The Gospel of Judas, a Gnostic text discovered in 1978 in Egypt, presents Judas Iscariot not as a traitor but as the most trusted disciple chosen by Jesus to fulfill the divine plan of liberation. In Gnostic theology, the physical body is a prison, and Judas's role was to help release the divine spirit from its material prison. Jesus explicitly told Judas he would 'exceed all of them' and that he would 'sacrifice the man that clothes me,' with the understanding that Judas would be condemned and despised for this act. This text, buried for 1,500 years, challenges the traditional Christian narrative and raises questions about whether Judas was the worst disciple or the only one willing to do what the mission actually required.
Deep Dive
Prerequisite Knowledge
- No data available.
Where to go next
- No data available.
Deep Dive
The Gospel That Proves Judas Was InnocentAdded:
What if the church spent 2,000 years teaching you to hate the wrong man? One name above all others has stood as the symbol of betrayal. Judas, the disciple who sold God for 30 pieces of silver.
But in 1978, Egyptian farmers pulled a leather-bound manuscript from the desert sand. And inside it, Jesus looked at Judas and said something that no priest, no pastor, no theologian ever told you. He said, "You will exceed all of them. Not Peter, not John, not any of the 12.
Judas. This is the Gospel of Judas, buried for 1700 years. And when scholars finally translated it, the question it raised was one Christianity has never fully answered. What if Judas wasn't the villain? What if he was the only disciple Jesus actually trusted?
Before we go further, we need to establish the Judas you were given. Not the one history may have buried, the one you were handed. One of 12 disciples handpicked by Jesus himself. He traveled with him, ate with him, witnessed every miracle firsthand. And yet, all four canonical gospels tell the same story.
Judas went to the chief priests. He offered to hand Jesus over. Matthew 26-15 records the price. 30 silver coins. Luke 22:3 adds the detail that sealed his fate forever in the minds of believers.
Then Satan entered Judas. Not weakness, not greed, not a moment of human failure. Satan, the betrayal ends in the Garden of Gethsemane. Roman soldiers moving through darkness and a kiss, the most infamous greeting in human history that handed Jesus to his killers. For 20 centuries, that kiss defined Judas completely. His name became a synonym for traitor in dozens of languages.
Medieval artists painted him in yellow, the color of cowardice. Dante placed him in the lowest circle of hell, being chewed eternally in the mouth of Satan himself alongside only two others in all of human history. Brutus, Casius, and Judas, that is Inferno, Kanto 34. The world had made its verdict. Every sermon you ever heard that used the name Judas as a synonym for betrayal, every painting, every reference, every cultural shorthand was built on that verdict. And you were never asked whether it was the complete story. Then the desert gave up a secret.
Around 1978, near the limestone cliffs of Bell Kurara in middle Egypt, farmers uncovered an ancient cave. Inside a sealed limestone box, inside that box, a leather codeex, crumbling, fragile, ancient. But this was not just any manuscript. The codeex contained multiple early Christian texts that had not been read by human eyes.
1500 years the letter of Peter to Philillip first revelation a mysterious text called alogenis buried among them the gospel of Judas whoever sealed this box was not hiding one document they were hiding an entire library a library someone had decided the world was never supposed to find what followed the discovery was one of the most chaotic journeys any manuscript in history has ever taken. The codeex passed through illegal antiquities dealers cross international borders without documentation. By 1983, a Geneva dealer named Hannah Asabil was attempting to sell it to scholars at the Bicki Rare Book Library at Yale University for $3 million. Yale walked away. For the next 16 years, this manuscript sat in a safe deposit box in Hicksville, New York. Not a vault, not a climate controlled archive, a safe deposit box in a suburb.
The temperature fluctuations were so severe that when scholars finally recovered it, they were holding thousands of loose fragments, pieces of sentences, splinters of words, a puzzle that had to be reconstructed fragment by fragment under magnification. Then in the year 2000, a Swiss antiquities dealer named Freda Nusberger Chakos acquired the codeex. And what happened next is remarkable. Nberger Chakos later described feeling personally haunted by the manuscript. She said she felt a responsibility almost a calling to rescue it from further destruction. She transferred ownership to the Myaners Foundation in Switzerland which funded the painstaking restoration work.
Scholars spent years reassembling fragments, filling gaps, reconstructing sentences from splinters of ancient Coptic text. And in April 2006, National Geographic published the first full English translation. The world finally read what the Egyptian desert had been guarding for 17 centuries. Carbon dating confirmed the manuscript itself to approximately 280 AD, give or take 60 years. But scholars Marvin Meer of Chapman University and Bart Urman of the University of North Carolina both concluded the original text it was copied from dates significantly earlier, possibly as far back as 130 to 180 AD.
Within living memory of people who knew the apostles personally, this was not a medieval forgery. This was not a modern invention. This was ancient, authenticated, real, and it had survived illegal markets, neglectful storage, and 15 centuries of deliberate eraser. To tell a story, someone had worked very hard to make sure you never heard.
To understand why this gospel says what it says, you need to understand the world it came from. And that world had a discovery of its own. In December 1945, just 3 years before the Gospel of Judas surfaced, a farmer named Muhammad Ali al-San was digging for fertilizer in the Egyptian desert near a town called Nag Hamadi. His shovel struck something hard. He unearthed a sealed clay jar inside 13 leatherbound cotices. Dozens of ancient texts, an entire hidden library of early Christian writings that had not been read since the 4th century.
Muhammad Ali reportedly tore pages from some of the manuscripts and used them to light his fire that night before realizing what he had found. The Nag Hammadi library, as it became known, contained texts that would permanently change how scholars understood early Christianity.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philillip, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, all of them Gnostic, all of them buried, hidden, preserved in clay jars in the Egyptian desert. While the official church burned everything it could find. These were not fringe documents written by isolated eccentrics. Were the scriptures of real communities, real believers, people who gathered, worshiped and built their entire understanding of Jesus on texts that the Orthodox Church had declared heresy. And to understand why, you need to understand what the Gnostics actually believed. Because it was not a small difference of opinion. It was a completely different universe. The Gnostics believe the physical world is a prison, not a creation to be celebrated, not a gift from a loving God, a prison.
They believe the material universe was not created by the highest God, the infinite, unknowable, holy divine source of all existence. It was created by a lesser deity, a flawed, arrogant, inferior being. they called the demi urge, a broken god who built a broken world and declared himself the supreme ruler of it. In some Gnostic texts, the demi urge is identified with the god of the old testament, the god of law, punishment, and wroth. The true God, the infinite divine beyond all comprehension had nothing to do with the creation of this world and the human soul trapped inside it, locked in a body of flesh and matter, exiled from its divine origin, cut off from the true God by the very fact of physical existence. Salvation in Gnostic thinking did not come through faith or sacrifice or repentance. It came through nosis, hidden knowledge, secret truth. The kind of understanding that could not be earned through study or prayer, only revealed directly by a divine messenger to those spiritually prepared to receive it. Now, here is where it connects directly to Judas. The Gnostics did not view the 12 disciples with reverence. They viewed them with something closer to pity. In Gnostic texts, the 12 are often portrayed as spiritually blind, devoted men who genuinely loved Jesus, but fundamentally misunderstood who he was and what he came to do. They were worshiping the demiurge without knowing it. Operating at the level of the material world when Jesus was trying to point them towards something infinitely beyond it. Only one disciple according to the Gospel of Judas saw past the surface. Only one understood the true nature of Jesus. Not as a teacher or prophet operating within the existing religious framework, but as a divine messenger from the true God beyond this broken world come to liberate souls from their physical prison and return them to their divine origin. That disciple was not Peter. It was not John. It was Judas. Now hold that framework in your mind because if the body is a prison, death is not a tragedy. It is liberation. And if someone helped release a divine soul from its physical prison, that person is not a murderer. They are performing the highest act of spiritual obedience in the entire universe. Read that back onto what Judas did in the garden and everything everything changes.
Now we reach the moment that detonated headlines across the world. In the Gospel of Judas, Jesus does not address the 12 as a group. He pulls Judas aside privately alone. And he says, "Step away from the others and I shall tell you the mysteries of the kingdom. Not so that you will go there, but you will grieve a great deal. Read that carefully. This is not a reward. This is a warning. What you are about to be told will cost you everything. And then the sentence that stopped scholars cold when they first translated it in 2006.
You will exceed all of them, for you will sacrifice the man that clothes me, the man that clothes me. In Gnostic theology, the physical body is the garment the divine spirit wears during its time imprisoned in the material world. Jesus is not telling Judas to kill him. He is telling Judas to remove the garment to free the divine spirit from its physical prison to complete the mission that the other 11 for all their devotion for alty for all their years walking beside Jesus were not spiritually prepared to carry out. The gospel of Judas then gives Judas a title found nowhere else in any ancient Christian text. The 13th spirit. 13. One beyond the 12. Not the least disciple.
Not a footnote, not a failure, set apart, elevated, chosen for something the others could not bear. But here is the part most people never mention.
Because immediately after Jesus gives Judas this instruction, he tells him the price. Judas will be condemned, cursed, rejected, despised.
Jesus tells him this directly, explicitly with all knowledge of what history will do to Judas the moment the act is complete. And Judas says, "Yes, let that land." In this version of events, Judas knew exactly what agreeing would mean. He knew his name would be most hated name in westerization. He knew that every generation born after that night in the garden would be taught to use his as a synonym for the worst thing a human being can do. He knew about the paint, the sermons, the centuries of contempt. And he said yes anyway. If the gospel of Judas is to be believed was not the mostly disciple. He was the most obedient and you were never so know that. Before we go further, if what you just heard made you question something you were taught, you are not alone. Drop a comment below with one word. One word that describes how you feel right now about Judas. Betrayer, hero, victim, soldier. Whatever word comes to mind, write it below right now.
Because the conversation happening in those comments is exactly why this channel exists. And it is the first time you have ever heard any of this, hit subscribe because the Gospel of Judas is only the beginning. There are dozens of texts that were buried alongside it and we are going to open every single one.
So why has no one ever told you this?
Not in church, not in school, not in any of the documentaries you were handed about early Christianity. Because the people who controlled what you were taught did not simply ignore this gospel. They hunted it. And then they called in the Roman Empire to finish the job. It started with one man. Around 180 AD, a bishop named Irenaeus of Leon wrote the most comprehensive attack on Gnostic Christianity ever assembled, a five volume work called Against Heresies. And in book 1, chapter 31, Irenaeus specifically names the Gospel of Judas. He calls it a fictitious history. He accuses the communities reading it of glorifying the betrayer and corrupting apostolic teaching. That reference matters more than it might appear because it means the gospel of Judas was already circulating widely enough, influencing enough people that the most powerful bishop of his era felt it necessary to name it publicly and condemn it by title. You do not write five volumes attacking something nobody is reading. This text was a threat. But Irenaeus was only the beginning. In 325 AD, the Roman Emperor Constantine convened one of the most consequential gatherings in the hit of Western civilization. The Council of Nika. Over 300 bishops assembled to formally unify Christian doctrine under imperial authority. The war that Irenaeus had been fighting with words Constantine finished with law. Dissenting theological positions were declared heresy. The Gnostic tradition that had produced the Gospel of Judas, the Gospel of Thomas, and dozens of other texts was not simply condemned. It was outlawed by the most powerful empire on earth. And then in 367 AD, a bishop named Athanasius of Alexandria wrote his annual Easter letter to the churches under his authority. In it, he listed exactly 27 books that he declared to be the authentic New Testament. The same 27 books that sit in every Bible printed today. Everything not on that list was ordered destroyed. That Easter letter is the first document in recorded history to define the New Testament cannon as we know it. And with it, the Gospel of Judas was officially sentenced to erasia. Not by accident, not by neglect, by decree. Within two centuries of Athanasius writing those words, the Gospel of Judas had vanished completely.
No copies, no references, no trace. 15 centuries of silence until a limestone box in the Egyptian desert returned it to the world. Now, does that mean everything in the Gospel of Judas is historically accurate? No. Bart man, who is not a Christian, who has spent his career questioning traditional biblical narratives and who has no theological reason whatsoever to defend the Orthodox cannon still concludes that this text tells us more about 2 century Gnostic belief than about the historical Judas himself. But that is not the point. The point is this. There were communities of real people in the earliest centuries of Christian history who read this text as scripture who gathered around it who built their entire understanding of Jesus salvation and Judas on what it said. It took a bishop, an emperor, and an imperial decree to erase them from the record. And someone decided you were never allowed to know they existed.
So what do we do with Judas? The canonical gospels say he was a traitor who died in shame. Matthew 27:5 records that he threw the 30 silver coins into the temple, walked out and hanged himself. The Acts of the Apostles adds a darker detail. Still, Acts 1:18 describes his body falling headlong into a field, bursting open, his intestines spilling out. Two accounts of the same death, already contradicting each other within the cannon itself. The Gospel of Judas says something else entirely. It says he was the mosted disciple chosen for a burden so sacred and so costly that no one else was spiritually equipped to carry it. Three accounts, three different Judases, and the one that got buried for 1500 years is the only one that portrays him as anything other than a monster. Ask yourself why.
The Gospel of Judas forces questions onto the table that Orthodox Christianity has never comfortably answered. If the betrayal was part of the divine plan, can it even be called betrayal? Jesus told his disciples repeatedly that he would be handed over, that he would suffer and die, that it was necessary, that it had to happen. If it had to happen, someone had to make it happen. And if Judas was that someone, then Judas did not derail the plan of God. He fulfilled it. Judas was following a direct instruction from Jesus himself. Does guilt still apply?
We do not condemn a soldier for following orders in a mission his commander designed and authorized. We do not call a surgeon a murderer for cutting open a body to heal it. Why then has Judas carried the weight of condemnation for 2,000 years for doing precisely what this text claims Jesus asked him to do? And if Jesus knew, predicted, and according to this gospel personally asked for what happened in that garden, then what exactly have 2,000 years of paintings, sermons, and cultural contempt been for? These are not comfortable questions. They were not meant to be. The people who decided what what you were allowed to believe understoodly how destabilizing these gins were.
That why they needed the gospel of Judas appear not because obviously false but because it was asking questions that had no safe answers. The canonical story of Judas is clean simp morally satisfying.
There is a villain. He is punished. Just is served. The gospel of Judas does that clean completely. It replaces a villain with a martyr. It replaces rail with obedience. It replaces 2,000 years of certainty with a question that history still cannot stop asking.
Was Judas the worst disciple or was he the only one willing to do what the actually required the Gospel of Judas rewrite Christianity.
It does not erase the New Testament or overturn 2,000 years of theology with a single manuscript exposing that powerful people worked very hard to make never saw church a unment handing down a sing agreed. It was over Jesus was what he to whose events five and which texts were dangerous enough to be condemned by name, hunted down and erased from the record entirely. Iranas won that war.
The Gnostics lost and their texts were buried, burned, hidden or sealed in limestone boxes beneath the Egyptian desert. While the winning side wrote the history that every generation since has been handed as the complete final unquestionable truth. Here is what you need to sit with. They made Judas the most hated man in history. And then they buried the one document that told his side of the story. If his version didn't matter, if it posed no threat, if it was nothing more than the ravings of a fringe movement that history rightly ignored, then why did the most powerful bishop of the second century feel the need to hunt it by name? Why did it need to disappear for 1,500 years? And why, when it finally came back, did it still have the power to shake the world?
The Gospel of Judas is not the only text they buried.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary Magdalene, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, the Gospel of Phillip, dozens of texts, real communities, real believers erased. We have them now sitting in museum, translated, published, available to anyone willing to look. And the question is no longer whether they did. The question is, what did they say that someone needed 2,000 years of silence to protect? If you want to know this ch where you find out what if the church years teaching you to the wrong man one of all other has the sim trail Judah the who sold for thes of silver 198 Egyptian farmers pulled a leatherbound manuscript from the desert sand and inside it Jesus looked at Judas and said something that no priest no pastor no theologian ever told you, he said, you will exceed all of them. Not Peter, not John, not any of the 12.
Judas, this is the Gospel of Judas, buried for 1700 years. And when scholars finally translated it, the question it raised was one Christianity has never fully answered. What if Judas wasn't the villain? What if he was the only disciple Jesus actually trusted?
Before we go further, we need to establish the Judas you were given. Not the one history may have buried, the one you were handed. One of 12 disciples handpicked by Jesus himself. He traveled with him, ate with him, witnessed every miracle firsthand, and yet all four canonical gospels tell the same story.
Judas went to the chief priests. He offered to hand Jesus over. Matthew 26-15 records the price. 30 silver coins. Luke 22:3 adds the detail that sealed his fate forever in the minds of believers.
Then Satan entered Judas. Not weakness, not greed, not a moment of human failure. Satan, the betrayal ends in of Gethsemane.
Roman soldiers moving through darkness and a kiss, the most infamous greeting in human history that handed Jesus to his killers. For 20 centuries, that kiss defined Judas completely. His name became a synonym for traitor in dozens of languages. Medieval artists painted him in yellow, the color of cowardice.
Dante placed him in the lowest circle of hell, being chewed eternally in the mouth of Satan himself alongside only two others in all of human history.
Brutus, Casius, and Judas, that is Inferno, Kanto, 34. The world had made its verdict. Every sermon you ever heard that used the name Judas as a synonym for betrayal, every painting, every reference, every cultural shorthand was built on that verdict. And you were never asked whether it was the complete story. Then the desert gave up a secret.
Around 1978, near the limestone cliffs of Jabel Kurara in middle Egypt, farmers uncovered an ancient cave. Inside a sealed limestone box. Inside that box, a leather codeex, crumbling, fragile, ancient. But this was not just any manuscript. The codeex contained multiple early Christian texts that had not been read by human eyes in over 1,500 years. The letter of Peter to Philillip, the first revelation of James, a mysterious text called alogenis and buried among them the gospel of Judas. Whoever sealed this box was not hiding one document. They were hiding an entire library. a library someone had decided the world was never supposed to find. What followed the discovery was one of the most chaotic journeys any manuscript in history has ever taken.
The codeex passed through illegal antiquities dealers in Cairo crossed international borders without documentation. By 1983, a Geneva dealer named Hannah Asabil was attempting to sell it to scholars at the Bicki Rare Book Library at Yale University for $3 million. Yale walked away. For the next 16 years, this manuscript sat in a safe deposit box in Hicksville, New York. Not a vault, not a climate controlled archive, a safe deposit box in a suburb.
The temperature fluctuations were so severe that when scholars finally recovered it, they were holding thousands of loose fragments, pieces of sentences, splinters of words, a puzzle that had to be reconstructed fragment by fragment under magnification. Then in the year 2000, a Swiss antiquities dealer named Freda Nusberger Chakos acquired the codeex. And what happened next is remarkable. Nberger Chakos later described feeling personally haunted by the manuscript. She said she felt a responsibility almost a calling to rescue it from further destruction. She transferred ownership to the Myaners Foundation in Switzerland which funded the painstaking restoration work.
Scholars spent years reassembling fragments, filling gaps, reconstructing sentences from splinters of ancient Coptic text. And in April 2006, National Geographic published the first full English translation. The world finally read what the Egyptian desert had been guarding for 17 centuries. Carbon dating confirmed the manuscript itself to approximately 280 AD, give or take 60 years. But scholars Marvin Meyer of Chapman University and Bart Urman of the University of North Carolina both concluded the original text it was copied from dates significantly earlier, possibly as far back as 130 to 180 AD.
Within living memory of people who knew the apostles personally, this was not a medieval forgery. This was not a modern invention. This was ancient, authenticated, real, and it had survived illegal markets, neglectful storage, and 15 centuries of deliberate eraser. To tell a story, someone had worked very hard to make sure you never heard.
To understand why this gospel says what it says, you need to understand the world it came from. And that world had a discovery of its own. In December 1945, just three years before the Gospel of Judas surfaced, a farmer named Muhammad Ali al-San was digging for furs in desert near a town called Nag Hamadi.
His shovel struck something. He unearthed a sealed clay jar in inside 13 leatherbound codices.
Dozens of ancient an entire hidden library of writings been read fourth century. Muhammad Ali reportedly tore pages some of the manuscripts and used them his fire that night before realizing what he had found. The Nag Hamadili as it became known contained text that would permanently change how scholars understood early Christianity.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philillip, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, all of them Gnostic, all of them buried, hidden, preserved in clay jars in the Egyptian desert. While the official church burned everything it could find. These were not fringe document written by isolentrics.
These scriptures of commun reals who gathered and entire underling of Jesus on text that the dox church declared her. And to understand you need to understand what the gnostics actually believed because it was not a small difference of opinion. It was a completely different universe. The Gnostics believe the physical world is a prison, a creation to be celebrated, not a gift from a loving God, a prison.
They believe the mater, the infinite knowable, wholly divine source of all existence. It was created by a lesser deity, flawed, arrogant, inferior being they called the demiurge.
A broken god built a broken world and declared himself the supreme of it. In some gnostic texts, the de is identified with of the old testament the law punishment wroth. The true God, the infinite divine beyond all comprehension had nothing to do creation of this world and the soul trapped inside it, locked in a body of flesh and matter, exiled from its divine origin, cut off from the true God by the very fact of physical existence. Salvation in Gnostic thinking did not come through faith or sacrifice or repentance. It came through nosis, hidden knowledge, secret truth. The kind of understanding that could not be earned through study or prayer, only revealed directly by a divine messenger to those spiritually prepared to receive it. Now, here is where it connects directly to Judas. The Gnostics did not view the 12 disciples with reverence.
They viewed them with something closer to pity. In Gnostic texts, the 12 are often portrayed as spiritually blind, devoted men who genuinely loved Jesus, but fundamentally misunderstood who he was and what he came to do. They were worshiping the demiurge without knowing it. Operating at the level of the material world when Jesus was trying to point them towards something infinitely beyond it. Only one disciple, according to the Gospel of Judas, saw past the surface. Only one understood the true nature of Jesus, not as a teacher or prophet operating within the existing religious framework. As a divine messenger from the true God beyond this broken world come to liberate from their physical prison and return them to their divine origin. That disciple was not Peter. It was not John. It was Judas.
Now hold that framework in your mind because if the body is a prison, death is not a tragedy. It is liberation. And if someone helped release a divine soul from its physical prison, that person is not a murderer. They are performing the highest act of spiritual obedience in the entire universe. Read that back onto what Judas did in the garden and everything everything changes.
Now we reach the moment that detonated headlines across the world. In the Gospel of Judas, Jesus does not address the 12 as a group. He pulls Judas aside privately alone. And he says, "Step away from the others and I shall tell you the mysteries of the kingdom. Not so that you will go there, but you will grieve a great deal. Read that carefully. This is not a reward. This is a warning. What you are about to be told will cost you everything. And then the sentence that stopped scholars cold when they first translated it in 2006.
You will exceed all of them for you will sacrifice the man that clothes me. The man that clothes me. In Gnostic theology, the physical body is the garment the divine spirit wears during its time imprisoned in the material world. Jesus is not telling Judas to kill him. He is telling Judas to remove the garment, to free the divine spirit from its physical prison, to complete the mission that the other 11 for all their devotion, for all their loyalty, for all their years walking beside Jesus, were not spiritually prepared to carry out. The Gospel of Judas then gives Judas a title found nowhere else in any ancient Christian text, the 13th Spirit. 13. One beyond the 12, not the least disciple, not a footnote, not a failure, set apart, elevated for something the others could. But here is the part most people never mention because immediately after Jesus gives us this instruction.
He tells him Judas will be condemned, cursed, rejected, despised. Tells him this directly, explicitly with full knowledge of what history will do to Judas the moment the act is complete.
And Judas says, "Yes, let that land." In this version of events, Jude exactly what agreeing would mean. He knew his name would become the most hated name in Western civilization. He knew that every generation born after that night in the be taught to use his name as a synonym for the thing a human being do. He knew about the paintings, the sermons, the centuries of contempt. And he said yes anyway. If the gospel of Judas is to be believed, Judas was not the most cowardly disciple. He was the most obedient and you were never supposed to know that. Before we go further, if what you just heard made you question something you were taught you, you are not alone.
Drop a comment below. One word, one word that describe how you feel now. Judas, betrayer, hero, victim, soldier, whatever word comes to mind, write it below right now because the conversation happening in those comments is exactly why this channel exists. And if this is the first time you have ever heard any of this, hit subscribe because the Gospel of Judas is only the be beginning. Thousands of texts were buried inside it. We are going to open every one.
So why has no one told you this in church, not in not in documentaries you were handed about early Christianity?
Because the people who controlled what you were taught did not simply ignore this gospel. They hunted it. And then they called in the Roman Empire to finish the job. It started with one man.
Around 180 AD, a bishop named Irenaeus of Leon wrote the most comprehensive attack on Gnostic Christianity ever assembled, a five volume work called against heresies. And in book 1, chapter 31, Irenaeus specifically names the Gospel of Judas. He calls it a fictitious history. He accuses the communities reading it of glorifying the betrayer and corrupting apostolic teaching. That reference matters more than it might appear because it means the Gospel of Judas was already circulating widely enough, influencing enough people that the most powerful bishop of his era felt it necessary to name it publicly and condemn it by title. You do not write five volumes attacking something nobody is reading.
This text was a threat. But Irenaeus was only the beginning. In 325 AD, the Roman Emperor Constantine convened one of the most consequential gatherings in the history of Western civilization. The Council of Nika. Over 300 bishops assembled to formally unify Christian doctrine under imperial authority. The war that Irenaeus had been fighting with words Constantine finished with law.
Dissenting theological positions were declared heresy. The Gnostic tradition that had produced the Gospel of Judas, the Gospel of Thomas, and dozens of other texts was not simply condemned. It was outlawed by the most powerful empire on earth. And then in 367 AD, a bishop named Athanasius of Alexandria wrote his annual Easter letter to the churches under his authority. In it, he listed exactly 27 books that he declared to be the authentic New Testament. The same 27 books that sit in every Bible printed today. Everything not on that list was ordered destroyed. That Easter letter is the first document in recorded history to define the New Testament cannon as we know it. And with it, the Gospel of Judas was officially sentenced to erasia. Not by accident, not by neglect, by decree. Within two centuries of Athanasius writing those words, the Gospel of Judas had vanished completely.
No copies, no references, no trace. 15 centuries of silence until a limestone box in the Egyptian desert returned it to the world. Now, does that mean everything in the Gospel of Judas is historically accurate? No. Bart Urman, who is not a Christian, who has spent his career questioning traditional biblical narratives, and who has no theological reason whatsoever to defend the Orthodox cannon, still concludes that this text tells us more about second century Gnostic belief than about the historical Judas himself. But that is not the point. The point is this.
There were communities of real people in the earliest centuries of Christian history who read this text as scripture who gathered around it who built their entire understanding of Jesus salvation and Judas on what it said. It took a bishop, an emperor, and an imperial decree to erase them from the record.
And someone decided you were never allowed to know they existed.
So what do we do with Judas? The canonical gospels say he was a traitor who died in shame. Matthew 27:5 records that he threw the 30 silver coins into the temple, walked out and hanged himself. The Acts of the Apostles adds a darker detail. Still, Acts 1:18 describes his body falling headlong into a field, bursting open, his intestines spilling out. Two accounts of the same death, already contradicting each other within the cannon itself. The Gospel of Judas says something else entirely. It says he was the most trusted disciple chosen for a burden so sacred and so costly that no one else was spiritually equipped to carry it. Three accounts, three different Judases, and the one that got buried for 1500 years is the only one that portrays him as anything other than a monster. Ask yourself why.
The Gospel of Judas forces questions onto the table that Orthodox Christianity has never comfortably answered. If the betrayal was part of the divine plan, can it even be called betrayal? Jesus told his disciples repeatedly that he would be handed over, that he would suffer and die, that it was necessary, that it had to happen. If it had to happen, someone had to make it happen. And if Judas was that someone, then Judas did not derail the plan of God. He fulfilled it. If Judas was following a direct instruction from Jesus himself, does guilt still apply?
We do not condemn a soldier for following orders in a mission his commander designed and authorized.
We do not call a surgeon a murderer for cutting open a body to heal it. Why then has Judas carried the weight of condemnation for 2,000 years for doing precisely what this text claims Jesus asked him to do? And if Jesus knew, predicted, and according to this gospel personally asked for what happened in that garden, then what exactly have 2,000 years of paintings, sermons, and cultural contempt been for? These are not comfortable questions. They were not meant to be. The people who decided what you were allowed to believe understood exactly how destabilizing these questions were. That is why they needed the gospel of Judas to disappear. Not because it was obviously false, but because it was asking questions that had no safe answers. The canonical story of Judas is clean, simple, morally satisfying. There is a villain. He is punished. justice is served. The Gospel of Judas destroys that cleanness completely. It replaces a villain with a martyr. It replaces a betrayal with an act of obedience. It replaces 2,000 years of certainty with a question that history still cannot stop asking. Was Judas the worst disciple or was he the only one willing to do what the mission actually required?
The Gospel of Judas does not rewrite Christianity. It does not erase the New Testament or overturn 2,000 years of theology with a single manuscript. But it exposes something that powerful people worked very hard to make sure you never saw. The early church was not a unified movement handing down a single agreed truth. It was a war. A war over who Jesus was, what he taught, whose version of events would survive, and which texts were dangerous enough to be condemned by name, hunted down, and erased from the record entirely.
Irenaeus won that war. The Gnostics lost, and their texts were buried, burned, hidden, or sealed in limestone boxes beneath the Egyptian desert. While the winning side wrote the history that every generation since has been handed as the complete final unquestionable truth. Here is what you need to sit with. They made Judas the most hated man in history. And then they buried the one document that told his side of the story. If his version didn't matter, if it posed no threat, if it was nothing more than the ravings of a fringe movement that history rightly ignored, then why did the most powerful bishop of the second century feel the need to hunt it by name? Why did it need to disappear for 1,500 years? And why, when it finally came back, did it still have the power to shake the world? The Gospel of Judas is not the only text they buried.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary Magdalene, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, the Gospel of Philillip. Dozens of texts, real communities, real believers erased. We have them now sitting in museums, translated, published, available to anyone willing to look. And the question is no longer whether they existed. The question is what did they say that someone needed 2,000 years of silence to protect? If you want to know, this channel is where you find out.
What if the church spent 2,000 years teaching you to hate the wrong man? One name above all others has stood as the symbol of betrayal. Judas, the disciple who sold God for 30 pieces of silver.
But in 1978, Egyptian farmers pulled a leatherbound manuscript from the desert sand. And inside it, Jesus looked at Judas and said something that no priest, no pastor, no theologian ever told you. He said, "You will exceed all of them. Not Peter, not John, not any of the 12.
Judas, this is the Gospel of Judas, buried for 1700 years." And when scholars finally translated it, the question it raised was one Christianity has never fully answered. What if Judas wasn't the villain? What if he was the only disciple Jesus actually trusted?
Before we go further, we need to establish the Judas you were given. Not the one history may have buried, the one you were handed. one of 12 disciples handpicked by Jesus himself. He traveled with him, ate with him, witnessed every miracle firsthand, and yet all four canonical gospels tell the same story.
Judas went to the chief priests. He offered to hand Jesus over. Matthew 26-15 records the price. 30 silver coins. Luke 22:3 adds the detail that sealed his fate forever in the minds of believers.
Then Satan entered Judas. Not weakness, not greed, not a moment of human failure. Satan, the betrayal ends in the Garden of Gethsemane. Roman soldiers moving through darkness and a kiss, the most infamous greeting in human history that handed Jesus to his killers. For 20 centuries, that kiss defined Judas completely. His name became a synonym for traitor in dozens of languages.
Medieval artists painted him in yellow, the color of cowardice. Dante placed him in the lowest circle of hell, being chewed eternally in the mouth of Satan himself alongside only two others in all of human history. Brutus, Casius, and Judas, that is Inferno, Kanto, 34. The world had made its verdict. Every sermon you ever heard that used the name Judas as a synonym for betrayal, every painting, every reference, every cultural shorthand was built on that verdict. And you were never asked whether it was the complete story. Then the desert gave up a secret.
Around 1978, near the limestone cliffs of Jabel Kurara in middle Egypt, farmers uncovered an ancient cave. Inside a sealed limestone box. Inside that box, a leather codeex, crumbling, fragile, ancient. But this was not just any manuscript. The codeex contained multiple early Christian texts that had not been read by human eyes in over 1,500 years. The letter of Peter to Philillip, the first revelation of James, a mysterious text called Aloinis and buried among them the Gospel of Judas. Whoever sealed this box was not hiding one document. They were hiding an entire library. a library someone had decided the world was never supposed to find. What followed the discovery was one of the most chaotic journeys any manuscript in history has ever taken.
The codeex passed through illegal antiquities dealers in Cairo crossed international borders without documentation.
By 1983, a Geneva dealer named Hannah Asaril was attempting to sell dollars at the Kare book at University 3 millions year away.
For the next 6 years, this manuscript sat in a safe deposit box in Hicksville, New York. Not a vault, not a climate controlled archive, a safe deposit box in a suburb. The temperature fluctuations were so severe that when scholars finally recovered it, they were holding thousands of loose fragments, pieces of sentences, splinters of words, a puzzle that had to be reconstructed fragment by fragment under magnification. Then in the year 2000, a Swiss antiquities dealer named Freda Nusberger Chakos acquired the codeex.
And what happened next is remarkable.
Nberger Chakos later described feeling personally haunted by the manuscript.
She said she felt a responsibility almost a calling to rescue it from further destruction. She transferred ownership to the Mysenus Foundation in Switzerland which funded the painstaking restoration work. Scholars spent years reassembling fragments, filling gaps, reconstructing sentences from splinters of ancient Coptic text. And in April 2006, National Geographic published the first full English translation. The world finally read what the Egyptian desert had been guarding for 17 centuries. Carbon dating confirmed the manuscript itself to approximately 280 AD, give or take 60 years. But scholars Marvin Meyer of Chapman University and Bart Urman of the University of North Carolina both concluded the original text. It was copied from dates significantly earlier, possibly as far back as 130 to 180 AD. Within living memory of people who knew the apostles personally, this was not a medieval forgery. This was not a modern invention. This was ancient, authenticated, real, and it had survived illegal markets, neglectful storage, and 15 centuries of deliberate eraser. To tell a story, someone had worked very hard to make sure you never heard.
To understand why this gospel says what it says, you need to understand the world it came from. And that world had a discovery of its own. In December 1945, just 3 years before the Gospel of Judas surfaced, a farmer named Muhammad Ali al-San was digging for fertilizer in the Egyptian desert near a town called Nag Hamadi. His shovel struck something hard. He unearthed a sealed clay jar inside 13 leatherbound cotices. Dozens of ancient texts, an entire hidden library of early Christian writings that had not been read since the 4th century.
Muhammad Ali reportedly tore pages from some of the manuscripts and used them to light his fire that night before realizing what he had found. The Nag Hamadi Library, as it became known, contained texts that would permanently change how scholars understood early Christianity.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philillip, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, all of them Gnostic, all of them buried, hidden, preserved in clay jars in the Egyptian desert. While the official church burned everything it could find. These were not fringe documents written by isolated eccentrics. These were the scriptures of real communities, real believers, people who gathered, worshiped, and built their entire understanding of Jesus on texts that the Orthodox Church had declared heresy. And to understand why, you need to understand what the Gnostics actually believed. Because it was not a small difference of opinion. It was a completely different universe. The Gnostics believe the physical world is a prison, not a creation to be celebrated, not a gift from a loving God, a prison.
They believe the material universe was not created by the highest God, the infinite, unknowable, holy divine source of all existence. It was created by a lesser deity, a flawed, arrogant, inferior being they called the demiurge, a broken god who built a broken world and declared himself the supreme ruler of it. In some Gnostic texts, the demiurge is identified with the god of the Old Testament, the god of law, punishment, and wroth. The true God, the infinite divine beyond all comprehension had nothing to do with the creation of this world and the human soul trapped inside it, locked in a body of flesh and matter, exiled from its divine origin, cut off from the true God by the very fact of physical existence. Salvation in Gnostic thinking did not come through faith or sacrifice or repentance. It came through nosis, hidden knowledge, secret truth. The kind of understanding that could not be earned through study or prayer, only revealed directly by a divine messenger to those spiritually prepared to receive it. Now, here is where it connects directly to Judas. The Gnostics did not view the 12 disciples with reverence. They viewed them with something closer to pity. In Gnostic texts, the 12 are often portrayed as spiritually blind, devoted men who genuinely loved Jesus, but fundamentally misunderstood who he was and what he came to do. They were worshiping the demiurge without knowing it. Operating at the level of the material world when Jesus was trying to point them towards something infinitely beyond it. Only one disciple according to the Gospel of Judas saw past the surface. Only one understood the true nature of Jesus. Not as a teacher or prophet operating within the existing religious framework, but as a divine messenger from the true God beyond this broken world come to liberate souls from their physical prison and return them to their divine origin. That disciple was not Peter. It was not John. It was Judas. Now hold that framework in your mind because if the body is a prison, death is not a tragedy. It is liberation. And if someone helped release a divine soul from its physical prison, that person is not a murderer. They are performing the highest act of spiritual obedience in the entire universe. Read that back onto what Judas did in the garden and everything everything changes.
Now we reach the moment that detonated headlines across the world. In the Gospel of Judas, Jesus does not address the 12 as a group. He pulls Judas aside privately alone. And he says, "Step away from the others and I shall tell you the mysteries of the kingdom. Not so that you will go there, but you will grieve a great deal. Read that carefully. This is not a reward. This is a warning. What you are about to be told will cost you everything. And then the sentence that stopped scholars cold when they first translated it in 2006.
You will exceed all of them, for you will sacrifice the man that clothes me.
The man that clothes me. In Gnostic theology, the physical body is the garment the divine spirit wears during its time imprisoned in the material world. Jesus is not telling Judas to kill him. He is telling Judas to remove the garment, to free the divine spirit from its physical prison, to complete the mission. that the other 11 for all their devotion, for all their loyalty, for all their years walking beside Jesus, were not spiritually prepared to carry out. The Gospel of Judas then gives Judas a title found nowhere else in any ancient Christian text, the 13th spirit. 13. One beyond the 12. Not the least disciple, not a footnote, not a failure, set apart, elevated, chosen for something the others could not bear. But here is the part most people never mention. Because immediately after Jesus gives Judas this instruction, he tells him the price. Judas will be condemned, cursed, rejected, despised. Jesus tells him this directly, explicitly with full knowledge of what history will do to Judas the moment the act is complete.
And Judas says, "Yes, let that land." In this version of events, Judas knew exactly what agreeing would mean. He knew his name would become the most hated name in Western civilization. He knew that every generation born after that night in the garden would be taught to use his name as a synonym for the worst thing a human being can do. He knew about the paintings, the sermons, the centuries of contempt. And he said yes anyway. If the gospel of Judas is to be believed, Judas was not the most cowardly disciple. He was the most obedient. And you were never supposed to know that. Before we go further, if what you just heard made you question something you were taught, you are not alone. Drop a comment below with one word. One word that describes how you feel right now about Judas, betrayer, hero, victim, soldier. Whatever word comes to mind, write it below right now.
because the conversation happening in those comments is exactly why this channel exists. And if this is the first time you have ever heard any of this, hit subscribe because the Gospel of Judas is only the beginning. There are dozens of texts that were buried alongside it and we are going to open every single one.
So why has no one ever told you this?
Not in church, not in school, not in any of the documentaries you were handed about early Christianity. Because the people who controlled what you were taught did not simply ignore this gospel. They hunted it and then they called in the Roman Empire to finish the job. It started with one man. Around 180 AD, a bishop named Irenaeus of Leon wrote the most comprehensive attack on Gnostic Christianity ever assembled, a five volume work called Against Heresies. And in book one, chapter 31, Irenaeus specifically names the Gospel of Judas. He calls it a fictitious history. He accuses the communities reading it of glorifying the betrayer and corrupting apostolic teaching. That reference matters more than it might appear because it means the gospel of Judas was already circulating widely enough, influencing enough people that the most powerful bishop of his era felt it necessary to name it publicly and condemn it by title. You do not write five volumes attacking something nobody is reading. This text was a threat. But Irenaeus was only the beginning. In 325 AD, the Roman Emperor Constantine convened one of the most consequential gatherings in the history of Western civilization. The Council of Nika. Over 300 bishops assembled to formally unify Christian doctrine under imperial authority. The war that Irenaeus had been fighting with words Constantine finished with law. Dissenting theological positions were declared heresy. The Gnostic tradition that had produced the Gospel of Judas, the Gospel of Thomas, and dozens of other texts was not simply condemned. It was outlawed by the most powerful empire on earth. And then in 367 AD, a bishop named Athanasius of Alexandria wrote his annual Easter letter to the churches under his authority. In it, he listed exactly 27 books that he declared to be the authentic New Testament. The same 27 books that sit in every Bible printed today. Everything not on that list was ordered destroyed. That Easter letter is the first document in recorded history to define the New Testament cannon as we know it. And with it, the Gospel of Judas was officially sentenced to erasure. Not by accident, not by neglect, by decree. Within two centuries of Athanasius writing those words, the Gospel of Judas had vanished completely.
No copies, no references, no trace. 15 centuries of silence until a limestone box in the Egyptian desert returned it to the world. Now, does that mean everything in the Gospel of Judas is historically accurate? No. Bartman, who is not a Christian, who has spent his career questioning traditional biblical narratives, and who has no theological reason whatsoever to defend the Orthodox cannon, still concludes that this text tells us more about 2 century Gnostic belief than about the historical Judas himself. But that is not the point. The point is this. There were communities of real people in the earliest centuries of Christian history who read this text as scripture who gathered around it who built their entire understanding of Jesus salvation and Judas on what it said. It took a bishop, an emperor, and an imperial decree to erase them from the record. And someone decided you were never allowed to know they existed.
So what do we do with Judas? The canonical gospels say he was a traitor who died in shame. Matthew 27:5 records that he threw the 30 silver coins into the temple, walked out and hanged himself. The Acts of the Apostles adds a darker detail. Still, Acts 1:18 describes his body falling headlong into a field, bursting open, his intestines spilling out. Two accounts of the same death, already contradicting each other within the cannon itself. The Gospel of Judas says something else entirely. It says he was the most trusted disciple chosen for a burden so sacred and so costly that no one else was spiritually equipped to carry it. Three accounts, three different Judases, and the one that got buried for 1500 years is the only one that portrays him as anything other than a monster. Ask yourself why.
The Gospel of Judas forces questions onto the table that Orthodox Christianity has never comfortably answered. If the betrayal was part of the divine plan, can it even be called betrayal? Jesus told his disciples repeatedly that he would be handed over, that he would suffer and die, that it was necessary, that it had to happen. If it had to happen, someone had to make it happen. And if Judas was that someone, then Judas did not derail the plan of God. He fulfilled it. If Judas was following a direct instruction from Jesus himself, does guilt still apply?
We do not condemn a soldier for following orders in a mission his commander designed and authorized. We do not call a surgeon a murderer for cutting open a body to heal it. Why then has Judas carried the weight of condemnation for 2,000 years for doing precisely what this text claims Jesus asked him to do? And if Jesus knew, predicted, and according to this gospel personally asked for what happened in that garden, then what exactly have 2,000 years of paintings, sermons, and cultural contempt been for? These are not comfortable questions. They were not meant to be. The people who decided what you were allowed to believe understood exactly how destabilizing these questions were. That is why they needed the Gospel of Judas to disappear. Not because it was obviously false, but because it was asking questions that had no safe answers. The canonical story of Judas is clean, simple, morally satisfying. There is a villain. He is punished. justice is served. The Gospel of Judas destroys that cleanness completely. It replaces a villain with a martyr. It replaces a betrayal with an act of obedience. It replaces 2,000 years of certainty with a question that history still cannot stop asking. Was Judas the worst disciple or was he the only one willing to do what the mission actually required?
The Gospel of Judas does not rewrite Christianity. It does not erase the New Testament or overturn 2,000 years of theology with a single manuscript. But it exposes something that powerful people worked very hard to make sure you never saw. The early church was not a unified movement handing down a single agreed truth. It was a war. A war over who Jesus was, what he taught, whose version of events would survive, and which texts were dangerous enough to be condemned by name, hunted down, and erased from the record entirely.
Irenaeus won that war. The Gnostics lost, and their texts were buried, burned, hidden, or sealed in limestone boxes beneath the Egyptian desert. While the winning side wrote the history that every generation since has been handed as the complete final unquestionable truth. Here is what you need to sit with. They made Judas the most hated man in history. And then they buried the one document that told his side of the story. If his version didn't matter, if it posed no threat, if it was nothing more than the ravings of a fringe movement that history rightly ignored, then why did the most powerful bishop of the second century feel the need to hunt it by name? Why did it need to disappear for 1,500 years? And why, when it finally came back, did it still have the power to shake the world? The Gospel of Judas is not the only text they buried.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary Magdalene, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, the Gospel of Philip. Dozens of texts, real communities, real believers erased. We have them now sitting in museums, translated, published, available to anyone willing to look. And the question is no longer whether they existed. The question is what did they say that someone needed 2,000 years of silence to protect? If you want to know, this channel is where you find out.
What if the church spent 2,000 years teaching you to hate the wrong man? One name above all others has stood as the symbol of betrayal. Judas, the disciple who sold God for 30 pieces of silver.
But in 1978, Egyptian farmers pulled a leatherbound manuscript from the desert sand. And inside it, Jesus looked at Judas and said something that no priest, no pastor, no theologian ever told you. He said, "You will exceed all of them. Not Peter, not John, not any of the 12.
Judas, this is the Gospel of Judas, buried for 1700 years." And when scholars finally translated it, the question it raised was one Christianity has never fully answered. What if Judas wasn't the villain? What if he was the only disciple Jesus actually trusted?
Before we go further, we need to establish the Judas you were given. Not the one history may have buried, the one you were handed. one of 12 disciples handpicked by Jesus himself. He traveled with him, ate with him, witnessed every miracle firsthand, and yet all four canonical gospels tell the same story.
Judas went to the chief priests. He offered to hand Jesus over. Matthew 26-15 records the price. 30 silver coins. Luke 22:3 adds the detail that sealed his fate forever in the minds of believers.
Then Satan entered Judas. Not weakness, not greed, not a moment of human failure. Satan, the betrayal ends in the Garden of Gethsemane. Roman soldiers moving through darkness. and a kiss, the most infamous greeting in human history that handed Jesus to his killers. For 20 centuries, that kiss defined Judas completely. His name became a synonym for traitor in dozens of languages.
Medieval artists painted him in yellow, the color of cowardice. Dante placed him in the lowest circle of hell, being chewed eternally in the mouth of Satan himself alongside only two others in all of human history. Brutus, Casius, and Judas. That is Inferno, Kanto. 34. The world had made its verdict. Every sermon you ever heard that used the name Judas as a synonym for betrayal, every painting, every reference, every cultural shorthand was built on that verdict. And you were never asked whether it was the complete story. Then the desert gave up a secret.
Around 1978, near the limestone cliffs of Jabel Kurara in middle Egypt, farmers uncovered an ancient cave. Inside a sealed limestone box. Inside that box, a leather codeex, crumbling, fragile, ancient. But this was not just any manuscript. The codeex contained multiple early Christian texts that had not been read by human eyes in over 1,500 years. The letter of Peter to Philillip, the first revelation of James, a mysterious text called alogenis and buried among them the gospel of Judas. Whoever sealed this box was not hiding one document. They were hiding an entire library. a library someone had decided the world was never supposed to find. What followed the discovery was one of the most chaotic journeys any manuscript in history has ever taken.
The codeex passed through illegal antiquities dealers in Cairo crossed international borders without documentation. By 1983, a Geneva dealer named Hannah Asabil was attempting to sell it to scholars at the Bicki Rare Book Library at Yale University for $3 million. Yale walked away. For the next 16 years, this manuscript sat in a safe deposit box in Hicksville, New York. Not a vault, not a climate controlled archive, a safe deposit box in a suburb.
The temperature fluctuations were so severe that when scholars finally recovered it, they were holding thousands of loose fragments, pieces of sentences, splinters of words, a puzzle that had to be reconstructed fragment by fragment under magnification. Then in the year 2000, a Swiss antiquities dealer named Freda Nusberger Chakos acquired the codeex. And what happened next is remarkable. Nberger Chakos later described feeling personally haunted by the manuscript. She said she felt a responsibility almost a calling to rescue it from further destruction. She transferred ownership to the Myanis Foundation in Switzerland which funded the painstaking restoration work.
Scholars spent years reassembling fragments, filling gaps, reconstructing sentences from splinters of ancient Coptic text. And in April 2006, National Geographic published the first full English translation. The world finally read what the Egyptian desert had been guarding for 17 centuries. Carbon dating confirmed the manuscript itself to approximately 280 AD, give or take 60 years. But scholars Marvin Meyer of Chapman University and Bart Urman of the University of North Carolina both concluded the original text it was copied from dates significantly earlier, possibly as far back as 130 to 180 AD.
Within living memory of people who knew the apostles personally, this was not a medieval forgery. This was not a modern invention. This was ancient, authenticated, real, and it had survived illegal markets, neglectful storage, and 15 centuries of deliberate eraser. To tell a story, someone had worked very hard to make sure you never heard.
To understand why this gospel says what it says, you need to understand the world it came from. And that world had a discovery of its own. In December 1945, just 3 years before the Gospel of Judas surfaced, a farmer named Muhammad Ali al-San was digging for fertilizer in the Egyptian desert near a town called Nag Hamadi. His shovel struck something hard. He unearthed a sealed clay jar inside 13 leatherbound codices.
dozens of ancient texts. An entire library of Christian writings that had not been read since the century reportedly tore pages from some of the manuscripts and used them his fire that night before realizing what he had found. The Nag Hammadi library as it became known contained texts that would permanently change how understood early Christy. The Gospel of Thomas, the of Phillip, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, all of them not all of them, hidden served in clay in the Egyptian desert, while the official church and everything it could find.
These were not fringe documents written by isolated eccentrics. These were the scriptures of real communities, real believers, people who gathered, worshiped, and built their entire understanding of Jesus on texts that the Orthodox Church had declared heresy. And to understand why, you need to understand what the Gnostics actually believed. Because it was not a small difference of opinion. It was a completely different universe. The Gnostics believe the physical world is a prison, not a creation to be celebrated, not a gift from a loving God, a prison.
They believe the material universe was not created by the highest God, the infinite, unknowable, wholly divine source of all existence. It was created by a lesser deity, a flawed, arrogant, inferior being they called the demiurge.
a broken god who built a broken world and declared himself the supreme ruler of it. In some Gnostic texts, the demiurge is identified with the God of the Old Testament, the God of law, punishment, and wroth. The true God, the infinite divine beyond all comprehension had nothing to do with the creation of this world and the human soul trapped inside it, locked in a body of flesh and matter, exiled from its divine origin, cut off from the true God by the very fact of physical existence. Salvation in Gnostic thinking did not come through faith or sacrifice or repentance. It came through nosis, hidden knowledge, secret truth. The kind of understanding that could not be earned through study or prayer, only revealed directly by a divine messenger to those spiritually prepared to receive it. Now, here it connects directly to Judas. The Gnostics did not the 12 disciples with reverence.
They viewed them with something closer to pity. In Gnostic texts, the 12 are often portrayed as spiritually blind, devoted men who genuinely loved Jesus, but fundamentally misunderstood who he was and what he came to do. They were worshiping the demiurge without knowing it. Operating at the level of the material world when Jesus was trying to point them towards something infinitely beyond it. Only one disciple according to the Gospel of Judas saw past the surface. Only one understood the true nature of Jesus. Not as a teacher or prophet operating within the existing religious framework, but as a divine messenger from the true God beyond this broken world come to liberate souls from their physical prison and return them to their divine origin. That disciple was not Peter. It was not John. It was Judas. Now hold that framework in your mind because if the body is a prison, death is not a tragedy. It is liberation. And if someone helped release a divine soul from its physical prison, that person is not a murderer.
They are performing the highest act of spiritual obedience in the entire universe. Read that back onto what Judas did in the garden. And everything everything changes.
Now we reach the moment that detonated headlines across the world. In the Gospel of Judas, Jesus does not address the 12 as a group. He pulls Judas aside privately alone. And he says, "Step away from the others and I shall tell you the mysteries of the kingdom. Not so that you will go there, but you will grieve a great deal." Read that carefully. This is not a reward. This is a warning. What you are about to be told will cost you everything. And then the sentence that stopped scholars cold when they first translated it in 2006.
You will exceed all of them for you will sacrifice the man that clothes me, the man that clothes me. In Gnostic theology, the physical body is the garment that the divine spirit wears during its time imprisoned in the material world.
Jesus is not telling Judas to kill. He is telling Judas to remove the garment to free the divine spirit from its physical to complete the mission. The other 11 their devotion, their loyalty all their yearing beside Jesus not spiritually pro carry out the gospel of Judas then gives title found where else in any ancestian text the spirit 13 un beyond the 12 not the least disciple not a footnote not a failure set apart elevated chosen for some others could not bear but here is the part most people never mention because itly after Jesus gives Judas this instruction, he tells him the price. Judas will be condemned, cursed, rejected, despised. Jesus tells him this directly, explicitly with full knowledge of what history will do to Judas the moment the act is complete. And Judas says, "Yes, let that land." In this version of events, Judas knew exactly what agreeing would mean. He knew his name would become the most hated name in Western civilization. He knew that every generation born after that night in the garden would be taught to use his name as a synonym for the worst thing a human being can do. He knew about the paintings, the sermons, the centuries of contempt. And he said yes anyway. If the gospel of Judas is to be believed, Judas was not the most cowardly disciple. He was the most obedient. And you were never supposed to know that. Before we go further, if what you just heard made you question something you were taught, you are not alone. Drop a comment below with one word. One word that describes how you feel right now about Judas.
betrayer, hero, victim, soldier, whatever word comes to mind, write it below right now because the conversation happening in those comments is exactly why why this channel exists. And if this is the first time you heard any, hit subscribe because the gospel of Judas is only the beginning. There are dozens of texts that were alongside it and we are going to open every single one.
So why has no one ever told you this?
Not in church, not in school, not in any of the documentaries you were handed about early Christianity. Because the people who controlled what you were taught did not simply ignore this gospel. They hunted it. And then they called in the Roman Empire to finish the job. It started with one man. Around 180 AD, a bishop named Irenaeus of Leon wrote the most comprehensive attack on Gnostic Christianity ever assembled, a five volume work called Against Heresies. And in book one, chapter 31, Irenaeus specifically names the Gospel of Judas. He calls it a fictitious history. He accuses the communities reading it of glorifying the betrayer and corrupting apostolic teaching. That reference matters more than it might appear because it means the gospel of Judas was already circulating widely enough, influencing enough people that the most powerful bishop of his era felt it necessary to name it publicly and condemn it by title. You do not write five volumes attacking something nobody is reading. This text was a threat. But Irenaeus was only the beginning. In 325 AD, the Roman Emperor Constantine convened one of the most consequential gatherings in the history of Western civilization. The Council of Nika. Over 300 bishops assembled to formally unify Christian doctrine under imperial authority. The war that Irenaeus had been fighting with words Constantine finished with law. Dissenting theological positions were declared heresy. The Gnostic tradition that had produced the Gospel of Judas, the Gospel of Thomas, and dozens of other texts was not simply condemned. It was outlawed by the most powerful empire on earth. And then in 367 AD, a bishop named Athanasius of Alexandria wrote his annual Easter letter to the churches under his authority. In it, he listed exactly 27 books that he declared to be the authentic New Testament. The same 27 books that sit in every Bible printed today. Everything not on that list was ordered destroyed. That Easter letter is the first document in recorded history to define the New Testament cannon as we know it. And with it, the Gospel of Judas was officially sentenced to erasia. Not by accident, not by neglect, by decree. Within two centuries of Athanasius writing those words, the Gospel of Judas had vanished completely.
No copies, no references, no trace. 15 centuries of silence until a limestone box in the Egyptian desert returned it to the world. Now, does that mean everything in the Gospel of Judas is historically accurate? No. Bart Urman, who is not a Christian, who has spent his career questioning traditional biblical narratives, and who has no theological reason whatsoever to defend the Orthodox cannon, still concludes that this text tells us more about second century Gnostic belief than about the historical Judas himself. But that is not the point. The point is this.
There were communities of real people in the earliest centuries of Christian history who read this text as scripture who gathered around it who built their entire understanding of Jesus salvation and Judas on what it said. It took a bishop, an emperor and an imperial decree to erase them from the record.
And someone decided you were never allowed to know they existed.
So what do we do with Judas? The canonical gospels say he was a traitor who died in shame. Matthew 27:5 records that he threw the 30 silver coins into the temple, walked out and hanged himself. The Acts of the Apostles adds a darker detail. Still, Acts 1:18 describes his body falling headlong into a field, bursting open, his intestines spilling out. Two accounts of the same death, already contradicting each other within the cannon itself. The Gospel of Judas says something else entirely. It says he was the most trusted disciple chosen for a burden so sacred and so costly that no one else was spiritually equipped to carry it. Three accounts, three different Judases, and the one that got buried for 1500 years is the only one that portrays him as anything other than a monster. Ask yourself why.
The Gospel of Judas forces questions onto the table that orthodox Christianity has never comfortably answered. If the betrayal was part of the divine plan, can it even be called betrayal? Jesus told his disciples repeatedly that he would be handed over, that he would suffer and die, that it was necessary, that it had to happen. If it had to happen, someone had to make it happen. And if Judas was that someone, then Judas did not derail the plan of God. He fulfilled it. If Judas was following a direct instruction from Jesus himself, does guilt still apply?
We do not condemn a soldier for following orders in a mission his commander designed and authorized.
We do not call a surgeon a murderer for cutting open a body to heal it. Why then has Judas carried the weight of condemnation for 2,000 years for doing precisely what this text claims Jesus asked him to do? And if Jesus knew, predicted, and according to this gospel personally asked for what happened in that garden, then what exactly have 2,000 years of paintings, sermons, and cultural contempt been for? These are not comfortable questions. They were not meant to be. The people who decided what you were allowed to believe understood exactly how destabilizing these questions were. That is why they needed the gospel of Judas to disappear. Not because it was obviously false, but because it was asking questions that had no safe answers. The canonical story of Judas is clean, simple, morally satisfying. There is a villain. He is punished. justice is served. The Gospel of Judas destroys that cleanness completely. It replaces a villain with a martyr. It replaces a betrayal with an act of obedience. It replaces 2,000 years of certainty with a question that history still cannot stop asking. Was Judas the worst disciple or was he the only one willing to do what the mission actually required?
The Gospel of Judas does not rewrite Christianity. It does not erase the New Testament or overturn 2,000 years of theology with a single manuscript. But it exposes something that powerful people worked very hard to make sure you never saw. The early church was not a unified movement handing down a single agreed truth. It was a war. A war over who Jesus was, what he taught, whose version of events would survive, and which texts were dangerous enough to be condemned by name, hunted down, and erased from the record entirely.
Irenaeus won that war. The Gnostics lost, and their texts were buried, burned, hidden, or sealed in limestone boxes beneath the Egyptian desert. While the winning side wrote the history that every generation since has been handed as the complete final unquestionable truth. Here is what you need to sit with. They made Judas the most hated man in history. And then they buried the one document that told his side of the story. If his version didn't matter, if it posed no threat, if it was nothing more than the ravings of a fringe movement that history rightly ignored, then why did the most powerful bishop of the second century feel the need to hunt it by name? Why did it need to disappear for 1,500 years? And why, when it finally came back, did it still have the power to shake the world? The Gospel of Judas is not the only text they buried.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary Magdalene, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, the Gospel of Philip. Dozens of texts, real communities, real believers erased. We have them now sitting in museums, translated, published, available to anyone willing to look. And the question is no longer whether they existed. The question is what did they say that someone needed 2,000 years of silence to protect? If you want to know, this channel is where you find out.
What if the church spent 2,000 years teaching you to hate the wrong man? One name above all others has stood as the symbol of betrayal. Judas, the disciple who sold God for 30 pieces of silver.
But in 1978, Egyptian farmers pulled a leatherbound manuscript from the desert sand. And inside it, Jesus looked at Judas and said something that no priest, no pastor, no theologian ever told you. He said, "You will exceed all of them. Not Peter, not John, not any of the 12.
Judas, this is the Gospel of Judas, buried for 1700 years." And when scholars finally translated it, the question it raised was one Christianity has never fully answered. What if Judas wasn't the villain? What if he was the only disciple Jesus actually trusted?
Before we go further, we need to establish the Judas you were given. Not the one history may have buried, the one you were handed. one of 12 disciples handpicked by Jesus himself. He traveled with him, ate with him, witnessed every miracle firsthand, and yet all four canonical gospels tell the same story.
Judas went to the chief priests. He offered to hand Jesus over. Matthew 26-15 records the price. 30 silver coins. Luke 22:3 adds the detail that sealed his fate forever in the minds of believers.
Then Satan entered Judas. Not weakness, not greed, not a moment of human failure. Satan, the betrayal ends in the Garden of Gethsemane. Roman soldiers moving through darkness and a kiss, the most infamous greeting in human history that handed Jesus to his killers. For 20 centuries, that kiss defined Judas completely. His name became a synonym for traitor in dozens of languages.
Medieval artists painted him in yellow, the color of cowardice. Dante placed him in the lowest circle of hell, being chewed eternally in the mouth of Satan himself alongside only two others in all of human history. Brutus, Casius, and Judas, that is Inferno, Kanto, 34. The world had made its verdict. Every sermon you ever heard that used the name Judas as a synonym for betrayal, every painting, every reference, every cultural shortorthhand was built on that verdict. And you were never asked whether it was the complete story. Then the desert gave up a secret.
Around 1978, near the limestone cliffs of Jabel Kurara in middle Egypt, farmers uncovered an ancient cave. Inside a sealed limestone box, inside that box, a leather codeex, crumbling, fragile, ancient. But this was not just any manuscript. The codeex contained multiple early Christian texts that had not been read by human eyes in over 1,500 years. The letter of Peter to Philillip, the first revelation of James, a mysterious text called Aloinis and buried among them the Gospel of Judas. Whoever sealed this box was not hiding one document. They were hiding an entire library. a library someone had decided the world was never supposed to find. What followed the discovery was one of the most chaotic journeys any manuscript in history has ever taken.
The codeex passed through illegal antiquities dealers in Cairo crossed international borders without documentation. By 1983, a Geneva dealer named Hannah Asabil was attempting to sell it to scholars at the Bicki Rare Book Library at Yale University for $3 million. Yale walked away. For the next 16 years, this manuscript sat in a safe deposit box in Hicksville, New York. Not a vault, not a climate controlled archive, a safe deposit box in a suburb.
The temperature fluctuations were so severe that when scholars finally recovered it, they were holding thousands of loose fragments, pieces of sentences, splinters of words, a puzzle that had to be reconstructed fragment by fragment under magnification. Then in the year 2000, a Swiss antiquities dealer named Freda Nusberger Chakos acquired the codeex. And what happened next is remarkable. Nberger Chakos later described feeling personally haunted by the manuscript. She said she felt a responsibility almost a calling to rescue it from further destruction. She transferred ownership to the Myanas Foundation in Switzerland which funded the painstaking restoration work.
Scholars spent years reassembling fragments, filling gaps, reconstructing sentences from splinters of ancient Coptic text. And in April 2006, National Geographic published the first full English translation. The world finally read what the Egyptian desert had been guarding for 17 centuries. Carbon dating confirmed the manuscript itself to approximately 280 AD, give or take 60 years. But scholars Marvin Meer of Chapman University and Bart Urman of the University of North Carolina both concluded the original text. It was copied from dates significantly earlier, possibly as far back as 130 to 180 AD, within living memory of people who knew the apostles personally. This was not a medieval forgery. This was not a modern invention. This was ancient, authenticated, real, and it had survived illegal markets, neglectful storage, and 15 centuries of deliberate eraser. To tell a story, someone had worked very hard to make sure you never heard.
To understand why this gospel says what it says, you need to understand the world it came from. And that world had a discovery of its own. In December 1945, just 3 years before the Gospel of Judas surfaced, a farmer named Muhammad Ali al-San was digging for fertilizer in the Egyptian desert near a town called Nag Hamadi. His shovel struck something hard. He unearthed a sealed clay jar inside 13 leatherbound codices. Dozens of ancient texts, an entire hidden library of early Christian writings that had not been read since the 4th century.
Muhammad Ali reportedly tore pages from some of the manuscripts and used them to light his fire that night before realizing what he had found. The Nag Hammadi library as it became known contained texts that would permanently change how scholars understood early Christianity. The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philillip, the Seek of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, all of them Gnostic, all of them buried, hidden, preserved in clay jars in the Egyptian desert while the official church burned everything it could find. These were not fringe documents written by isolated eccentrics. These were the scriptures of real communities, real believers, people who gathered, worshiped and built their entire understand Jesus on texts that the Orthodox Church had declared heresy.
And to understand why, you need to understand what the Gnostics actually believed. Because it was not a small difference of opinion. It was a completely different universe. The Gnostics believe the physical world is a prison, not a creation to be celebrated, not a gift from a loving God, a prison.
They believe the material universe was not created by the highest God, the infinite, unknowable, holy divine source of all existence. It was created by a lesser deity, a flawed, arrogant, inferior being. they called the demi urge, a broken god who built a broken world and declared himself the supreme ruler of it. In some Gnostic texts, the demi urge is identified with the god of the old testament, the god of law, punishment, and wroth. The true God, the infinite divine beyond all comprehension had nothing to do with the creation of this world and the human soul trapped inside it, locked in a body of flesh and matter, exiled from its divine origin, cut off from the true God by the very fact of physical existence. Salvation in Gnostic thinking did not come through faith or sacrifice or repentance. It came through nosis, hidden knowledge, secret truth. The kind of understanding that could not be earned through study or prayer, only revealed directly by a divine messenger to those spiritually prepared to receive it. Now, here is where it connects directly to Judas. The Gnostics did not view the 12 disciples with reverence. They viewed them with something closer to pity. In Gnostic texts, the 12 are often portrayed as spiritually blind, devoted men who genuinely loved Jesus, but fundamentally misunderstood who he was and what he came to do. They were worshiping the demiurge without knowing it. Operating at the level of the material world when Jesus was trying to point them towards something infinitely beyond it. Only one disciple according to the Gospel of Judas saw past the surface. Only one understood the true nature of Jesus. Not as a teacher or prophet operating within the existing religious framework, but as a divine messenger from the true God beyond this broken world come to liberate souls from their physical prison and return them to their divine origin. That disciple was not Peter. It was not John. It was Judas. Now hold that framework in your mind because if the body is a prison, death is not a tragedy. It is liberation. And if someone helped release a divine soul from its physical prison, that person is not a murderer. They are performing the highest act of spiritual obedience in the entire universe. Read that back onto what Judas did in the garden. And everything everything changes.
Now we reach the moment that detonated headlines across the world. In the Gospel of Judas, Jesus does not address the 12 as a group. He pulls Judas aside privately alone. And he says, "Step away from the others and I shall tell you the mysteries of the kingdom. Not so that you will go there, but you will grieve a great deal. Read that carefully. This is not a reward. This is a warning. What you are about to be told will cost you everything. And then the sentence that stopped scholars cold when they first translated it in 2006.
You will exceed all of them, for you will sacrifice the man that clothes me, the man that clothes me. In Gnostic theology, the physical body is the garment the divine spirit wears during its time imprisoned in the material world. Jesus is not telling Judas to kill him. He is telling Judas to remove the garment, to free the divine spirit from its physical prison, to complete the mission that the other 11 for all their devotion, for all their loyalty, for all their years walking beside Jesus, were not spiritually prepared to carry out. The Gospel of Judas then gives Judas a title found nowhere else in any ancient Christian text, the 13th Spirit. 13. One beyond the 12, not the least disciple, not a footnote, not a failure, set apart, elevated, chosen for something the others could not bear. But here is the part most people never mention. Because immediately after Jesus gives Judas this instruction, he tells him the price. Judas will be condemned, cursed, rejected, despised. Jesus tells him this directly, explicitly with full knowledge of what history will do to Judas the moment the act is complete.
And Judas says, "Yes, let that land." In this version of events, Judas knew exactly what agreeing would mean. He knew his name would become the most hated name in Western civilization. He knew that every generation born after that night in the garden would be taught to use his name as a synonym for the worst thing a human being can do. He knew about the paintings, the sermons, the centuries of contempt. And he said yes anyway. If the gospel of Judas is to be believed, Judas was not the most cowardly disciple. He was the most obedient. And you were never supposed to know that. Before we go further, if what you just heard made you question something you were taught, you are not alone. Drop a comment below with one word. One word that describes how you feel right now about Judas, betrayer, hero, victim, soldier. Whatever word comes to mind, write it below right now.
Because the conversation happening in those comments is exactly why this channel exists. And if this is the first time you have ever heard any of this, hit subscribe because the Gospel of Judas is only the beginning. There are dozens of texts that were buried alongside it and we are going to open every single one.
So why has no one ever told you this?
Not in church, not in school, not in any of the documentaries you were handed about early Christianity. Because the people who controlled what you were taught did not simply ignore this gospel. They hunted it. And then they called in the Roman Empire to finish the job. It started with one man. Around 180 AD, a bishop named Irenaeus of Leon wrote the most comprehensive attack on Gnostic Christianity ever assembled, a five volume work called Against Heresies. And in book 1, chapter 31, Irenaeus specifically names the Gospel of Judas. He calls it a fictitious history. He accuses the communities reading it of glorifying the betrayer and corrupting apostolic teaching. That reference matters more than it might appear because it means the gospel of Judas was already circulating widely enough, influencing enough people that the most powerful bishop of his era felt it necessary to name it publicly and condemn it by title. You do not write five volumes attacking something nobody is reading. This text was a threat. But Irenaeus was only the beginning. In 325 AD, the Roman Emperor Constantine convened one of the most consequential gatherings in the history of Western civilization. The Council of Nika. Over 300 bishops assembled to formally unify Christian doctrine under imperial authority. The war that Irenaeus had been fighting with words Constantine finished with law. Dissenting theological positions were declared heresy. The Gnostic tradition that had produced the Gospel of Judas, the Gospel of Thomas, and dozens of other texts was not simply condemned. It was outlawed by the most powerful empire on earth. And then in 367 AD, a bishop named Athanasius of Alexandria wrote his annual Easter letter to the churches under his authority. In it, he listed exactly 27 books that he declared to be the authentic New Testament. The same 27 books that sit in every Bible printed today. Everything not on that list was ordered destroyed. That Easter letter is the first document in recorded history to define the New Testament cannon as we know it. And with it, the Gospel of Judas was officially sentenced to erasure. Not by accident, not by neglect, by decree. Within two centuries of Athanasius writing those words, the Gospel of Judas had vanished completely.
No copies, no references, no trace. 15 centuries of silence until a limestone box in the Egyptian desert returned it to the world. Now, does that mean everything in the Gospel of Judas is historically accurate? No. Bart man, who is not a Christian, who has spent his career questioning traditional biblical narratives and who has no theological reason whatsoever to defend the Orthodox cannon, still concludes that this text tells us more about 2 century Gnostic belief than about the historical Judas himself. But that is not the point. The point is this. There were communities of real people in the earliest centuries of Christian history who read this text as scripture who gathered around it who built their entire understanding of Jesus salvation and Judas on what it said. It took a bishop, an emperor, and an imperial decree to erase them from the record. And someone decided you were never allowed to know they existed.
So what do we do with Judas? The canonical gospels say he was a traitor who died in shame. Matthew 27:5 records that he threw the 30 silver coins into the temple, walked out and hanged himself. The Acts of the Apostles adds a darker detail. Still, Acts 1:18 describes his body falling headlong into a field, bursting open, his intestines spilling out. Two accounts of the same death, already contradicting each other within the cannon itself. The Gospel of Judas says something else entirely. It says he was the most trusted disciple chosen for a burden so sacred and so costly that no one else was spiritually equipped to carry it. Three accounts, three different Judases, and the one that got buried for 1500 years is the only one that portrays him as anything other than a monster. Ask yourself why.
The Gospel of Judas forces questions onto the table that orthodox Christianity has never comfortably answered. If the betrayal was part of the divine plan, can it even be called betrayal? Jesus told his disciples repeatedly that he would be handed over, that he would suffer and die, that it was necessary, that it had to happen. If it had to happen, someone had to make it happen. And if Judas was that someone, then Judas did not derail the plan of God. He fulfilled it. If Judas was following a direct instruction from Jesus himself, does guilt still apply?
We do not condemn a soldier for following orders in a mission his commander designed and authorized.
We do not call a surgeon a murderer for cutting open a body to heal it. Why then has Judas carried the weight of condemnation for 2,000 years for doing precisely what this text claims Jesus asked him to do? And if Jesus knew, predicted, and according to this gospel personally asked for what happened in that garden, then what exactly have 2,000 years of paintings, sermons, and cultural contempt been for? These are not comfortable questions. They were not meant to be. The people who decided what you were allowed to believe understood exactly how destabilizing these questions were. That is why they needed the gospel of Judas to disappear. Not because it was obviously false, but because it was asking questions that had no safe answers. The canonical story of Judas is clean, simple, morally satisfying. There is a villain. He is punished. justice is served. The Gospel of Judas destroys that cleanness completely. It replaces a villain with a martyr. It replaces a betrayal with an act of obedience. It replaces 2,000 years of certainty with a question that history still cannot stop asking. Was Judas the worst disciple or was he the only one willing to do what the mission actually required?
The Gospel of Judas does not rewrite Christianity. It does not erase the New Testament or overturn 2,000 years of theology with a single manuscript. But it exposes something that powerful people worked very hard to make sure you never saw. The early church was not a unified movement handing down a single agreed truth. It was a war. A war over who Jesus was, what he taught, whose version of events would survive, and which texts were dangerous enough to be condemned by name, hunted down, and erased from the record entirely.
Irenaeus won that war. The Gnostics lost, and their texts were buried, burned, hidden, or sealed in limestone boxes beneath the Egyptian desert. While the winning side wrote the history that every generation since has been handed as the complete final unquestionable truth. Here is what you need to sit with. They made Judas the most hated man in history. And then they buried the one document that told his side of the story. If his version didn't matter, if it posed no threat, if it was nothing more than the ravings of a fringe movement that history rightly ignored, then why did the most powerful bishop of the second century feel the need to hunt it by name? Why did it need to disappear for 1,500 years? And why, when it finally came back, did it still have the power to shake the world? The Gospel of Judas is not the only text they buried.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary Magdalene, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, the Gospel of Philip. Dozens of texts, real communities, real believers erased. We have them now sitting in museums, translated, published, available to anyone willing to look. And the question is no longer whether they existed. The question is what did they say that someone needed 2,000 years of silence to protect? If you want to know, this channel is where you find out.
What if the church spent 2,000 years teaching you to hate the wrong man? One name above all others has stood as the symbol of betrayal. Judas, the disciple who sold God for 30 pieces of silver.
But in 1978, Egyptian farmers pulled a leatherbound manuscript from the desert sand. And inside it, Jesus looked at Judas and said something that no priest, no pastor, no theologian ever told you. He said, "You will exceed all of them. Not Peter, not John, not any of the 12.
Judas, this is the Gospel of Judas, buried for 1700 years." And when scholars finally translated it, the question it raised was one Christianity has never fully answered. What if Judas wasn't the villain? What if he was the only disciple Jesus actually trusted?
Before we go further, we need to establish the Judas you were given. Not the one history may have buried, the one you were handed. One of 12 disciples handpicked by Jesus himself. He traveled with him, ate with him, witnessed every miracle firsthand, and yet all four canonical gospels tell the same story.
Judas went to the chief priests. He offered to hand Jesus over. Matthew 26-15 records the price. 30 silver coins. Luke 22:3 adds the detail healed his fate forever in the minds of believers.
Then then Satan entered Judas.
Weakness, not greed, not a mo human faith. Satan trail ends in the garden of Gethsemane. Roman soldiers moving through darkness.
And this the most infamous greeting in human history that handed Jesus to his killers. For 20 cent centuries, that kiss defined Judas completely. His name became a synonym for traitor in dozens of languages. Medieval art painted him in yellow the color of Dante placed him in the low of hell be eternal mouth of Satan himself alongside only in all of humanry. Brutus Casius and Judas that is inferno Kanto 34 the world had made its verdict. Every sermon you ever heard that used the name Judas as a synonym for betrayal, every painting, every reference, every cruel shortorthhand was built verdict and you were never asked whether it was the complete story. Then the desert gave up a secret.
Around 1978, near the limestone cliffs of Jabel Kurara in Middle Egypt, farmers uncovered an ancient cave. Inside a sealed limestone box, inside that box, a leather codeex, crumbling, fragile, ancient. But this was not just any manuscript. The codeex contained multiple early Christian texts that had not been read human eyes in over 1,500 years. The letter of Peter to Philillip, the first revelation of James, a mysterious text called Alogenis and buried among them the Gospel of Judas.
Whoever sealed this box was not hiding one document. They were hiding an entire library. a library someone had decided the world was never supposed to find.
What followed the discovery was one of the most chaotic journeys any manuscript in history has ever taken. The codeex passed through illegal antiquities dealers in Cairo, crossed international borders without documentation. By 1983, a Geneva dealer named Hannah Asabil was attempting to sell it to scholars at the Bicki Rare Book Library at Yale UN for $3 million. Yale walked away. For the next 16 years, this manuscript sat in a safe deposit box in Hicksville, New York.
Not a vault, not a climate can archive a deposit box in a suburb. The temperature fluctuations were so severe that when scholars finally rec they thousands of loose fragments, pieces of sentences, splinters of words, a puzzle that had to be wreaked fragment by fragment under magnification. Then in the year 2000, a Swiss antiquities dealer named Freda Nusberos acquired Odex.
and what happened next remarkable burger chakos to described feeling personally haunted by the manuscript. She said she felt a responsibility almost a calling to rescue it from further destruction.
She transferred ownership to the Myanas Foundation in Switzerland the painstaking restoration work.
Scholars spent years reassembling fragments, filling gaps, reconstructing sentences from splinters of ancient Coptic text. And in 2006, National Geographic published the first full English translation. The world finally read what the Egyptian desert had been guarding for 17 centuries.
Carbon dating confirmed the manuscript itself to approximately 280 AD, give or take 60 years. But scholars Marvin Meer of Chapman and Bart Urman of the University of North Carolina both concluded the original text. It was copied from dates significantly earlier, possibly as far back as 130 to 180 AD within living memory of people who knew the apostles personally was not a medieval forgery. This was not a modern invention. This was ancient, authenticated, real, and it had survived illegal markets, neglectful storage, and 15 centuries of deliberate eraser. To tell a story, someone had worked very hard to make sure you never heard.
To understand why this gospel says what it says, you need to understand the world it came from. And that world had a discovery of its own. In December 1945, just 3 years before the Gospel of Judas surfaced, a farmer named Muhammad Ali al-San was digging for fertilizer in the Egyptian desert near a town called Nag Hamadi. His shovel struck something hard. He unearthed a sealed clay jar inside 13 leatherbound cotices. Dozens of ancient texts, an entire hidden library of early Christian writings that had not been read since the 4th century.
Muhammad Ali reportedly tore pages from some of the manuscripts and used them to light his fire that night before realizing what he had found. The Nag Hammadi library, as it became known, contained texts that would permanently change how scholars understood early Christianity.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philip, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, all of them Gnostic, all of them buried, hidden, preserved in clay jars in the Egyptian desert, while the official church burned everything it could find. These were not fringe documents written by isolated eccentrics. These were the scriptures of real communities, real believers, people who gathered, worshiped, and built their entire understanding of Jesus on texts that the Orthodox Church had declared heresy. And to understand why, you need to understand what the Gnostics actually believed. Because it was not a small difference of opinion. It was a completely different universe. The Gnostics believe the physical world is a prison, not a creation to be celebrated, not a gift from a loving God, a prison.
They believe the material universe was not created by the highest God, the infinite, unknowable, holy divine source of allance. It was created by a lesser deity, a flawed, arrogant, inferior being. they called the demiurge, a broken god who built a broken world and declared himself the supreme ruler of it. In some gnostic texts, the demi urge is identified with the god of the old testament, the god of law, punishment and wroth.
The true God, infinite beyond all comprehs divine origin, cut off from the true God, fact of physical existence.
Salvation innostic thinking did not come through faith or sacrifice or repentance. It came through knowledge, secret truth. The kind of understanding that could not be through study prayer only revealed directly by a divine messenger to those spiritually prepared to receive it. Now here is where it connects directly to Judas.
The Gnostics did not disciples with viewed them something closely. In Gnostic texts 12 are often portrayed as spiritually blind devoted who genuinely loved Jesus but fundamentally misunderstood who he was and what he came to do. They were worshiping the demiurge without knowing it.
The level of the material world when Jesus was trying to point them toward something infinitely beyond it.
Only one disciple according to the goal of Judas saw past the surface. Only one of the true nature of Jesus. Not as a teacher or prophet operating within the religious framework but as a messenger through God beyond this bro come to liberals from their physical and return to their divine. That Peter it was non Udus. Now hold that in your mind because if he is a prison death is not liberated and in helped reline soul fromical prison that person is not murderer. They are performing the highest act of spiritual obedience the entire universe. Read that back onto what Judas did in the garden.
and everything everything.
Now we reach the moment that detonated headlines across the world.
In the gospel of Judas, Jesus does not dwell as a group. He Judas aside privately alone and step away others. I shall tell histories and not so that go there but you will greet great read that this not a reward. This is a warning.
What you are be told will cost everything and then the stopped scold first translate into tuned and sick. You will exceed all of them for you will sacrifice the man that clothe me. The man that clothes me innostic the physi is the garment the divine spirit wears during its time in the material world.
Jesus telling kill him. He is telling Judas to remove garment to free the divine spirit from its physical prison to complete the mission that the other for all their devotion for all their loyalty for all their years walking beside Jesus were not spiritually prepared to carry out the gospel of Judas.
then gives Judas a title found nowhere else in any ancient Christian text. The 13th spirit 131 B12 not the disciple not a footnote not a faith set for something could not bear but here is the most fever mention because in after Jes instru the price Judas will beed by Jesus tells him this directly full knowledge of what he'll do to the act is complete and Judas says yes at land this verse events just knewly what it would mean. knew his name would become the most hate name in civilian he knew regener after that the garden taught to name a synonym for the work a human can do knew about the things the sense of content and he anyway if the of Judas is believed Judas was not cowardiple was the mostant and you were never to know that before we go for if just her made you something taught and not below with word one word scribes he'll right about Judas betray hero victim soldier whatever word come write it below right now because the conversation happening in those comments is exactly why this channel exists and if this is the first time you have ever heard any of this hit subscribe because the gospel of Judas is only the beginning there are dozens of texts that were buried alongside it and we are going to open every single single one.
So why has no one ever told you this?
Not in church, not in school, not in any of the documentaries you were handed about early Christianity because the people who control what you were taught did not goel.
They hunted it and then they called in the Roman Empire to finish the job. It started with one man. Around 180 AD, a bishop named Irin of Leon wrote the most comprehensive attackic Christianity assembled, a volume work called against heresies. And in book 1 to31 Irenius spitly names the gospel of J. He calls it a fictitious history. He accused re of gloring the betrayer and corrupting stolic teach.
That's matter than it might appear because it mean the gospel of was all circulating enough iting enough people that the most bishop of ha it necessary name it publicly and condemn it by title. You do not write five volumes of something nobody is reading. Text was a threat. Adrenaeus only the beginning. In 325 AD, the Roman Emperor and one of the most sequential gatherings in the history of Western civilization, the Council of Nika, over 300 bishops assembled to formally unify Christian doctrine, imperial authority. The war that Irenaeus had been fighting with words Constantine finished with law. Dissenting theological positions were declared heresy. The Gnostic tradition that had produced the Gospel of Judas, the Gospel of Thomas, and dozens of other texts was not simply condemned. It was outlawed by the most powerful empire on earth. And then in 367 AD, a bishop named Athanasius of Alexandria wrote his annual Easter letter to the churches under his authority. In it, he listed exactly 27 books that he declared to be the authentic New Testament. The same 27 books that sit in every Bible printed today. Everything not on that list was ordered destroyed. That Easter letter is the first document in recorded history to define the New Testament cannon as we know it. And with it, the Gospel of Judas was officially sentenced to erasure. Not by accident, not by neglect, by decree. Within two centuries of Athanasius writing those words, the Gospel of Judas had vanished completely.
No copies, no references, no trace, 15 centuries of silence until a limestone box in the Egyptian desert returned it to the world. Now, does that mean everything in the Gospel of Judas is historically accurate? No. Bart Urman, who is not a Christian, who has spent his career questioning traditional biblical narratives, and who has no theological reason whatsoever to defend the Orthodox cannon, still concludes that this text tells us more about second century Gnostic belief than about the historical Judas himself. But that is not the point. The point is this.
There were communities of real in the earliest centuries of Christian history who read this text as scripture who gathered around it who built their entire understanding of Jesus salvation and Judas on what it said. It took a bishop an emperor and an imperial decree to erase them from the record. And someone decided you were never allowed to know they existed.
So what do we do with Judas? The canonical gospels say he was a traitor who died in shame. Matthew 27:5 records that he threw the 30 silver coins into the temple, walked out and hanged himself. The Acts of the Apostles adds a darker detail. Still, Acts 1:18 describes his body falling headlong into a field, bursting open, his intestines spilling out. Two accounts of the same death, already contradicting each other within the cannon itself. The Gospel of Judas says something else entirely. It says he was the most trusted disciple chosen for a burden so sacred and so costly that no one else was spiritually equipped to carry it. Three accounts, three different Judases, and the one that got buried for 1500 years is the only one that portrays him as anything other than a monster. Ask yourself why.
The Gospel of Judas forces questions onto the table that Orthodox Christianity has never comfortably answered. If the betrayal was part of the divine plan, can it even be called betrayal? Jesus told his disciples repeatedly that he would be handed over, that he would suffer and die, that it was necessary, that it had to happen. If it had to happen, someone had to make it happen. And if Judas was that someone, then Judas did not derail the plan of God. He fulfilled it. If Judas was following a direct instruction from Jesus himself, does guilt still apply?
We do not condemn a soldier for following orders in a mission his commander designed and authorized. We do not call a surgeon a murderer for cutting open a body to heal it. Why then has Judas carried the weight of condemnation for 2,000 years for doing precisely what this text claims Jesus asked him to do? And if Jesus knew, predicted, and according to this gospel personally asked for what happened in that garden, then what exactly have 2,000 years of paintings, sermons, and contempt been for? These are not comfortable questions. They were not meant to be. The people who decided what you were allowed to believe understood exactly how destabilizing these questions were. That is why they needed the gospel of Judas to disappear. Not because it was obviously false, but because it was asking questions that had no safe answers. The canonical story of Judas is clean, simple, morally satisfying. There is a villain. He is punished. justice is served. The Gospel of Judas destroys that cleanness completely. It replaces a villain with a martyr. It replaces a betrayal with an act of obedience. It replaces 2,000 years of certainty with a question that history still cannot stop asking. Was Judas the worst disciple or was he the only one willing to do what the mission actually required?
The Gospel of Judas does not rewrite Christianity. It does not erase the New Testament or overturn 2,000 years of theology with a single manuscript. But it exposes something that powerful people worked very hard to make sure you never saw. The early church was not a unified movement handing down a single agreed truth. It was a war. a war over who Jesus was, what he taught, whose version of events would survive, and which texts were dangerous enough to be condemned by name, hunted down, and erased from the record entirely.
Irenaeus won that war. The Gnostics lost, and their texts were buried, burned, hidden, or sealed in limestone boxes beneath the Egyptian desert. While the winning side wrote the history that every generation since has been handed as the complete final unquestionable truth. Here is what you need to sit with. They made Judas the most hated man in history. And then they buried the one document that told his side of the story. If his version didn't matter, if it posed no threat, if it was nothing more than the ravings of a fringe movement that history rightly ignored, then why did the most powerful bishop of the second century feel the need to hunt it by name? Why did it need to disappear for 1,500 years? And why, when it finally came back, did it still have the power to shake the world? The Gospel of Judas is not the only text they buried.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary Magdalene, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, the Gospel of Philip. Dozens of texts, real communities, real believers erased. We have them now sitting in museums, translated, published, available to anyone willing to look. And the question is no longer whether they existed. The question is what did they say that someone needed 2,000 years of silence to protect? If you want to know, this channel is where you find out.
What if the church spent 2,000 years teaching you to hate the wrong man? One name above all others has stood as the symbol of betrayal. Judas, the disciple who sold God for 30 pieces of silver.
But in 1978, Egyptian farmers pulled a leatherbound manuscript from the desert sand. And inside it, Jesus looked at Judas and said something that no priest, no pastor, no theologian ever told you. He said, "You will exceed all of them. Not Peter, not John, not any of the 12.
Judas, this is the Gospel of Judas, buried for 1700 years." And when scholars finally translated it, the question it raised was one Christianity has never fully answered. What if Judas wasn't the villain? What if he was the only disciple Jesus actually trusted?
Before we go further, we need to establish the Judas you were given. Not the one history may have buried, the one you were handed. one of 12 disciples handpicked by Jesus himself. He traveled with him, ate with him, witnessed every miracle firsthand, and yet all four canonical gospels tell the same story.
Judas went to the chief priests. He offered to hand Jesus over. Matthew 26-15 records the price, 30 silver coins. Luke 22:3 adds the detail that sealed his fate forever in the minds of believers.
Then Satan entered Judas. Not weakness, not greed, not a moment of human failure. Satan, the betrayal ends in the Garden of Gethsemane. Roman soldiers moving through darkness and a kiss, the most infamous greeting in human history that handed Jesus to his killers. For 20 centuries, that kiss defined Judas completely. His name became a synonym for traitor in dozens of languages.
Medieval artists painted him in yellow, the color of cowardice. Dante placed him in the lowest circle of hell, being chewed eternally in the mouth of Satan himself alongside only two others in all of human history. Brutus, Casius, and Judas, that is Inferno, Kanto, 34. The world had made its verdict. Every sermon you ever heard that used the name Judas as a synonym for betrayal, every painting, every reference, every cultural shortorthhand was built on that verdict. And you were never asked whether it was the complete story. Then the desert gave up a secret.
Around 1978, near the limestone cliffs of Jabel Kurara in Middle Egypt, farmers uncovered an ancient cave. Inside a sealed limestone box, inside that box, a leather codeex, crumbling, fragile, ancient. But this was not just any manuscript. The codeex contained multiple early Christian texts that had not been read by human eyes in over 1,500 years. The letter of Peter to Philillip, the first revelation of James, a mysterious text called Aloinis and buried among them the Gospel of Judas. Whoever sealed this box was not hiding one document. They were hiding an entire library. a library someone had decided the world was never supposed to find. What followed the discovery was one of the most chaotic journeys any manuscript in history has ever taken.
The codeex passed through illegal antiquities dealers in Cairo crossed international borders without documentation. By 1983, a Geneva dealer named Hannah Asabil was attempting to sell it to scholars at the Bicki Rare Book Library at Yale University for $3 million. Yale walked away. For the next 16 years, this manuscript sat in a safe deposit box in Hicksville, New York. Not a vault, not a climate controlled archive, a safe deposit box in a suburb.
The temperature fluctuations were so severe that when scholars finally recovered it, they were holding thousands of loose fragments, pieces of sentences, splinters of words, a puzzle that had to be reconstructed fragment by fragment under magnification. Then in the year 2000, a Swiss antiquities dealer named Freda Nusberger Chakos acquired the codeex. And what happened next is remarkable. Nberger Chakos later described feeling personally haunted by the manuscript. She said she felt a responsibility almost a calling to rescue it from further destruction. She transferred ownership to the Myanas Foundation in Switzerland which funded the painstaking restoration work.
Scholars spent years reassembling fragments, filling gaps, reconstructing sentences from splinters of ancient Coptic text. And in April 2006, National Geographic published the first full English translation. The world finally read what the Egyptian desert had been guarding for 17 centuries. Carbon dating confirmed the manuscript itself to approximately 280 AD, give or take 60 years. But scholars Marvin Meyer of Chapman University and Bart Urman of the University of North Carolina both concluded the original text. It was copied from dates significantly earlier, possibly as far back as 130 to 180 AD.
Within living memory of people who knew the apostles personally, this was not a medieval forgery. This was not a modern invention. This was ancient, authenticated, real, and it had survived illegal markets, neglectful storage, and 15 centuries of deliberate eraser. To tell a story, someone had worked very hard to make sure you never heard.
To understand why this gospel says what it says, you need to understand the world it came from. And that world had a discovery of its own. In December 1945, just 3 years before the Gospel of Judas surfaced, a farmer named Muhammad Ali al-San was digging for fertilizer in the Egyptian desert near a town called Nag Hamadi. His shovel struck something hard. He unearthed a sealed clay jar inside 13 leatherbound cotices. Dozens of ancient texts, an entire hidden library of early Christian writings that had not been read since the 4th century.
Muhammad Ali reportedly tore pages from some of the manuscripts and used them to light his fire that night before realizing what he had found. The Nag Hammadi library, as it became known, contained texts that would permanently change how scholars understood early Christianity.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philillip, the Secret Book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, all of them Gnostic, all of them buried, hidden, preserved in clay jars in the Egyptian desert, while the official church burned everything it could find. These were not fringe documents written by isolated eccentrics. These were the scriptures of real communities, real believers, people who gathered, worshiped, and built their entire understanding of Jesus on texts that the Orthodox Church had declared heresy. And to understand why, you need to understand what the Gnostics actually believed. Because it was not a small difference of opinion. It was a completely different universe. The Gnostics believe the physical world is a prison, not a creation to be celebrated, not a gift from a loving God, a prison.
They believed the material universe was not created by the highest God, the infinite, unknowable, holy divine source of all existence. It was created by a lesser deity, a flawed, arrogant, inferior being. they called the demiurge, a broken god who built a broken world and declared himself the supreme ruler of it. In some Gnostic texts, the demi urge is identified with the god of the old testament, the god of law, punishment, and wroth. The true God, the infinite divine beyond all comprehension had nothing to do with the creation of this world and the human soul trapped inside it, locked in a body of flesh and matter, exiled from its divine origin, cut off from the true God by the very fact of physical existence.
Salvationistic thinking did not come through faith or sacrifice or repentance. It came through nosis, hidden knowledge, secret truth. The kind of understanding that could not be earned through study or prayer, only revealed directly by a divine messenger to those spiritually prepared to receive it. Now, here is where it connects directly to Judas. The Gnostics did not view the 12 disciples with reverence.
They viewed them with something closer to pity. In Gnostic texts, the 12 are often portrayed as spiritually blind, devoted men who genuinely loved Jesus, but fundamentally misunderstood who he was and what he came to do. They were worshiping the demiurge without knowing it. Operating at the level of the material world when Jesus was trying to point them towards something infinitely beyond it. Only one disciple according to the Gospel of Judas saw past the surface. Only one understood the true nature of Jesus. Not as a teacher or prophet operating within the existing religious framework, but as a divine messenger from the true God beyond this broken world come to liberate souls from their physical prison and return them to their divine origin. That disciple was not Peter. It was not John. It was Judas. Now hold that framework in your mind because if the body is a prison, death is not a tragedy. It is liberation. And if someone helped release a divine soul from its physical prison, that person is not a murderer.
They are performing the highest act of spiritual obedience in the entire universe. Read that back onto what Judas did in the garden and everything everything changes.
Now we reach the moment that detonated headlines across the world. In the Gospel of Judas, Jesus does not address the 12 as a group. He pulls Judas aside privately alone.
And he says away from the others and I shall tell you the mysteries of the kingdom.
Not so that you will go there but you will grieve a deal. Read that carefully.
This is not a reward. This is a warning.
What what you are about to be told will cost you everything. And then the sentence that scholars cold first translated it in 2006.
You will exceed all of them for you will s the man that clothes me that clothes me. In Gnostic theology the fit body is the garine spirit as during its imprisoned in the material. Jesus is telling Judas to kill him. He is Judas to rim garment to divine from its physical prison to complete the mission that the other 11 for all their devotion for all their loyalty for all their years walking beside Jesus were not spiritually paired to carry out.
The Gospel of Judas gives Judas a title found else in any ancient text. The teenth spirit.
13. One beyond the 12. Not the least disciple, not a footnote, not a failure, set apart, elevated for something the others could not. But here is the most people never mention cuz immediate Jesus gives Judas this instruction. He tells him the price.
Judas will be condemned, cursed, rejected, despised. Jesus tells him this direct explicit with full knowledge history will do to Judas moment the act is and Judas says yes let that land in this version of events Judas knew exactly what agreeing would mean he knew his name would become the most hated name in western civilization he knew that every generation born after that night in the garden would be taught to use his name as a synonym for the worst thing a human being can do. He knew about the paintings, the sermons, the centuries of contempt, and he said, "Yes, anyway." If the gospel of Judas is to be believed, Judas was not the most cowardly disciple. He was the most obedient. And you were never supposed to know that. Before we go further, if what you just heard made you question something you were taught, you are not alone. Drop a comment below with one word. One word that describes how you feel right now about Judas, betrayer, hero, victim, soldier. Whatever word comes to mind, write it below right now because the conversation happening in those comments is exactly why this channel exists. And if this is the first time you have ever heard any of this, hit subscribe because the gospel of Judas is only the beginning. There are dozen every single one.
So why has no one ever told you this?
Not in church, not in school, not in any of the documentaries you were handed about early Christianity. Because the people who controlled what you were taught did not simply ignore this gospel. They hunted it. And then they called in the Roman Empire to finish the job. It started with one man. Around 180 AD, a bishop named Irenaeus of Leon wrote the most comprehensive attack on Gnostic Christianity ever assembled, a five volume work called Against Heresies. And in book one, chapter 31, Irenaeus specifically names the Gospel of Judas. He calls it a fictitious history. He accuses the communities reading it of glorifying the betrayer and corrupting apostolic teaching. That reference matters more than it might appear because it means the gospel of Judas was already circulating widely enough, influencing enough people that the most powerful bishop of his era felt it necessary to name it publicly and condemn it by title. You do not write five volumes attacking something nobody is reading. This text was a threat. But it was only the beginning. In 325 AD, the Roman Emperor Constantine convened one of the most consequential gatherings in the history of Western civilization.
The Council of Nika. Over 300 bishops assembled to formally unify Christian doctrine under imperial authority. The war that Irenaeus had been fighting with words Constantine finished with law.
Dissenting theological positions were declared heresy. The Gnostic tradition that had produced the Gospel of Judas, the Gospel of Thomas, and dozens of other texts was not simply condemned. It was outlawed by the most powerful empire on earth. And then in 367 AD, a bishop named Athanasius of Alexandria wrote his annual Easter letter to the churches under his authority. In it, he listed exactly 27 books that he declared to be the authentic New Testament. The same 27 books that sit in every Bible printed today. Everything not on that list was ordered destroyed. That Easter letter is the first document in recorded history to define the New Testament cannon as we know it. And with it, the Gospel of Judas was officially sentenced to erasure. Not by accident, not by neglect, by decree. Within two centuries of Athanasius writing those words, the Gospel of Judas had vanished completely.
No copies, no references, no trace. 15 centuries of silence until a limestone box in the Egyptian desert returned it to the world. Now, does that mean everything in the Gospel of Judas is historically accurate? No. Bart Urman, who is not a Christian, who has spent his career questioning traditional biblical narratives and who has no theological reason whatsoever to defend the Orthodox cannon, still concludes that this text tells us more about second century Gnostic belief than about the historical Judas himself. But that is not the point. The point is this.
There were communities of real people earliest centuries of Christian history who read this text as scripture who gathered around it who built their entire understanding of Jesus salvation and Judas on what it said. It took a bishop, an emperor, and an imperial decree to erase them from the record.
And someone decided you were never allowed to know they existed.
So what do we do with Judas? The canonical gospels say he was a traitor who died in shame. Matthew 27:5 records that he threw the 30 silver coins into the temple, walked out and hanged himself. The Acts of the Apostles adds a darker detail. Still, Acts 1:18 describes his body falling headlong into a field, bursting open, his intestines spilling out. Two accounts of the same death, already contradicting each other within the cannon itself. The Gospel of Judas says something else entirely. It says he was the most trusted disciple chosen for a burden so sacred and so costly that no one else was spiritually equipped to carry it. Three accounts, three different Judases, and the one that got buried for 1500 years is the only one that portrays him as anything other than a monster. Ask yourself why.
The Gospel of Judas forces questions onto the table that Orthodox Christianity has never comfortably answered. If the betrayal was part of the divine plan, can it even be called betrayal? Jesus told his disciples repeatedly that he would be handed over, that he would suffer and die, that it was necessary, that it had to happen. If it had to happen, someone had to make it happen. And if Judas was that someone, then Judas did not derail the plan of God. He fulfilled it. If Judas was following a direct instruction from Jesus himself, does guilt still apply?
We do not dem a soldier for following orders in a mission his commander designed and authorized.
We do not call in a murderer for cutting open a body to heal it. Why then has Judas carried the weight of condemnation for 2,000 years for doing precisely what this text claims Jesus asked him to do?
And if Jesus knew predicted and according to this gospel personally asked for what happened in that garden, then what exactly have 2,000 years of paintings and culture attempt been for?
These are not comfortable questions.
They were to be who decided allowed to believe under exactly how stabilizing legions were. That is why they needed the gospel of to disappear. Not because obviously false because it was asking question that had no safe answers. The canonical story of Judas is clean, simple, morally satisfying. There is a villain. He is punished. justice is served. The Gospel of Judas destroys that cleanness completely. It replaces a villain with a martyr. It replaces a betrayal with an act of obedience. It replaces 2,000 years of certainty with a question that history still cannot stop asking. Was Judas the worst disciple or was he the only one willing to do what the mission actually required?
The Gospel of Judas does not rewrite Christianity. It does not erase the New Testament or overturn 200 years of theology with a single manuscript. But it exposes something that powerful people worked very hard to make sure you never saw. The early church was not a unified movement handing down a single agreed truth. It was a war. A war over who Jesus was, what he taught, whose version of events would survive, and which texts were dangerous enough to be condemned by name, hunted down, and erased from the record entirely.
Irenaeus won that war. The Gnostics lost and their texts were buried, burned, hidden or sealed in limestone boxes beneath the Egyptian desert. While the winning side wrote the history that every generation since has been handed as the complete final unquestionable truth. Here is what you need to sit with. They made the most hated man in history.
And then they buried the one document that told his side of the story. If did matter.
If it posed no threat, if it was nothing more than the ravings of a fringe movement that history rightly ignored, then why did the most powerful bishop of the second century feel the need to hunt it?
name?
Why did it need disappear for 1,500 years? And why, when it finally came back, did it still have the power to shake the world? Gospel of Judah is not the only they buried. The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary Magdalene, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, Gospel of Phillip, of text, realities, real believers erased. We have them now sitting in museum, translated, published, available to anyone willing to look. Question is no longer whether they quest what did they say someone needed 2,000 years of silence to protect. If you want to know, this channel is where you find out.
What if the church spent 2,000 years teaching you to hate the wrong man? One name above all others has stood as the symbol of Judus disciple who sold God for 30 pieces of silver.
But in 197 Egyptian farmers pulled a leather bound manuscript from the desert sand and inside it Jesus looked at Judas and said that no priest no pastor theologian ever told you. He said you will exceed all of them. Not Peter, not John, not any of the 12.
Judas, this is the Gospel of Judas, buried for 1700 years. And when scholars finally translated it, the questioned was one Christianity has never fully answered. What if Judas wasn't the villain? What if he was the only disciple Jesus actually trusted?
Before we go further, we need to establish the Judas you were given. Not the one history may have buried, the one you were handed, one of 12 disciples, hand picked by Jesus himself. He traveled with him, ate with him, witnessed every miracle firsthand.
And yet all four canonical gospels tell the same story. Judas the chief priest.
He offered handus over.
Matthew 26-5 records the price 30 silver coins. Luke 22-3 adds the detail that sealed his fate forever in the minds of believers.
Then Satan entered Judas.
Not weakness, not greed, not a moment of human failure. Satan. The betrayal ends in the garden of Gethsemane.
Roman soldiers move darkness and a kiss.
The most infamous greeting in human history at handed Jesus killers for 20 cent. That kiss defined Judas completely. His name became a synonym to in dozens of languages. Medieval artists painted him in yellow, the color of cowardice. Dante placed him in the lowest circle of hell being chewed eternally in the mouth of Satan himself alongside two others in all of human history. Bruce Cassie and his inferno Kanto before the world has verdict every man you ever heard that use name Judas as a synonym for betrayal. Every every painting, every reference, every cultural shorthand was built on that ver and you were asked whether it was the complete. Then the day gave up a se around 198 near the limestone cliffs of Karara in middle Egypt. Farmer's uncover ancient cave hide a sealed limetos inside box a leather x crumb f ancient but this was not the manuscript x contained multiple early texts been read by eyes 1500s the letter to the first revelation a mysterious called buried among the gospel of Jude whoever's this box was not hiding one doc they were an entire Library library some sided the world was never to find what the discovery was one of chaotic journeys manuscript in has achen the ex passed through antiquities dairo internet borders without documentation 1883 a dealer named Hannibal attempting to sell dollars a nicki rare book line at Yale city for million Yale way for the next years this manuscript a safe deposit box in Hicksville New Not a vault, not a clim archive, a safe depo, a suburb. The deflue was so that when scholy recover they were whole thousands of fragments, pieces of splinters that had constructed by fragment magnific. Then in the year Swiss antiquity named Nberos acquired the codeex.
happened next is remark nbercribed feelingsly haunt by the manuscript. She said she felt a responsibility almost a calling to to rescue it from further destruction. She transferred ownership to to the Myanas Foundation in Switzerland which funded the painstaking restoration work.
Scholars spent years reassmbling fragments, filling gaps, reconstructing sentences from splinters of ancient cop text.
And in April 2006, National Geographic published the first full English translation.
Finally read the Egyptian desert guarding for centuries. Carbon dating confirmed manuscripted to approx 28 give or take years. But scholar in Mayer man University and Bartman University of North Carolina both the original text.
It was copied from dates significantly earlier, possibly as far back as 130 to 180 AD within memory of people who knew the apostles personally.
This not medieval forgery.
This was not a modern invention.
This was ancient authenticated real and it had survived illegal markets, neglectful storage and 15 centuries of deliberate eraser. to tell a story someone had worked very hard to make sure you never heard.
To understand why this gospel says what it says, you need to understand the world it came from. And that world had a discovery of its own. In December 1945, just 3 years before the Gospel of Judas surfaced, a farmer named Muhammad Ali al-San was digging for fertilizer in the Egyptian depth near a town called Nag Hamadi. Shovel struck something hard. He unearthed clay jar inside 13 codices of ancient tech. an entire hidden library of early Christian writings that had not not been read since the century.
Muhammad Ali reportedly tore pages from some of the manuscripts and to light his fire night before what he had found.
Hammadi light as it became known contained texts permanently change house understood early. The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel Phillip, the Secret Book of the Apocalyp, all of them Gnostic, all of them buried, preserved in clay jars in the Egyptian desert, while the official burned everything it couldn't.
These were not fringe documents written by isolated eccentrics. These were thees of real communities, real beliefs, people who had worshiped and built their entire standing of Jesus on text that the Orthodox Church had declared. And to understand why to understand what the Gnostics actually believed because it was not a small of opinion was a completely different universe. The nost leave the physical world is a prison.
Not a creation to be celebrated. Not a gift from a loving God. A prison. They material. You was not c by the highest god. The infinite unknowable holy divines of all ex created by a deity. A flawed arrogant inferior. They called the demiurge broken god a broken world and declared himself supreme ruler of it. Instic texts demi urges with the god of the old testament god of law punishment and wrong. The true God, the infinite divine beyond all had nothing to do with the creation of this world and the human soul trapped in it, locked in a body of flesh and exiled from its divine origin, cut off from the true God. The very fact of physical existence, vation innostic thinking did come through faith or vice or repentance. It came through nosis, hidden knowledge, pruth. The kind of ending that could not earned through study or prayer only ruled direct by a divine messenger to those prepared. Now here is where it connect directly to Judah. The Gnostics view the 12s with reverence. They viewed them something closer to inn Gnostic texts 12 are often as spiritually blunt devoted men genuinely loved Jesus but fundamentally mishanded who he was and what he came to do. They were worshiping the urge without itating at the level material world when Jesus trying to point them towards something infinitely beyond it.
Only one disciple according to the god Judas saw surface. Only one understood the true nature of not as aer or prophetating within the ex religious framework but as nine messenger true God. This broken word come to liberate souls fromical prison and return them to their divine origin. That disciple was not Peter. It was not John.
It was Judas. Now hold that framework in your mind because if there is a prison death is liberation and if helped release a divine soul physical prison that person is not a murderer. They are performing highest act of spiritual obedience in the entire universe. Read that back onto what Jude in the garden and everything everything changes.
Now we reach the mo that detonated headlines across the world. In the gospel of Judas, Jesus does not address the 12 as he pulls judide privately alone. And he said, "Step away from the others and I shall the mysteries of the king. Not so that you will, but you will leave a great deal. Read that care. This is not this is a warning. What you are about to be told will everything." And then the sentence scholars when they first translated it 2006 you need all of them for you will sacrif that clothes me the man that clothes me innostic the physically is the divine spirit wears due time in prison in the material Jesus telling Judas to he is Judas to remove free the divine from its physical prison to complete the mission that the other 11 for All their for all their loyalty, their years walking beside us were spiritually prepared to count. The god Judas gives Judas a title found nowhere else in any ancient Christian text. The 13th spirit. 13. One beyond the 12. Not the least disciple.
Not a footnote. Not a failure. Set apart. Elevated. chosen for something the others could not bear. But here is the part most people never mention because immediately after Jesus gives Judas this instruction, he tells him the price. Judas will be condemned, cursed, rejected, despised. Jesus tells him this directly, explicitly with full knowledge of what history will do to Judas the moment the act is complete. And Judas says, "Yes, let that land." In this version of events, Judas knew exactly what a Ging would mean. He knew his name would become the most hated name in Western civilization. He knew that every generation after that night in the garden would be taught to use as a sim for the thing a human being do. He knew about the sons, the centuries of empty.
And he said, "Yes, if the gospel of Judas is to be believed, was not the most cowardiple. He was the most obedient and you were never know that."
Before we go further, if what you just heard made you question something you were taught, you are not alone. Drop a comment below with one word. One word that describes how you feel right now about Judas, betrayer, hero, victim, soldier, whatever word comes to mind, write it below right now. Because the conversation happening in those comments is exactly why this channel exists.
And if this is the first time you have ever heard any of this scribe because the Gospel of Judas is only the beginning. There are dozens of texts that were buried alongside it and we are going to open every single one.
So why has Noah told you this? Not in church, school, not any of the documentary handed about early because the who controlled what you were taught did not simply ignore this gospel hunted it and then in the Roman Empire to Finab. It started man around 180. A bishop named Irenaeus of Leon wrote the most comprehensive Gnostic Christianity ever assembled a five volume work called against heresies. And in book 1, chapter 31, Irenaeus specifically names the Gospel of Judas. He calls it a fictitious history. He accuses the communities reading it of glorifying the betrayer and corrupting apostolic teaching. That reference matters more than it might appear because it means the gospel of Judas was already circulating widely enough, influencing enough people that the most powerful bishop of his era felt it necessary to it public and condemn it by title. You do not write five volumes attacking something nobody is reading. This text was a threat. But Irenaeus was only the beginning. In 325 AD, the emperor Constantine convened one of the most consequential gatherings in the history of Western civilization. The Council of Nika. Over 300 bishops assembled to formally unify Christian doctrine under imperial authority. The war that Irenaeus had been fighting with words finished with law. Dissenting theological positions were declared heresy. The Gnostic tradition that had produced the Gospel of Judas, the Gospel of Thomas, and dozens of other texts was not simply condemned. It was outlawed by the most powerful empire on earth. And then in 367 AD, a bishop named Athanasius of Alexandria wrote his annual Easter letter to the churches under his authority. In it, he listed exactly 27 books that he declared to be the authentic New Testament. The same 27 books that sit in every booked today.
Everything not on that list was ordered destroyed. That Easter letter is the first document in recorded history to define the New Testament cannon. As we and with it, the Gospel of Judas was officially sentenced to erasure, not by accident, not by neglect, by decree.
Within two centuries of Athanasius writing those words, the Gospel of Judas had vanished completely. No copies, no references, no trace. 15 centuries of silence until a limestone box in the Egyptian desert returned it to the world. Now, does that mean everything in the Gospel of Judas is historically accurate? No. Bart man, who is not a Christian, who has spent his career questioning traditional biblical narratives and who has no theological reason whatsoever to defend the Orthodox cannon still concludes that this text tells us more about 2 century Gnostic belief than about the historical Judas himself. But that is not the point. The point is this. There were communities of real people earlier centuries of Christian history who read this text as scripture who gathered around it built their entire understanding of Jesus salvation and Judas on what it took a bishop an emperor and an imperial decree to erase them from the record and someone decided you were never allowed to know they existed. did.
So what do we do with Judas? The canonical gospels say he was a traitor who died in shame. Matthew 27:5 records that he threw the 30 silver coins into the temple, walked out and hanged himself. The Acts of the Apostles adds a darker detail. Still, Acts 1:18 describes his body falling headlong into a field, bursting open, his intestines spilling out. Two accounts of the same death, already contradicting each other within the cannon itself.
The Gospel of Judas is something else entirely. It says he was the most trusted disciple chosen for a burden so sacred and so costly that no one else was spiritually equipped to carry it.
Three accounts, three different Judases, and the one that got buried for 1500 years is the only one that portrays him as anything other than a monster. Ask yourself why. The Gospel of Judas forces questions onto the table that orthodox Christianity has never comfortably answered. If the betrayal was part of the divine plan, can it even be called betrayal? Jesus told his disciply that he would be handed over, that he would suffer and die, that it was necessary, that it had to happen. If it had to happen, someone had to make it happen.
And if Judas was that someone then Judas did not derail of God it was following a direct instruction from Jesus himself. Does guilt still apply?
We do not condemn a soldier for following orders in a mission his commander designed and authorized. We all a surgeon for open a body to he. Why has Judy the waynation for two and years for doing what this claims asked him to do? And if Jesus knew, predicted and according gospel personally asked for in that god then what have 2 years of paintings, sermons, cultural content for these are not comfortable questions.
They were not meant to be. The people who decided what you were allowed to believe understood exactly how destabilizing these questions were. That is why they needed the gospel of Judas to disappear. Not because it was obviously false, but because it was asking questions that had no answers.
The canonical story of Judas is clean, simple, morally satisfying.
There is a villain. He is punished.
Justice is served. The gospel of Judas destroys that that cleanness completely.
It replaces a villain with a martyr. It replaces a bill with an act of obedience. It replaces 2,000 years of certainty with a question that history still cannot stop asking. Was Judas the worst disciple or was he the only one willing to do what the mission actually required?
The of Judas does not rewrite Christianity. It does not the New Testament or overturn 2,000 years of theology with a single manuscript. It exposes something that people were very hard to you never saw. The early church was not a unified movement handing down a single agreed truth. It was a war. A war over who Jesus was, what he taught, whose version of events would survive, and which texts were dangerous enough to be condemned by name, hunted down, and erased from the record entirely. Iran won that war. The Gnostics lost and their texts were buried, burned, hidden, or sealed in limestone boxes. But the Egyptian desert, while the winning side wrote the history that every generation since has been handed as the complete, final, unquestionable truth. Here is what you need to sit with. Made Judas the most hated mastery. And then they buried the one document that told his side of the story. If his version didn't, if it was no threat, if it was nothing more than the ravings of a fringe movement that history rightly ignored, then why did the most powerful bishop of the second century feel the need to hunt it by name? Why did it need to disappear for 1,500 years? And why when it finally came back did it still have the power to shake the world. The gospel of is not the text they be. The gospel of Thomas, the gospel of Mary Magdalene, the book of John, the apocalypse of Peter, the gospel of Philillip. Dozens of texts, real communities, real believers erased.
We have them now sitting in museums, translated, published, available to anyone willing to look. And the question is no longer whether they existed. The question is, they say that someone needed 2,000 years to protect. If you want to know, this channel is where you find out.
What if the church spent 2,000 years teaching you to hate the wrong man? One name above all others has stood as the symbol of betrayal. Judas, the disciple who sold God for 30 pieces of silver.
But in 1978, Egyptian farmers pulled a leatherbound manuscript from the desert sand and inside it looked at Judas and said something that no priest, no pastor, no Theon ever. He said, "You will exceed all of them. Not Peter, not John, not any of the 12.
Judas. This is the gospel Judas buried for 700 years.
And when scholars finally translated it, the question it raised was Christianity has never fully answered. What if Judant the villain? He was the only Jesus actually Trump.
Before we go further, we need to establish the Judas you were given, not the mystery may have buried, the one you were handed, one of 12 disciples, handpicked by Jesus himself.
He traveled with him, ate with him, witnessed every miracle firsthand.
And yet all four canonical goles tell the same story. Judas went to the chief priest.
He offered to hand Jesus over.
Matthew 26-15 records the price 30 coins. Luke 22:3 Adel that see fate forever in the mind levers centered Judah weakness not greed. A moment of failure. Say the betrayals in of Geth soldiers through dark and kiss. The most infaming in human history that handed Jesus to 20 cent that defied us. His name became a synonym for traitor in dozens of languages. Medieval artists painted him in yellow, the color of cowardice. Dante placed him in the lowest circle of hell, being chewed eternally in the mouth of Satan himself alongside only two others in all of human history, Brutus, Casius, and Judas. That is Inferno, Kanto 34. The world had made its verdict. Every sermon you ever heard that used the name Judas as a synonym for betrayal, every painting, every reference, every cultural shorthand was built on that verdict. And you were never asked whether it was the complete story. Then the desert gave up a secret.
Around 1978, near the limestone cliffs of Jabel Kurara in Middle Egypt, farmers uncovered an ancient cave. Inside a sealed limestone box, inside that box, a leather codeex, crumbling, fragile, ancient. But this was not just any manuscript. The codeex contained multiple early Christian texts that had not been read by human eyes in over 1,500 years. The letter of Peter to Philillip, the first revelation of James, a mysterious text called Alogenis and buried among them the Gospel of Judas. Whoever this box was not hiding one document, they were hiding an entire library. a library someone had decided the world was never supposed to find.
What followed the discovery was one of the most chaotic journeys any manuscript in history has ever taken. The codeex passed through illegal antiquities dealers in Cairo crossed international borders without documentation. By 1983, a Geneva dealer named Hannah Asabil has attempted it to scholars at the Bicki Rare Book Library at Yale University for $3 million. Yale walked away for the next 16 years. This manuscript sat in a safe deposit box in Hicksville, New York. Not a vault, not a climate controlled archive, a safe deposit box in a suburb. The temperature fluctuations were so severe that when scholars finally recovered it, they were holding thousand ofments of sentences of words. A puzzle that had to be reconfication.
Then year Swiss anti de named fusburg the and neck is remarked nus charco felised by the man said she felt a responsibility almost a calling to rescue it from further destruction. She transferred ownership to the mys foundation in Switzerland which funded the painstaking restoration work.
Scholars spent years reassembling fragments, filling gaps, reconstructing sentences from splinters of ancient Coptic text. And in April 2006, National Geographic published the first full English translation. The world finally read what the Egyptian desert had been guarding for 17 centuries. Carbon dating confirmed the manuscript itself approximately 280 give or take 60 years. But scholars Marvin Meer of Chapman University and Bart Urman of the University of North Carolina both concluded the original text. It was copied from dates significantly earlier, possibly as far back as 130 to8 A within living of people knew the personally.
This was medieval for this a modern invent. This ancient authenticated and it had survived illegal markets, neglectful storage and 15 centuries of deliberate eraser. To tell a story, someone had worked very hard to make sure you never heard.
To understand why this gospel says what it says, you need to understand the world it came from. And that world had a discovery of its own. In December 1945, just 3 years before the Gospel of Judas surfaced, a farmer named Muhammad Ali al-San was digging for fertilizer in the Egyptian desert near a town called Nag Hamadi. His shovel struck something hard. He unearthed a sealed clay jar inside 13 leatherbound cotices. Dozens of ancient texts, an entire hidden library of early Christian writings that had not been read since the 4th century.
Muhammad Ali reportedly tore pages from some of the manuscripts and used them to light his fire that night before realizing what he had found. The Nag Hammadi Library, as it became known, contained texts that would permanently change how scholars understood early Christianity.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philip, the Secret Book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, all of them Gnostic, all of them buried, hidden, preserved in clay jars in the Egyptian desert, while the official church burned everything it could find. These were not fringe documents written by isolated eccentrics. These were the scriptures of real communities, real believers, people who gathered, worshiped, and built their entire understanding of Jesus on texts that the Orthodox Church had declared heresy. And to understand why, you need to understand what the Gnostics actually believed. Because it was not a small difference of opinion. It was a completely different universe. The Gnostics believe the physical world is a prison, not a creation to be celebrated, not a gift from a loving God, a prison.
They believe the material universe was not created by the highest God, the infinite, unknowable, holy divine source of all existence. It was created by a lesser deity, a flawed, arrogant, inferior being. They called the demiurge, a broken god who built a broken world and declared himself the supreme ruler of it. In some Gnostic texts, the demi urge is identified with the god of the old testament, the god of law, punishment, and wroth. The true God, the infinite divine beyond all comprehension had nothing to do with the creation of this world and the human soul trapped inside it, locked in a body of flesh and matter, exiled from its divine origin, cut off from the true God by the very fact of physical existence.
Salvation in Gnostic thinking did not come through faith or sacrifice or repentance. It came through nosis, hidden knowledge, secret truth. The kind of understanding that could not be earned through study or prayer, only revealed directly by a divine messenger to those spiritually prepared to receive it. Now, here is where it connects directly to Judas. The Gnostics did not view the 12 disciples with reverence.
They viewed them with something closer to pity. In Gnostic texts, the 12 are often portrayed as spiritually blind, devoted men who genuinely loved Jesus, but fundamentally misunderstood who he was and what he came to do. They were worshiping the demiurge without knowing it. Operating at the level of the material world when Jesus was trying to point them towards something infinitely beyond it. Only one disciple according to the Gospel of Judas saw past the surface. Only one understood the true nature of Jesus. Not as a teacher or prophet operating within the existing religious framework, but as a divine messenger from the true God beyond this broken world come to liberate souls from their physical prison and return them to their divine origin. That disciple was not Peter. It was not John. It was Judas. Now hold that framework in your mind because if the body is a prison, death is not a tragedy. It is liberation. And one helped divine soul from its physical prison. That person is not a murderer. They are performing the highest act of spiritual obedience in the entire universe. Read that back onto what Judas did in the garden. And everything everything changes.
Now we reach the moment that detonated headlines across the world. In the Gospel of Judas, Jesus does not address the 12 as a group. He pulls Judas aside privately alone. And he says, "Step away from the others and I shall tell you the mysteries of the kingdom. Not so that you will go there, but you will grieve a great deal. Read that carefully. This is not a reward. This is a warning. What you are about to be told will cost you everything. And then the sentence that stopped scholars when they first transit 2006.
You will exceed all of them for you will sacrifice the man that clothes me. the man that clothe. In Gnostic theology, the physical body is the garment the divine spirit wears during its time imprisoned in the material world. Jesus is not telling Judas to kill him. He is telling Judas to remove the garment to free the divine spirit from its physical prison to complete the mission that the other 11 for all their devotion for all guilty for all their years walking beside Jesus were not spiritually prepared to carry out. The Gospel of Judas then gives Judas a title found nowhere else in any ancient Christian text, the 13th spirit. 13. One beyond the 12, not the least disciple, not a footnote, not a failure, set up, elevated, chosen thing the others could not bear. But here is the part most people never mention. Because immediately after Jesus gives Judas this instruction, he tells him the price.
Judas will be condemned, cursed, rejected, despised. Jesus tells him this directly, explicitly with full knowledge of what history will do to Judas the moment the act is complete. And Judas says, "Yes, let that land." In this version of events, Judas knew exactly what agreeing would mean. He knew his name would become the most hated name in Western civilization. He knew that every generation born after that night in the garden would be taught to use his name as a synonym for the worst thing a human being can do. He knew about the paintings, the sermons, the centuries of contempt. And he said yes anyway. If the gospel of Judas is to be believed, Judas was not the most cowardly disciple. He was the most obedient. And you were never supposed to know that. Before we go further, if what you just heard made you question something you were taught, you are not alone. Drop a comment below with one word. One word that describes how you feel right now about Judas, betrayer, hero, victim, soldier.
Whatever word comes to mind, write it below right now. Because the conversation happening in those comments is exactly why this channel exists. And if this is the first time you heard any of this, hit subscribe because the Gospel of Judas is only the beginning.
There are dozens of texts that were buried alongside it and we are going to open every single one.
So why has no one ever told you this?
Not in church, not in school, not in any of the documentaries you were handed about early Christianity. Because the people who controlled what you were taught did not simply ignore this gospel. They hunted it. And then they called in the Roman Empire to finish the job. It started with one man. Around 180 AD, a bishop named Irenaeus of Leon wrote the most comprehensive attack on Gnostic Christianity ever assembled, a five volume work called Against Heresies. And in book 1, chapter 31, Irenaeus specifically names the Gospel of Judas. He calls it a fictitious history. He accuses the communities reading it of glorifying the betrayer and corrupting apostolic teaching. That reference matters more than it might appear because it means the gospel of Judas was already circulating widely enough, influencing enough people that the most powerful bishop of his era felt it necessary to name it publicly and condemn it by title. You do not write five volumes attacking something nobody is reading. This text was a threat. But Irenaeus was only the beginning. In 325 AD, the Roman Emperor Constantine convened one of the most consequential gatherings in the history of Western civilization. The Council of Nika. Over 300 bishops assembled to formally unify Christian doctrine under imperial authority. The war that Irenaeus had been fighting with words Constantine finished with law. Dissenting theological positions were declared heresy. The Gnostic tradition that had produced the Gospel of Judas, the Gospel of Thomas, and dozens of other texts was not simply condemned. It was outlawed by the most powerful empire on earth. And then in 367 AD, a bishop named Athanasius of Alexandria wrote his annual Easter letter to the churches under his authority. In it, he listed exactly 27 books that he declared to be the authentic New Testament. The same 27 books that sit in every Bible printed today. Everything not on that list was ordered destroyed. That Easter letter is the first document in recorded history to define the New Testament cannon as we know it. And with it, the Gospel of Judas was officially sentenced to erasure, not by accident, not by neglect, by decree. Within two centuries of Athanasius writing those words, the Gospel of Judas had vanished completely.
No copies, no references, no trace. 15 centuries of silence until a limestone box in the Egyptian desert returned it to the world. Now, does that mean everything in the Gospel of Judas is historically accurate? No. Bart Urman, who is not a Christian, who has spent his career questioning traditional biblical narratives and who has no theological reason whatsoever to defend the Orthodox cannon, still concludes that this text tells us more about 2 century Gnostic belief than about the historical Judas himself. But that is not the point. The point is this. There were communities of real people in the earliest centuries of Christian history who read this text as scripture who gathered around it who built their entire understanding of Jesus salvation and Judas on what it said. It took a bishop, an emperor, and an imperial decree to erase them from the record.
And someone decided you were never allowed to know they existed.
So what do we do with Judas? The canonical gospels say he was a traitor who died in shame. Matthew 27:5 records that he threw the 30 silver coins into the temple, walked out and hanged himself. The acts of the apostle adds a darker detail. Acts 1:18 his body falling headlong into a field bursting open his intestines out two accounts of the same death all dicting each other the cannon the gospel of Judas sinti most trled for a birth so andly no one else was spirit equipped riot. Three accounts, three Judas, and the one buried for 15 years, only one that portrays him as anything other than a monster. Ask yourself why. The Gospel of Judas forces questions onto the table that Orthodox Christianity has never comfortably answered. If the betrayal was part of the divine plan, can it even be called betrayal? Jesus told his disciples repeatedly that he would be handed over, that he would suffer and die, that it was necessary, that it had to happen. If it had to happen, someone had to make it happen. And if Judas was that someone, then not derail the plan of God. healed it following a direct instruction from Jesus himself. Does guilt still apply?
We do not condemn a soldier following orders in a mission his commander designed and authorized.
We do not call a surgeon a murderer for cutting openly to heal. Why has carried the wendom 2000s precis claimed as asked and as knew predicted and to this gospel asked for what in that garden? What ex have two years of paintings, sermons and cultural contempt been for? These are not comfortable questions. They were not meant to be. The people who decided what you were allowed to believe understood exactly how destabilizing these questions were. That is why they needed the Gospel of Judas to disappear. Not because it was obviously false, but because it was asking questions that had no safe answers. The canonical story of Judas is clean. Morally fying. There is a villain. He is punished. Justice is served. The Gospel of Judas destroys that cleanness completely. It replaces a villain with a martyr. It replaces a betrayal with an act of obedience. It replaces 2,000 years of certainty with a question that history still cannot stop asking. Was Judas the worst disciple or was he the only one willing to do what the mission actually required?
The Gospel of Judas does not rewrite Christianity. It does not erase the New Testament or overturn 2,000 years of theology with a single manuscript, but it exposes something that powerful people worked very hard to make sure never saw. The early church was not a unified movement handing down a single agreed truth. It was a war. a war over who Jesus was, what he taught, whose version of events would survive, and which texts were dangerous enough to be condemned by name, hunted down, and erased from the record entirely.
Irenaeus won that war. The Gnostics lost, and their texts were buried, burned, hidden, or sealed in limestone boxes beneath the Egyptian desert. While the winning side wrote the history that every generation since has been handed as the complete final unquestionable truth. Here is what you need to sit with. They made Judas the most hated man in history. And then they buried the one document that told his side of the story. If his version didn't matter, if it posed no threat, if it was nothing more than the ravings of a fringe movement that history rightly ignored, then why did the most powerful bishop of the second century feel the need to hunt it by name? Why did it need to disappear for 1,500 years? And why, when it finally came back, did it still have the power to shake the world? The Gospel of Judas is not the only text they buried.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary Magdalene, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, the Gospel of Philip. Dozens of texts, real communities, real believers erased. We have them now sitting in museums, translated, published, available to anyone willing to look. And the question is no longer whether they existed. The question is what did they say that someone needed 2,000 years of silence to protect? If you want to know, this channel is where you find out.
What if the church spent 2,000 years teaching you to hate the wrong man? One name above all others has stood as the symbol of betrayal. Judas, the disciple who sold God for 30 pieces of silver.
But in 1978, Egyptian farmers pulled a leatherbound manuscript from the desert sand. And inside it, Jesus looked at Judas and said something that no priest, no pastor, no theologian ever told you. He said, "You will exceed all of them. Not Peter, not John, not any of the 12.
Judas, this is the Gospel of Judas, buried for 1700 years." And when scholars finally translated it, the question it raised was one Christianity has never fully answered. What if Judas wasn't the villain? What if he was the only disciple Jesus actually trusted?
Before we go further, we need to establish the Judas you were given. Not the one history may have buried, the one you were handed. One of 12 disciples handpicked by Jesus himself. He traveled with him, ate with him, witnessed every miracle firsthand, and yet all four canonical gospel the same story. Judas went to the chief priests. He offered to hand Jesus over. Matthew 26-15 records the price. 30 silver coins. Luke 22:3 adds the detail that sealed his fate forever in the minds of believers.
Then Satan entered Judas. Not weak weakness, not greed, not a moment of humia. Satan, the betrayal ends in the garden of Gethsemane. Roman soldiers moving through darkness. And a kiss, the most infamous greeting in human history that handed Jesus to his killers. For 20 centuries, that kiss defined Judas completely. His name became a synonym for traitor in dozens of languages.
Medieval artists painted him in yellow, the color of cowardice. Dante placed him in the lowest circle of hell, being chewed eternally in the mouth of Satan himself alongside only two others in all of human history. Brutus, Casius, and Judas. That is Inferno. Kanto 34. The world had made its verdict. Every sermon you ever heard that used the name Judas as a synonym for betrayal, every painting, every reference, every cultural shortorthhand was built on that verdict. And you were never asked whether it was the complete story. Then the desert gave up a secret.
Around 1978, near the limestone cliffs of Jabel Kurara in middle Egypt, farmers uncovered an ancient cave. Inside a sealed limestone box. Inside that box, a leather codeex, crumbling, fragile, ancient. But this was not just any manuscript. The codeex contained multiple early Christian texts that had not been read by human eyes in over 1,500 years. The letter of Peter to Philillip, the first revelation of James, a mysterious text called Aloinis and buried among them the Gospel of Judas. Whoever sealed this box was not hiding one document. They were hiding an entire library. a library decided the world was never supposed to find. What followed the discovery was one of the most chaotic journeys any manuscript in history has ever taken. The codeex passed through illegal antiquities dealers in Cairo, crossed international borders without documentation. By 1983, a Geneva dealer named Hannah Asabil was attempting to sell it to scholars at the Bicki Rare Book Library at Yale University for $3 million. Yale walked away. For the next 16 years, this manuscript sat in a safe deposit box in Hicksville, New York. Not a vault, not a clrolled archive, a safe deposit box in a suburb. The temperature fluctuations were so severe that when scholars finally recovered it, they were holding thousands of loose fragments, pieces of sentences, splinters of words, a puzzle that had to be reconstructed fragment by fragment under magnification. Then in the year 2000, a Swiss antiquities dealer named Freda Nusberger Chakos acquired the codeex. And what happened next is remarkable. Nberger Chakos later described feeling personally haunted by the manuscript. She said she felt a responsibility almost a calling to rescue it from further destruction. She transferred ownership to the Myanas Foundation in Switzerland which funded the painstaking restoration work. Scholars spent years reassembling fragments, filling gaps, reconstructing sentences from splinters of ancient Copticist. And in 2006, National Geographic published the first full English translation. The world finally read what the Egyptian desert had been guarding for 17 centuries.
Carbon dating confirmed the manuscript itself to approximately 280 AD, give or take 60 years. But scholars Marvin Meyer of Chapman University and Bart Man of the University of North Carolina both concluded the original text. It was copied from dates significantly earlier, possibly as far back as 130 to 180 AD.
Within living memory of people who knew the apostles personally, this was not a medieval forgery. This was not a modern invention. This was ancient, authenticated, real and it had survived legal markets, neglectful storage and 50 of deliberate erasia. To tell a story worked to make sure you never heard to understand why this gospel says what it says, you need to understand the world it came from. And that world had a discovery of its own. In December 1945, just 3 years before the Gospel of Judas surfaced, a farmer named Muhammad Ali al-San was digging for fertilizer in the Egyptian desert near a town called Nag Hamadi. His shovel struck something hard. He unearthed a sealed clay jar inside 13 leatherbound cotices. Dozens of ancient texts, an entire hidden library of early Christian writings that had not been read since the 4th century.
Muhammad Ali reportedly tore pages from some of the manuscripts and used them to light his fire that night before realizing what he had found. The Nag Hammadi Library, as it became known, contained texts that would permanently change how scholars understood early Christianity.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philip, the Secret Book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, all of them Gnostic, all of them buried, hidden, preserved in clay jars in the Egyptian desert, while the official church burned everything it could find. These were not fringe documents written by isolated eccentrics. These were the scriptures of real communities, real believers, people who gathered, worshiped, and built their entire understanding of Jesus on texts that the Orthodox Church had declared heresy. And to understand why, you need to understand what the Gnostics actually believed. Because it was not a small difference of opinion. It was a completely different universe. The Gnostics believe the physical world is a prison, not a creation to be celebrated, not a gift from a loving God, a prison.
They believe the material universe was not created by the highest God, the infinite, unknowable, holy divine source of all existence. It was created by a lesser deity, a flawed, arrogant, inferior being they called the demiurge, a broken god who built a broken world and declared himself the supreme ruler of it. In some Gnostic texts, the demi urge is identified with the god of the Old Testament, the god of law, punishment, and wroth. The true God, the infinite divine beyond all comprehension had nothing to do with the creation of this world and the human soul trapped inside it, locked in a body of flesh and matter, exiled from its divine origin, cut off from the true God by the very fact of physical existence. Salvation in Gnostic thinking did not come through faith or sacrifice or repentance. It came through nosis, hidden knowledge, secret truth. The kind of understanding that could not be earned through study or prayer, only revealed directly by a divine messenger to those spiritually prepared to receive it. Now, here is where it connects directly to Judas. The Gnostics did not view the 12 disciples with reverence. They viewed them with something closer to pity. In Gnostic texts, the 12 are often portrayed as spiritually blind, devoted men who genuinely loved Jesus, but fundamentally misunderstood who he was and what he came to do. They were worshiping the demiurge without knowing it. Operating at the level of the material world when Jesus was trying to point them towards something infinitely beyond it. Only one disciple according to the Gospel of Judas saw past the surface. Only one understood the true nature of Jesus, not as a teacher or prophet operating within the existing religious framework, but as a divine messenger from the true God beyond this broken world come to liberate souls from their physical prison and return them to their divine origin. That disciple was not Peter. It was not John. It was Judas. Now hold that framework in your mind because if the body is a prison, death is not a tragedy. It is liberation. And if someone helped release a divine soul from its physical prison, that person is not a murderer. They are performing the highest act of spiritual obedience in the entire universe. Read that back onto what Judas did in the garden and everything everything changes.
Now we reach the moment that detonated headlines across the world. In the Gospel of Judas, Jesus does not address the 12 as a group. He pulls Judas aside privately alone. And he says, "Step away from the others and I shall tell you the mysteries of the kingdom.
Not so that you will go there, but you will greet deal. Read carefully. Is not a reward. This is a warning. What you are about to be told will cost you everything. And then the sentence that stopped scholars cold when they first translated it in 2006.
You will exceed all of them for you will sacrifice the man that clothes me. The man that clothes me. In Gnostic theology, the physical body is the garment the divine spirit wears during its time imprisoned in the material world. Jesus is not telling Judas to kill him. He is telling Judas to remove the garment to free the divine spirit from its physical prison to complete the mission that the other 11 for all their devotion for all their loyalty for all their years walking beside Jesus were not spiritually prepared to carry out.
The Gospel of Judas then gives Judas a title found nowhere else in any ancient Christian text. The 13th spirit. 13. One beyond the 12. Not the least disciple, not a footnote, not a failure, set apart, elevated, chosen for something the others could not bear. But here is the part most people never mention.
Because immediately after Jesus gives Judas this instruction, he tells him the price. Judas will be condemned, cursed, rejected, despised. Jesus tells him this directly, explicitly with full knowledge of what history will do to Judas the moment the act is complete. And Judas says, "Yes, let that land." In this version of events, Judas knew exactly what agreeing would mean. He knew his name would become the most hated name in Western civilization. He knew that every generation born after that night in the garden would be taught to use his name as a synonym for the worst thing a human being can do. He knew about the paintings, the sermons, the centuries of contempt. And he said yes anyway. If the gospel of Judas is to be believed, Judas was not the most cowardly disciple. He was the most obedient. And you were never supposed to know that. Before we go further, if what you just heard made you question something you were taught, you are not alone. Drop a comment below with one word. One word that describes how you feel right now about Judas, betrayer, hero, victim, soldier.
Whatever word comes to mind, write it below right now. Because the conversation happening in those comments is exactly why this channel exists. And if this is the first time you have ever heard any of this, hit subscribe because the Gospel of Judas is only the beginning. There are dozens of texts that were buried alongside it and we are going to open every single one.
So why has no one ever told you this?
Not in church, not in school, not in any of the documentaries you were handed about early Christianity. Because the people who controlled what you were taught did not simply ignore this gospel. They hunted it. And then they called in the Roman Empire to finish the job. It started with one man. Around 180 AD, a bishop named Irenaeus of Leon wrote the most comprehensive attack on Gnostic Christianity ever assembled, a five volume work called Against Heresies. And in book 1, chapter 31, Irenaeus specifically names the Gospel of Judas. He calls it a fictitious history. He accuses the communities reading it of glorifying the betrayer and corrupting apostolic teaching. That reference matters more than it might appear because it means the gospel of Judas was already circulating widely enough, influencing enough people that the most powerful bishop of his era felt it necessary to name it publicly and condemn it by title. You do not write five volumes attacking something nobody is reading. This text was a threat. But Irenaeus was only the beginning. In 325 AD, the Roman Emperor Constantine convened one of the most consequential gatherings in the history of Western civilization. The Council of Nika. Over 300 bishops assembled to formally unify Christian doctrine under imperial authority. The war that Irenaeus had been fighting with words Constantine finished with law. Dissenting theological positions were declared heresy. The Gnostic tradition that had produced the Gospel of Judas, the Gospel of Thomas, and dozens of other texts was not simply condemned. It was outlawed by the most powerful empire on earth. And then in 367 AD, a bishop named Athanasius of Alexandria wrote his annual Easter letter to the churches under his authority. In it, he listed exactly 27 books that he declared to be the authentic New Testament. The same 27 books that sit in every Bible printed today. Everything not on that list was ordered destroyed. That Easter letter is the first document in recorded history to define the New Testament cannon as we know it. And with it, the Gospel of Judas was officially sentenced to erasure, not by accident, not by neglect, by decree. Within two centuries of Athanasius writing those words, the Gospel of Judas had vanished completely.
No copies, no references, no trace. 15 centuries of silence until a limestone box in the Egyptian desert returned it to the world. Now, does that mean everything in the Gospel of Judas is historically accurate? No. Bart man, who is not a Christian, who has spent his career questioning traditional biblical narratives and who has no theological reason whatsoever to defend the Orthodox cannon, still concludes that this text tells us more about 2 century Gnostic belief than about the historical Judas himself. But that is not the point. The point is this. There were communities of real people in the earliest centuries of Christian history who read this text as scripture who gathered around it who built their entire understanding of Jesus salvation and Judas on what it said. It took a bishop, an emperor, and an imperial decree to erase them from the record. And someone decided you were never allowed to know they existed.
So what do we do with Judas? The canonical gospels say he was a traitor who died in shame. Matthew 27:5 records that he threw the 30 silver coins into the temple, walked out and hanged himself. The Acts of the Apostles adds a darker detail. Still, Acts 1:18 describes his body falling headlong into a field, bursting open, his intestines spilling out. Two accounts of the same death, already contradicting each other within the cannon itself. The Gospel of Judas says something else entirely. It says he was the most trusted disciple chosen for a burden so sacred and so costly that no one else was spiritually equipped to carry it. Three accounts, three different Judases, and the one that got buried for 1500 years is the only one that portrays him as anything other than a monster. Ask yourself why.
The Gospel of Judas forces questions onto the table that Orthodox Christianity has never comfortably answered. If the betrayal was part of the divine plan, can it even be called betrayal? Jesus told his disciples repeatedly that he would be handed over, that he would suffer and die, that it was necessary, that it had to happen. If it had to happen, someone had to make it happen. And if Judas was that someone, then Judas did not derail the plan of God. He fulfilled it. If Judas was following a direct instruction from Jesus himself, does guilt still apply?
We do not condemn a soldier for following orders in a mission his commander designed and authorized.
We do not call a surgeon a murderer for cutting open a body to heal it. Why then has Judas carried the weight of condemnation for 2,000 years for doing precisely what this text claims Jesus asked him to do? And if Jesus knew, predicted, and according to this gospel personally asked for what happened in that garden, then what exactly have 2,000 years of paintings, sermons, and cultural contempt been for? These are not comfortable questions. They were not meant to be. The people who decided what you were allowed to believe understood exactly how destabilizing these questions were. That is why they needed the Gospel of Judas to disappear. Not because it was obviously false, but because it was asking questions that had no safe answers. The canonical story of Judas is clean, simple, morally satisfying. There is a villain. He is punished. justice is served. The Gospel of Judas destroys that cleanness completely. It replaces a villain with a martyr. It replaces a betrayal with an act of obedience. It replaces 2,000 years of certainty with a question that history still cannot stop asking. Was Judas the worst disciple or was he the only one willing to do what the mission actually required?
The Gospel of Judas does not rewrite Christianity. It does not erase the New Testament or overturn 2,000 years of theology with a single manuscript. But it exposes something that powerful people worked very hard to make sure you never saw. The early church was not a unified movement handing down a single agreed truth. It was a war. a war over who Jesus was, what he taught, whose version of events would survive, and which texts were dangerous enough to be condemned by name, hunted down, and erased from the record entirely.
Irenaeus won that war. The Gnostics lost, and their texts were buried, burned, hidden, or sealed in limestone boxes beneath the Egyptian desert. While the winning side wrote the history that every generation since has been handed as the complete final unquestionable truth. Here is what you need to sit with. They made Judas the most hated man in history. And then they buried the one document that told his side of the story. If his version didn't matter, if it posed no threat, if it was nothing more than the ravings of a fringe movement that history rightly ignored, then why did the most powerful bishop of the second century feel the need to hunt it by name? Why did it need to disappear for 1,500 years? And why, when it finally came back, did it still have the power to shake the world? The Gospel of Judas is not the only text they buried.
The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary Magdalene, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, the Gospel of Philip. Dozens of texts, real communities, real believers erased. We have them now sitting in museums, translated, published, available to anyone willing to look. And the question is no longer whether they existed. The question is what did they say that someone needed 2,000 years of silence to protect? If you want to know, this channel is where you find out.
What if the church spent 2,000 years teaching you to hate the wrong man? One name above all others has stood as the symbol of betrayal. Judas, the disciple who sold God for 30 pieces of silver.
But in 1978, Egyptian farmers pulled a leatherbound manuscript from the desert sand. And inside it, Jesus looked at Judas and said something that no priest, no pastor, no theologian ever told you. He said, "You will exceed all of them. Not Peter, not John, not any of the 12.
Judas, this is the Gospel of Judas, buried for 1700 years." And when scholars finally translated it, the question it raised was one Christianity has never fully answered. What if Judas wasn't the villain? What if he was the only disciple Jesus actually trusted?
Before we go further, we need to establish the Judas you were given. Not the one history may have buried, the one you were handed, one of 12 disciples, handpicked by Jesus himself. He traveled with him, ate with him, witnessed every miracle firsthand, and yet all four canonical gospels tell the same story.
Judas went to the chief priests. He offered to hand Jesus over. Matthew 26-15 records the price 30 silver coins. Luke 22:3 adds the detail that sealed his fate forever in the minds of believers.
Then Satan entered Judas. Not weakness, not greed, not a moment of human failure. Satan, the betrayal ends in the Garden of Gethsemane. Roman soldiers moving through darkness and a kiss, the most infamous greeting in human history that handed Jesus to his killers. For 20 centuries, that kiss defined Judas completely. His name became a synonym for traitor in dozens of languages.
Medieval artists painted him in yellow, the color of cowardice. Dante placed him in the lowest circle of hell, being chewed eternally in the mouth of Satan himself alongside only two others in all of human history, Brutus, Casius, and Judas. That is Inferno, Kanto. 34. The world had made its verdict. Every sermon you ever heard that used the name Judas as a synonym for betrayal, every painting, every reference, every cultural shortorthhand was built on that verdict. And you were never asked whether it was the complete story.
Then the desert gave up a secret.
The lime stiffs of Jabel Kurara in middle Egypt. Farmers uncovered an ancient cave inside a sealed limestone box. Inside that box, a leather codeex, crumbling, fragile, ancient. But this was not just any manuscript. The codeex contained multiple early Christian texts that had not been read by human eyes in over 1,500 years. The letter of Peter to Philillip, the first revelation of James, a mysterious text called Alogenis, and buried among them the Gospel of Judas. Whoever sealed this box was not hiding one document. They were hiding an entire library, a library someone had decided the world was never supposed to find. What followed the discovery was one of the most chaotic journeys any manuscript in history has ever taken. The codeex passed through illegal antiquities dealers in Cairo, crossed international borders without documentation. By 1983, a Geneva dealer named Hannah Asabil was attempting to sell it to scholars at the Bicki Rare Book Library at Yale University for $3 million. Yale walked away. For the next 16 years, this manuscript sat in a safe deposit box in Hicksville, New York. Not a vault, not a climate controlled archive, a safe deposit box in a suburb.
The temperature fluctuations were so severe that when scholars finally recovered it, they were holding thousands of loose fragments, pieces of sentences, splinters of words, a puzzle that had to be reconstructed fragment by fragment under magnification. Then in the year 2000, a Swiss antiquities dealer named Freda Nusberger Chakos acquired the codeex. And what happened next is remarkable. Nberger Chakos later described feeling personally haunted by the manuscript. She said she felt a responsibility almost a calling to rescue it from further destruction. She transferred ownership to the Myaners Foundation in Switzerland which funded the painstaking restoration work.
Scholars spent years reassembling fragments, filling gaps, reconstructing sentences from splinters of ancient Coptic text. And in April 2006, National Geographic published the first full English translation. The world finally read what the Egyptian desert had been guarding for 17 centuries. Carbon dating confirmed the manuscript itself to approximately 280 AD, give or take 60 years. But Scarvin Meer of Chapman University and Bartman of the University of North Carolina both concluded the original text. It was copied from dates significantly earlier, possibly as far back as 130 to 180 AD, within living memory of people who knew the apostles personally. This was not a medieval forgery. This was not a modern invention. This was ancient, authenticated, real, and it had survived illegal markets, neglectful storage, and 15 centuries of deliberate eraser. To tell a story, someone had worked very hard to make sure you never heard.
To understand why this gospel says what it says, you need to understand the world it came from. and that had a discovery of its own. In December 95, just 3 years before the Gospel of Judas surfaced, a farmer named Muhammad Ali al-San was digging for fertilizer in the Egyptian desert near a town called Hammadi. His shovel string hard. He unearthed a sealed clay jar inside 13 leatherbound cotices. Dozens of ancient texts, an entire hidden library of early Christian writings that had not been read since the 4th century. Muhammad Ali reportedly tore pages from some of the manuscripts and used them to light his fire night before realizing what he had found. The Nag Hamadi library as it be known contained tech permanently how scholars understood early Christianity.
The Gospel of Thomas. The Gospel of Phillip. The secret book of John. The apocalypse of Peter. The Nost of them hidden prison clay jars Egyptian desert while the burned everything it could find. These were not fringe documents written by isolated eccentrics. These were the scriptures of real communities, real believers, people who gathered, worshiped, and built their entire understanding of Jesus on texts that the Orthodox Church had declared heresy. And to understand why, you need to understand what the Gnostics actually believed. Because it was not a small difference of opinion. It was a completely different universe. The Gnostics believe the physical world is a prison, not a creation to be celebrated, not a gift from a loving God, a prison.
They believe the material universe was not created by the highest God, the infinite, unknowable, holy divine source of all existence. It was created by a lesser deity, a flawed, arrogant, inferior being. they called the demi urge. A broken god built a broken world and declared himself the supreme ruler of it. In some gnostic texts, the demi urge is identified with the god of the old testament, the god of law, punishment, and wroth. The true God, the infinite divine beyond all comprehension had nothing to do with the creation of this world and the human soul trapped inside it, locked in a body of flesh and matter, exiled from its divine origin, cut off from the true God by the very fact of physical existence. Salvation in Gnostic thinking did not come through faith or sacrifice or repentance. It came through nosis, hidden knowledge, secret truth. The kind of understanding that could not be earned through study or prayer, only revealed directly by a divine messenger to those spiritually prepared to receive it. Now, here is where it connects directly to Judas. The Gnostics did not view the 12 disciples with reverence. They viewed them with something closer to pity. In Gnostic texts, the 12 are often portrayed as spiritually blind, devoted men who genuinely loved Jesus, but fundamentally misunderstood who he was and what he came to do. They were worshiping the demiurge without knowing it. Operating at the level of the material world when Jesus was trying to point them towards something infinitely beyond it. Only one disciple according to the Gospel of Judas saw past the surface. Only one understood the true nature of Jesus. Not as a teacher or prophet operating within the existing religious framework, but as a divine messenger from the true God beyond this broken world come to liberate souls from their physical prison and return them to their divine origin. That disciple was not Peter. It was not John. It was Judas. Now hold that framework in your mind because if the body is a prison, death is not a tragedy. It is liberation. And if someone helped release a divine soul from its physical prison, that person is not a murderer. They are performing the highest act of spiritual obedience in the entire verse. Read that Judas did in the G and everything everything changes.
Now we reach the moment tenonated heads are in the gospel of Judas. Jesus does not address the 12 as a group. He pulls Judas aside privately alone and he says, "Step away from the others and I shall tell you the mysteries of the kingdom.
Not so that you will go there, but you will grieve a great deal. Read that carefully. This is not a reward. This is a warning.
what you are about to be told will cost you everything.
And then the sentence that stopped scholars cold when they first translated it in 2006.
You will exceeded all of them for you will sacrifice the man that clothe me. The man that clothes me. In Gnostic theology, the physical body is the garment the divine spirit wears during its time imprisoned in the material world. Jesus is not telling Judas to kill him. He is telling Judas to remove the garment to free the divine spirit from its physical prison to complete the permission that the other 11 for all their de devotion for all their loyalty for all their years beside Jesus were not actually prepared to carry it. The gospel of Judas then gives Juditle found where else in any ancient Christian text the spirit 13 one beyond the the least a footnote not a failure set chosen the others bear here is the part most because in the after this he tell us rejected despite Jesus tells him rely full knowledge history will do to the act is complete and Jews. Yes, let that in this events knew exactly would he name with the most hated name in western sation knew that every generation after that the god would be use his synonym a human can do knew about sermon tempt and he said yes anyway if the gospel of Judas is to be believed Judas was not the most cowardly disciple he was the most obedient and you were never supposed to know that before we go further Further, if what you just heard made you question something you were taught, you are not alone. Drop a comment below with one word. One word that describes how you feel right now about Judas, betrayer, hero, victim, soldier. Whatever word comes to mind, write it below right now. The conversation happening in those comments is exactly why this channel exists. And if this is the first time you have ever heard any of hit subscribe because the Gospel of Judas is only the beginning.
There are dozens of texts that were buried alongside it and we are going to open every single one.
So why has no one ever told you this?
Not in church, not in school, not in any of the documentaries you were handed about early Christianity. Because the people who controlled what you were taught did not simply ignore this gospel. They hunted it. And then they called in the Roman Empire to finish the job. It started with one man. Around 180 AD, a bishop named Irenaeus of Leon wrote the most comprehensive attack on Gnostic Christianity ever assembled, a five volume work called Against Heresies. And in book 1, chapter 31, Irenaeus specifically names the Gospel of Judas. He calls it a fictitious history. He accuses the communities reading it of glorifying the betrayer and corrupting apostolic teaching. That reference matters more than it might appear because it means the gospel of Judas was already circulating widely enough, influencing enough people that the most powerful bishop of his era felt it necessary to name it publicly and condemn it by title. You do not write five volumes attacking something nobody is reading. This text was a threat. But Irenaeus was only the beginning. In 325 AD, the Roman Emperor Constantine convened one of the most consequential gatherings in the history of Western civilization. The Council of Nika. Over 300 bishops assembled to formally unify Christian doctrine under imperial authority. The war that Irenaeus had been fighting with words Constantine finished with law. Dissenting theological positions were declared heresy. The Gnostic tradition that had produced the Gospel of Judas, the Gospel of Thomas, and dozens of other texts was not simply condemned. It was outlawed by the most powerful empire on earth. And then in 367 AD, a bishop named Athanasius of Alexandria wrote his annual Easter letter to the churches under his authority. In it, he listed exactly 27 books that he declared to be the authentic New Testament. The same 27 books that sit in every Bible printed today. Everything not on that list was ordered destroyed. That Easter letter is the first document in recorded history to define the New Testament cannon as we know it. And with it, the Gospel of Judas was officially sentenced to erasure. Not by accident, not by neglect, by decree. Within two centuries of Athanasius writing those words, the Gospel of Judas had vanished completely.
No copies, no references, no trace. 15 centuries of silence until a limestone box in the Egyptian desert returned it to the world. Now, does that mean everything in the Gospel of Judas is historically accurate? No. Bart Urman, who is not a Christian, who has spent his career questioning traditional biblical narratives and who has no theological reason whatsoever to defend the Orthodox cannon, still concludes that this text tells us more about 2 century Gnostic belief than about the historical Judas himself. But that is not the point. The point is this. There were communities of real people in the earliest centuries of Christian history who read this text as scripture who gathered around it who built their entire understanding of Jesus salvation and Judas on what it said. It took a bishop, an emperor, and an imperial decree to erase them from the record.
And someone decided you were never allowed to know they existed.
So what do we do with Judas? The canonical gospels say he was a traitor who died in shame. Matthew 27:5 records that he threw the 30 silver coins into the temple, walked out and hanged himself. The Acts of the Apostles adds a darker detail. Still, Acts 1:18 describes his body falling headlong into a field, bursting open, his intestines spilling out. Two accounts of the same death, already contradicting each other within the cannon itself. The Gospel of Judas says something else entirely. It says he was the most trusted disciple chosen for a burden so sacred and so costly that no one else was spiritually equipped to carry it. Three accounts, three different Judases, and the one that got buried for 1500 years is the only one that portrays him as anything other than a monster. Ask yourself why.
The Gospel of Judas forces questions onto the table that orthodox Christianity has never comfortably answered. If the betrayal was part of the divine plan, can it even be called betrayal? Jesus told his disciples repeatedly that he would be handed over, that he would suffer and die, that it was necessary, that it had to happen. If it had to happen, someone had to make it happen. And if Judas was that someone, then Judas did not derail the plan of God. He fulfilled it. If Judas was following a direct instruction from Jesus himself, does guilt still apply?
We do not condemn a soldier for following orders in a mission his commander designed and authorized.
We do not call a surgeon a murderer for cutting open a body to heal it. Why then has Judas carried the weight of condemnation for 2,000 years for doing precisely what this text claims Jesus asked him to do? And if Jesus knew, predicted, and according to this gospel personally asked for what happened in that garden, then what exactly have 2,000 years of paintings, sermons, and cultural contempt been for? These are not comfortable questions. They were not meant to be. The people who decided what you were allowed to believe understood exactly how destabilizing these questions were. That is why they needed the gospel of Judas to disappear. Not because it was obviously false, but because it was asking questions that had no safe answers. The canonical story of Judas is clean, simple, morally satisfying. There is a villain. He is punished. justice is served. The Gospel of Judas destroys that cleanness completely. It replaces a villain with a martyr. It replaces a betrayal with an act of obedience. It replaces 2,000 years of certainty with a question that history still cannot stop asking. Was Judas the worst disciple or was he the only one willing to do what the mission actually required?
The Gospel of Judas does not rewrite Christianity. It does not erase the New Testament or overturn 2,000 years of theology with a single manuscript. But it exposes something that powerful people worked very hard to make sure you never saw. The early church was not a unified movement handing down a single agreed truth. It was a war. A war over who Jesus was, what he taught, whose version of events would survive, and which texts were dangerous enough to be condemned by name, hunted down, and erased from the record entirely.
Irenaeus won that war. The Gnostics lost, and their texts were buried, burned, hidden, or sealed in limestone boxes beneath the Egyptian desert. While the winning side wrote the history that every generation since has been handed as the complete final unquestionable truth. Here is what you need to sit with. They made Judas the most hated man in history. And then they buried the one document that told his side of the story. If his version didn't matter, if it posed no threat, if it was nothing more than the ravings of a fringe movement that history rightly ignored, then why did the most powerful bishop of the second set feel the need it by name?
Why need to years? And why, when it finally came back, did it still have the power to shake the world? The Gospel of Judas is not the only text they buried. The Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary Magdalene, the secret book of John, the Apocalypse of Peter, the Gospel of Philip. Dozens of texts, real communities, real believers erased. We have them now sitting in museums, translated, published, available to anyone willing to look. And the question is no longer whether they existed. The question is what did they say that someone needed 2,000 years of silence to protect? If you want to know, this channel is where you find out.
Related Videos
Black History: Why America Must Confront Its Past'' #blackhistory #america #shorts
Blackworldblackhistory
29K views•2026-05-30
#SeamansAct1915 #MaritimeHistory #LifeAtSea #BoatShitCrazyX #SaferWorkEnvironment
BoatShitCrazyX
859 views•2026-06-01
They Said Flight Was Impossible—Then Two Bicycle Mechanics Changed Everything#wrightbrothers
umars997
526 views•2026-05-30
Black Women Were Banned From White Suffrage Groups
Peoplediduknow
782 views•2026-05-31
A Volcano Created Frankenstein — And Killed Summer for a Year
TheDarkSideOfSmth
389 views•2026-05-29
Born into slavery in Beaufort
RoadsanRoots
613 views•2026-05-31
50.32 Judah And Israel Split / Jeroboam's False Religion - 2 Chronicles ch. 10-11
smyrnachristianchurchkokomo
107 views•2026-05-29
Iran's Secret Society Wrote the Constitution — Then Got Hanged for It
TheShadowLecture
502 views•2026-05-29











