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The Master's Men - Part 5
by
John MacArthur
(A copy of this message on cassette tape may be obtained
by calling
Matthew 10:4b Tape GC 2276
But before we go specifically into the instruction, we
have been noting the names of the twelve and we've stopped
to take the time to get to know them as much as is possible
in the Word of God. We're looking this morning at the last
name in the list in verse 4, the name Judas Iscariot. We've
already studied the other eleven and this morning we'll
complete our series on the Master's Men by examining this
man Judas Iscariot.
Let me read from verse 1 through the first part of
verse 5:
"And when He had called unto Him His twelve disciples,
He gave them power against unclean spirits, to cast
them out, and to heal all manner of sickness and all
manner of disease. Now the names of the twelve apostles
are these; The first, Simon, who is called Peter, and
Andrew his brother; James the son of Zebedee, and John
his brother; Philip and Bartholomew; Thomas, and
Matthew the tax collector; James the son of Alphaeus,
and Lebbaeus, whose surname was Thaddaeus; Simon the
Zealot, and Judas Iscariot, who also betrayed Him.
These twelve Jesus sent forth."
Now we have met already the first eleven disciples. We
had set about to learn everything that we could learn about
them. Some of them have a lot of information, some of them
little or none. But we've tried to look at their
personalities and their character and how they fit into the
scheme of things and the plan of our Lord and why they were
selected for such an incredibly marvelous task. The one
thing, I think, that we have concluded in general is that
they were basically unqualified. They were basically common
men just like we are. Men whom God had to transform in order
to make them into what He wanted them to be. And we saw how
our Lord overcame their commonness and enabled them to
preach and to teach and to heal and to cast out demons as
the official representatives of the Kingdom. And I might add
that they were successful, oh, they were highly successful.
These first eleven men were really the key to all of
the rest of human history. For had they failed there never
would have been another generation and we would not be here
today. We are living testimony to the success of the eleven.
They did it. Under the energy of the Spirit of God they
pulled it off. They brought about that which Christ had
asked them to do, they built His church. They were a
remarkable group.
But one of them stands out against the background of
the others. He is isolated. He is lonely. He is alone. His
name is Judas Iscariot. He is a horrifying, colossal,
misfit. He is the epitome of disaster. He is the vilest,
wickedest man the Bible knows anything about and he is our
subject this morning. He is listed last, you'll notice, in
verse 4. And he is always listed last and with a comment
about his betrayal, because that was his brand and will be
for all time. The dark story of Judas is a blight on the
page of human history. Although there is much we know, there
is much mystery and darkness surrounding Judas that perhaps
we'll never know.
His name became a byword for betrayal. His name is so
despised that it is not used in human society although its
meaning is full of loveliness.
There are forty verses in the New Testament in which
there is a reference to the betrayal of our Lord and in each
of them there is the implication of the incredible sin of
this man Judas. In fact, in Dante's passage through hell,
Judas is depicted as occupying the lowest level of hell, fit
only for Lucifer himself and Judas is not even allowed to
rise to the caverns of the rest of the damned. He is so deep
in the pit. After the mention of his death in the first
chapter of Acts, he disappears from holy Scripture, never to
be mentioned again.
Now I believe this man can teach us some profound and
awakening lessons, so let's examine what the Bible says
about him. First of all, his name.. .his name, Judas, a
common name. Lebbaeus Thaddaeus in verse 3 is also called
Judas. It is simply a form of Judah, the land of God's
people. Some say the root of it means Jehovah leads and
others think the root of it might refer to one who is the
object of praise. But what a paradox either way. If it means
Jehovah leads there never was one who was more obviously led
by Satan than was Judas. If it means one worth of praise
there is never.. .there has never lived one more unworthy of
praise than Judas. So, he is a very, very enigmatical man
even in terms of his name.
It says his name is not only Judas but Iscariot. What
does that mean? Basically it comes from two terms ish
meaning man and Kerioth meaning town. He was a man of the
town of Kerioth. That is simply a geographical
identification. Why is it that Judas is identified
geographically and the other eleven are not? It's important
because he is the only non-Galilean. He is the only Jew from
the southern section. He is the only Judean Jew. All of the
rest came from Galilee. And this may indicate to us that
from the very beginning Judas was never really one of the
boys. Also, the southern Jews felt themselves greatly
superior to the rural Jews of the north and would have
looked down on them and consequently there may have been a
certain amount of pride involved which deepened as time went
on.
Twenty-three miles south of Jerusalem, seven miles from
Hebron was a little group of tiny villages. They were built
near farms where the people cultivated the soil. As the
little villages congregated together and grew they became
one little town and that little town became known as
Kerioth. And in Joshua chapter 15 and verse 25 it is
mentioned. And it was that little village that gave birth to
this man. Seven miles from Hebron a little child was born
that was one day to be the most hated human being whoever
lived.
From his name we look at his call secondly.. .his call.
And I hasten to add that the call of Judas is not recorded
in the Bible. We meet him the first time right here in this
list and we don't know how he got in the group. I mean, we
know the Lord called him in but we don't know any of the
circumstances. We know he wanted to be involved but we don't
know how it was that he attached himself to Jesus.
Apparently he was attracted to Jesus, that's obvious. He
followed Him. He stayed with Him. And he stayed with Him
longer than a lot of the other false disciples who bailed
out much earlier than this.
In fact, in John 6, you remember last week I said that
there were many disciples who followed Jesus but when He
demanded total commitment out of them it says, "And many of
His disciples walked no more with Him." But the twelve, it
says, remained. So, even when Jesus called for all-out
commitment, even when He said you must eat My flesh and
drink My blood, even when He made total demand on them and
many of them left, Judas stuck it out. He stayed. And so he
was definitely attracted to Jesus. I don't think he was
particularly attracted by the spiritual, I think he was
attracted on the selfish level. I don't think it was really
Jesus alone that drew him, I think it was what Jesus could
do for him that drew him. He saw the power of Jesus. And he
believed that this man would bring the Kingdom. And he was
not interested in the Kingdom for the Kingdom's sake or for
Christ's sake, he was interested in the Kingdom for what he
might gain from it if he were on the inner circle. So he's
totally motivated by selfishness. But nonetheless he
followed, in a half-hearted way. So, in one sense from his
side he chose to follow Jesus. But on the other side, from
Christ's perspective, he was chosen to follow. And there you
have the same paradox of human choice and divine sovereignty
that you have in salvation. We come to Christ, we choose to
believe in Christ and yet we are chosen before the
foundation of the world by Him. That's a paradox. That is a
theological problem ultimately solved in the mind of God.
Christ chose Judas, Judas chose Christ.
Now one thing is certain, Jesus knew Judas would betray
Him, and that is why He chose him. Jesus knew the plan, you
see. You say - How did He know the plan? Well, He knew the
plan for one thing because He was omniscient, He knew
everything. And the very beginning, John 6 verse 70, when it
says, "Many went away and the twelve remained," Jesus at
that early time said: "One of you is a... what?.. .devil."
So, from the beginning He knew. And He knew because of what
the Old Testament said. The Old Testament predicted that one
of His own would betray Him.
For example, in Psalm 41 verse 9, we read this and it
has a Messianic significance, it says, Psalm 41:9"Yea, Mine
own familiar friend in whom I trusted, who did eat of My
bread hath lifted up his heel against Me." The Psalmist saw
in the future, the Messiah being betrayed by His own
familiar friend.
Psalm 55 also carries a Messianic perspective in verse
12 and following. Verse 12 says: "For it was not an enemy
that reproached Me, then I could have borne it, neither was
it he that hated Me that did magnify himself against Me,
then I would have hidden Myself from him. But it was thou, a
man Mine equal, My guide and My familiar friend. We took
sweet counsel together and walked unto the house of God in
company." And then drop down into verse 21, the end of verse
20: "He's broken a covenant. The words of his mouth were
smoother than butter but war was in .his heart. His words
were softer than oil, yet they were drawn swords."
Treachery, hypocrisy and betrayal, again with a Messianic
perspective.
And then if you look into the prophecy of Zechariah
chapter 11 as he speaks of the same event, it even gets more
specific. Zechariah 11:12 says: "And I said unto them, If ye
think good, give me my price, and if not, forbear. So they
weighed for my price thirty pieces of silver. And the Lord
said unto me," now listen carefully, "Cast it unto the
potter; a lordly price that I was priced at of them. And I
took the thirty pieces of silver and cast them to the potter
in the house of the Lord." Negotiations, someone is sold for
thirty pieces of silver. The thirty pieces of silver are
thrown to the potter in the house of the Lord. What an
intricate prophecy, and strange because what is a potter
doing in the house of the Lord? We shall see.
Betrayed by His own familiar friend for thirty pieces
of silver. The New Testament simply records the fulfillment
of the Old Testament prophesied. So when Jesus chose Judas
He knew he was the betrayer and He knew the prophecies about
His betrayal so He understood the entire plan. And He chose
him because of that plan.
Now look with me at John 17:12 and let's continue our
thinking on this point. John 17:12, Jesus is praying to the
Father and He is praying about the disciples. He's praying
about the twelve. And He says: "While I was with them in the
world I kept them in Thine name. Those that Thou gayest Me I
have kept and none of them is lost." Father, I kept them, He
says, and none is lost. "But the son of perdition, or the
child of lostness." Luther translated it the lost child, the
one whose nature it is to be lost, the one who was always
lost, the one who was damned always, who never altered his
lostness. It isn't one who lost his salvation, but one whose
nature was lost. He lost none of them but the lost one ,
``In order that the Scripture might be fulfilled."
In other words, Jesus says to the Father - Judas is
lost because it is the fulfilling of the Scripture. I say,
that Jesus therefore chose him because He knew the
Scripture, He chose him to be the fulfillment of that
Scripture. That was the plan.. .that was the plan.
In fact, as I said at the very beginning, Jesus said to
him, "One of you is a devil." He didn't pick which one, but
He knew the plan.
Now listen to me, you have here the paradox. You say -
If it's in the plan then is Judas responsible? Yes. You say
- Well, how can God predetermine this, set up the plan, make
all the prophecies, pull it of f, fit Judas in and then hold
Judas responsible? That's exactly what God does. How He can
do that, I don't understand because the infinite mind of God
is beyond my own. But I do understand very clearly what the
Bible says and for your own interest to resolve the problem,
you listen to this verse, Luke 22:21 and 22. It says this:
Jesus speaking in this the Last Supper; "Behold, the hand of
him that betrays Me is with Me on the table." He's here.
He's right here. Then Luke 22:22 says this: "And truly the
Son of man goeth," listen to this, "as it was determined."
In other words, I am going into betrayal, I am going into
arrest, I am going into death as it was determined. The
betrayal and the man was determined. But, and here it comes,
"Woe unto that man by whom He is betrayed." You see? On the
one hand it is determined, on the other hand Judas is
responsible.
So it is in salvation. If you're saved it's because it
was determined before the foundation of the world and if
you're lost you're responsible. And if you can't resolve
those two don't feel bad, no one else whoever lived can
either.
Look at Acts chapter 2 for another illustration, verse
22. You don't need to resolve them just let them be what
they are. When Peter indicted the populous of Jerusalem for
killing the Messiah, listen to how he said it.. .in Acts 2
he says, talking of Jesus of Nazareth verse 22, then verse
23: "Him," that is Jesus of Nazareth, "being delivered,"
that is delivered over to death, "by the determinate counsel
and foreknowledge of God." In other words, he says - God
delivered Him over, God had determined it before, all of the
foreknowledge and planning of God brought it to pass, yet
"You have taken Him and with your wicked hands you have
crucified and slain Him."
So you see, the overruling power, the overruling
providence of God can allow such a man as Judas to wish to
follow Christ, to choose to follow Christ and yet be in
utter fulfillment of the divine plan and still have his own
choice. And that is the power of God.
Now outwardly Judas didn't appear to have defective
character. I'm sure of that. In fact, he must have had
qualities and capacities which commended him. Three years he
was with the disciples and Jesus said in the upper room
in... in John 13, He said: "One of you will betray Me." And
all the Apostles responded. Do you remember how they
responded? Did they say - Is it Judas? No. Everyone of them
said - Is it I? Why? They had no more reason to suspect
Judas then they had reason to suspect themselves. They knew
better about themselves and they assumed better about Judas,
he was a fantastic hypocrite. He was so good at it they
elected him treasurer of the group. That's right. They gave
him the money. That's how much they trusted him.
You say - Well, didn't they know.. .he must have had a
rotten, sinful background if he was such a rotten wretched
vile man that he would do this to Christ, he must have had a
track record that was horrifying? Yeah, but it wasn't at the
worst any worse than any other ones. It's hard to be much
worse than Matthew who was an extortioner and a thief and took bribes. It would be hard to be much worse
than Simon the Zealot who was an assassin. So you know, they
were all kind of a crummy bunch if you look at it that way.
And Judas must have put on an act to end all acts. It's
interesting to me that he never has a word to say until he
complains about the waste of money in Bethany, the whole
biblical record, the whole three years he'd ever open his
mouth, I'm sure he really guarded his mouth well to keep the
ruse up.
He had the same potential as any of the others. He
could have been a John or a Peter or whatever. I mean,
Christ could have transformed him if his heart had been
willing. He was the same raw material, he was no more
unqualified than anybody else. But the same sun that melts
the wax, hardens the clay and while the other men were being
melted and molded he was being hardened. He was probably
young, a somewhat devout Jew, a zealous Jew, a patriotic Jew
who didn't want the Romans to rule and he saw an opportunity
to follow this man, he believed this man was the Messiah and
that He would set up a Kingdom and the Kingdom would be
earthly and He would overthrow Rome. And He would push the
conquerors out and He would reestablish the Kingdom of
Israel. And days of prosperity and glory would come again.
And for him it was all earthly and it was all crass and it
was all materialistic and it was all something you could
hold in your hand. And he saw the possibility of getting in
on the gravy train. He was never really drawn by the person
of Jesus to believe and to love Jesus, he only saw Jesus as
a means to an end... .to gain for himself.
And you know, he could put it off a little because at
the beginning he didn't join the group for money because
they were poor. But he figured if he hung around long
enough, after the revolution he would get in on it. He was
willing to make the investment of a few years for a dividend
that he thought would be tremendous.
So, Jesus chose him because it was the plan. But he
chose Jesus of his own will because he saw the road to
personal prosperity. And so we could summarize by saying
this about his call - Jesus chose Judas because of the plan
yet offered Judas every opportunity not to fulfill it. Jesus
gave the lesson of the unjust steward, of a man wasting his
opportunity to Judas. He gave the lesson of the wedding
garment to Judas. He gave the lessons of money and greed to
Judas. He gave lessons of pride to Judas. He said a lot of
things. One of you is a devil, to warn Judas.. .but Judas
never listened, and never applied anything. And he kept up
his deceit.
The disciples relationship to him is kind of
interesting. He was in group four, he's in the last group
which indicates that he wasn't a real intimate disciple of
Christ. And I imagine he kind of hung on the edges of group
four too. He didn't fit in because he was a non-Galilean and
he sort of hung on the outside and I think he never really
had a meaningful relationship. They gave him the job of
carrying in the money because you don't have to be spiritual
to hold the bag. He probably had an aptitude for finances
and a love for bargaining and a real sort of interest in
money and that certainly what he was after and they picked
up on his knowledge of that.
Jesus knew everything the disciples didn't know. Jesus
knew exactly what he was. But Jesus loved him, tried to
reach him. In John 13 at the last supper Jesus said: "One of
you is going to betray Me." They all said - Is it I... Is it
I. "He said the one to whom I give the sop, he it is who
betrays Me." Sop was a piece of bread that you stuck in a
bowl and in the bowl was a... a sort of a paste like jam
made out of fruit and nuts. And you took the bread and just
sort of soaked it in that and it was common in the Orient to
honor a guest and the meal and the one who was the honored
guest would be the one to whom the host gave the sop. The
host would dip it and give it to the honored guest. And He
said the one to whom I give the sop, he it is that betrays
Me. And He dipped the sop and gave it to Judas. And at that
very moment He was honoring him, He was respecting him, He
was showing love to him, He was lifting him up. It was an
act, I think, of affection. It was an act of love. Beside
teaching him and teaching him and warning him He actually
honored the man. He was ever-reaching to that man. But he
never responded.
And that brings us to the third point. His progress
into betrayal.. .his progress. John's gospel is the place we
have to go to get the progress. And we can kind of see
what's going on. Three years are going by and Judas keeps
hoping that any minute Jesus is going to grab the Kingdom. I
mean, it's going to come, he sees a miracle and another
miracle and another miracle and people are healed and the
blind can see and the deaf can hear and the lame can walk
and the dumb can speak and people are fed and he's.. .he's
in awe of all these things and he knows the power is there
to do it. And he anticipates that at any moment it's going
to happen. And he is so greedy that he just keeps hanging in
there and hanging in there and hanging in there with
tenacity, waiting for that Kingdom to happen.
Now I would hasten to add to you that he is no
different than the other twelve. They all believed that the
Messiah had come. They all believed the Messiah would bring
an earthly Kingdom. They all believed the Messiah would
overthrow Rome, He would establish the Kingdom and they
would enter into the glory of the Kingdom. They all believed
that they had met the lion of the tribe of Judah. But the
Lord began to tell them that before He was the lion of the
tribe of Judah, He had to be the lamb slain from the
foundation of the world. And He talked about dying. And He
talked about giving His life. And He talked about being
lifted up. And whenever He talked about that you could just
hear Judas saying - What is this? And I believe that the
final thing that just destroyed Judas finally, was the
triumphal entry. When Jesus rode into the city and it was
"Hosanna to the son of David," and palm branches at His feet
and all the praises and everybody acknowledging Him as the
Messiah and He rides in and Judas has got to be in the back
saying - This is it. It's going to happen today. What a set
up. Jesus gets off the donkey and gives a speech. This is
His speech: "Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and
die, it abideth alone." I'll have to die. And I believe that
literally devastated, that was the last straw that Judas
could handle. It wasn't going to happen. And I think that
made it finally clear to him.
You see, the other disciples started where he started.
But the Lord lifted them to a spiritual plain, Judas never
got there. The Lord elevated them to a spiritual Kingdom to
see things in a divine dimension, but Judas never got off
the crass materialistic earthly level, he was the epitome of
a crass materialist.
The other disciples had worldliness - yes, and greed
and selfishness, but it was overcome by the love of Christ.
And they began to love Him and in their love for Him He
lifted them to another level. Well, it never happened in
Judas' life. Greed and selfishness and materialism and
worldliness conquered love. And the others were lifted and
he stayed. The others became uncorrupted and he became more
corrupted, more greedy. He had at the root of his character
a. ú .a terrible, terrible passion and he never was willing
to relinquish it. And so like Goethe's* Faust, sold his soul
to Mephistopheles, Judas sold his soul to hell itself.
* John says Gertes but it was Goethe's tragedy
Let's follow the sequence, John chapter 12. We're
coming to the final events, moving to the cross, Judas is
utterly and totally disillusioned. The anticipation of anything good
coming had totally removed itself from him. There was
nothing good left and he no longer could contain his
hypocrisy, he no longer could mask the vile, filthy,
wretched soul that was within him and so in Bethany
there was an incident that unmasked him. I don't think the
disciples really picked it up because they so little
suspected him that they really didn't read properly what he
was saying. But Mary, in verse 3, took a pound of ointment
of spikenard, very costly and anointed the feet of Jesus,
wiped His feet with her hair and the house was filled with
the odor of the ointment. She was just pouring out love,
just pouring out affection. She gave this very costly thing
to Jesus and it's something that was once used and then
forever gone and so in the sense that she wasted it, she
wasted it.
"Then saith one of His disciples," and this is the
first time the man ever opens his mouth in holy writ, "Judas
Iscariot, Simon's son, which should betray him." I wonder
who Simon is? Poor fellow. "Why was not this ointment sold
for three hundred denarii and given to the poor?" He hated
Jesus so deeply now that he couldn't stand any homage paid
to Him. The hate had taken over. What started as attraction
and love and fascination had turned to hate. Because Jesus
didn't do what he expected and he became more frustrated and
more frustrated until he had this love/hate and finally it
was hate.. .wasting that on this One, in whom I have
invested three wasted years.
By the way, it may not have been worth quite three
hundred, that may have been his exaggeration because of the
greed of his heart and in over.. .in order to overstate his
case for affect. If it was it was three hundred days work,
so nearly a year's wages worth of ointment.
"This he said, not because he
cared for the poor, but because he was a thief." He didn't
become one here, he always was one. He was stealing from the
thing the whole time, all three years. He was a thief and he
had the bag and watch this: And the Greek says: "He pilfered
what was put in it."
Can you imagine that kind of a guy. Here's a poor band
of people going around doing good and he was stealing out of
their resources, all the while. He had absolutely no love
for them, no affection for them. The fact that he didn't
know any of them and was from the south, played into the
hands of his secrecy very well, they knew nothing about him.
And all the while he was stealing out of the bag, he was a
materialist and he was in life for one thing - what he could
get out of it and he got it any way he could. And if he
wasn't going to get the whole Kingdom, he was going to get a
few bucks getting out. That's the basic motive of Judas.
And some people have tried to ascribe to him a good
motive, you cannot ascribe to Judas a good motive anytime in
anyway for two reasons. One, Jesus said - One of you is a
devil; two, before he betrayed Him Jesus said, "And Satan
entered into him." There was nothing good about him. He was
wretched.
So that.. .occurred. .that incident occurred and
immediately that night Judas left Bethany and brought about
the first fatal interview with the chief priests. And he
began to negotiate with them, as in Zechariah chapter 11,
for thirty pieces of silver. So, the Lord was anointed out
of love, and betrayed out of hate, the same night. And may I
hasten to add that it is so still and that it is so with
every man. You either enthrone Him or you betray Him. There
is no middle ground. You are either Mary or you are Judas.
You either pour out your love to Him or you sell Him for
whatever price you have deemed proper.
Look at John 13 then. After having initiated the
betrayal, our Lord is meeting in the upper room with His
disciples, they've gone from Bethany to this place. Judas
has worked out his thing and now he comes back to join
himself with the group and play the role of the hypocrite
even further. He comes back in, he's welcome to the
fellowship again. Jesus washes his feet, if you can imagine
that, in the first part of the chapter. And then Jesus says
in verse 10: "And ye are clean, but not all of you." And He
is beginning to point out Judas. Not all of you, for He knew
who should betray Him, therefore He said - You are not all
clean.
Verse 18: "I speak not of you all: I know whom I have
chosen," I know the eleven who are saved, "but that the
Scripture may be fulfilled." And He quotes Psalm 41:9: "He
that eateth bread with Me hath lifted up his heel against
Me. Now I'm telling you before it comes," verse 19, "so that
when it comes to pass you may believe that I am He." He
wanted them to know that He knew this so when it happened
they'd say - My, only God could have known that before it
happened. And they didn't know it when He said - One of you
shall betray Me, they said - Is it I?.. Is it I?.. Is it
I?.. Is it I?.. it wasn't manifestly obvious who it was and
if Jesus knew He had to be supernatural. And I... I am
always drawn to verse 21: "When Jesus had thus said, He was
troubled in spirit." He was troubled in spirit. He was
burdened, He was anxious. He was upset. The ingratitude, the
rejection of love, the hate for hypocrisy, the repulsiveness
of the enemy, the heinousness of sin, the horrors of knowing
that hell was waiting Judas and the anticipation of the
sin-bearing on the cross. Do you know that He actually would
be dying on that cross with all the sins of all the world in
addition to suffering this, it was so much that it tore Him
up on the inside?
"He testified and said, Truly, truly I say unto you,
one of you will betray Me." They couldn't believe it. They
looked on each other doubting of whom He spoke. They had no
reason to believe it was anybody.
"There was leaning on Jesus bosom one of His disciples
whom Jesus loved. Simon Peter therefore beckoned to him,
that he should ask who it should be of whom He spoke." He
says - John, ask Him, ask Him, who is He talking about? Now
I think Peter asked because Peter and Judas were a lot alike
in many ways. They acted hypocritically. Peter knew he was a
sinner of the first magnitude and I think he was just
checking in to find out if it was going to be him, since he
had so many other failures.
"Jesus answered and said, The one I give the sop to,
it's him." And I think that's what He told John. And I don't
think the others heard it because if the others would have
heard it there would have been an attack. John in his
quietness accepted it as the plan because Jesus had said -
"I say this now so you'll know when it happens that I am
He." John went along with the plan. He gave the sop.
And then verse 27, that horrifying verse: "And after
the sop Satan entered into him and said Jesus unto him, What
thou doest, do quickly. And now no man at the table knew for
what intent He spoke this unto him." Nobody knew why He sent
him away. They maybe thought He sent him to get some more
food - Out, He said. It was over now. The door was shut.
Satan entered Judas. Can't imagine anything more horrifying.
It's one thing to be demon possessed, it's something to have
the Devil himself get in there. I mean, what is it that the
Devil himself gets into an individual to accomplish. It must
be the big ones, right?
And before you get too shocked you might be interested
to know that the Devil also entered Ananias and Sapphira,
two Christians in the early church in Jerusalem because they
didn't give money to God they promised to give Him. And they
lied to the Holy Spirit. It doesn't sound quite as serious
as betraying Jesus Christ. Does it? But Satan entered Judas
and Judas went away. Jesus remained with His own. Judas went
out to consummate the betrayal.
Matthew 26:16 says he sought an opportunity to betray
Him. Mark 14:11 says he sought how he might conveniently
betray Him. And in Luke 22:6 it says he sought how to betray
Him in the absence of the multitude. He was afraid of the
crowd, he wanted to do it sneaky and he wanted to do it
right, and he wanted to do it the easiest way. He feared the
populous because he was there at the triumphal entry, he saw
the crowd. He was afraid of that. And he wanted to do it in
a way that Jesus wouldn't suspect either. He wanted to do it
in a sneaky way, so he met again with the chief priests and
they made a negotiation.
And He was sold for thirty pieces of silver. Today that
would be worth somewhere between ten and twenty dollars.
That tells me three things. Number one, that greedy people
will settle for any price. Number two, that those chief
priests had absolute distain for Judas, they wouldn't give
him anymore than that. And number three, that they hated
Jesus because that's all they thought He was worth. And so
he negotiated that he would point Jesus out to them in a
secret place, in a quiet place and in the pit. .pitch dark
of the night they had to have a sign so he said the sign
will be the One I kiss. Otherwise they wouldn't have known
which One He was in the darkness.
And that brings us to John 18, the next time we see
Judas. A few nights later Jesus is in the garden, verse 2:
"Judas also, who betrayed Him, knew the place for Jesus
often resorted there with His disciples." Judas not only
profaned the Passover with blood money, he profaned the
secret pliv. . .private place of devotion for our dear Lord.
He profaned friendship. He knew the place. "He gathered
together a band of men and officers and chief priests and
Pharisees and they came with lanterns and torches and
weapons. Jesus therefore, knowing all things that should
come upon Him, went forth and said to them, Whom seek ye?"
You see, Jesus knew that Judas was going to come in and
he was going to come up to Jesus and he was going to kiss
Him. And then the soldiers would attack and Judas would say
- Oh!!!! you know, in shock as if he knew nothing. Judas
would kiss Him to put Him at ease so He wouldn't think
anything was up. Jesus knew all that. So you know what He
did? He removed the necessity for the kiss. He walked out
and said - "Whom seek ye? And they said, Jesus of Nazareth.
And He said, I am He." Thus eliminating the need for a kiss.
But just to show you the pit of blackness in the heart
of Judas, he kissed Him anyway. The diabolical heart forced
him into that unnecessary kiss even though it was no longer
a kiss to point Him out, it was a kiss to fake his
innocence.. .a supreme act of hypocrisy.
And by the way, in Matthew 26 it says in the Greek, -
He kissed Him repeatedly. Boy, you've got to be a vile
character to pull that off. I can't imagine the heart of our
Lord. I just can't imagine it. I mean, I.. .I can understand
how He could endure the hatred of the priests, the raucous
noise of the multitude. I can understand how He could endure
the cowardice of Pilate, the brutality of the soldiers. I
can understand how He could sort of go through the denial of
Peter but how in the world you can handle this. And then you
know what Jesus' reply was? In Matthew 26 it says that Judas
kept on kissing Him and Jesus said to him, "Friend, what are
you doing? Betraying the Son of man with a kiss." Friend, He
said. Always the lover, always the forgiver, and so He was
betrayed by a man who lived for greed. And he knew the game
was up. And if he could only get ten bucks it was better
than nothing else.
Let me ask you a question. Is the act of Judas unique?
Is it the only act of its kind? Not so. For you will read in
the Old Testament in the book of Ezekiel how that God was
polluted among the people for handfuls of barley and bread.
And if you read the prophet Amos you will read of those who
sold the righteous for money. And may I suggest to you today
that men have and always will sell Christ for whatever they
think is worth more.
Listen to this, "It may not be for silver, it may not
be for gold. But yet by tens of thousands, the Prince of
life is sold. Sold for a godless friendship. Sold for a
selfish aim. Sold for a fleeting trifle. Sold for an empty
name. Sold in the mart of science. Sold in the seat of
power. Sold at the shrine of fortunes. Sold in pleasure's
hour. Sold for your awful bargain, none but God's eye can
see. Ponder my soul the question, - how shall He be sold by
thee? Sold, 0 God, what a moment stilled his conscience
voice. Sold unto weeping angel records the fatal choice.
Sold but the price accepted to a living coal shall turn,
with the pangs of a late repentance deep in a soul to burn."
Judas sold Jesus for greed. People are still doing it
for their ill- gotten gain, their lifestyle and everything
else. Why did he do it? Why? Sure there was malice, sure
there was worldly ambition, revenge, hatred of what was
good, rejection of what was pure, pride, ingratitude, anger,
but most of all - just greed... .crass, worldly materialism.
I submit to you that no man is more like a devil than a
perverted apostle. I guess that's why I hate false teachers
so much.
May I talk for a moment about his death? James says
that lust when it is conceived brings forth sin, James 1,
and when sin conceives it bringeth forth.. .what?. . .death.
And Proverbs 10:7 says: "The name of the wicked shall rot."
Poor Judas.. .he sold Christ, he sold his fellow apostles,
he sold his soul and he bought hell. And the price was too
high.
You know what he did? He knew it.. .because his heart
was filled with such pain and remorse that it says in
Matthew 27 verse 3 this: "Judas who had betrayed Him when he
saw that he was condemned." And how was he condemned? By his
conscience. Conviction must have been on him so that it
pounded in his head, "He repented," it says. Now that might
sound good to you, but that's not the Greek word for
repentance, that's the word for wanting to change your
feelings. He felt bad. He regretted it. Now a spiritually
minded man deals with his conscience in a spiritual way. He
goes to God for forgiveness. But a materialist, a crass
earthly man deals with his problems on an earthly basis and
so instead of going to God with his need on a spiritual
plain, he went back to the chief priests on a physical level
and he threw the money back thinking by the physical act of
returning the money he could relieve the spiritual
conviction. But he couldn't. His unforgiven heart screamed
out for vengeance on himself and so he took the vengeance on
himself and the Bible says, "He hanged himself, after having
thrown the money on the temple floor."
In Acts 1 it says he died having his bowels burst
asunder. Some people think those conflict.. .they don't. He
couldn't hang himself any better than he could do anything
else. And either the knot was insufficient or the branch
broke and having hanged himself over a precipice he
plummeted to have his bowels burst on the rocks beneath. And
by the way, what did they do with the money that he threw in
the house of the Lord? They said, "It is not lawful to put
it in the treasury." So now all of a sudden, they're getting
lawful? "Because it is the price of blood, we can't use
blood money in the treasury. They took counsel and they
bought with it potter's field to bury strangers in." That is
exactly what the Old Testament said that the thirty pieces
would be given to the potter in the house of the Lord. And
the plan was fulfilled.
And you know what it's telling us all through this?
That God is overruling the stupidity and the evil of men to
fulfill His own word. Listen, some people have said - Well,
the people in the New Testament knew the Old Testament so
they tried to fulfill it, to make Christ look good. Oh? Then
how so that the Pharisees are always fulfilling it too when
they hated Him? It just shows us whose in control. If by
taking his own life, Judas thought he could end the misery
of his conscience, he made a terrible mistake. For he has a
miserable conscience now and forever and ever in hell.
Finally, we've gone through some important things..
.his name, his call, his progress, the betrayal and death.
May I close, and I want you to listen very close, with some
lessons learned from the life of Judas? Just very quickly
listen.
Number one, Judas is the world's greatest example of
lost opportunity. No man ever, ever, ever is a greater
tragedy than that man. Twelve men in human history have the
privilege of walking three years in the presence of the
living God incarnate and he missed it. The other eleven got
it. Incredible. And there are people who will sit in the
presence of Christians and thus in the presence of Christ,
there are fathers in families and mothers in families and
people in.... in churches who come and go and live their
life - around them are all these people in whom dwells the
living Christ and they lose that opportunity and go into
eternity without Him. But Judas is the worst. And those who
continue to miss the opportunity are in the line of Judas.
He stood in the fairest surroundings the world has ever
known and he's damned forever. He was content to associate -
nothing more.
Secondly, he is the world's greatest example of wasted
privilege, the greatest example of wasted privilege. He
wanted money, he wanted riches, he wanted possessions, he
could have possessed the universe forever but he sold it for
ten or twenty dollars. God offers you and every soul the
riches of eternity. What kind of a stupid bargain are you
making? By saying no to that to say yes to some pittance
that will burn in the end of this earth.
Thirdly, Judas is the world's greatest illustration of
the love of money as the root of evil. He loved money so
much that he actually sold the living God. That's how far
greed can take a man. He is a monument to the
destructiveness and the damnation of greed.
Fourthly, and this is turning the corner, I believe
Judas is the greatest lesson in the history of the world of
the forbearing patient love of God. Only God could have
known what He knew and tolerated that man's presence that
long. That is the patient forbearance of God. And then to
have reached out in affection to him and offer him the sop
and even after the kiss said to him -Friend. Incredible
insight into the patience of God.
And finally, I believe Judas provides an essential
qualification in preparing Christ for His high priestly
role. He served a purpose. The Bible tells us that Christ
was perfected through suffering, that He became a
sympathetic high priest. Many men are betrayed, many men are
wounded in the house of their friends. People cut people up
and all of us have known the hurt and the pain of that kind
of thing. And when we go to the Lord Jesus and we say -You
know, I've had this happen in my life, do You understand?
Oh, does He understand. Part of the perfecting of His high
priestly work came in having to endure this from this man.
Well, for whatever lessons should be applied to your
life, I pray the Holy Spirit would do that work. This man is
the consummate hypocrite of all time and he is an
illustration to us of people who can hide in the presence of
Christ and be filled with Satan. That may be true of someone
even here. You've been in the church but you' re a
hypocrite.
Jesus said, "Judas went to his own place." Right where
he belonged. And that's the way it will be for people who
reject Christ. I close with this. Someone has written and I
think it sums it all up: "Still as of old, man by himself is
priced. For thirty pieces Judas sold himself, not Christ."
Let's bow in prayer.
While your heads are bowed in just this final seconds,
if you don't know Christ you've sold Him for whatever it is
that keeps you from coming to Him, you have valued more than
Him. That's you price. Maybe it's greed, ill-gotten gain,
maybe it's some sin, some act of pride, self-will, some
fancied wisdom, some human philosophy, some immoral
relationship, whatever it is - it's your price and you've
sold your soul in the selling. I hope there are none in the
line of Judas here. If there are, Jesus reaches out to you
as He reached out to him. And I trust that today you'll open
up your heart and receive Christ, ask His forgiveness right
where you sit in the silence of this moment and invite Him
to be your Lord and Savior, and enter into the blessedness
of His eternal Kingdom.
Father, we have had a wonderful morning in worship and
sobering in the Word. Bring us back again tonight as we
consider the gospel, the wonderful message of the book of
Romans. Help us to order our priorities right. Lord, perhaps
You'll lead us to some unsaved person we can even bring
tonight. God, help us to have the right priorities, the
right focus. Make this a special day, a day of glory for
Your name as we live it for Your own cause and Kingdom.
Thank You, Lord, for our fellowship this morning in Christ's
name. Amen.
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