English (en)
አማርኛ (am)Italiano (it)русский (ru)
العربية (ar)kikuyu / kikamba (ki)Kinyarwanda (rw)
Armãneaşce (av)Қазақ тілі (kk)slovenčina (sk)
български (bg)Kyrgyz (ky)slovenščina (sl)
Bosanski (bs)Lingala (ln)shona (sn)
cebuano (cb)lietuvių kalba (lt)shqip (sq)
Česky (cs)Dholuo (luo)srpski (sr)
dansk (da)Luhya (luy)Kiswahili (sw)
Deutsch (de)Latviešu (lv)தமிழ் (ta)
Dhanwar (dh)malagasy (mg)ትግርኛ (ti)
ελληνικά (el)македонски (mk)türkmen (tk)
English (en)myanma bhasa (my)tok pisin (tp)
esperanto (eo)Bokmål (nb)Türkçe (tr)
Español (es)नेपाली (ne)Татарлар (tt)
فارسى (fa)Nederlands (nl)Українська мова (uk)
suomi (fi)Chicheŵa (nya)اُردو (ur)
tagalog (fil)Runyankole (nyn)O‘zbek tili (uz)
Français (fr)Polski (pl)Venda (ve)
Hrvatski (hr)افغانستان (ps)简体中文 (zh)
Magyar (hu)Português (pt)
Bahasa Indonesia (id)limba română (ro)

Satan Entered Judas

Luke 22:3: “Then entered Satan into Judas surnamed Iscariot, being of the number of the twelve”.

See 2.3.2, “The Jewish Satan”.

Note in passing how “enter” is used in a non-physical sense in Mt. 25:21 “enter into the joy of your Lord”, entering in at the narrow gate (Mt. 7:13), entering into another’s labours (Jn. 4:38). ‘Satan’ enters a man’s heart in the sense that “the lusts of other things enter in” (Mk. 4:19); in this sense we can “enter into temptation” (Lk. 22:46).

Luke 22:3


previous page table of contents next page