Maundy
Thursday
Traitor!
Matthew
26:20-25
Opening
Words: There
are 52 weeks every year. Each one is important and not a single one
should be wasted. Have you ever stop to consider how many weeks have
occurred in the history of the world? However, there is one week
that stands out. It is the week that changed our world forever, Holy
Week. On the Christian calendar Holy Week is the last week of Lent,
beginning on Palm Sunday and ending at dawn on Easter. It is the
week the church remembers the final days of Jesus’ earthly
ministry. It recalls the expectations of Palm Sunday, the rejection
of Maundy Thursday, the devastation of Good Friday and the final
victory of Easter morning.
This
is Maundy Thursday and on this day we remember how Jesus washed the
disciples feet, observed that first Last Supper, how he went to in
the Garden of Gethsemane pray and found himself being arrested. May
God give you ears to hear these words from the twenty-sixth chapter
of Matthew, verses twenty through twenty-five. Let me call
this20message Traitor!
Matthew
26:20-25 20When
evening came, Jesus was reclining at the table with the Twelve.
21And while they were eating, he said, "I tell you the truth,
one of you will betray me." 22They were very sad and began to
say to him one after the other, "Surely not I, Lord?"
23Jesus replied, "The one who has dipped his hand into the bowl
with me will betray me. 24The Son of Man will go just as it is
written about him. But woe to that man who betrays the Son of Man!
It would be better for him if he had not been born." 25Then
Judas, the one who would betray him, said, "Surely not I,
Rabbi?"
Jesus answered, "Yes, it is you."
From
the very beginning he was destined for greatness. At the age of 14
he ran away from home and fought in the French and Indian War. At
the outbreak of the Revolutionary War, he joined the American army
and as a colonel in 1775 shared a command with Ethan Allen in the
capture of Ticonderoga. Later he led 1000 men into Canada where he
fought in the battle of Quebec. His courage in battle won him a
promotion to brigadier general. His future looked bright and then
something went horribly wrong. Thoughts of compromise ate away at
his patriotic zeal. Soon the unthinkable happened. He offered his
services to the British, and in 1780 devised a plan to surrender
West Point to British. You know the name of the man of whom I speak,
Benedict Arnold, the greatest traitor in American history. This
evening we come to remember the greatest traitor in the history of
the world, Judas Iscariot.
We
are instructed this evening from the twenty-sixth chapter of
Matthew. The scene is familiar to us. It is Thursday of Holy Week.
Much has happened but there was still much work to be done. In a few
moments Jesus will leave to go to the garden to pray. His earthly
ministry is nearly complete and he finds himself in the middle of a
political storm. He knows the outcome. He will be arrested, put on
trial by his own people for blasphemy, then put on trial in front of
the Roman governor, Pilate, as an enemy of the state. The outcome is
obvious. Jesus, the long awaited Messiah, the perfect one, the Son
of God, will be found guilty and will be executed. I can not say
this too strongly. There is not much time left and every second must
count. One of the things he must do is assemble the disciples
together for one more meal. He is building for them a living
memorial. It is at this meal that Jesus talks to the disciples about
the one who was going to betray him, Judas Iscariot, the great
traitor in the history of the world.
It
is Jesus who brings up the topic of betrayal. The disciples can not
believe their ears. Verse 22 says, “They were very sad and
began to say to him one after the other, "Surely not I, Lord?"
It is not possible that one of them was going to betray Jesus.
They had been through so much together. Jesus himself had selected
everyone of them. They had sacrificed together and ministered
together. They had heard Jesus’ teachings together and had
witnessed the miracles. They had felt the power of the Master’s
presence and had dreamed of the future. They could hardly believe it
when Jesus identified Judas Iscariot was the traitor, they had even
trusted him their money.
Through
the generations people have wondered why Judas Iscariot did it.
Biblical scholars tells us there maybe as many as six reasons why
Judas Iscariot did it.
1)
Maybe Judas Iscariot betrayed Jesus because he was the only none
Galilean of the disciples. Iscariot is not a last name it is a
location. He was from Kaerrioth. Maybe he got tried and bitter from
being the odd man out?
2) Maybe Judas Iscariot betrayed Jesus
to save his own skin? He knew in the political game of the day that
the Roman’s were a safer bet.
3)
Maybe Judas Iscariot betrayed Jesus because of old fashion greed? He
betrayed Jesus for about $10,000 in today‘s money .. What
would you do this evening to make a quick $10,000?
4) Maybe
Judas Iscariot betrayed Jesus because he grew to hate Jesus? He
wasn’t part of the inner circle. Peter, Andrew, James and John
got more attention and were privilege to more information. What made
them better then him?
5)
Maybe Judas Iscariot betrayed Jesus because of his name? Iscariot is
not a derivative of the Hebrew Ish Kariot as much as it was a form
of the Greek word that meant “Dagger Bearer.” Now the
Dagger Bearers were a band of violent nationalists who were prepared
to use every means available to them, including assassination to
free Palestine from Roman rule. Perhaps Judas had set his hopes on a
Messiah who would deliver his people from his oppressors. And then
in bitter disappointment he betrayed him.
6) Maybe Judas
Iscariot betrayed Jesus because hoping to force his hand? He saw the
Master’s power but things were moving to slowly. He never
intended for Jesus to die that day, instead he hoped to force his
hand, so that when he was betrayed he would use his power to
liberated Israel.
The
truth is we will never know why Judas Iscariot betrayed Jesus but we
do know Judas Iscariot brayed Jesus. That was not a wise choice.
Judas Iscariot lived to regret it. In the chapter beyond our
reading, Matthew 27, we are told that Judas Iscariot20regretted his
choice to betray Jesus so much that me committed suicide, he hanged
himself. Matthew 27:3-4 says once Jesus was handed over the Roman
governor, Pilate, Judas Iscariot tried to return the money. The
problem was it was too late. According to the text, Judas Iscariot
threw the money into the temple and left to hang himself. The
authorities used the money to buy a plot for him to be buried.
So
what can we learn from the greatest traitor in the history of the
world? Consider these four things. Maybe someday we will look at
them in detail.
First,
sin never delivers what it promises.
Second,
it is possible to be near Christ and still not be truly saved.
Third,
we are responsible for our own decisions.
Fourth,
remorse is not the same as repentance.
If
one of those four speaks to you say, “Amen!”
T
he First Battle of Bull Run might not have been a smashing
Confederate victory without the flowing curls of Rose Greenhow. On
July 9, 1861 she hid a message in her lovely tresses; when she
combed out her hair for Rebel officers, they learned that Union
troops were about to march on Richmond. A second message contained
the invaders' strength and marching orders. Confederate General
P.G.T. Beauregard later said that Greenhow "lived
in a house within rifle shot of the White House."
Her house became the heart of a Southern spy network, and at the
height of her activities Greenhow directed more than 50 agents.
How
close was Jesus’ traitor? He was closer then a rifle shot. He
was so close he dipped his fingers into the Master’s bowl. Let
us come to this communion table not as traitors but as the
completely loyal.
Let
us pray…