and Jesus chose him -- "have I not chosen you?" is what comes right before what you quoted.
Luke 22:3 & John 13:27 both say "Satan entered him" -- which to me eliminates the idea that Judas was Satan incarnate.
it is interesting tho, that John appears to recognize the beast in Revelation 17, who was, who is not, and who is to come. big subject.
what are we looking at, then? did Judas personally have an unavoidable destiny, or could any of the disciples have been the son of perdition if Judas had -by his own free agency - decided not to be? is that a choice Judas was free to make? what if he chose otherwise, and all the disciples chose otherwise -- then no one delivers Jesus to be crucified?
how does prophecy reconcile with the idea of human free will?
Luke 22:3 & John 13:27 both say "Satan entered him" -- which to me eliminates the idea that Judas was Satan incarnate.
it is interesting tho, that John appears to recognize the beast in Revelation 17, who was, who is not, and who is to come. big subject.
what are we looking at, then? did Judas personally have an unavoidable destiny, or could any of the disciples have been the son of perdition if Judas had -by his own free agency - decided not to be? is that a choice Judas was free to make? what if he chose otherwise, and all the disciples chose otherwise -- then no one delivers Jesus to be crucified?
how does prophecy reconcile with the idea of human free will?
Even of Jesus we read, "And John bare record, saying, I saw the Spirit descending from heaven like a dove, and it abode upon him. And I knew him not: but he that sent me to baptize with water, the same said unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending, and remaining on him, the same is he which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost" (John 1:32-33).
Satan, the father, entered Judas while the Holy Spirit descended upon and remained with Jesus.