the field of blood was a place where strangers were buried. a worthless piece of land bought with the money Judas got to betray Jesus after he hanged himself. Matthew 27:3-10 acts1:18-19. it says Judas purchased the field but what that means is after he killed himself it provided the means to buy the field with the 30 pieces of silver.
In the biblical account, the 30 pieces of silver were given to Judas Iscariot by the chief priests as a payment for betraying Jesus. After Judas identified Jesus to the authorities, he felt remorse and returned the silver to the priests, who used it to purchase a potter's field as a burial place for foreigners. This act fulfilled a prophecy from the Old Testament regarding the betrayal. The 30 pieces of silver thus became symbolic of treachery and the price of betrayal.
Judas did not pay for the potters field. After he betrayed Jesus for 30 pieces of silver, he returned the money to the Jewish leaders then went out and hung himself. Because it was blood money, the money could not be returned to the treasury and was used to buy a potter's field in Judas' name.
Matthew 27:5 says that Judas threw down the silver in the Temple and went and hanged himself. Acts 1:18 says that Judas bought a field with the reward of iniquity, and fell headlong, bursting asunder and all his bowels gushed out. The author knew nothing of Matthew's suicide account and chose to have Judas die, horribly, of misadventure. Neither account says whether Jesus condemned Judas for what he did.
A:The person the gospels say betrayed Jesus was Judas Iscariot. There are two diammetrically opposed narratives in the New Testament as to what happened to Judas afterwards. Matthew 27:3-5 says that Judas repented of what he had done and took the thirty pieces of silver back to the Temple and cast them down at the priests. He then went away and committed suicide.In Acts of the Apostles, at Acts 1:19, Judas was no doubt pleased to be suddenly rich, and purchased a field with the money he had received. Unfortunately for him, he fell down and died, his bowels gushing out.In spite of their differences, both stories tell a satisfyingly terrible fate for Judas, and neither is considered likely to be historically true.Another Answer:Judas was deeply remorseful at his failed plan to force Jesus to become a powerful force and stop Roman domination of the Jews. He simply did not understand the 'Passover Lamb' mission of Jesus' first coming. He hung himself against the law.In Acts 1:18-20, it begins parenthetically about the purchase of a field with the 30 pieces of silver Judas received for his betrayal. But many biblical scholars, especially writing in the New King James state that the field was actually purchased by the priest (transactions take time and not just several hours even in the 1st Century) after Judas had hung himself like Matthew 27:6-8 notes:Matthew 27:6-8New King James Version (NKJV) 6 But the chief priests took the silver pieces and said, "It is not lawful to put them into the treasury, because they are the price of blood." 7 And they consulted together and bought with them the potter's field, to bury strangers in.8Therefore that field has been called the Field of Blood to this day.
Heaven Answer: Judas is desire ,it always stay here. Before last supper means our death ,3 days before desire has to seprate from body and soul. Body decomposed into five elements from which it created. Soul travel from body to body ,there is no heaven or hell.
Judas went and threw them into the temple, in an effort to return them. The priests said they couldn't accept them because they were "blood money", so they bought a field with it where the poor could be buried.
When Judas “hanged himself” (archive.org/details/bibletellsmeso01wier/page/150) it was similar to a military man falling on his sword and did not involve a rope around his neck as in western culture. Judas took his own life by falling and suspending himself on a stake and the fact that “all his bowels gushed out” was because his abdomen was punctured by doing this. Judas could have chosen to remain living as one of the 12 apostles but chose not to do so as the mental anguish due to his betrayal of Jesus Christ was to him a negative too great to bear.
Judas Iscariot bought the field of blood.
The bible says that when Judas repented ,he went back to the high priests with the bag of 30 pieces of silver, which they had paid him to betray Jesus. Judas threw the coins and then hanged himself. The priests said that they can not mix the money, as it was the price of blood.. The coins were collected used to buy a field to bury strangers.
After Judas returned the 30 pieces of silver to the chief priests and elders, they refused to put the money into the temple treasury, as it was considered blood money. Instead, they used the funds to purchase a potter's field, which became known as the Field of Blood. This field was intended as a burial place for foreigners. The act fulfilled a prophecy from the Old Testament regarding the betrayal of Jesus.
Judas Iscariot never called his field the "field of blood". In fact, it is hard to establish whether he even bought a field with the money he received. Matthew 27:5 says that Judas threw down the silver in the Temple and went and hanged himself. The priests took the blood money and bought the potter's field, which they called the field of blood. In this account, it was not Judas who even bought the field, so he certainly did not name it. Acts 1:18 says that Judas bought a field with the reward of iniquity, and fell headlong, bursting asunder and all his bowels gushed out. Because of this, the field was called the field of blood. In this account, the field was only called the "field of blood" because of Judas' misadventure. Clearly neither Matthew nor Luke really knew how Judas Iscariot died. There must have been a tradition that associated his death with the field of blood and each author, in his own way, tried to write a believable story of the death, associating it with the field of blood.