The Silver Key: Why 2030 May Reveal the Son of Perdition, and 2033 - the Christ Himself
What if one of the clearest clues to when Jesus Christ will return to earth has been hiding in two familiar Bible stories?
Why was Joseph betrayed by Judah for 20 pieces of silver, but Jesus was betrayed by Judas for 30 pieces of silver?
Why were both stories marked by betrayal, blood, silver, and something being dipped?
Why is Judas called the son of perdition?
And why does Paul use that same title for the final man of sin who is revealed before the coming of Christ?
Could the difference between twenty and thirty be the key? Could those two silver amounts point us directly to 2030? Not as the return of Christ, but as the revealing of the final betrayer before the return of Jesus Christ.
In this study, we’re going to follow the Silver Key from Joseph to Jesus and to the final son of perdition.
And by the end, you may never read those 30 pieces of silver the same way again.
Hi, my name is Scott Clarke, and if you just take a moment to like this and follow me, I’d very much appreciate it. And while we’re studying, think of someone to share this with.
This is … The Silver Key
There are some patterns in scripture that do not reveal themselves all at once. You see one piece and then another and then another, and at first, the pieces seem related, but incomplete. That’s how the study began.
Four years ago, I did a study on the silver pieces relating to Joseph and then Jesus. The numbers are stunning. They equal twenty and thirty—but I didn’t have the full picture.
But now I think I do.
This is that study.
Joseph was betrayed by Judah for 20 pieces of silver. Jesus was betrayed by Judas for 30 pieces of silver.
Both stories involved betrayal.
Both involve silver.
Both involved blood.
Both involved something being dipped.
Both involved a beloved son being delivered into the hands of wicked men.
But there was one question that remained, why are the amounts different? If Joseph was a picture of Christ, then why was Joseph sold for 20 pieces of silver but Jesus for 30? Why not the same amount?
Was the difference random? Was it only historical? Or was the difference itself the clue? That question may be The Silver Key. Joseph: the beloved son betrayed by JudahThe first picture begins with Joseph. Joseph was loved by his father. Joseph had dreams of future rule. Joseph was hated by his brethren, and Joseph was betrayed by his brother Judah.
Genesis 37: 26-28 KJV
”and Judah said unto his brethren, what profit is it if we slay our brother and conceal his blood? Come, let us sell him to the Ishmaelites, and let not our hand be upon him, for he is our brother and our flesh, and his brethren were content. Then there passed by Midianites, merchantmen. And they drew and lifted up Joseph out of the pit and sold Joseph to the Ishmaelites for 20 pieces of silver. And then they brought Joseph into Egypt.”
Notice the language. Judas says, what profit is it? Joseph is sold for silver.
The beloved son is delivered up by his own brethren. Then comes the blood sign.
Genesis 37:31 KJV ”and they took Joseph’s coat and killed a kid of the goats and dipped the coat in blood.” So the first pattern is clear. Judah, betrayal, 20 pieces of silver, a beloved son, a garment dipped in blood.
But in Joseph’s case, the dipped garment is used to hide the truth. It conceals the betrayal.
Joseph’s brethren used the blood dipped coat to make Jacob believe that Joseph, his beloved son, is dead.
So, the first dipped garment becomes a false report. The beloved son is alive, but the father is shown a bloody garment and believes he’s dead.
Jesus: the beloved Son betrayed by Judas
Then we come to Jesus, and the pattern returns. Only now Judah becomes Judas.
Judas is the Greek form of Judah, and that matters because the betrayal pattern does not move away from Judah.
It intensifies through Judas.
Matthew 26:14-15 KJV
“Then one of the twelve, called Judas Iscariot, went unto the chief priests, and said unto them, what will ye give me? And I will deliver him unto you. And they covenanted with him for thirty pieces of silver.“Again we have silver, again we have betrayal, again the beloved son is delivered into the hands of wicked men.
But this time, the amount is not 20.
It’s 30.
Why?
That question waits.
Then Jesus exposes the betrayer through another dipped sign.
John 13:26-27 KJV
“Jesus answered, he it is to whom I shall give a sop when I have dipped it. And when he had dipped the sop, he gave it to Judas Iscariot, the son of Simon. And after the sop, Satan entered into him. Then said Jesus unto him, that thou doest, do quickly.”
This is where the pattern becomes stunning.
In Genesis, the dipped garment concealed the betrayal.
In John, the dipped sop reveals the betrayer.
The first dipping hides.
The second dipping exposes.
Joseph’s coat was dipped in blood.
Jesus dips the sop and hands it to Judas.
And after the sop, Satan enters into him.
This is not ordinary betrayal anymore. This is Satanic betrayal. Judas becomes the vessel through which Satan himself moves against Christ.
But the dipped sop does more than identify Judas.
It also points to Jesus.
A sop is bread dipped. And in the supper context, the symbols are already established. Bread represents Christ’s body.
Luke 22:19 KJV
“And he took bread, and gave thanks, and brake it, and gave unto them saying, this is my body, which is given for you. This do in remembrance of me.”
Jesus is the bread.
John 6:35 KJV
“And Jesus said unto them, I am the bread of life. He that cometh to me shall never hunger, and that believeth on me shall never thirst.”
Wine represents blood.
Luke 22:20 KJV
“Likewise, also the cup after supper saying, this cup is the New Testament in my blood, which is shed for you.”
So the dipped sop is more than a dinner detail. It’s bread dipped in wine, body dipped in blood, the bread of life marked by blood.
At the table, the dipped bread reveals the betrayer. At the return, the dipped vesture reveals the betrayed King.
Revelation 19:13 KJV
“And he was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood, and his name was called the Word of God.”
There is the full circle.
Joseph’s coat dipped in blood.
Jesus’ sop dipped at supper.
Christ’s vesture dipped in blood at his return.
The coat concealed the betrayal.
The sop revealed the betrayer.
The vesture reveals the king.
But there’s one title that unlocks the whole study.
The Son of Perdition
Jesus calls Judas the son of perdition.
John 17:12 KJV
“While I was with them in the world, I kept them in thy name, and none of them is lost but the son of perdition, that the scripture might be fulfilled.”
That title is rare, but Paul uses it. Not for Judas historically, but for the final man of sin in the future 70th week (Daniel 9:27).
2 Thessalonians 2:3-4 & 8 KJV
“Let no man deceive you by any means. For that day (the day of Christ, his return) shall not come, except there come a falling away first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition, who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God or that is worshipped, so that he as God sitteth in the temple, showing himself that he is God, and then shall that wicked be revealed.”
This means Judas was not merely a betrayer.
Judas was a pattern.
He was the first son of perdition connected directly to Christ’s betrayal. The final son of perdition is the man of sin, the antichrist as some call him. And he is revealed before the coming of Christ, before the day of the Lord.
This matters because the son of perdition does not mark the return of Christ, he marks the event that comes first.
Paul says, “for that day shall not come except there come a falling away first.”
So, the revelation of the man of sin is a prior event. It comes before the day of Christ. The betrayer is revealed before the king is revealed.
Satan entered Judas; the dragon empowers the beast
Now, watch the connection deepen. When Judas received the dipped sop, Satan entered into him.
John 13:27 KJV
“And after the sop, Satan entered into him.”
But in Revelation, the beast is also empowered by Satan.
Revelation 12:9 KJV
“And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent called the devil and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world.”
Then:
Revelation 13:2 KJV
“… and the dragon gave him (the beast, the man of sin, the son of perdition) his power and his seat and great authority.”
So, Judas and the beast are connected by more than betrayal. They are connected by satanic empowerment.
Judas was entered by Satan.
The beast receives power, seat, and authority from the dragon.
The first son of perdition betrayed Christ personally.
The final son of perdition betrays Christ publicly.
The first worked through one man at a supper.
The final works through a kingdom, a beast, a temple claim, and a strong delusion.
The Midpoint: why 2030?
Now we come back to the question, why 20 silver for Joseph? Why 30 silver for Jesus?
At first, the difference seems to prevent a clean parallel, which is what I thought at first—but what if the difference is the point?
The midpoint.
Joseph gives us the 20.
Jesus gives us the 30.
Together, they form the Silver Key, the key to this whole thing!
Twenty and thirty.
2030.
Not as a loose number game, not as a date pulled from nowhere, but as a confirming marker inside of a much larger timeline.
Because according to the framework we’ve been building, the final seventieth week runs toward terminus 2033, with Christ’s return after two days from AD 33.
This is how it works.
Hosea 6:1-2 KJV
“Come and let us return unto the LORD, for He hath torn, and He will heal us… After two days He will revive us, and in the third day He will raise us up, and we shall live in His sight.”
This pertains to Israelites and when they will be resurrected from the dead to rule and reign with Christ for a thousand years.
After two days.
Two days?
Yes, but the scale is given through Peter.
2 Peter 3:8 KJV
“But beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing, that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day.”
And when Peter said, “but beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing”, that’s a reminder.
His audience were Hebrew disciples. His audience were Israelites, and they should have known from the temple worship, from synagogue, they should have known the Psalms.
Psalm 90:4 KJV
“For a thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday when it’s past, and as a watch in the night.”
This is what Peter was pointing to, the Psalm. A day with the Lord is a thousand years.
So, from AD 33, the year that Christ died, was buried, and rose again, two prophetic days point to AD 2033.
That places the final week before the return of Christ, the 70th week.
And if the final week is moving towards the 2033, then the middle of that week lands in 2030. Six months different, that’s the Spring of 2030.
That is exactly where Paul places the revealing of the man of sin, the son of perdition, at the great betrayal point, when actually a covenant of peace is also broken.
A seven year covenant, and that’s in Daniel 9:27 KJV.
“And he shall confirm the covenant with many for one week. And in the midst of the week (Spring 2030) he shall cause the sacrifice and the oblation to cease. And for the overspreading of abominations he shall make it desolate even until the consummation and that determined shall be poured upon the desolate.”
That’s what’s next. A covenant for one week—of peace.
2 Thessalonians 2:3 KJV
“except there come a falling away first and that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition,” the day of Christ cannot come.
Then verse four shows what he does.
2 Thessalonians 2:4,8 KJV
“So that he is God, sitteth in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God… and then shall that Wicked be revealed.”
That’s the revelation of the beast at the midpoint.
Now he’s not yet destroyed, he’s revealed. He sits in the temple of God, he shows himself, he claims to be God, he claims what belongs to Christ.
And then comes the later destruction.
2 Thessalonians 2:8 KJV
“And then shall that Wicked be revealed whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of his mouth and shall destroy with the brightness of his coming.”
So the order is clear. The sun of perdition is revealed first halfway into the seventieth week, and then Christ destroys him at his coming at the end of the seventieth week.
That means 2030 is not the return of Christ.
2030 is the unveiling of the betrayer—three and a half years prior to the coming of Christ.
The numbers are 2030 (Spring) and 2033 (Fall).
The Witnesses and the Falling Away
This also fits Revelation 11. The two witnesses prophesy for one thousand two hundred and sixty days in the first half of the seventieth week. That’s three and a half years.
Revelation 11:3 KJV
“And I will give power unto my two witnesses, and they shall prophesy a thousand two hundred and threescore days.”
That’s three and a half years.
And when their testimony is finished, the beast makes war against them.
Revelation 11:7 KJV
“And when they shall have finished their testimony, the beast that ascendeth out of the bottomless pit shall make war against them…”
This means the betrayal comes after witness. That’s important.
Judas did not betray Christ from a distance.
He walked with him. He heard him. He saw the works, he sat at the table, and then he betrayed him.
Likewise, in the final week, the Israelites will hear the testimony of God’s two witnesses. They will be warned. They will be shown the truth. They will be called back to the God of Israel and his Christ.
And then comes the falling away.
2 Thessalonians 2:10-11 KJV
“because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved, and for this cause God shall send them strong delusion that they should believe a lie.”
That’s Judas at full scale.
Truth was present, witness was given, the betrayer was then revealed.
Satan empowered the deception, and many will choose the false king.
But what is the falling away?
And that brings us to this phrase, “the falling away”.
So now we need to understand what that falling away actually is. It’s not simply people who never heard the truth. It’s not merely ignorance of outsiders.
Falling away is a drawing back after light has been given. Jesus described this in the parable of the sower.
Luke 8:13 KJV
“And they on the rock are they which, when they hear, they receive the word with joy, and these have no root, which for a while believe, and in a time of temptation, fall away.”
That phrase is critical.
“… for a while, believe”.
They are not described as those who never received anything. They hear the truth. They receive the word with joy. They believe for a while.
This is in the first three and a half years of the seventieth week, which is seven years long. But they have no root to endure.
Then comes the time of temptation, beginning in the middle of the seventieth week until the end. And in the time of temptation, the time of Jacob’s trouble, they fall away from that truth. That’s the falling away that Paul talked about.
The falling away is the timing of what’s called “the tribulation period”. Three and a half years—the middle of the seventieth week to the end.
And that’s exactly the kind of tests the latter half of the seventieth week would bring. After the two witnesses have testified for three and a half years, twelve hundred and sixty days.
The son of perdition is revealed.
The beast is empowered by the dragon.
The pressure becomes visible, public, and deadly.
And then the question becomes unavoidable. Will they believe Christ? Or will they draw back?
Drawing back unto perdition
Hebrews gives the language we need.
Hebrews 10:37-39 KJV
“For yet a little while, and he that shall come will come and will not tarry. Now the just shall live by faith, but if any man draw back, my soul shall have no pleasure in him. But we are not them who draw back unto perdition, but of them that believe to the saving of the soul.”
That phrase, “draw back unto perdition”, locks into this study perfectly.
Judas was the son of perdition.
The final man of sin is the son of perdition.
And Hebrews warns that some Hebrews may draw back into perdition in the latter half of the seventieth week after the son of perdition is revealed.
So, perdition is not only attached to the final betrayer, it also becomes the destination of those who join his rebellion. The son of perdition is revealed, and then many draw back unto perdition.
That is the falling away.
Perdition means total destruction, and Hebrews places this warning in the context of endurance.
“For yet a little while, and he that shall come will come and will not tarry.”
The faithful must live by faith during that three and a half years until he comes, and even die unto that faith. But the fearful and rootless and the deceived draw back.
That means that the latter half of the week becomes a loyalty test. Not merely, do you believe something privately, but will you (Israelites) endure publicly?
Will you refuse the lie?
Will you reject the beast?
Will you remain faithful to Christ when the son of perdition is sitting in the temple showing that he himself is God?
Why the mark of the beast is final
This is where the mark of the beast fits.
The mark of the beast is not just a random end time symbol. It’s the outward action of the inward falling away. It’s the public signature of drawing back into perdition.
Revelation warns plainly.
Revelation 14:9-11 KJV
“And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, ‘if any man worship the beast and his image and receive his mark in his forehead or in his hand, the same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God.”
Perdition.
Then immediately after that warning, the faithful are identified.
Revelation 14:12 KJV
“Here is the patience of the saints.”
These are Hebrews. Faithful Hebrews.
“Here are they that keep the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus.”
So, there’s two groups.
One that receives the mark and worships the beast. The other keeps the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus.
One draws back into perdition and the other believes to the saving of the soul.
And this is why Hebrews 6 becomes so serious.
Hebrews 6:4-6 KJV
“For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened and have tasted the heavenly gift and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the world to come, if they shall fall away, to renew them again unto repentance, seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh and put him to an open shame.”
So it’s saying it is impossible for those who were once enlightened if they shall fall away—the mark of the beast—it’s impossible to renew them again unto repentance.
This is not describing a small mistake. This is a moment of weakness. This is a falling away after enlightenment of the truth, after tasting the good word of God in the first half of the seventieth week, after tasting the powers of the world to come—meaning Israel—immortal.
Within the final week framework, that fits the testimony of the two witnesses.
They testify, they warn, they show forth truth.
The Israelites hear. Some receive for a while, but then comes the son of perdition, then comes the beast, then comes the mark, then comes the final choice. And after that choice, there’s no repentance.
That’s why the mark of the beast is so final.
It’s not simply a political act, it’s a covenant betrayal.
It is Judas repeated at full scale.
Agenda 2030?
And then we have to ask carefully, why does the world also seem so focused on 2030?
The powerful of this age have their own 2030 language, their own 2030 goals, their own vision of transformation, their own public 2030 Agenda.
Now I’m not saying this proves the prophecy, the Bible proves the Bible, but it does raise the question, why are they focused on 2030?
What do they believe is coming? What are they preparing for?
Why does the world have its own transformation language attached to the same number that appears in this verse chain as the midpoint betrayal marker?
Is this a coincidence?
Maybe, maybe not.
But then scripture already gives us;
20 silver.
30 silver.
Judas, son of perdition.
Satan entering Judas.
The dragon empowering the beast.
A temple claim, a falling away, a strong delusion, a drawing back into perdition, a mark that finalizes the betrayal, and a midpoint before the coming of Christ.
Now, suddenly, 2030 does not feel like a random year. It feels like the number was waiting for the timeline.
It was waiting for us to understand this.
The Big Picture | The Silver Key
So here’s the whole picture.
Joseph was betrayed by Judah for 20 pieces of silver.
His coat was dipped in blood.
Jesus was betrayed then by Judas for 30 pieces of silver, and Jesus exposed him with a dipped sop, bread dipped in wine representing blood.
Then Satan enters Judas.
Judas is called the son of perdition.
And then Paul says that the final man of sin is also the son of perdition. That man sits in the temple of God showing himself that he is God, falsely.
And then Revelation says that the dragon gives the beast his power, his seat, and great authority.
Luke says some receive the word with joy and believe for a while, but in a time of temptation fall away.
Hebrews says some (Israelites) draw back into perdition. They fall away.
Hebrews also warns that after their enlightenment, knowing the truth, if they fall away, they cannot be renewed again unto repentance. After that, they cannot repent.
There’s no forgiveness for that.
And Revelation shows the final outward act receiving the mark of the beast.
And according to the timeline, the midpoint of the final week lands at 2030.
So, why were the silver amounts different?
Because they were not merely meant to match.
They were meant to combine 20 and 30.
2030.
The Silver Key does not point first to Christ’s return.
It points to the revealing of the final Judas.
The betrayer comes first.
The falling away comes first.
The mark comes first.
The King comes after, in which he will rule and reign in his day, the day of Christ, a day with the Lord is a thousand years.
Revelation 19:13 KJV
”And he was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood, and his name is called the word of God.”
The first dipped garment concealed the betrayal.
The dipped sop revealed the betrayer.
And the final dipped vesture reveals the king when he returns.
That’s the Silver Key.
It was telling us the midpoint of the 70th week.
Judah sold Joseph for 20 pieces of silver.
Judas sold Jesus for 30 pieces of silver.
And the final son of perdition may be revealed at 2030 (Spring), in Jerusalem, in a temple that is not yet built, because there’s a Dome of the Rock sitting on the spot that it needs to be rebuilt.
The final son of perdition may be revealed at 2030, not to announce the return of Christ, but to begin the last great betrayal before Christ destroys him at his coming.
That is the Silver Key.
Thank you for your time and attention. Please take a moment to like this. You could follow me, and you could also share this with somebody who you think might need this.
This is just a small piece of the seven thousand year timeline and the events to come.
If you’d like to know more, stick with me. I’ve got a lot more for you that you will not get anywhere else.
Thank you for your support. It is necessary to keep this work coming. And now is clearly the time.
God bless.
Scott Clarke
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