John 18:1-11 · Jesus Arrested
What Gets Into Us?
John 18:1--19:42
Sermon
by King Duncan
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What got into Judas? That’s an appropriate question for this Good Friday service. What got into him? Can’t you imagine the other disciples asking one another and themselves that question? All this time he was one of us. We trusted him. We even made him treasurer. How could he betray the Master for 30 pieces of silver?

Was it jealousy? Did someone make him feel rejected? He was an important member of the fellowship. We tried to treat him like a brother even though he was the only non-Galilean among us. What happened? Was he simply impatient? Did he want to force Jesus’ hand?

Did he come to resent Jesus’ indifference toward some points of the law? Perhaps he questioned Jesus’ association with the wrong kinds of people--sinners and tax-collectors? Was he disappointed in Jesus’ humble entrance into the Holy City to begin that fateful last week?

Can’t you imagine those early disciples asking themselves, why? What got into Judas? Did the devil make him do it? 

You and I ask that question from time to time, do we not? A prominent athlete is arrested for drug trafficking, and we ask, why? Why did he do it? He had it made. A prominent business person--already making much more than you or I even dream of--embezzles a large sum of money, and we ask why? Couldn’t he see the difficulty he was making for himself?

A wife and mother, active in her community and church, risks the love of her husband and the respect of her friends by becoming involved in a cheap and tawdry affair--and we ask why? What is it that gets into people? 

The betrayal of Jesus by Judas posed a real problem for the disciples. How could the Messiah be put to death? It must have been in the plan of God. Was Judas merely a puppet, chosen for this tragic assignment? If he was, that would be contrary to what the rest of the Bible says about the nature of man.

So, what happened? Why did he go wrong? 

A few moments thought on the matter will reveal that Judas’ betrayal of Jesus was simply another chapter in the continuing story of humanity’s rebellion against God. 

Why did Adam and Eve eat the forbidden fruit? Why did Cain murder Abel? Consider Israel’s great kings.

Saul was chosen of God, and yet he spent the last days tortured with jealousy and seeking to murder David, the man who would succeed him.

Then there was David--poet, soldier, leader of man, favored by God. He could have chosen a wife from thousands of beautiful women. Why did he feel the need to take the wife of one of his soldiers and then, why in heaven’s name have that soldier killed?

And King Solomon--wisest man in the world--why did he end his life in intellectual, moral and spiritual dissolution? Could he not see what he was doing to himself and to his nation? 

The Bible is the record of rebellion and redemption. There is something within the heart of every human being that is at war with the purpose for which we were created.

You may remember that humorous tale that Noel Coward once sent identical notes to twenty of the most prominent men in London. The note said, “All is discovered. Escape while you can.” All twenty abruptly left town. 

Human rebellion is universal. None of us is exempt. Jesus said that we are to hunger and thirst after righteousness. I have never known anyone who truly hungers and thirsts after righteousness, have you? I’ve known people who hunger and thirst for money, or sex, or power, or recognition, or knowledge or a host of other things, but I have never known anyone who hungers and thirsts after righteousness. Even the best of us have a part of our life that is in rebellion. 

You may be familiar with Melville’s classic novel, Moby Dick. It is the tale of Captain Ahab, who had a feud going with a great white whale. The captain had already lost his leg in an encounter with the great white whale and had become a brooding, unhappy, sullen, and terribly pessimistic man. Most of the time he kept himself closed up in his cabin. 

On one of those rare occasions when he was walking around the deck of the ship, he came upon the ship’s blacksmith, who was working on some metal. Captain Ahab said to him, “What are you doing, Smithy?” And Smithy replied, “I am knocking the dents out of the harpoon, Captain.”

Captain Ahab stood there for a moment, then pointed to his heart and said, “Smithy, do you know anything that will take the dents out of here?” *

Of course Smithy had no cure for what ailed Captain Ahab. There was something going on deep in his heart and soul that was beyond the reach of any man.

This brings us to the second thing we need to notice. There is no answer to that rebellion within the heart of man except the power of Jesus Christ. We can buy every self-help book on the market, we can make New Year’s resolutions every day of the year, we can keep a diary, as did Ben Franklin, and meticulously seek to eliminate all of our bad habits and substitute them wholly with good, but we will only be dealing with symptoms. We will never touch the disease. 

Dr. J. Vernon McGee once offered a good illustration of that truth. He tells about a game he used to play which he called “jumping to Catalina Island.” He says, “It’s about twenty-five miles directly across to Catalina from the pier in Santa Monica. We get to the end of the pier and we run and jump off the end to see who can jump to Catalina. Now up to the present, nobody has made it. There have been some mighty good jumps, but nobody yet had made it. 

“It’s a delightful game because when you jump, you get wet, and you can say to the other fellow, ‘I jumped farther than you did.’ And it is true. Some jump farther. I see some people that I’m sure could out jump me. But I’ll tell you this, if you do, you’ll get wetter than I will. The farther you jump the more water you get, but you won’t make Catalina. All come short of Catalina although some jump farther than others.” 

We can infer from Dr. McGee’s description of the distance to Catalina Island that it is impossible for any human being to make that leap. We would need a boat or a bridge. It is equally as impossible for a human being to make the leap from rebellion to redemption. We need a boat--a bridge. And, of course, that boat or bridge is Christ. 

We don’t know what caused Judas to betray Christ, but we do know this:  Judas was powerless to help himself. He realized that all too late. This is why he went and hanged himself. If only he had reached out to Christ--even after his terrible deed--he would have found the help he needed. 

I understand that in a lonely cemetery in New York City is a grave with one word written on it: Forgiven. There is no name, no date of birth or death, no eulogy--just the word Forgiven. 

I wish Judas could have come to know that forgiveness.

Reuel Howe once told about a little eight-year-old girl who did something which caused her to feel alienated from her mother. Although her mother tried her best to help, the daughter finally ran out of the room in anger and went upstairs. Seeing her mother’s new dress laid out for a party that evening, she found scissors and vented her hostility by ruining her mother’s new dress, seeking to injure her mother. 

Later the mother came upstairs, saw the dress, threw herself on the bed, and wept. Soon the small daughter came into the room and whispered, “Mother.” But there was no reply. 

“Mother, Mother,” she repeated, still no reply. 

“Mother, Mother, please,” she continued. 

Finally the mother responded, “Please what?” 

“Please take me back, please take me back,” pleaded the girl. 

Of course the mother did take the child back, just as Jesus would have taken Judas back. That is what the cross is all about. The cross is not about God’s love for saints, but for sinners like you and me. 

But there is one more thing to be said: Judas had a choice to make. As Jesus noted at the Last Supper, it was necessary for the Son of Man to be betrayed for God’s plan to be effected, “But woe to that man by whom he is betrayed!” We don’t know the exact relationship between God’s plan and our freedom. Social scientists cannot even explain how much freedom we have from our heredity and environment. But we have to believe that Judas was a free moral agent. God gives us the freedom to choose for ourselves. He will not force himself upon us. 

I read somewhere about a famous court case in which a man died because he refused to accept a pardon. This man had been convicted of a capital crime and was sentenced to die in the electric chair. Because of extenuating circumstances the governor of the state issued the man a pardon--but the man refused to accept the pardon. The state supreme court was forced to decide whether a person could refuse a pardon. They decided that, indeed, he could, and the man died in the electric chair even though a pardon was available. 

Judas was a free moral agent, and so are we. We do not have to accept God’s love, His forgiveness, His grace. But, my friends, we do need to understand that we are powerless to save ourselves. 

You may remember from your school days--Charles Dickens’ famous novel, A Tale of Two Cities. “It was the best of times and it was the worst of times . . .” You may remember in the novel that Charles Darnay, a young Frenchman, was condemned to the guillotine. But a second young man, a dissolute young British lawyer who is, nevertheless, a friend of Darnay, comes to the condemned man’s rescue.

On the night before the execution Sidney Carton presents himself at the gate of the prison and is allowed to enter. He goes to the dungeon and there exchanges clothes with Darnay. Darnay goes free; Carton dies on the guillotine. 

I hope the lesson is obvious. There is One who has gone to the guillotine in our place. He offers us power over our rebellious spirits. He offers us pardon for our transgressions. He offers strength for our weakness. 

If only Judas had understood that. What got into him? He had spent nearly three years in the presence of Jesus. We should not be surprised, though. What gets into us? I’ve known people who have spent fifty years or sixty or seventy in church who have never understood that the gospel of grace and forgiveness is for them. There is rebelliousness within our hearts. We are powerless to help ourselves. But he can help, and he will help, if only we will ask.  


* Paul W. Powell, Jesus Is for Now! (Nashville: Broadman Press). 

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Second Quarter 2019 Sermons, by King Duncan