brb3, the sermons I sent to you discuss Psalms 41 and 55, see
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=747488
So you HAVE seen them, but only if you actually read the sermons, which now I’m guessing you didn’t. Or if you did, it was only a cursory reading that missed much pertinent information relating to this very subject.
Think about it. If Judas was a Christian, then he was in a state of grace. He went from spiritual death to spiritual life. He was born again, and he was one of Jesus’ sheep. Going from dead in sins to life is what Paul speaks about in Eph 2:1-10. It is the journey of the believer. But we have some pretty clear evidence that Judas went to hell. He was of the devil (John 6:70) and chosen that the Scriptures would be fulfilled (John 13:18).
Now we have some theological problems. In the clearest and most emphatic Greek, Jesus, the “Good Shepherd” (John 10:11), says His sheep have eternal life and will never perish in John 10:28. It means they will never go to hell.
If Judas was a sheep and goes to hell, it means:
Jesus was wrong in John 10:27-30. Sheep can be lost.
Jesus was wrong in John 6:37-40. Jesus will lose some given by the Father.
Paul was wrong in Romans 8:39 (ref 8:18-39, we, who are in creation, can separate ourselves from from the love of God, but that is not what Paul says, is it?)
Paul was wrong in Philippians 1:6. Since faith is lost, it won’t be completed.
Jesus is not the perfecter of our faith (Heb 12:2).
And there is more, but we are limited in the length of our responses.
I think it is a safe bet that, theologically, Judas was never one of Jesus sheep to begin with. And, since he knew all about Jesus and what following Jesus meant, his turning away fits the “impossible” statement in Hebrews 6:4. .