THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO MATTHEW - Chapter 27 - Verse 3
Verse 3. Then Judas—when he saw that he was condemned, repented
himself. This shows that Judas did not suppose that the affair would
have results in this calamitous manner. He probably expected that
Jesus would have worked a miracle to deliver himself, and not have
suffered this condemnation to come upon him. When he saw him taken,
bound, tried, and condemned; when he saw that all probability that he
would deliver himself was taken away, he was overwhelmed with
disappointment, sorrow, and remorse of conscience. The word rendered
repented himself, it has been observed, does not of necessity denote
a change for the better, but any change of views and feelings.
Here it evidently means no other change than that produced by the horrors
of a guilty conscience, and by deep remorse, for crime at its unexpected
results. It was not saving repentance; that leads to a holy life: this
led to an increase of crime in his own death. True repentance leads the
sinner to the Saviour: this led away from the Saviour to the gallows.
Judas, if he had been a true penitent, would have come then to Jesus,
confessed his crime at his feet, and sought for pardon there. But,
overwhelmed with remorse, and the conviction of vast guilt, he was not
willing to come into his presence, and added to the crime of a
traitor that of self-murder. Assuredly, such a man could not be
a true penitent.