire company, and by which, in
any case, most of the disciples
allowed themselves for a moment
to become embarrassed to such a
degree that they did not venture
to take Mary immediately under
their protection. John gives us
an accurate explanation of the
dark origin of this murmur in
the band of disciples. It was
Judas the son of Simon, the
Iscariot, who first gave
utterance to it: Why was not
this ointment sold for three
hundred denarii,5 for the
benefit of the poor? The
calculating disciple thus
ventured to characterize the
inspired handmaid in this action
as a thoughtless enthusiast. He
threw out to her the reproach
that she had deprived the poor
of this costly benefit.
Therefore, as was suitable to
such a disposition, he rated the
probable value of the ointment
at its highest. But not only the
Lord, even John also, seem to
have looked through the
hypocrite at that moment. He
points out Judas as the man who
was about eventually to betray
the Lord, and remarks that he
had thus expressed his
indignation, not because he
cared for the poor, but because
he was a thief, who administered
the treasury of the disciples,
and took possession of the
contributions that flowed into
it.
We gather from this observation,
by the way, that the brotherhood
of the Lord’s disciples had a
common treasury; that it
received charitable
contributions; that from these,
moreover, it abundantly
succoured the poor; so that it
might rightly be said, that what
was given to them was given to
the poor. At the same time, we
gather that Judas managed the
treasury, and that even at this
time he must have been guilty of
embezzlement in respect of the
same.6 Perhaps since he had long
been inwardly altogether out of
harmony with the being, the
spirit, and the course of life
of his Master, he would have
been able at this time to have
‘gone off,’ if this money had
actually flowed into the
treasury; for already he had
arrived at a terrible darkening
of his nature. The future of his
Lord and Master, His life, His honour and glory, concern him no
more; because, in his unhappy
selfishness, he thought he saw
his own future deeply imperilled
by association with His
interest. To anoint Christ with
so costly an ointment, appeared
to him therefore a sheer
extravagance. And that powerful
odour which streamed through the
house as if it had been a king’s
hall, which broke forth thus out
of the opening flower of the
coming age as an entirely new
fragrance,—an odour of life for
those who were capable of
life,—would seem to him a savour
of death, an odour of
corruption. No wonder if, in
this bitter disposition, and
confiding in the power of his
dissimulation, he spoke
vehemently. But it is remarkable
that, in many of the disciples,
the elements of affinity with
the disposition of Judas should
have gained the mastery over the
elements of affinity with the
disposition of Mary, even for a
moment. We see also how
fearfully the sinfulness of
human nature reacted in the
hearts of the disciples at this
time, against the incipient
glorification of Christ, the
source of the regeneration of
humanity. Mark relates that some
of the disciples were angry at
the transaction, had called it a
waste, had valued it at three
hundred denarii and more, and
were filled with indignation
against Mary. The anger among
the disciples must have been
strongly expressed. This is
evident from the fact that
Matthew, in his comprehensive
manner, could say quite
generally that the disciples
were indignant. Scarcely could
all the twelve have expressed
such an indignation; but Matthew
indicates that the disposition
of the disciples was a general
one, or rather, that they
conceived a general offence,
since even the best of them
replied nothing to the wicked
accusation. Mark, on the other
hand, has perhaps painted in
lively and clear colours their
expression and their appearance,
while John limits himself to
their exact and actual motive.
The difficulty in the minds of
the disciples was, that they
still thought too legally and
meanly of the expenditure of the
property, to be able to
reconcile themselves to the
princely spirit and style of
Mary’s homage; and thus the
hypocritical anxiety of Judas
for the poor was able, for the
first moment, to strike them
more than the royal action of
Mary had affected them. But the
calculating chiliastic spirit of
Judas, which at first probably
had captivated the disciples,
and subsequently had often
paralyzed them, now carried them
away with it for the last time
in this mournful manner.
Doubtless they availed
themselves of the reproof of
Jesus to their deep humiliation;
while the traitor hardened
himself even more against it,
because he grudged to his Lord
and Master this one outlay for
His glorification.
We know not in what measure Mary
was moved by the unexpected and
lively censure of the company of
disciples. She had with full
confidence, out of the very
depth of her heart, brought an
offering of love to the Lord;
and now the honourable college
of disciples decided that she
had done foolishly, yea,
lovelessly, and faithlessly
towards the poor. Whilst the
costly odour of the ointment
filled the whole house, a very
painful discontent was being
diffused among the guests. She
stood suddenly in the circle as
one arraigned; and although her
confidence did not forsake her
for a moment, yet, in proportion
as she had a presentiment of the
death of Jesus, she must have
perceived with a deep shudder
the prevalence at that time, in
the band of the disciples, of a
satanic traitor-spirit.
The Lord had not yet expressed
Himself; and before His tribunal
stood His disciples in two
parties, facing one another,
eager and questioning. It was to
be decided whether the Lord’s
world is really so poor, that it
can give no offering of
gratitude, no poetry, and no
extravagance of sacrificing
love—no grand expression of
great hearts, in splendid
festivals, and gifts, and
institutions, to the honour of
God, to the glory of Jesus, to
the celebration of the sublime
moments of life; so poor, that
the common necessity of every
day, and the every day of common
necessity, can and must,
eventually, consume all the
possessions of life. Surely the
contradiction of such a notion
is already found, in the very
existence of these possessions
at all. Somewhere and somehow,
even the costly ointments will
still be used; and thus,
therefore, it is only a question
whether they should be applied
in an excellent manner for the
service of consecrated moments,
or in a common, luxurious,
unspiritual waste. In the case
of Judas, matters had really
come to that issue, that so long
as it was only sold for a good
price, he would rather have
granted the ointment to an
Eastern harem, than to the Lord
for His festival. The Lord,
however, does not let them wait
in vain for His decisive word.
With His perfect faith He
received the faithful handmaid
into protection. ‘Let her
alone,’ said He; ‘why trouble ye
the woman? She hath wrought a
good work on Me.’ And this He
explained to them. ‘The poor
have ye always with you; and if
you really will, you can do them
good: but Me ye have not
always.’ The occasion does not
always occur when you can
prepare for the Lord a festival
of grateful love, either in His
own person or in that of His
people. The real festival-times
are single moments, which the
heart must recognise and embrace
in their flight; for if they are
lost, they are lost without
recall. Thus it was with this
occasion of refreshing the Lord
on His last journey. Mary
perceived the moment, and
performed a work for which
Christian humanity thanks her
without ceasing. It is otherwise
with the customary duty of the
care of the poor. It does not
intermit. For just as life, in
its completeness, is constantly
begetting sicknesses anew, so
constantly anew it begets
poverty. Certainly the relief of
poverty ought always to be
attempted as much as possible,
and the more fundamental that
relief the better. But the
notion, that by the expenditure
of large sums of money poverty
can ever effectually be
abolished, is a materialistic
superstition. Commonly, however,
this notion is entertained most
by such as have themselves
actually the least care for the
poor, and do the least for them.
The Lord counts it suspicious if
such alternatives are suggested
as these:—either to anoint Him
or to care for the poor. This
hypocritical alternative recurs
a thousand-fold in similar and
kindred forms. In such cases the
word of Christ can always be
applied. If ye will, ye zealots
for the interest of the poor,
yea, if ye will, ye can always
do good to the poor, for ye
shall have them always with you.
But the real poor, in their true
necessities, do not so
impoverish the world, as that
the festive, the profound, the
poetic heart, should be unable
to declare itself in fit
expression, yea, as that
thankful love must not anoint
its deliverer—for His
death-journey.
The word of the Lord, especially
spoken for Judas, might have
another and a specially serious
meaning. Poor men ye have always
with you, but Me ye have not
always. Judas had expressed the
thought, that the poor would
suffer by the expenditure on
Jesus. Jesus intimates to him,
that in future he will have no
more to do with Him, but only
with poor persons—that he will
be always surrounded with the
poorest poor: then it might be
clear to him that the omission
of the contribution of love does
not cancel for him the necessity
of the poor.
Then began the Lord to explain
the action of Mary, according to
its deepest meaning. He says
that she had kept the ointment
for His burial. From this
expression we may perhaps
conclude that Mary had once
deferred the anointing of the
dead Lazarus, in her hope for
the coming of Jesus, and was
therefore placed in a position
to apply the ointment now for
Him. The dead brother she
anointed no more, for she hoped
still in the help of the Master;
but Him she now anoints, while
He is still alive, as if she
would already inter Him.
Thereupon the Lord declares with
certainty, that she had been
impelled to anoint Him, by a
strong presentiment of His death
and burial.
This word was especially fitted
to pierce the conscience of the
traitor; for he it was who was
intending to prepare this death
for his Master. Finally, Jesus
declares the grandeur of this
action of Mary in the
affirmation, ‘Verily I say unto
you, Wherever this Gospel shall
be preached in the whole world,
there shall it also be mentioned
what this woman hath done, in
remembrance of her.’ He could
not more strongly justify her.
Her work should be commended to
all time in connection with the
preaching of the Gospel. It was
thus asserted that the apostles,
who had so bitterly blamed Mary
on account of the anointing in
that hour, were commissioned
throughout the whole of their
future life to bless and praise
her for that very deed, in the
face of their own generations,
and generations to come. Yes, it
was intimated to them, moreover,
thereby, that with that record
should be associated the
remembrance of the terrible
darkening, in that hour, of
their love and faith, until the
end of the world.
It is worthy of observation,
that these supplementary words
occur only in the two
Evangelists who do not record
the name of the woman, but not
in John, who has preserved her
name. It is as if the two first
Evangelists had desired, by the
record of this saying of Christ,
to intimate to the reader of
these Gospels, that he might
easily learn the name of the
celebrated female disciple in
the congregation of the Lord.
This incident, first of all,
brought to maturity the thoughts
of treason that were brooding in
the soul of Judas. Luke takes
notice, apparently, of a moment
which forms the close of this
scene, when Satan entered into
Judas, who was yet one of the
twelve, and he went away and
communed with the chief priests
and captains (the temple guard).
The latter had it in charge to
cast Jesus into prison, if they
could discover his retreat. Thus
Judas might betake himself to
them, and give them to
understand that he could deliver
to them the man they sought. And
thus he might be introduced to
the chief priests. Or possibly
also, the matter might have
occurred thus: that Judas, first
of all, treated with the chief
priests, and might then have
been made known by them to the
officials of the temple police,
because he must needs act in
concert with them. Thus much is
quite clear from Matthew, that
at once, in the most shameless
way, he turned his treachery to
profitable account, with the
question, ‘What will ye give me,
and I will deliver Him to you?’
But they were glad, that out of
the very band of disciples one
should come to them with such an
offer. Involuntarily they had
conceived of the circle of the
disciples of Jesus, as of an
unshaken phalanx of His most
faithful friends, nay, of a
circle of inspired heroes of a
new era. The discovery of such
wickedness in this company, so
near to the heart of Jesus, must
even have surprised the old
masters in sin, and have
encouraged them immensely in
their mischief. It is in the
very nature of things, that the
wicked and reprobate of the New
Testament order of life, should
be much worse, and more
devilish, than those of the Old
Testament. It may therefore be
conceived how much the treachery
of Judas must have encouraged
the chief priests to the
consummation of their work;
while, on the other hand,
probably the disciple also might
stifle the last movements of his
conscience with the illusion,
that he was now being converted
once more to the true old
Judaism, and was on the
praiseworthy road to deliver up
to its jurisdiction one that was
deserving of punishment. The
enemies of Jesus thus received
the false disciple joyfully, and
arranged with him for a definite
price, thirty shekels of silver,7
exactly the amount of
blood-money payable for a slave
whom an ox has slain.8
The consideration of this
hateful significance of the
thirty pieces of silver might
have been overlooked by the
enemies of Jesus, or that they
were purposing, in the most
remarkable manner, to fulfil9
the word of the prophet
Zechariah concerning the thirty
pieces of silver, at which the
Lord was valued. In return,
Judas gave them his promise (ἐξωμολόγησε).
And thereupon he went out to
find the fitting opportunity to
deliver the Lord to His enemies.
It was arranged in the matter,
that it should be done with all
quietness. The Pharisees already
knew, from frequent experience,
how difficult it was to get
possession of the person of Him
whom they sought in the midst of
the people. Therefore they could
only accept the offer of Judas,
upon his promise to betray the
Lord in one of His solitary
hours. Thereupon he agreed, that
in a sanctuary of His lonely
prayer he would deliver up his
Master to them.
It is very remarkable that the
plans of Judas to betray the
Lord were matured at two several
times of festival—namely, at the
entertainment at Bethany, and at
the celebration of the Passover
in Jerusalem. This striking
phenomenon is thus explained,
that great influences of grace
falling to the lot of false
hearts, result in a mighty
reaction of evil in them if they
harden themselves, and they
become terribly obdurate. In
this manner Judas hardened
himself at the two festivals,
precisely on that account,
because they exercised an
extraordinary influence upon
him, which might have startled
and saved him. This is first
apparent at the festival at
Bethany. Here, above all things,
the clear, pure, heavenly
earnestness with which Mary
glorified her Master, might have
warmed his cold and empty heart.
In vain! Her conduct offended
him to the very depth of his
soul. But especially here, the
fair festal joy increased his
discomfort—the celebration of
the glory of Jesus, his envy—the
beautiful and princely
liberality, his avarice-the
gentle reproof of the Lord, his
bitter enmity against Him-the
heavenly clearness with which
Jesus’ glance pierced him
through, his gloomy
self-entanglement, in which he
surrendered himself to the
influences of Satan. Luke, as we
have said, makes the remark here
accordingly, that Satan entered
into him. On the other hand,
John associates that dark
mystery with the moment when
Judas at the last supper
received the morsel from the
hand of Jesus (Joh 13:27). But
the same Evangelist notices
expressly, in respect of the
previous disposition of the soul
of Judas at the beginning of the
Passover, that the devil at that
time had already put it into his
heart to betray Jesus. Thus
clearly does John distinguish
two special moments in the
hardening of Judas. This
suggests to us a question as to
the way in which the progressive
steps in the hardening and the
treachery of Judas stand related
to one another.
On the evening of that supper at
Bethany, when the Sabbath was
already over, the traitor, under
the cover of night, might have
easily sought the neighbourhood
of Jerusalem to enter into the
first arrangements with the
individual officers of the
Sanhedrim. Moreover, that he
actually did so, is almost more
probable, than that in the early
morning of the next day he
should have hurried across the
Mount of Olives on his dark
errand; for his actual ways
needed the curtain of night—the
unseasonable time. On this
occasion a general contract was
effected between him and the
chief priests. He gave them his
word, that he would betray Jesus
to them on the first
opportunity. They, on their
side, agreed upon the price to
be paid to him for it. The time
and the place were undecided,
but it was arranged that the
betrayal should take place out
of the way of any popular
disturbance. From this bargain,
we may conclude that the first
intention of Judas was matured.
We say his first intention, but
the final resolve did not come
to maturity till immediately
before the moment of the deed.
Probably the grand triumphal
entry of Jesus into Jerusalem
occurred after the traitor had
already concluded the first
agreement with the enemies of
the Lord. It may reasonably be
supposed, in harmony with the
whole character of this man,
that the palm-procession must,
for a long time, have sadly
staggered him. It might seem to
him as if he had been mistaken,
precipitate—that the prospects
of Jesus were taking a more favourable turning, after all,
than he had anticipated.
On such a supposition, it is
explained that he did not avail
himself of the evenings of
Monday and Tuesday at all for
the treason; although, if he had
done so, he might have spared to
the Sanhedrim the annoyance of
being compelled to press forward
the crucifixion even at the
Passover. We find, accordingly,
that two days before Easter the
Sanhedrim held a sitting
(probably late on Tuesday
evening, and doubtless in
consequence of the great triumph
which Jesus had achieved on that
day over all Jewish devices), in
which they had not yet come to
any answer to the question when
Christ should be taken prisoner
and put to death. The Sanhedrim
has long since decided that
Jesus should die; but they are
now discussing how Christ might
be apprehended secretly as well
as craftily. It is evident that
they hope for the assistance of
Judas; but it is also evident,
that since the first stipulation
they cannot have had much
communication with him, for the
how still remains the great
question for deliberation, and
the conclusion is then come to,
that the taking Him prisoner
must now be postponed till after
the feast.
But the departure of Jesus from
the temple towards the evening
of Tuesday, made it plain to
Judas that the palm-procession
would not be attended with any
exaltation of his Master to the
throne. If, on this supposition,
his purpose had slightly
wavered, the old intention is
now again more than ever
confirmed. And at length the
celebration of the paschal
supper brought about the crisis.
Up to that time he had been
calculatingly playing with the
purpose of Satan; but now that
purpose played with him. In the
first influence that Satan had
exerted over him, he received
the diabolical plan into his
heart. He would gain for himself
both favour and money from the
Sanhedrim by the betrayal of his
Master. But after that influence
had operated a second time, he
gave himself over as a slavish
tool of the kingdom of darkness;
as the bow and arrow with which
the Prince of Darkness aimed at
the heart of the Prince of Life.
And now enslaved, he plunged,
like one possessed, out into the
night; and his vehemence carried
away with him even the leaders
of the Sanhedrim to complete the
work of darkness without delay.
───♦───
Notes The hypothesis, that Judas by his betrayal only wished to compel the Lord publicly to destroy His enemies, and to establish His kingdom, finds no support in the account of his life, unless the passage in Mat 27:3 be considered as affording such a support. The circumstance that twice in the course of one entertainment, in the midst of decidedly wholesome influences, Judas deliberately hardens his soul, convinces us of a deep alienation from, and even an embittering of his soul against, Jesus. Even the fact that he suffered himself to be paid for his treachery, does not permit us to think of a nobler motive. Moreover, it is to be taken into consideration, that Jesus would hardly have characterized so thoroughly absurd an attempt—which would have been more stupid than wicked—as the gravest crime. But, at all events, it is perhaps possible that the traitor—whose terrible self-entanglement will not so easily be cleared up, since, according to its nature, it is the most fearful chaotic soul-maze that the history of the world has known-may have benumbed his conscience, not only with the thought that he is now serving the highest established magistrates and priesthood, but also with the deceit that Jesus would know how to deliver Himself in time of need by His miraculous power. As his leading motive, however, we shall always have to consider an avarice and ambition exaggerated nearly to frenzy.
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1) [According to Ewald (401), Simon was the father of the family. ED.] 2) See Friedlieb, Archäologie dcr Leidensgeschichte, p. 33, s. 33. The author conjectures that the litra here mentioned (the pound) is the old true litra of the Sicili-Greek system, about 7-20ths of a Cologne pound. ['Hardly as much as a Roman pound.'—Alford.] 3) Upon the several interpretations of the expression, νάρδος πιστική, compare Lücke, ii. 493 [the substance of whose note is given by Alford], Sepp, iii. 175 ; Friedlieb, 30. 4) Friedlieb, 33. 5) About £9, 15s. [Some idea of the costliness of a μύρου ἀλάβαστρον is received from Herodotus numbering it among the gifts sent by Cambyses to the Ethiopians (iii. 20) ; also from Horace's 'nardi parvus onyx.'—ED.] 6) Thus he had abused the pure and free community of goods of the disciples of Jesus, and his unfaithfulness serves as a mournful example which deters from a merely external and legal community of goods, just as the example of Ananias does (Acts v.) Still more discouraging, indeed, is the arrogance that would impute to Mary the lofty, beautiful, and free expenditure of her property as a wrong done to the society (considered by him in the most delusive sense communist), when he uttered the charge, 'This money ought to have been given to the poor.' 7) About £3, 15s. See Friedlieb, 44 8) Friedlieb, 36. 9) De Wette observes (217): 'If the post-exile stater of the Treasury be meant, the sum was unquestionably too little to furnish an explanation of the treachery of Judas, as proceeding from avarice. But the tradition which the Evangelist follows has probably fixed the sum in accordance with the quotation from Zechariah.' We may here be reminded almost of the words of Zechariah. 'If ye think good, bring me my price (or make an offer), how much I am worth.' Was not the avarice of Judas diabolical ? Is it not possible to diabolical avarice to make the greatest sacrifice for the smallest price? For the rest, it must by all means be assumed that the avaricious man was also an ambitious man, and sought the favour of the chief council.
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