Summary: Judas (PowerPoint slides to accompany this talk are available on request - email: gcurley@gcurley.info)

Reading: John chapter 17 verses 12:

Ill:

• On this day in 1605:

• Thirteen young men planned to blow up the Houses of Parliament.

• Among them was Britain's most notorious traitor,

• A man called Guy Fawkes.

• They rented a house next to Parliament;, dug a tunnel;

• And into the tunnel they placed 36 barrels (1.5 tonnes of gunpowder).

• One of the group members a man called Francis Tresham;

• Became a traitor to his companions;

• He sent an anonymous letter warning his brother-in-law, Lord Monteagle;

• Telling him not to attend Parliament on November 5th.

• As a result;

• Guy Fawkes and some of his companions were captured and the plot foiled;

• They were imprisoned and tortured;

• And on January 31st 1606 Guy Fawkes and seven others were hanged.

On the very night that the Gunpowder Plot was foiled, on November 5th, 1605,

• Bonfires were set alight to celebrate the safety of the King.

• Since then, November 5th has become known as Bonfire Night.

• The event is commemorated every year with fireworks;

• And burning effigies of Guy Fawkes on a bonfire

Now tonight I want us to look at another traitor – the greatest of all!

Ill:

I often do a talk (schools, lots of children etc) called: ‘What’s in a name?’

• And the answer is - quite a lot!

• Think of these 2 names which are rarely used, if ever.

• Jesus (Rescuer) - Out of respect.

• Judas (Praise) - Out of association.

• Ill: The dictionary tells us that a "Judas kiss";

• Is a false expression of affection.

• Ill: And that a "Judas hole";

• Is a hidden slit in the wall through which guards spy on prisoners.

• Because of one mans act of treachery;

• The name Judas is always negative, and nobody wants the name "Judas" attached to themselves.

Ill:

I don’t know if you have ever noticed:

• That in the New Testament when the twelve disciples are listed.

• Peter is always listed first and Judas Iscariot always last.

• Surprisingly the New Testament tells us more about these two men;

• Than all the other ten disciples combined.

At the time Jesus walked on planet earth:

• The manes Simon and Judas were popular;

• Similar to Jack and Emily are today.

Ill

• This is partly due to the period of time between the Old and the New Testaments.

• Two brothers called Simon and Judas Maccabaeus, became popular Jewish heroes.

• Their popularity helped bring these two names back into common usage once again.

• And in the New Testament, there are nine Simons found and six Judases.

• Simon & Judas may have been men with very common and popular names;

• But their futures could not have been more contrasting.

Judas Iscariot would turn out to be the man who should never had been born:

• Most scholars believe, that the name "Iscariot";

• Comes from "Man of Kerioth,"

• Ill: Modern equivalents;

• Surname of a city or area e.g. Queen – Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor.

• The name "Iscariot";

• Comes from "Man of Kerioth,"

• The city of Kerioth belonged to the tribe of Judah (Joshua 15:25).

• And was in the South. (Cariot) was a city in Judea 12 miles south of Hebron

• This would mean Judas was probably the only disciple who was not a Galilean;

• The others were all northerners, but Judas was a southerner!

(1). The disciple.

• Jesus did not choose his twelve disciples hap-hazardly:

• Flick back to Luke chapter 6 verses 12-16;

“One of those days Jesus went out to a mountainside to pray, and spent the night praying to God. 13When morning came, he called his disciples to him and chose twelve of them, whom he also designated apostles”.

• Obviously the disciples were not chosen hap hazardly;

• They were chosen after a night of prayer.

• He made his choice, he did not make a mistake;

• He chose twelve men to become His disciples and Judas Iscariot was among them.

Ill:

• From: Jordan Management Consultants

• Dear Sir:

• Thank you for submitting the resumes of the twelve men;

• You have picked for managerial positions in your new organization.

• All of them have now taken our battery of tests;

• And we have not only run the results through our computer,

• But also arranged personal interviews for each of them;

• With our psychologist and vocational aptitude consultant.

• The profiles of all tests are included,

• And you will want to study each of them carefully.

• As part of our service, we make some general comments for your guidance,

• Much as an auditor will include some general statements.

• This is given as a result of staff consultation,

• And comes without any additional fee.

It is the staff opinion that most of your nominees:

• Are lacking in background, education and vocational aptitude;

• For the type of enterprise you are undertaking. They do not have the team concept.

• We would recommend that you continue your search;

• For persons of experience in managerial ability and proven capability.

• Simon Peter is emotionally unstable and given to fits of temper.

• Andrew has absolutely no qualities of leadership.

• The two brothers, James and John, the sons of Zebedee,

• Place personal interest above company loyalty.

• Thomas demonstrates a questioning attitude;

• That would tend to undermine morale.

• We feel that it is our duty to tell you that;

• Matthew had been blacklisted by the Greater Jerusalem Better Business Bureau;

• James, the son of Alphaeus, and Thaddaeus definitely have radical leanings,

• And they both registered a high score on the manic-depressive scale.

• One of the candidates, however, shows great potential.

• He is a man of ability and resourcefulness, meets people well,

• Has a keen business mind, and has contacts in high places.

• He is highly motivated, ambitious, and responsible.

• We recommend Judas Iscariot as your controller and right-hand man.

• All of the other profiles are self-explanatory.

• We wish you every success in your new venture.

• Sincerely, The Jordan Management Consultants

When Jesus chose Judas to be one of the twelve disciples;

• It was not on the basis of his C.V.

• Judas did not even have to sit an interview!

• Jesus knew exactly what Judas was like;

• And he even knew exactly what Judas would become and eventually go on to do!

Ill:

• If Jesus knew from the beginning that Simon would become a rock,

• A key leader in the early Church.

• Then he certainly knew that Judas would become a traitor.

• One who when the time was right betray him.

Ill: John chapter 6 verse 64:

." For Jesus had known from the beginning which of them did not believe

and who would betray him”.

• Jesus knew exactly what Judas was like;

• And he even knew what Judas would eventually go on to do!

• Judas may have fooled the other 11 disciples;

• But he had not fooled or deceived Jesus!

(2). The thief.

• John chapter 12 verses 1-8 tells us that the group of disciples;

• Had a treasurer, that job was given to Judas.

• John chapter 12 verse 5 would suggest;

• That one of the treasurers jobs was to distribute money to the poor;

Ill:

• John chapter 12 verse 6: Let’s us know what Judas was really like:

• “He was a thief, and as he had the money box, he used to pilfer what was put into it"

• Having Judas in charge of the moneybag was like

• Having an alcoholic in charge of a wine-bar, or Dracula in charge of a blood-bank

• Yet none of the other disciples knew what Judas was doing,

• But Jesus knew!

Note: When you read the story in John chapter 12 it is so revealing:

• Amazingly Judas had the nerve to criticize Mary for her extravagant act of love;

• When she spent a year's wages on ointment so that she might anoint Jesus.

• Judas no-doubt was thinking;

• “What a year's wages would have done for the treasury; and of course Judas!”

• It would seem that the gospels show to us

• That Judas permitted covetousness to take over in his life and led him to his ruin.

• Quote:

• “His life was not directed by "What is right?" but by "What will you give me?"”

• ‘The love of money’ seemed to be his motto in life.

• And sadly this is where his priorities lie.

Ill:

• One day a certain old, rich man of a miserable disposition visited a rabbi,

• Who took the rich man by the hand and led him to a window.

• “Look out there,” he said. The rich man looked into the street.

• “What do you see?” asked the rabbi.

• “I see men, women, and children,” answered the rich man.

• Again the rabbi took him by the hand and this time led him to a mirror.

• “Now what do you see?”

• “Now I see myself,” the rich man replied.

Then the rabbi said,

• “Behold, in the window there is glass, and in the mirror there is glass.

• But the glass of the mirror is covered with a little silver,

• And no sooner is the silver added than you cease to see others,

• But you see only yourself”.

Ill:

• If you go up a mountain that has a fantastic view of a panoramic landscape;

• You only need two small coins placed closely in front of your eyes.

• And although the mountains are still there,

• You cannot see them at all because there is a coin shutting off the vision in each eye.?

• It doesn’t take large quantities of money to come between us and God;

• just a little, placed in the wrong position, will effectively obscure our view.

Question: What did Judas do with the money that he pilfered?

Answer:

• It has been suggested by some students of the Bible;

• That Judas bought himself a piece of property.

• Acts chapter 1 verse 18 states that Judas;

• "Acquired a field with the price of his wickedness. . . . "

• The word "acquired" is literally "procured for one's self, purchased. "

• Judas used the money stolen from the treasury to purchase a little plot of ground for himself.

• Judas the thief secured his field but lost his life.

• "For what does it profit a man to gain the whole world, and to forfeit his soul?" (Mark 8:36).

(3). The traitor.

Ill:

• In 1535 another traitor, an Englishman called Henry Phillips;

• Persuaded William Tyndale to venture out onto the streets of Antwerp.

According to the Foxes Book of Martyrs:

• So when it was dinner time, Master Tyndale went forth with Philips,

• And at the going forth of Pointz's house, was a long narrow entry,

• So that two could not go in front.

• Master Tyndale would have put Philips before him,

• But Philips would in no wise, but put Master Tyndale before,

• For that he pretended to show great humanity.

• So Master Tyndale, being a man of no great stature,

• Went before, and Philips, a tall, comely person, followed behind him;

• Who had set officers on either side of the door upon two seats,

• Who might see who came in the entry.

• Philips pointed with his finger over Master Tyndale's head down to him,

• That the officers might see that it was he whom they should take.

• The officers afterwards told Pointz, when they had laid him in prison,

• That they pitied to see his simplicity.

• They brought him to the emperor's attorney, where he dined.

• Then came the procurator-general to the house of Pointz,

• And sent away all that was there of Master Tyndale's,

• As well his books as other things;

• And from thence Tyndale was had to the castle of Vilvorde,

• Eighteen English miles from Antwerp.

After being confined in prison for a year and a half:

• Tyndale was strangled and then burned at the stake in Brussels on October 6th 1536.

• He was in every sense the ‘Father of the English Bible’.

• What causes a person to sell-out a friend for money;

• I guess and hope we will never know!

Quote:

• The psychology of Judas has been described as;

• “A riddle wrapped up in a puzzle and locked in an enigma.”

Like all good traitors:

• There appeared to be nothing in his character or behaviour;

• That hinted at his true spiritual condition, and Jesus never gave him away to the others.

• If anything, Jesus did all He could to rescue Judas.

• Certainly many of his teachings must have pierced the heart of Judas!

• The repeated warnings against love of money should have stopped Judas,

• But he did not heed them.

• Nor did Jesus’ denunciation of hypocrisy;

• Make any impact on this false apostle.

Ill:

• When you read the account of Jesus and the disciples in the upper room (John chapter 13),

• You can see how He tried one last time to get to Judas' heart.

• True to Jewish custom,

• Jesus kissed Judas (and the other disciples) when they came to the Passover feast.

• He even gave Judas the seat of honour, at His left.

• He washed Judas' feet.

• He gave Judas the token of friendship, the sop (bread dipped in the bitter herbs).

• This act should have sealed a bond of friendship, but instead, it triggered treachery.

• Jesus even spoke words of warning that only Judas would fully understand.

• "You are clean, but not all of you" (John chapter 13 verses 10-11).

• Matthew chapter 26 verse 21: Puts it even plainer;

• "Truly I say to you that one of you will betray Me"

• And to emphasises the seriousness of the situation, Jesus goes onto say:

• "Woe to that man by whom the Son of Man is betrayed!"

• But Jesus did not openly name Judas.

• Until the very end, Jesus protected Judas and gave him opportunity to repent.

Ill:

• God also deals with us in Grace – in a way that we do not deserve!

• We tonight still have the opportune it to repent.

• To turn away from our sins and believe the good news.

• Ill: Motorway.

(4). The suicide.

One of the saddest verses of the Bible has to be Matthew chapter 27 verse 5:

“So Judas threw the money (note: that which had been so precious to him)

into the temple and left. Then he went away and hanged himself.”

• I wonder if the words of Jesus came back to haunt him;

• “What good is it for a man to gain the whole world, yet forfeit your soul!”

From the actions of Judas:

• We see that he did not repent of his sins.

• He was remorseful but not repentant.

Quote: Matthew chapter 27 verse 3:

“When Judas, who had betrayed him, saw that Jesus was condemned, he was seized with remorse and returned the thirty silver coins to the chief priests and the elders.”

• Remorse and regret are not the same as repentance.

• For Judas, it was now too late. He had already yielded himself to the power of Satan!

Question

• That arises is: Why suicide?

• Why not just flee the country and make the best of it somewhere else?

Answer:

• Jesus himself told us that Satan is a murderer (John 8:44)

• And a destroyer (Revelation 9: 11).

• He comes first as the deceiving serpent ("You can get away with this!")

• But then turns into the devouring lion (1 Peter 5:8).

• He uses despair and guilt to drive people to self-destruction.

• He preys upon the hopeless and the helpless,

• And he convinces them that there is no hope or help.

• Their best solution is to destroy themselves.

In contrast Jesus could say “I am the Way, the Truth & the Life”

• Way: we can follow him.

• Truth: we can believe him.

• Life: we can experience him.

Ill:

Sadly Judas ended it all by destroying himself,

• Judas "went out immediately; and it was night" (John chapter 13 verse 30).

• For Judas, it is still night, and it always will be night.

• He could have followed the Way, but sadly he was lost!

• He could have believed the Truth, but sadly he swallowed a lie (hook, line & sinker).

• He could have experienced Life but sadly he experienced premature death!

And finally:

• Judas reminds us of how close a person can come to the truth,

• And to salvation, and finally be lost.

• If any person ever had the privilege of knowing Christ,

• It was Judas; but it did not lead him to salvation.

• Remember Judas probably heard every sermon Jesus ever preached,

• He probably saw every or most of the miracles Jesus ever did,

• Yet he was lost!

• What a contrast say to the thief on the cross.

• He heard no sermons, he saw no miracles;

• But he put his trust and faith in the person and the work of Jesus Christ!

Question: What about you?