EVENING SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 7/7/2026
7:49 PM
My
Worship Time Focus: “His
(Judas) Betrayal”
I will attempt to finish our look at
these twelve apostles in my SD for this
evening.
“After leaving the upper room, Judas
evidently went straight to the Sanhedrin to set his evil plans in motion. He informed them of the final, irreparable breach
between himself and Jesus. More
significantly, he told them that Jesus would be in Gethsemane later that evening
(cf. Luke 22:39; John 18:2)—a secluded place where they could seize Jesus
without fear of provoking a riot (cf. Matt. 26:3-5; Luke 22:6).
“Judas did not betray Jesus in a
moment of passion; he could not have pleaded temporary insanity. How long he had plotted in his wretched heart
to betray the Savior is not revealed.
But he had made his bargain with the Jewish leaders almost a week
earlier, and had been looking for an opportunity to deliver Him into their
hands ever since (Luke 22:6). His evil
act was thus fully premediated.
“Judas next appears in John’s narrative
at the head of the large contingent of Roman soldiers and Jewish officials that
arrived at Gethsemane to arrest Jesus.
The Lord did not attempt to hide or escape, nor did He wait for Judas to
single Him out. Completely in control of
the situation, He went to meet the arresting party and calmly asked them who
they were seeking (John 18:4). After
they replied, ‘Jesus the Nazarene’ (v. 5), Jesus identified Himself using the
divine name ‘I am’ (cf. Ex. 3:14). In response
the entire detachment—including Judas—was slammed to the ground (vv. 5-6).” “5
They answered him, “Jesus of Nazareth.” Jesus said to them, “I am he.”
Judas, who betrayed him, was standing with them. 6 When Jesus said to them, “I am he,” they drew
back and fell to the ground.” “Incredibly,
despite that stunning display of Christ’s divine power, Judas proceeded with
his diabolical plan. Using the
prearranged signal (Matt. 26:48), Judas brazenly ‘went to Jesus and said ‘Hail,
Rabbi!’ and kissed Him’ (v. 49. To
betray the Son of Man with a kiss of affection was the act of Judas’s devious
hypocrisy; it was a cynical attempt to feign innocence and conceal his
treachery. Judas used the symbol of
love, respect, and homage to attempt to mask the evil in his heart. He profaned the Passover, Gethsemane, where
Jesus had poured out His heart to the Father and been ministered to by and
angel (Luke 22:41-44), and most of all the sinless Son of God.
“The monumental sin of betraying
Jesus produced unbearable guilt, Judas’s conscience immediately came alive and
began tormenting him. He was overwhelmed
with remorse (but not genuine repentance).
In a desperate but faithless and futile bid to gain relief from his
tormenting conscience, he attempted to return to the Jewish leaders the paltry
sum (thirty pieces of silver, the price of a slave [Ex. 12:32]) he had received
from them (Matt. 27:3). Judas had been a
useful tool to them, but now that they had Jesus in custody, the Jewish
authorities had no further use for him.
They contemptuously dismissed him, callously responding to his plaintive
cry, “ I have sinned by betraying innocent blood’ by telling him, ‘What is that
to us? See to that yourself!’ (v. 4).
“This was the end of the line for
Judas. After throwing the thirty pieces
of silver into the temple sanctuary, he
went out and hanged himself (v. 5). In a
fitting end to the tragic story of his life, he could not even do that
successfully. Either the knot came
undone, or the rope or the branch to which it was tied broke, and Judas plunged
to his death in a gory fashion (Acts 1:18). Acts 1:25 records the chilling epitaph
to the life of Judas, noting that that son of perdition (John 17:12), went to
his own place—hell (Acts 1:25). In that
place of unspeakable torment, his guilt-ridden conscience will refuse to be
silenced for all eternity. Truly, as Jesus declared of him, ‘It would have been
good for that man if he hand not been born’ (Mark 14:21)
“Several compelling lessons may be
drawn from the life of Judas:
“First, Judas is history’s greatest
example of lost opportunity and wasted privilege. He heard Jesus teach day in and day out, and
he personally interacted with Him. He
saw firsthand the miracles Jesus performed, which proved that He was God in
human flesh. But Judas refused Christ’s
invitation to exchange the oppressive burden of sin for the easy yoke of
submission to Him (Matt. 11:28-30).
“Second, Judas is the foremost
illustration of the danger of loving money (1 Tim. 6:10). Riches meant more to him than the salvation
of his soul (cf. Mark 8:36).
“Third, Judas exemplifies the
vileness and danger of spiritual betrayal.
In every age there have been Judases, who professed to follow Christ but
turned against Him. Judas’s life is also
a sobering reminder of the need for self-exemption (2 Cor. 13:5).
“Fourth, Judas was living proof of
Christ’s patience, mercy, and loving-kindness.
Even when he arrived with the detachment to arrest Him, Jesus still
courteously addressed Judas as ‘friend’ (Matt. 26:50).
“Fifth, the example of Judas is a
sobering reminder that the devil will always be at work in the midst of God’s
people. Jesus illustrated that truth in
the parable of the wheat and the tares (Matt. 13:24-30, 36-43).
“Sixth, Judas proves the deadliness
of hypocrisy. He was a fruitless branch,
cut off and cast into the eternal fire of hell (John 15:6).
“Finally, Judas demonstrated that
there is nothing sinful men can do to thwart the sovereign will of God. Out of the seeming tragedy of the cross came
the triumph of redemption; Satan’s apparent victory was in reality his ultimate
defeat (Heb. 2:14; 1 John 3:8; cf. Gen. 3:15).
God used Judas’s treachery for His own glory (cf. Gen. 50:20).
“When Judas sold Jesus to His
enemies, he was in effect selling his own soul to the devil. In the words of the nineteenth-century poet
Hester H. Cholmondeley,
“Still as of old
Men by themselves are priced—
For thirty pieces Judas sold
Himself, not Christ.”
Now I am
going to post a song by Michael Card entitled “Traitor’s Look” which came out
in 1984, and he tells his story about Judas.
If you want to listen to the song you can search for it on Youtube.
Verse 1]
How did it feel to take the place
Of honor at the meal
To take the sup from His own hand
A prophecy to seal
Was it because He washed your feet
That you sold Him as a slave?
The Son of Man, the Lamb of God
Who'd only come to save
[Verse 2]
The silver that they paid to you
From out their precious till
Was meant to buy a spotless lamb
A sacrifice to kill
How heavy was the money bag
That couldn't set you free?
It became a heavy millstone
As you fell into the sea
[Verse 3]
Now, Judas, don't you come too close
I fear that I might see
That traitor's look upon your face
Might look too much like me
Cause just like you I've sold the Lord
And often for much less
And like a retched traitor
I betrayed Him with a kiss.
7/7/2026
9:29 PM