Saturday, December 7, 2019

The woman caught in adultery


THAT’S in the gospel of St. John, chapter 8, verses 1 to
11. It’s a very nice story that shows us how Christ deals with
sinners, teaching us a precious lesson of how we have to deal with
others who may not even be sinners but who simply happen to differ
with our opinion or even with the teachings of the Church.

            Like Christ we have to be kind, patient, merciful,
magnanimous, even with those who are clearly in error or who may have
offended not only us but also God himself. To be sure, it is not a
matter of erasing the difference between right and wrong, grace and
sin.

            Rather it is a matter of charity that corrects and heals
the wrong and that overcomes sin with grace, since as St. Paul said:
“Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound.” (Rom 5,20) We should
never forget this wonderful truth of our faith.

            In that gospel episode, the woman was dragged before
Christ by the teachers of the law and some Pharisees with the
intention of trapping Christ in something that can be used to accuse
him. There we already have what is usually wrong when we accuse others
of something. Our intentions are usually not pure.

            Of course, they were trying to see if Christ again would
declare himself as the Son of God who became man to redeem us,
something that they could not accept. They already had a fixed
preconceived bias, an unbelief and even hatred against Christ, and
they were just trying to justify their attitude toward him.

            What Christ did baffled them because instead of replying
to their tricky question of what to do with the adulterous woman, he
simply kept quiet and bent down, writing something on the ground. But
when they insisted on asking Christ, he stood up and plainly told them
that if any of them has not committed any sin, he may cast the first
stone.

            At that, they started to go away until no one was left.
And so when Christ noticed this, he asked the woman if anyone has
condemned her. When the woman said, “No one,” Christ simply said,
“Neither will I condemn you. You may go, but sin no more.”

            This gospel episode somehow tells us that we should not be
too fastidious about the sins and mistakes of people, especially if
these sins and mistakes do not involve so much external harm or damage
on others as to significantly disturb public order.

            When mistakes and sins are hidden or are supposed to be
hidden, our attitude should be to just be let the sinners be. What we
have to do instead is to pray and to do whatever we can to help the
person involved toward his own conversion. Dragging them to public
notice will only make things worse and is often motivated by some
self-interest. This way, we also avoid scandals that would
unnecessarily stain others in some way.

            We need to follow the example of Christ who, being God and
our redeemer, must be the first one to be offended by the sin of the
adulterous woman. If he, being sinless, could manage to be merciful
and magnanimous, who are we to be any less?

            We know very well that we are all sinners. We have far
less reasons, or no reason at all, to find fault in others because of
their mistakes and sins. Ours is simply to help one another.

            That is simply because at the end of the day we are all
brothers and sisters, all children of God, meant and bound to love and
help one another. This is a fundamental truth that cannot be erased by
whatever mistakes and sins that we commit. If God could love us even
more because of our sinfulness, who are we to refuse that love to the
others who may have fallen into sin?



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