A piece of bread gets dipped, passed across a table, and everything changes. At the Last Supper in John 13, betrayal doesn’t start with a sword or a shout, but with a quiet moment between friends and a line of Scripture that reaches all the way back to Genesis. We slow down the scene, from Jesus washing filthy feet to the shocking announcement that one of his own will turn on him, and we ask what it reveals about evil, authority, and the plan of God.
We’ve been zeroing in on the sovereignty of God and the reality of spiritual warfare, and this passage brings both into sharp focus. Judas takes the morsel, and the text says, “Satan entered into him.” Then Jesus says, “What you are going to do, do quickly.” Most people assume Jesus is speaking to Judas. We make the case that he’s speaking past Judas directly to Satan and that changes the whole tone of the moment. The Messiah isn’t caught off guard, bargaining for time, or losing control. He’s issuing a command inside God’s decree, showing the enemy never moves without permission.
From that table, we follow the steps toward Gethsemane, arrest, false trials, denial, the roar of a crowd, the nails, the tomb, and the enemy’s assumption that the cross is checkmate. Then we come back to the question every Christian eventually asks: why would God allow Satan to make war against his saints? The answer is simple, weighty, and strangely steadying: the dragon is on a leash, and God is working a plan that evil cannot derail. If this strengthened you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a five-star rating and review.
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