TITLE
John 12:1-11 – Exposing the Heart
EXPLANATION
The week before His final Passover, Jesus went to
Bethany again, to the home of Lazarus, Martha, and Mary. They had dinner together. In the midst of the dinner, Mary took some
expensive perfume, anointed Jesus’s feet with it, and wiped His feet with her hair. Judas Iscariot, who was in charge of the
money for Jesus’s ministry, and who used to steal from the money bag, grew
angry at Mary. He cared nothing for her
desire to minister to Jesus. Rather, he
was focused on the material gain he could have gotten from the perfume. So, he criticized Mary’s actions and covered
his own evil heart by claiming to have wanted to take care of the poor with
money from the sales of the perfume.
Jesus rebuked Judas and protected Mary from his anger. He stated that the disciples would always
have the poor with them, but they would not always have Him.
When the people learned that Jesus was in Bethany,
many of them came to see both Him and Lazarus, who had been raised from the
dead. As a result, the chief priests
decided that Lazarus needed to die as well, because they saw him as an
accomplice to Jesus’s ministry and part of the reason people were believing in
Him.
APPLICATION
Pressure always reveals the heart of man. Turmoil and difficulty are where people’s
true character comes out. The veneer of
civility is sometimes stripped away and what a person really thinks and feels
becomes visible. This is what happened
here with Judas. He had probably been
covering his wicked heart for some time.
It is possible that he followed Jesus in hopes of attaching himself to a
military type of Messiah who would sweep the Romans away. But, when Jesus continued to talk about
sacrifice and death Judas may have decided he did not want anything to do with
that. And now, with the opportunity for
monetary gain draining away onto Jesus’s feet, Judas could not contain himself
any longer, and his sinfulness burst forth.
Truth. I guess pressure does reveal the truth in people. They can't always hide their true intentions.
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