aniron...If you examine the information presented in this thread, it should be clear that Judas Iscariot is the "Judas" of the gospel. The last page of the gospel in its last paragraph describes the actions of Ioudas, mentioning him by name twice and concludes with his acceptance of money and his betrayal of Jesus. Irenaeus, in his description of the Gospel of Judas, also mentions how it focused on Judas' role in the mystery of the betrayal. It is also significant that unlike other passion gospels, the Gospel of Judas ends with the betrayal and does not go on to relate the trial and crucifixion.
rick_here....It's a little fun trying to piece together what we know of the gospel, tentative tho it is. It's kind of like trying to figure out the plot of an upcoming Star Wars movie from the various spoilers leaked online.
The "different race" theme is certainly given a rather different application in the Petrine pseudepigrapha, but it still looks like a thread that runs between distinct groups of Christian literatures....btw, the Petrine idea of Christians as a "third race" is not ideologically one of including Gentiles into the Jewish fold but rather creating a new race that was neither Jewish nor Gentile.
I'm a little dubious that a first-century Zealot understanding of Judas Iscariot would be latent in a mid-to-late second-century gnostic text. I somewhat like the allusional connection with the patriarchs Judah and Issachar in the original root form of the Judas legend because "Judah" is the one of the original Twelve (= sons of Jacob) who suggested betraying Joseph for a payment of silver (Genesis 37:26-28), the names are usually adjacent to each other as "Judah Issachar" in the OT (cf. Genesis 35:23, 46:12-13, Exodus 1:2-3; Numbers 1:27-28, 26:22-23; Deuteronomy 27:12; 1 Chronicles 2:1), and in one of these texts there is a curse against "the man who accepts a bribe to kill an innocent person" elsewhere in the same passage (Deuteronomy 27:12, 25).
About the word "wicked", if the Greek original was anomos, maybe there is an allusion to Luke 22:37, which has Jesus "numbered among the wicked" (a wording found only in Luke in the gospels, I believe). I think the evidence surveyed above indicates that the Gospel of Judas was especially dependent on Luke.
Midget-Sasquatch....Nice suggestion, linking the "race" concept to the Valentinian division of humanity into three categories. The question tho is if Allogenes is addressing Satan, the "ruler of the world", and says that he is not from your race. Does the hylic-psychic-pneumatic scheme apply to archons/powers? I have usually seen it applied to those imprisoned in matter who achieve different levels of gnosis.