| Biography:
Saint
Jude Thaddeus was closely associated with our Lord by
blood relationship through Saints Joachim and Anne, the
parents of the Blessed Virgin. A grand-nephew of these
two saints, he is at once a nephew of Mary and Joseph,
which places him in the relationship of cousin of our
Lord.
Jude is
the brother of the Apostle James the Less. He had two
other brothers, whom the Gospel calls “brethren” of
Jesus. When our Lord came back from Judea to Nazareth,
he began to teach in the synagogue. The people who
heard Him were astonished and said, “Where did this man
get this wisdom and these miraculous powers? Isn’t this
the carpenter’s Son? Isn’t Mary known to be His mother
and aren’t James, Joseph., Simon and [Jude] His
brothers?”(Mt 13:54)
The
word “brethren” or “brothers” in the Hebrew language
usually suggests a near relationship. Jude’s father was
Clopas. His mother’s name was Mary. She was a near
relative of the Blessed Virgin. She stood beneath the
Cross when Jesus died. “Near the Cross of Jesus stood
His Mother, His Mother’s sister Mary the wife of Clopas,
and Mary Magdalene” (Jn 19:25)
In his
boyhood and youth Jude must have associated with Jesus.
At the beginning of the public life of Jesus, Jude left
all to follow the Master. As an Apostle, he labored
with great zeal for the conversion of Gentiles. For ten
years he worked as a missionaries in the whole of
Mesopotamia. He returned to Jerusalem for the Council
of the Apostles. Later he joined Simon in Libya, where
the two Apostles preached the Gospel to the barbarian
inhabitants.
Tradition says that he and Simon suffered martyrdom at
Suanis, a city or Persia, where they had labored as
missionaries.. Jude was beaten to death with a club;
hence he is represented with a club in his hand. His
head was then severed from his body with an ax. His
body was brought to Rome and his relics are now
venerated in Saint Peter’s Basilica.
Saint
Jude is known mainly as the author of the New Testament
Epistle of Jude. This letter was probably written
before the fall of Jerusalem, between the years of 62
and 65. In his letter Jude denounces the heresies of
that early time and warns the Christians against the
seduction of false teaching. He speaks of the judgment
to come upon the heretics who are living evil lives and
condemns the worldly-minded, the lustful, and ‘those who
cultivate people for the sake of gain.” He encourages
Christians to remain steadfast in the faith and
foretells that false teachers, leading wicked lives and
ridiculing religion, will arise, but that they will be
punished.
To the
pride of the wicked he opposes the humble loyalty of the
Archangel Michael. He encourages the Christians to
build a spiritual edifice by living lives founded upon
faith, love of God, hope, and prayer. He encourages the
practice of love of neighbor; he urges Christians to
endeavor to convert the heretics by the virtues of their
lives.
St. Jude
concluded the letter with a prayer praising God for the
Incarnation, by means of which the eternal Word of God,
Jesus Christ, took upon Himself our human nature and
redeemed mankind.
Epistle of Jude:
This
letter is by its address attributed to "Jude, a slave of
Jesus Christ and brother of James" (Jude
1:1). Since he is not identified as an apostle, this
designation can hardly be meant to refer to the Jude or
Judas who is listed as one of the Twelve (Luke
6:16;
Acts 1:13; cf
John 14:22). The person intended is almost certainly
the other Jude, named in the gospels among the relatives
of Jesus (Matthew
13:55;
Mark 6:3), and the James who is listed there as his
brother is the one to whom the Letter of James is
attributed (see the Introduction to James). Nothing else
is known of this Jude, and the apparent need to identify
him by reference to his better-known brother indicates
that he was a rather obscure personage in the early
church.
The
letter is addressed in the most general terms to "those
who are called, beloved in God the Father and kept safe
for Jesus Christ" (Jude
1:1), hence apparently to all Christians. But since
its purpose is to warn the addressees against false
teachers, the author must have had in mind one or more
specific Christian communities located in the
unidentified region where the errors in question
constituted a danger. While the letter contains some
Semitic features, there is nothing to identify the
addressees specifically as Jewish Christians; indeed,
the errors envisaged seem to reflect an early form of
gnosticism, opposed to law, that points rather to the
cultural context of the Gentile world. Like James and 2
Peter, the Letter of Jude manifests none of the typical
features of the letter form except the address.
There
is so much similarity between Jude and 2 Peter,
especially
Jude 1:4-16 and
2 Peter 2:1-18, that there must be a literary
relationship between them. Since there is no evidence
for the view that both authors borrowed from the same
source, it is usually supposed that one of them borrowed
from the other. Most scholars believe that Jude is the
earlier of the two, principally because he quotes two
apocryphal Jewish works, the Assumption of Moses (Jude
1:9) and the Book of Enoch (Jude
1:14-15) as part of his structured argument, whereas
2 Peter omits both references. Since there was
controversy in the early church about the propriety of
citing noncanonical literature that included legendary
material, it is more probable that a later writer would
omit such references than that he would add them.
Many
interpreters today consider Jude a pseudonymous work
dating from the end of the first century or even later.
In support of this view they adduce the following
arguments: (a) the apostles are referred to as belonging
to an age that has receded into the past (Jude
1:17-18); (b) faith is understood as a body of
doctrine handed down by a process of tradition (Jude
1:3); (c) the author's competent Greek style shows
that he must have had a Hellenistic cultural formation;
(d) the gnostic character of the errors envisaged fits
better into the early second century than into a period
several decades earlier. While impressive, these
arguments are not entirely compelling and do not
completely rule out the possibility of composition
around the year A.D. 80, when the historical Jude may
still have been alive.
This
little letter is an urgent note by an author who
intended to write more fully about salvation to an
unknown group of readers, but who was forced by dangers
from false teachers worming their way into the community
(Jude
1:3-4) to dash off a warning against them (Jude
1:5-16) and to deliver some pressing Christian
admonitions (Jude
1:17-23). The letter is justly famous for its
majestic closing doxology (Jude
1:24-25).
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1
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1 Jude, a slave of Jesus Christ
and brother of James, 2 to
those who are called, beloved in God the Father and
kept safe for Jesus Christ:
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2
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may mercy, peace, and love be yours in abundance.
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3
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Beloved, although I was making every effort to write
to you about our common salvation,
3 I now feel a need to write to encourage you to
contend for the faith that was once for all handed
down to the holy ones.
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4
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For there have been some intruders, who long ago
were designated for this condemnation, godless
persons, who pervert the grace of our God into
licentiousness and who deny our only Master and
Lord, Jesus Christ.
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5
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I wish to remind you, although you know all things,
that (the) Lord who once saved a people from the
land of Egypt later destroyed those who did not
believe. 4
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6
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The angels too, who did not keep to their own domain
but deserted their proper dwelling, he has kept in
eternal chains, in gloom, for the judgment of the
great day. 5
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7
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Likewise, Sodom, Gomorrah, and the surrounding
towns, which, in the same manner as they, indulged
in sexual promiscuity and practiced unnatural vice,
6 serve as an example by
undergoing a punishment of eternal fire.
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8
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Similarly, these dreamers 7
nevertheless also defile the flesh, scorn lordship,
and revile glorious beings.
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9
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Yet the archangel Michael, when he argued with the
devil in a dispute over the body of Moses, did not
venture to pronounce a reviling judgment
8 upon him but said, "May the
Lord rebuke you!"
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10
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But these people revile what they do not understand
and are destroyed by what they know by nature like
irrational animals.
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11
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Woe to them! They followed the way of Cain,
abandoned themselves to Balaam's error for the sake
of gain, and perished in the rebellion of Korah.
9
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12
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These are blemishes on your love feasts,
10 as they carouse fearlessly
and look after themselves. They are waterless clouds
blown about by winds, fruitless trees in late
autumn, twice dead and uprooted.
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13
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They are like wild waves of the sea, foaming up
their shameless deeds, wandering stars for whom the
gloom of darkness has been reserved forever.
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14
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11 Enoch, of the seventh
generation from Adam, prophesied also about them
when he said, "Behold, the Lord has come with his
countless holy ones
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15
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to execute judgment on all and to convict everyone
for all the godless deeds that they committed and
for all the harsh words godless sinners have uttered
against him."
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16
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These people are complainers, disgruntled ones who
live by their desires; their mouths utter bombast as
they fawn over people to gain advantage.
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17
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But you, beloved, remember the words spoken
beforehand by the apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ,
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18
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for they told you, "In (the) last time there will be
scoffers who will live according to their own
godless desires." 12
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19
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These are the ones who cause divisions; they live on
the natural plane, devoid of the Spirit.
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20
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But you, beloved, build yourselves up in your most
holy faith; pray in the holy Spirit.
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21
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Keep yourselves in the love of God and wait for the
mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ that leads to eternal
life.
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22
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On those who waver, have mercy; 13
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23
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save others by snatching them out of the fire; on
others have mercy with fear, 14
abhorring even the outer garment stained by the
flesh.
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24
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15 To the one who is able to
keep you from stumbling and to present you
unblemished and exultant, in the presence of his
glory,
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25
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to the only God, our savior, through Jesus Christ
our Lord be glory, majesty, power, and authority
from ages past, now, and for ages to come. Amen.
Footnotes:
1 [1] Jude . . . brother of James:
for the identity of the author of this letter, see
Introduction.
2 [1] To those who are called: the
vocation to the Christian faith is God's free gift to
those whom he loves and whom he safely protects in
Christ until the Lord's second coming.
3 [3-4] Our common salvation: the
teachings of the Christian faith derived from the
apostolic preaching and to be kept by the Christian
community.
4 [5] For this first example of
divine punishment on those who had been saved but did
not then keep faith, see
Numbers 14:28-29 and the note there. Some
manuscripts have the word "once" (hapax as at
Jude 1:3) after "you know"; some commentators have
suggested that it means "knowing one thing" or "you know
all things once for all." Instead of "[the] Lord"
manuscripts vary, having "Jesus," "God," or no subject
stated.
5 [6] This second example draws on
Genesis 6:1-4 as elaborated in the apocryphal Book
of Enoch (cf
Jude 1:14): heavenly beings came to earth and had
sexual intercourse with women. God punished them by
casting them out of heaven into darkness and bondage.
6 [7] Practiced unnatural vice:
literally, "went after alien flesh." This example
derives from
Genesis 19:1-25, especially
Jude 1:4-11, when the townsmen of Sodom violated
both hospitality and morality by demanding that Lot's
two visitors (really messengers of Yahweh) be handed
over to them so that they could abuse them sexually.
Unnatural vice: this refers to the desire for intimacies
by human beings with angels (the reverse of the example
in
Jude 1:6). Sodom (whence "sodomy") and Gomorrah
became proverbial as object lessons for God's punishment
on sin (Isaiah
1:9;
Jeremiah 50:40;
Amos 4:11;
Matthew 10:15;
2 Peter 2:6).
7 [8] Dreamers: the writer returns
to the false teachers of
Jude 1:4, applying charges from the three examples
in
Jude 1:5,
6,
7. This may apply to claims they make for
revelations they have received by night (to the author,
hallucinations). Defile the flesh: this may mean bodily
pollutions from the erotic dreams of sexual license (Jude
1:7). Lordship . . . glorious beings: these may
reflect the Lord (Jude
1:5; Jesus,
Jude 1:4) whom they spurn and the angels (Jude
1:6; cf the note on
2 Peter 2:10, here, as there, literally, "glories").
8 [9] The archangel Michael . . .
judgment: a reference to an incident in the apocryphal
Assumption of Moses.
Deut 34:6 had said of Moses, literally in Greek,
"they buried him" or "he (God?) buried him" (taken to
mean "he was buried"). The later account tells how
Michael, who was sent to bury him, was challenged by the
devil's interest in the body. Our author draws out the
point that if an archangel refrained from reviling even
the devil, how wrong it is for mere human beings to
revile glorious beings (angels).
9 [11] Cain . . . Balaam . . . Korah:
examples of rebellious men and of the punishment their
conduct incurred; cf
Genesis 4:8-16;
Numbers 16:1-35;
31:16. See the note on
2 Peter 2:15.
10 [12] Blemishes on your love
feasts: or "hidden rocks" or "submerged reefs" (cf
Jude 1:13). The opponents engaged in scandalous
conduct in connection with community gatherings called
love feasts (agape meals), which were associated with
eucharistic celebrations at certain stages of early
Christian practice; cf
1 Cor 11:18-34 and the note on
2 Peter 2:13.
11 [14-15] Cited from the
apocryphal Book of Enoch 1:9.
12 [18] This is the substance of
much early Christian preaching rather than a direct
quotation of any of the various New Testament passages
on this theme (see
Mark 13:22;
Acts 20:30;
1 Tim 4:1-3;
2 Peter 3:3).
13 [22] Have mercy: some
manuscripts read "convince," "confute," or "reprove."
Others have "even though you waver" or "doubt" instead
of who waver.
14 [23] With fear: some manuscripts
connect the phrase "with fear" with the imperative
"save" or with the participle "snatching." Other
manuscripts omit the phrase "on others have mercy," so
that only two groups are envisioned. Rescue of those led
astray and caution in the endeavor are both enjoined.
Outer garment stained by the flesh: the imagery may come
from
Zechariah 3:3-5, just as that of snatching . . . out
of the fire comes from
Zechariah 3:2; the very garments of the godless are
to be abhorred because of their contagion.
15 [24-25] With this liturgical
statement about the power of God to keep the faithful
from stumbling, and praise to him through Jesus Christ,
the letter reaches its conclusion by returning to the
themes with which it began (Jude
1:1-2).
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