The Gospel of Judas

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Below are some content can be found at the Lost Gospel of Judas, the following are taken from the National Geographic.com

The Gospel of Judas is part of a codex. Codices were ancient books constructed of folding pages bound at one side. They supplanted scrolls because they held more information, and because readers could easily find specific passages. The codex also contains a text called James, the Letter of Peter to Phillip, and a fragmentary document dubbed the Book of Allogenes. The 1,700-year-old codex was badly fragmented, but an expert team of preservationists and scholars has rescued a nearly complete Gospel of Judas – a text once thought to be lost forever. The Gospel provides an alternative view of the Jesus-Judas relationship and evidences the diverse theological beliefs that circulated among early Christians.

Codex page 33:
The secret account of the revelation
that Jesus spoke in conversation with Judas
Iscariot during a
Week, three
Days before he celebrated Passover.

Codex page 35:
Step away from the
others and I shall tell you the mesteries
of the kingdom. It is possible
for you to reach it, but you
will grieve a great deal.

Codex page 44:
In the vision I saw myself
As the 12 disciples were stoning
Me and persecuting [me severely].

Codex page 46:

… you will
Be cursed by the other
Generations – and you
will come to
rule over them.

Codex page 56:
… you
Will exceed all of them.
For you will sacrifice

The man that clothes me.

Codex page 57:
Look, you have been told everything.
Lift up your eyes and look
At the cloud and the light within
It and the stars surrounding it.
The stars that leads the way
Is your star.
Judas lifted his eyes
And saw the luminous cloud,
And he entered it …

Codex page 58:
[… and] their high priests
Murmured because [he]
Had gone into the guest room
For his prayer. But some
Scribes were there
Watching carefully in order to
arrest him during
the prayer, for they were afraid
of the people, since he was
regarded by all as a prophet.
They approached
Judas and said to him,
“what are you doing here? You are
Jesus’ disciple.”
Judas answered them
As they wished and he received some money
And handed him over to them.

The Gospel of Judas

Posted by CDOToday Admin at 3:53 AM 0 comments  

Walk, Don't Ride

Wednesday, April 12, 2006

By Fr. Jerry Orbos

It is Holy Week. This week is the most important
week for us Christians. In fact, it is more
important than Christmas because if Christ did not
suffer, die and rise again (Paschal Mystery) there
would have been no salvation. The events of this
week, starting with Palm Sunday, the Last Supper,
the Way of the Cross, the Crucifixion and Death, the Easter Vigil, and Easter itself have only one clear message: You and I are so much loved personally by God that He gave His only Son to die on the Cross.
Think about it: Is there anyone, anyone at all in
your life, who is willing to die for you? (Maybe
your husband is with you right now. Ask him, if he
is willing to die for you!)


As the events of the Holy Week unfold, let us not
just be by standers or onlookers. Let us be a part
of it all. Walk, don't ride. How high you fly at
Easter depends on how you walked the Holy Week.
Sorry, there are no short cuts, no free rides in the
business of saving one's soul. Here are some
suggestions to make Holy Week holy. They are all
doable, all valuable.


RELAX: Many of us are overworked and
overstressed. We need to rest our bodies and our
minds so that we can "fine tune" with ourselves,
with other people and with God. Take a break. Take a walk. Commune with nature. See the sunset. Enjoy the moon. Close your cellular phone and your beeper and just allow yourself to be open to the divine. Let go. Let things be. God is in charge. Experience the restoring power of sleep and rest. Smile at the sky.
Walk the earth. Whistle a happy tune, or hum a
favorite melody. Just thank God you are still alive.


REFLECT: Find time to relax so you can reflect.
Don't end up just relaxing. Don't end up tired and
empty because you were too busy to relax and thus
found no time to slow down and reflect. How long has it been now since you have been in this world? What have you done? You have work, but do you have a life? What is really important for you? What do you still want to do or accomplish? How is your family and your relationships? And how are you relating with your God? Is there an area in your life that needs to be healed? Is there excess luggage in your heart? How would you like to be remembered after you are gone? Questions. Allow yourself to be questioned by life itself.


REPENT: We all fall. We all have mistakes and
weaknesses. Accept your limitations. Welcome to
humanity! Be humble. Visit the "red light" district
in the church and make a good confession. Make that general confession. Find time to say sorry to people you may have hurt or just taken for granted. Make time to visit, to write, to call, to text anyone you need to say sorry to. Is there one bad habit you need to give up? Is there one good habit you need to take up? This is the time for soul-searching.
Promise yourself not to go back to the pit of
selfishness and sin. If today you hear His voice,
harden not your heart.


RENEW: Take time to recharge and just be filled
up. Renew your contact with God. Don't just sit in
the comforts of your home and watch the services of the Holy Week. Make the sacrifice of participating in church. Show your gratitude to the Lord. Make that Bisita Iglesia, that Via Crucis, that Easter Vigil and do it all with gratitude and love. Renew ties with your immediate family. Make yourself available and vulnerable to them. Tell them in so many ways that you really care.The world is not just you and your family. Reach out. Give and share. The time to give is always now and it is never too late,never too much. Make a generous donation. Go and visit a hospital, an orphanage, an old folks' home or a sick person. It would be more wonderful if you can do all these with your family. Renew your contact with yourself. Go over old pictures, old letters and files and remember who you were and what you wanted to be. Clean your room and clean your heart of all the could-have-beens and should-have-beens and accept yourself. Embrace yourself for what you are and what you still can be.


RESIGN: That's right, resign. Resign from places
and people who do not bring the best in you. Resign
from vices and sins that are slowly but surely
eating you up. Resign from falsehood and pretenses. Be true. Have substance. No more japorms. No more papogi. Just give your very best and God will take care of the rest. Resign to God's will and God's plan for you and you will have peace-that peace of Easter, that peace, which the world cannot give or take away. Good luck, and all the best as you walk the Holy Week. The road that leads to true life is never easy, but the assurance is there: It is a road that leads to life, and He himself is on the road with you, every step along the way.


A Moment with the Lord >
Lord, help me walk another mile, and help me smile
another smile. Just one more smile as I walk the
Holy Week with You. Amen.


> --------------------------------- >

i'm nOt perfect, yes, i dO wrOng
i'm trying my best, but it ain't gOOd enOugh
even though it ain't gOOd enOugh, He still lOves me

- fighting temptatiOns

Posted by CDOToday Admin at 1:12 AM 0 comments