TCGreek said:
Christ chose him, yet he was the son of perdition. I don't think he just happened to slip into the 12; in fact, Matt. 10 proves otherwise.
First, we need to remember that Christ choose all 12 to be His disciples.
He taught them all the same things, empowered them all to do the same things (proclaim and cast out demons), and revealed Himself to them all through both His words and deeds. They all shared the same truths.
However, their being 'chosen' was not TO salvation but they were 'chosen' FOR a purpose. Acatully scripture states they (not one of the disciples) did not believe Christ would rise from the dead so the did not believe He was who they 'thought' He was. The messiah could not die for He was to set up His Kingdom. They did not understand all they knew until Christ rose from the dead and 'revealed' it to them. They were not yet saved in the New Covenant sense, because they did not yet understand what it all ment. IF they were all chosen (assuming chosen here means salvation) then according to scripture so all should be saved except Judas who lost it, again - IF - that were His meaning of 'chosen'.
We need to be careful of making blanket meaning for certain words in accordance with our theological understandings.
In Jesus prayer we find this:
Jhn 17:12 While I was with them in the world, I kept them in thy name: those that thou gavest me I have kept, and none of them is lost, but the son of perdition; that the scripture might be fulfilled.
Those whom the Father gave Christ (the 12 - John 6) were kept, NOT saved, but from harm and that included the son of perdition, till all things were accomplished.
Seriously, think about it. If the ministry of Christ raised such a ruckus that they Jews sought to Kill Him, why did they not seek after His disciples as well. But that only after the resurrection did all eyes turn on His followers.
The term 'kept' here refers to physically watching over them whom the Father gave Christ in accordance with John 6 (His disciples), but after the assention with SPECIFIC regard to salvation as the text concludes it refers to His watching over us spiritually. What we call - eternal security. Just as those with Christ physically had a physical security from death.