<http://adorotedevote.blogspot.com/2009/03/kiss-of-death.html>Kiss of Death

http://adorotedevote.blogspot.com/2009/03/kiss-of-death.html

I've been thinking a lot lately about Judas, and how much I resemble 
him.  I recently watched The Passion of the Christ again, and the 
scene that stood out to me this time was near the beginning.  There 
is something in the way he furtively leaves the Last Supper and goes 
to receive his payment for betrayal.

[]

There is something in the way the money bag flies through the air; 
and as Judas desperately and clumsily reaches out to catch the
  offhand throw, the money falls at his feet and scatters.  He is 
helpless to stop it.  He looks up at the crowd that stares back at 
him dispassionately and with an air of condescension, then with an 
attitude of desperate greed Judas drops to the ground to quickly 
gather up the silver he was paid for the blood of Christ who had 
ordained him that very evening.

He looks up at the soldiers, and the fear in his eyes cannot be 
mistaken. It seems he is already regretting his act.  And yet, he 
goes into the Garden, and there finds Jesus waiting for him. The man 
he had followed, the man who had washed his feet, even knowing of the 
betrayal to come.  The One who had shown him ONLY love...and gave him 
the free will to do what he set out to do.

Then, when Judas returns to the Garden with the soldiers, how does 
the betrayal occur?  Through a kiss. An expression of love.

<http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_ysbqAK-74JE/Sc7u-DcjlWI/AAAAAAAABlA/WYmsI5ta8sI/s1600-h/Betrayal%2520of%2520Christ.jpg>
[]

How many times have I expressed love to Christ while bearing hatred 
in my heart in some way?

How many times have I begged Jesus for His love, while I pondered my 
next sin, my very betrayal of His own love?

Judas flees, realizing what he's done.  The movie shows his torment 
and ultimate demise; suicide.

Yes, he sinned in his betrayal, but that sin was forgivable.  He 
could have come to the Cross.  He could have come to Christ an any 
time and made his repentance clear.  He could have been forgiven.

Just as I've been forgiven, over and over, for my many betrayals.

Because, every time I sin, I  give Christ the same kiss of 
death.  The very same.

We look to Peter, whose love, as beloved John Paul II pointed out, 
set him up for failure. It was in how Peter followed Christ to his 
scourging that put him in the position to be confronted, and where he 
denied him.  Three times.

Judas denied Christ only ONCE; when he betrayed him. The betrayal was 
a single, seamless act.   Peter denied him THREE times.

Yet their stories are very different.  Peter continued to follow 
Christ.  He truly loved Him and could not stay away.  He repented of 
his denial.  When Our Lord appeared a few days later on the sea 
shore, Peter was so excited that he didn't wait for the boat to pull 
up...he leapt overboard and SWAM to Jesus, where he was given three 
chances to overcome his three denials.

Our God is a God of Mercy.  Infinite mercy.

Judas, though, betrayed Christ, ran away...and stayed away.  It was 
his rejection of God's love that lead him into such complete despair 
that he saw no other way out than suicide.

How many times have I rejected God's love?  In choosing to sin, not 
only have I betrayed Him, but I've rejected Him.

How many times has Our Lord come after me, in spite of and because of 
the fact that He was nailed to the Cross on my behalf?

How many times have I been tempted to avoid Confession because I've 
thought my sins were greater than God's own mercy?

How many times have I turned my back on Jesus because Mercy was 
inconvenient to my Pride?

Judas was the first to leave Mass right in the middle, and completely 
missed the consecration which took place as Christ died upon the 
Cross.   Judas left right after his own ordination, only to bring 
destruction when he returned.  And ultimately, he missed the biggest 
moment of all.

Judas did repent, but he repented to the wrong authority; rather than 
going to Christ, the one whom He'd wronged, God himself whom he 
betrayed, he tried to give back the tangible evidence of his sin.

How many times have I tried to undo my own wrong only to make things worse?

How many times have those efforts been rejected because the ones in 
whom I sought comfort were the same ones who led me into sin to begin with?

How many times have I looked to myself for salvation, thinking I 
could fix things on my own?

Had Judas gone to Jesus, Our Lord would have taken him back, and 
although He would not have "undone" the damage, he would have helped 
Judas to carry that cross he'd so willingly embraced.  What was done 
was done, but Jesus understands everything.

He asks only one thing; humility.  That in our sin, we recognize our 
sin, repent of it, and embrace the effects of that sin.  None of us 
is immune.

This year, I'm trying to recognize each time I kiss Jesus in an act 
of betrayal, and have found even this short project to be maybe a 
little more than I can bear.  Yet it has been such a blessing, 
reminding me that whenever God reveals sin, He also reveals His Mercy.

Lately I've been fleeing His mercy, realizing my own lack of 
repentance, my own failings.  Yet Our Lord has come after me, 
refusing to let me go. I've been astonished at His guidance, unable 
to deny what He has done.

And yet, I look at Judas, and I see myself. If not in reality, then 
at least in the danger that has tempted me. To betray Christ, to run 
away, and even to be lost forever. I can understand why Judas did 
what he did; why he died at the end of a rope.  I've known that 
temptation as well and have been spared it only by the grace of God.

Death is not what Our Lord wills.  He did not will for Judas to 
despair. He did not will for Judas to betray Him. The reality was 
that Judas did these things all on his own.  Jesus suffered greatly 
on account of Judas, whom He loved dearly.

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[]

It was Judas who rejected Jesus; not the other way around.  It was 
Judas who ran away and gave in to despair. He refused God's mercy.

The reality is that the kiss Judas gave to Jesus was a betrayal not 
of Christ alone, but of himself.  He died in that moment, and he knew 
it. It was that very misuse of an act and symbol of love that truly 
revealed the state of Judas's soul. And if he could so warp love, 
how, in his mind, could he come back?

Through Christ, and Christ alone.  For Jesus went willingly to his 
Passion and death.  He went, and would have taken Judas with Him, but 
instead, Judas refused the uncondemning gaze of Jesus whose last 
words to him were,

"Would you betray the Son of Man with a kiss?"

A statement, a question...not a condemnation.

Jesus, I trust in Thee.

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