In October of 2014, Italian authorities arrested a woman for the murder of as many as 38 victims. Most shocking was the revelation that she was the victims’ nurse. Police first charged the woman with the murder of a 78-year-old hospital patient. Later, however, they suspected her involvement in a string of suspicious deaths. News outlets posted a disturbing pic seized by police: a selfie the nurse took of herself (in her hospital scrubs) standing near the body of a recently deceased patient while smiling and making a thumbs-up gesture.
The local prosecutor was aghast at the horrific nature of the evidence. “In all my professional years of seeing shocking photos, there were few such as these,” he said.
Of course, what was most appalling about this arrest was the betrayal—how the very person who was trusted to provide the most intimate care was the person who (it appears) brutally ended lives.
In the story of Jesus’ passion, Judas’ betrayal shows us a shocking reality about Jesus’ final days. How could the man who for years traveled the countryside with Him, shared meals with Him, and heard Him proclaim the truths of the kingdom of God be the same man who handed Jesus over to His crucifixion? Luke tells us that the angry mob that approached Jesus was “led by Judas” (Luke 22:47). This 3-word phrase reverberates with shock. Why would Judas do such a thing? Jesus said, “My friend. . . do what you have come for” (Matthew 26:50).
We don’t know why Judas betrayed Jesus, but the treachery isn’t hard to imagine. We’re tempted at every turn—tested for whether we’ll stay true to the truths we believe and to the ones we love. May God’s love compel us to do what’s right.
NLT 365-day reading plan passage for today: Acts 5:17-42
More:
Read Luke 22:47-50 again. Place yourself in the story. How do you imagine Judas felt? How do you imagine Jesus felt?
Next:
When are you most tempted to betray those you love or what you believe? Why do you think this temptation is so strong?
Gary Shultz on October 14, 2015 at 6:19 am
As your article moves to the end and enters the “next” question, it is evident that we can be tempted to at least think about some pretty crazy things. “It’s all in there” we are feed a increasingly bizarre and violent diet of shocking things. Thankfully God’s Spirit guides and pulls us toward the gifts of the Holy Spirit. It does become a simple formula of which one do we donate time to, which side gets fed, by choice we push ourselves to the direction we really want to go. May we hold fast! Thanks
Winn Collier on October 14, 2015 at 1:20 pm
yes, I don’t have to look far at all to find this kind of craziness…
Tom Felten on October 14, 2015 at 8:55 am
The grace shown in Jesus’ words is powerful. May the Holy Spirit give us the power we need today to stay true to Him and His Word.
Winn Collier on October 14, 2015 at 1:21 pm
it really is, the word friend offers so much — and to offer it here, under these circumstances…
konah on October 14, 2016 at 9:23 am
As humans, they both may have felt bad but it was prophesied years before Judas was born that someone was going to betrayed the Messiah for 30 pcs of silver, whether like it or not, that was a role destined for his path. Let’s pray that our roles in fulfilment to scriptures shouldn’t be as Judas was. In Jeremiah 1;5 it says;
Before I formed you in your mother’s womb, I knew you, before you were born, I ordained/consecrated you a prophet to the nations.
Great roles are destined for you before you were born.