Share This Episode
Truth for Life Alistair Begg Logo

Judas: An Enigma (Part 1 of 2)

Truth for Life / Alistair Begg
The Truth Network Radio
February 7, 2026 2:56 am

Judas: An Enigma (Part 1 of 2)

Truth for Life / Alistair Begg

00:00 / 00:00
On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 1741 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


February 7, 2026 2:56 am

Judas Iscariot's betrayal of Jesus is a chilling illustration of biblical truth, serving as a warning to those who may be tempted to grow content with the routine of Christian pilgrimage without placing their faith and trust in the Lord Jesus Christ. The Bible makes it clear that some who profess to follow Jesus do not continue to the end and will not be saved, and Judas' story is a tragic example of this. The struggle between good and evil is a cosmic battle that takes place in the hearts of individuals, and Judas' surrender to Satan's influence led him to make choices that ultimately led to his downfall.

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:
Moody Church Hour Podcast Logo
Moody Church Hour
Pastor Philip Miller
Truth for Life Podcast Logo
Truth for Life
Alistair Begg
Truth for Life Podcast Logo
Truth for Life
Alistair Begg
Sound of Faith Podcast Logo
Sound of Faith
Sharon Hardy Knotts and R. G. Hardy
More Than Ink Podcast Logo
More Than Ink
Jim Catlin and Dorothy Catlin
Leading the Way Podcast Logo
Leading the Way
Michael Youssef

Welcome to Truth for Life Weekend, where we are beginning a study in the Gospel of Luke today. Alastair Begg opens the study by taking a closer look at Judas, the apostle who would betray Jesus. Is it possible you may be in similar danger of turning from Jesus and following your own evil desires? We'll hear an important warning today. Yeah.

Um Those of you who are familiar with the immense work of John Bunyan. Will perhaps recall the staggering way in which he closes his. wonderful allegory that we know of as Pilgrim's Progress. As he describes the scene of faithful entering into the eternal glory. Bunyan writes, and then I saw.

that there was a way to hell. Even from the gate of heaven. as well as from the city of destruction. And Bunyan was simply making clear what the New Testament says and the warning that it extends. Both by precept and by example.

Making clear to us that some professing Christians. may not persevere in their profession of Christ, right through to the end of their lives. The Bible makes it clear, experience confirms the fact. that some who profess to follow Jesus Do not continue to the end. and therefore will not Be saved.

Now, nowhere do we have a more chilling illustration of this biblical truth. than in the life of the individual who is the central character in the few verses that were read earlier. Judas Iscariot lives on in the pages of Scripture as an awful warning. To any who may be tempted to grow content With being involved just in the routine of Christian pilgrimage. Without ever Having come to Place their faith and trust in the Lord Jesus Christ, who is the head of the church and the Savior of those who believe.

Now it is this that comes out as we turn to chapter 22. Here we are, 180 verses away from the end of Luke's Gospel. For some of you, I know it can't come soon enough. It seems as though we've been studying Luke for years. That's because we have been studying Look for years.

The death of Jesus is now just around the corner. And the context in which these events unfold is that of the celebration of the feasts. Unleavened bread. reminding the People that their forebears ate unleavened bread on the night before. Uh the deliverance.

in the Exodus. The Passover reminding them of the liberation which they'd known. in being set free from the tyranny of Egypt. And every time on an annual basis that the thousands of people gathered in the city of Jerusalem, the national fervor would run high and the prospect of civil disobedience was real. And especially because all that was filling their minds was the thought of national liberation and the prospect that maybe this kingdom of God would come, and perhaps in the words and in the activities of this Galilean carpenter, this amazing preacher, this wonderful man.

All that they had anticipated with their forefathers of old may now dawn upon them.

Now the authorities were well aware of this. And that's why in verse 2 Luke tells us that those who were in the position of influence were looking for some way in order to get rid of Jesus. This is not something that had just emerged, it had been their preoccupation for some time. As we've gone through Luke, we've seen that it is a recurring pattern, that as he challenges the religious authorities, as he points out the inadequacy of so much that they were doing, so their animosity towards him grew. And for example, at the end of 19, we read that every day he was teaching at the temple, but the chief priests and teachers of the law and the leaders among the people were trying very hard to kill him, but they couldn't find a way to do it because of the people.

And that's the dilemma here that is mentioned by Luke in these opening couple of verses. They wanted so desperately to get rid of Jesus, but they were afraid of the people. They were more interested really in what the people had to say than in what Jesus had to say of them and to them.

Somehow or another they needed to do this business. under cover of darkness, perhaps when the Jerusalem crowds had dwindled, when things were getting back to normal, they shouldn't do it, they said to themselves, during any of these feasts. because they may become the catalyst For an insurrection that they would be unable to put down, and then the authorities would come and deal with them at the same time. Mark actually points to the cunning that was involved in their approach when he says they were looking for some sly way. to arrest Jesus and to kill him.

But not during the feast, they said to one another, or the people may riot.

So that was the daily lammer. We need to get rid of him, we can't get rid of him. At least we can get rid of him now if we do it now with all of these people around. And after all, there were so many people in the crowds who loved Jesus. Either they or members of their family had had their lives touched and changed by Christ.

There were people who were able to look out on the panorama of the Jerusalem scene and see it with their own eyes because Jesus had made them to see, Bartimaeus being one of them. There were little children who had now grown a little and they had been there in the early days when Jesus had taken them and dangled them on his knee. There were families whose lives had been shattered by illness and by bereavement, and Jesus had come and touched them and changed them.

So how in the world were they going to achieve their purpose?

Well, they could scarcely imagine. that the way out of their dilemma was going to be provided by one of Jesus' inner circle. If they'd been sitting around for any length of time strategizing about how they could affect it, there wouldn't have been one of them that would have been prepared to say, well, you know, I've got an idea. Maybe one of the 12 will just hand them over to us. Tommy's seven.

Don't be silly. You mean those twelve individuals that are with him all the time? who've been following him, hanging on his every word. Yes. And then, perhaps, as they were in conference, the word came from the outer courtyard: we have a visitor.

Who is it?

Well, it's one of the twelve. One of the disciples, yes. Which one?

Well, it's not Peter, it's certainly not James, it's not John. We don't really recognize him. Apparently, his name is Judas, the Iscariot, the man from Kerioth. The Judean. What does he want?

Well, I don't know. Why don't we bring him in? And they bring him in, and Matthew 26 says: Then one of the twelve, the one called Judas Iscariot, went to the chief priests and he asked. What are you willing to give me if I hand them over to you? What?

We've been sitting in here just trying to figure out a way that we could do this. And you come walking out of the darkness with a question like that: what are we willing to give you? What do you think, hellas? How about thirty pieces of silver? Thirty?

I can do it for thirty.

Now, the way in which this is described to us by Luke is quite staggering, isn't it? It says in verse 3: then Satan entered Judas. Satan entered Judas. In other words, the devil had a huge active part in what now takes place. Not only in the words and activities of Judas himself, but indeed in the whole unfolding drama of the cross, the crucifixion, the death of Christ, and so on.

You have the forces of hell unleashed. against this heavenly prince. Those of you who have good memories may recall that back in Luke chapter 4, when we considered the temptation of Jesus in the wilderness. That Luke wraps it up by telling us in verse 13 of chapter 4 that at that point the devil left him waiting for an opportune time. Waiting for an opportune time.

I'll be back, he said. When the moment is right, when the time is right, and all of a sudden the opportune moment seems to have dawned. And it comes not in a vacuum, it never does. It comes in a person. It comes in flesh and blood.

The real deals that we are concerned with are not vacuum events. They're not strange, funny businesses up there. The real problems that you and I face are problems of flesh and blood, starting with my own flesh and blood. And in the Qumran community, when they identified this view of the world, they wrote as follows, in words that came out of the Dead Sea Scrolls, In the hand of the angel of darkness is total dominion. over the sons of deceit.

They walk on paths of darkness. Due to the angel of darkness, all the sons of justice stray, and all their sins, their iniquities, their failings, and their mutinous deeds are under his dominion.

Now, what Luke is telling us here is simply this: that Judas had surrendered to the power of Satan. He has allowed himself to come completely under the influence of the evil one. This is a reminder, too, of what Paul is going to go on and tell the Ephesians later. Remember, he's going to say to them, You don't wrestle against flesh and blood, but against spiritual wickedness in the heavenly places. Or you say, But don't you just didn't you just contradict yourself?

Didn't you just say that it wasn't up there, it was right down here in flesh and blood? And now you're telling us that Paul says it's not flesh and blood, but it's up there. What do you mean? What does he mean? What does anybody mean?

Well the fact of the matter is this, the struggle is not Ultimately Human. But it is definitely human. You understand? There is a cosmic dimension to what is taking place. But the battle is now being fought somehow or another beyond our ken, beyond our understanding, beyond our involvement.

No, the battle that is about to take place is a battle that is happening right down in a real moment in time, in a real individual, in an encounter with a real group of people. And indeed, the cosmic dimension of what is taking place. should not be overstated, lest we use it as a means of trying to exonerate Judas from any blame. And I hear this all the time.

Well, you know, poor old Judas, you know, he had that he that that was the reason he existed. You know, Judas was invented so he could do that. Judas didn't have a part in it. Judas was an automaton. Judas was a pawn.

No, he wasn't. No, he was not. When you read of Judas being entered, being encountered by Satan here, what does it make you think? I bet more than 50% when they read, then Satan entered Judas. think in terms of an unwelcome invasion.

If you do so, you're wrong. You should be thinking of a welcomed Invitation. Not that Judas somehow or another, although he was going in a totally different direction, was encountered by the devil and the devil manhandled him, wrestled to them, wrestled him to the ground and made him do something he didn't want to do, not for a moment. No. The devil comes alongside and says, Hey, You don't want to go there, Jonah?

I've got a boat going over here. You can get on it. It's leaving in 25 minutes. Anytime you don't want to do what you're supposed to do, you may be sure that the evil one stands close by, offering you a wonderfully viable alternative in order that we might go down the road that Jesus says we ought not to walk. Therefore.

Think of it in those terms. Don't envision Judas as somehow being involuntarily possessed. That would be to miss the point altogether. There is absolutely no hint, and you must search the scriptures yourself. There is no hint.

that he is unable to control his own actions. Rather, the inference is that he opened the door to Satan. That he failed at the point that God had given warning of in Genesis 4 when he said, sin is crouching at the door, it desires to have you, and you must master it. In my journey of Christian living, that is not an encounter, a battle that happened at a moment in time. That is an encounter and a battle that happens 60 seconds a minute, 60 minutes an hour for the whole of your life.

that sin is crouching out your door and it desires to have you. That's the facts of human experience. But you just opened the door. He did not resist the devil. Satan therefore did not flee from him.

Listen. Jesus had to suffer. But Judas did not have to be the traitor. Jesus had to suffer. But Judas did not have to be the traitor.

Now, Phillips gets at this by paraphrasing the opening phrase of verse 3 in this way. Then a diabolical plan came into the mind of Judas. Then a diabolical diabolus is a word for the devil, right, in Greek? Diabolus.

So the diabolical plan is now conceived in the mind of Judas. And you will notice the volitional aspect of all that then takes place. Not Judas somehow being propelled by an unseen force over which he has no control and yet which apparently controls him. No, but Judas making his own choices.

So you read in verse 4, notice all the doing words. Those are the verbs, that's what we learned at school. And Judas went. to the chief priests. He said, well, I think I'll go down to the chief priests.

I'll go find these characters. And so he did. And when he got there, He discussed with that. He had a conversation. He said, I want to talk to you about what you're willing to give me.

We just saw that in Matthew 26. What are you prepared to do for me if I do this for you? The kind of transaction that takes place every day in the process of business. I can supply this. How much are you prepared to pay me?

And having discussed with them, discovering they were delighted. And they having agreed to give him money, notice verse 6, he consented. You see the evolutional aspect of this. He said, okay, so do. Let's do this.

And then having consented, He watched. for the moment of opportunity in order that he might Hand him over.

Now I mention that simply to to make the point. Here we have Judas acting on his own cognizance. It's actually a reminder to us of what James teaches about the nature of temptation itself, isn't it? I mean, we can't delay on this, but I'll just remind you of it in James chapter 1. You can do a little homework if you want.

When tempted, James 1:13, no one should say, God is tempting me. For God cannot be tempted by evil, nor does He tempt anyone.

Well, then, what happens?

Well, each one. It's tempted. When? By his own evil desire. He's dragged away And enticed.

And after desire has conceived, It gives birth to sin. And sin When it is full grown, strangles the life. I do the person. By his own evil desire. The things that were going on in the heart and mind of Judas as he followed Jesus.

As he moved with the crowd, as he joined his colleagues in the process, there were things going on inside of him. There were evil desires, and instead of acknowledging his need of Christ, he tolerates these evil desires.

Now, all week I've been thinking as my mind went into neutral, why? Why Did Judas do this? I started thinking, how could Judas do this? And that question didn't last very long at all because I said, I think I know exactly how he could do it. I very quickly get to the answer.

How could Peter ever deny Jesus? When I find myself bottling it, when I have an opportunity to tell somebody that I love Christ and that I want to follow Him and serve Him, and I want to cough and splutter. Try and move the conversation to something else. The how question is easy. How could he do this?

I don't need to spend long on how. But I am intrigued by why. Why? What's the motive here? What does he really get out of it?

What would stir a man or a woman to such betrayal?

Well, of course, we cannot answer categorically. We can't say with any certainty. We can only take inferences from the Bible and try and put together a composite picture. Let me suggest to you that it is impossible for us to answer the why question without considering the influence of money.

Now that's not exactly brilliant in its deduction, is it? Because after all, Jesus is betrayed by Judas and you can't say Judas without saying thirty pieces of silver, you can't acknowledge the deed without the transaction that was taking place. Yeah, there was something going on in Judas about money. In Matthew 26, remember, how much will you give me? What will you give me?

In John chapter 12, after the lady has come with her alabaster jar of beautiful and very expensive perfume, which would have been kept by her for her dowry in marriage or for the embalmment of her in burial, and she takes that and she breaks it at the feet of Jesus and she wipes his feet with her hair as an expression of self-sacrificing worship. And John tells us that on that occasion, Judas got up on his high horse and he says, This is a dreadful waste of money. After all, this could have been given to the poor. But is that your real concern, Judas? No, John editorializes and he says, of course Judas was not remotely concerned about the poor, he was the keeper of the purse and he routinely dipped his hand into the coffers.

He had a pilfering mind. and a pilfering hand. When he'd heard Jesus tell the parable of the shrewd manager, where the The master says to the manager, that was a pretty good thing you dreamt up there coming up with that idea, how to get yourself out of your problem. It's your homework in Luke 16. And Jesus then goes on to say, you know, I tell you, use money to make friends for yourself.

You can imagine Judas saying, now we're going. That's the kind of thing I've been talking about, Jesus. That's it.

Now we're getting it.

Now we've got a parable about what I love to think about. Money, using money, getting money. Come on, Jesus. That's a wonderful story. Let's just cut it off right there.

And then he listens as Jesus says. And let me just say another thing. If you have not been trustworthy with someone else's property, Judas is saying, ooh, this is getting a little close. How do you think you will ever be entrusted with heavenly property? And let me just summarize it, says Jesus, and tell you this.

Nobody can serve two masters. Because either you will be devoted to one and hate the other, or you will love the one and despise the other, but you cannot serve God and money. And Judas is saying to himself, Uh I was so desperately hoping. That I could. The love of money, says Paul to Timothy, is a young pastor.

The love of money is a root. of all kinds of evil and some people Eager for money, notice the phrase not having money, not with a lot of money, not with hardly any money. It's nothing to do with the size of the bank account. People who are consumed with thoughts of money have wandered from the faith and have pierced themselves with many griefs. Could he have written that without at least Judas in his mind?

Why did you do this, Judas? Money's got something to do with it. That's why Paul, when he says to Timothy as a young man, he says, You better be careful. Or you can get sidetracked by possessions. By power and by passion.

Money Sex. Influence. The three things that sell The magazines in the ranks. The three great dangers. for everyone in a close position of leadership with Jesus.

I don't think there has been someone fall out of the ranks. of evangelical usefulness. but that it may be traced to either money Sex or power. Does this touch you at all? Sure.

You're listening to Truth for Life Weekend with Alastair Begg. We'll hear more about the betrayal of Jesus next weekend. You know, here at Truth for Life, one of the things we love is bringing you books that you can use to share the gospel with children.

so we're excited to tell you to day about Alistair's brand new children's book. It's called J is for Jesus Enjoying Who Jesus Is from A to Z. This is a book you can read with your children or grandchildren as a daily devotional. It spells out the truth of who Jesus is and what He's like, and makes it understandable for children ages six and up. You'll also find discussion questions that open the door to important conversations with your children about Jesus.

Find out more about the book J is for Jesus when you visit our website, truthforlife.org. Thanks for listening.

Next weekend, we will learn how easily appearances can deceive. even inside the church. The Bible teaching of Alastair Begg is furnished by Truth for Life. Where the Learning is for Living.

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime