"faintheartedly" was hyphenated "faint-heartedly", in the tenth and following
Urantia Foundation printings.
Original Paragraph:
P1567:5, 139:12.12
Judas then entered into the base and shameful intrigue to betray his Lord and
Master and quickly carried the nefarious scheme into effect. During the outworking
of his anger-conceived plans of traitorous betrayal, he experienced moments
of regret and shame, and in these lucid intervals he faintheartedly
conceived, as a defense in his own mind, the idea that Jesus might possibly
exert his power and deliver himself at the last moment.