Bible Reading Blog
“Seeking An Opportunity”
Categories: Congregational Bible ReadingBIBLE READING: Luke 22-23
“The chief priests and scribes were seeking how to put him to death… Then Satan entered into Judas Iscariot… and they were glad and agreed to give him money. So he consented and sought and opportunity to betray him…” (Luke 22.2-3, 5-6)
The blindness of the religious leader to reality always sickens me. The Jewish leadership had been powerless to do anything about Jesus because of his popularity, and so they had to resort to fabrication and blatant cunning to even get Jesus to trial. The irony in most of the events surrounding Jesus’ arrest, trial, and crucifixion is that those who appear to be in control are not. They happen only because Jesus allows them to proceed.
The injustice is obvious, but the lack of concern for another human is just beyond what I can comprehend. They wanted so badly for Jesus not to be who he claimed to be that they missed the very Son of God. But not only that, they undertook to destroy him by the most severe means possible. All the plotting and hypocrisy surrounding these events are a disgustingly accurate depiction of the degeneration of human selfishness.
The actions of Jesus’ enemies are a graph of how sin does its work. Someone has once said, “Sin always takes you farther than you want to go; keeps you longer than you want to stay; costs you more than you want to pay.” In the background stands the presence and influence of Satan. These events remind us that people can be led by forces that pull them in destructive directions (Ephesians 2.1-3).
What is so tragic is that if we stop and analyze the role of sin in our own lives, we see the same types of behavior and choices. The deceptive nature of sin is that it aligns with our wants and feeds our logic. Even things we would dare not speak aloud can be justified if no one or only a few select people see.
This passage is not just a history lesson, but a study of human nature at its worst, revealing the form sin takes as it compounds itself in action. In our lives, what may seem like an insignificant glance, thought, or action can quickly escalate as we become callous to where it leads. How often, for example, has someone engaged in an affair without considering its devastating effect on their families? When unchecked, the consequences of sin have a ripple effect that encompasses those around us.
We must always be aware of what we are looking for because we are sure to find it. Just like these men, we are not helpless to sin, but our desires can blind us to reality at times. Paul would admonish us to expose the unfruitful works of darkness (Ephesians 5.11). Peter would encourage us to resist the Devil by being firm in our faith. Any time we make excuses for sin, we give Satan a place to operate (Ephesians 4.27).