![]() ![]() In a twist that should send your ironic Geiger counter ticking, both novelist Guy Michaels and playwright Stephen Adly Guirgis put Judas in a courtroom, pleading his case that he should be admitted into heaven. Recently, though, artists and intellectuals, disturbed by what Jesus’ foreknowledge of the betrayal says about free will and spurred on by the release of the “Lost Gospel of Judas,” have taken some liberties. The Book of Acts says Judas used the money to buy a field, then fell down and busted his gut. The Gospel of Matthew says he hanged himself after returning his 30 pieces of silver. ![]() The Bible recounts two possible endings for history’s most famous traitor, Judas Iscariot.
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