“Spy Wednesday” - April 12, 2017
BETRAYED BY ONE OF HIS OWN
By David Mathis
Wednesday
went quietly. Too quietly. With the previous three days awash in drama—Sunday’s
triumphal entry, Monday’s temple cleansing, and Tuesday’s temple
controversies—now Wednesday, April 1, a.d. 33, comes like the calm before the
storm. But out of sight, lurking in the shadows, evil is afoot. The church has
long called it “Spy Wednesday,” as the dark conspiracy against Jesus
races forward, not just from enemies outside, but now with a traitor from
within. It is this day when the key pieces come together in the plot for the
greatest sin in all of history: the murder of the Son of God.
The Plot Thickens
Jesus wakes
again just outside Jerusalem, in Bethany, where he has been staying at the home
of Mary, Martha, and Lazarus. His teaching again attracts a crowd in the
temple. But now the Jewish leaders, silenced by Jesus the day before, will
leave him be. Today they will avoid public confrontation and instead connive in
private. Caiaphas, the high priest, gathers to his private residence the chief
priests and Pharisees—two competing groups, typically at odds, now bedfellows
in their ache to be rid of the Galilean. They scheme to kill him, but don’t
have all the pieces in place yet. They fear the approving masses, and don’t
want to stir up the assembled hordes during Passover. The initial plan is to
wait till after the feast, unless some unforeseen opportunity emerges. Enter
the traitor.
The Miser and His Money
The Gospel
accounts point to the same precipitating event: the anointing at Bethany.
Jesus was
approached by a woman—we learn from John 12:3 that it was Mary, the sister of
Martha. She took “very expensive ointment” and anointed Jesus. An objection
comes from the disciples—John 12:4 says it was Judas— “Why was this ointment
not sold for three hundred denarii and given to the poor?” This was, after all,
“a very large sum,” more than a year’s wages for a soldier or common laborer.
It would have been enough money to finance a family for more than a year, and
could have gone a long way for charity.
But Jesus
doesn’t share Judas’s miserliness. Here he finds extravagance in its rightful
place. The kingdom he brings resists mere utilitarian economics. He sees in
Mary’s “waste” a worshiping impulse that goes beyond the rational, calculated,
efficient use of time and money. For Mary, Jesus is worth every shekel and
more. The Anointed himself says what she has done is “a beautiful thing” (Matt.
26:10). Judas, on the other hand, is not so convinced. And contrary to
appearances, the miser’s protest betrays a heart of greed. Judas’s concern
comes “not because he cared about the poor, but because he was a thief, and
having charge of the moneybag he used to help himself to what was put into it”
(John 12:6). The traitor had long been on a trajectory of sin and
hard-heartedness, but the last straw is this extravagant anointing.
Satan finds
a foothold in this heart in love with money, and what wickedness follows.
Incensed about this “waste” of a year’s wages, he goes to the chief priests and
becomes just the window of opportunity the conspirators are looking for. The
spy will lead them to Jesus at the opportune time when the crowds have
dispersed. And the greedy miser will do it for only thirty pieces of silver,
which Exodus 21:32 establishes as the price of the life of a slave.
Why the Insult of Betrayal?
Why would
God have it go down like this? If Jesus truly is being “delivered up according
to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God” (Acts 2:23), and his enemies are
doing just as God’s hand and plan “had predestined to take place” (Acts 4:28),
why design it like this, with one of his own disciples betraying him? Why add
the insult of betrayal to the injury of the cross?
We find a
clue when Jesus quotes Psalm 41:9 in forecasting Judas’s defection: “He who ate
my bread has lifted his heel against me” (John 13:18). King David knew the pain
not just of being conspired against by his enemies, but betrayed by his friend.
So now the Son of David walks the same path in his agony. Here Judas turns on
him. Soon Peter will deny him, and then the remaining ten will scatter.
From the
beginning of his public ministry, the disciples have been at his side. They
have learned from him, traveled with him, ministered with him, been his earthly
companions, and comforted him as he walked this otherwise lonely road to
Jerusalem. But now, as Jesus’s hour comes, this burden he must bear alone. The
definitive work will be no team effort.
The Anointed
must go forward unaccompanied, as even his friends betray him, deny him, and
disperse. As Donald Macleod observes, “Had the redemption of the world depended
on the diligence of the disciples (or even their staying awake) it would never
have been accomplished.”1 As he lifts “loud cries and tears” (Heb. 5:7) in the
garden, the heartbreak of David is added to his near emotional breakdown: “Even
my close friend in whom I trusted, who ate my bread, has lifted his heel
against me” (Ps. 41:9).
He is
forsaken by his closest earthly associates, one of them even becoming a spy
against him. But even this is not the bottom of his anguish. The depth comes in
the cry of dereliction, “My God! My God! Why have you forsaken me?” (Matt.
27:46). But more remarkable than this depth of forsakenness is the height of
love he will show. Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life
for his friends, even when they have forsaken him.
Bible
Reading Plan: (52 weeks; 5
days a week)
Week 15
– Judges 17-18; Psalm 21; Acts 1
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