Imagine the public humiliation, the heaviness of condemnation, the surprise of love, the potential of forgiveness. Read well her story –
John 8:1-11 “Jesus returned to the Mount of Olives…A crowd soon gathered, and he sat down and taught them. As he was speaking, the teachers of religious law and the Pharisees brought a woman who had been caught in the act of adultery. They put her in front of the crowd. “Teacher,” they said to Jesus, “this woman was caught in the act of adultery. The law of Moses says to stone her. What do you say?” They were trying to trap him into saying something they could use against him, but Jesus stooped down and wrote in the dust with his finger. They kept demanding an answer, so he stood up again and said, “All right, but let the one who has never sinned throw the first stone!” Then he stooped down again and wrote in the dust. When the accusers heard this, they slipped away one by one, beginning with the oldest, until only Jesus was left in the middle of the crowd with the woman. Then Jesus stood up again and said to the woman, “Where are your accusers? Didn’t even one of them condemn you?” “No, Lord,” she said. And Jesus said, “Neither do I. Go and sin no more.”
This woman was caught in the act of adultery
She could never have imagined that life would turn out this way, finding herself guilty and on trial before the entire crowd; people stooped in a religion of rules and the burden of harsh judgment on those who broke them. It was a trap she had found herself in. A prearranged trap to trick Jesus, and she was the pawn. How did this happen? How did they know? Were they lying in wait for her to be caught in the very act? She could not have fathomed their cruelty or her humiliation. Did she even have time to dress appropriately before she was dragged through the crowd?
They, the religious, put her in front of the crowd John 8:3 NLT
These are they who Jesus refers to as hypocrites – who constantly sought public approval, and had the pretense of blamelessness. Those whose private lives and inward nature belied their public statements and appearances. He’d called them, whitewashed tombs Matthew 23:27, that looked beautiful on the outside, but were on the inside, full of the same things, the same sins, they accused her of. She was exposed, made a spectacle of, shamed, by these “religious”.
They make her stand before the group John 8:3, NIV
They make her stand. Shame would cause her to hide, not stand. They have to make her stand because her reaction would have been to fall to her knees, to hide her face, her tears, her nakedness, and her very soul that was exposed that day. She would’ve been frantic to find anything to hide her shame – her hands, her bedraggled hair, a shawl (if she were even allowed one), but she was not given the dignity to hide. She was made to stand – and before a cruel crowd! She knew adultery was a serious offense. She didn’t argue or dispute the claim. She was guilty. She had been caught in the very act. Her sin and the charge against her had not been challenged by Jesus. He too knew what she had done.
The Law of Moses says to stone her
She had broken commandment no.7, “Thou shalt not commit adultery” Exodus 20:14. But perhaps as she stood there, she recalled that the law also said, “If a man commits adultery with his
What do you say – Jesus? They kept demanding an answer
The Pharisees, the crowd, even she, standing there humiliated, is curious to know, What do you say, Jesus?
A theatre scene unfolds. At least that’s what it would feel like. A play being acted out on a real-life stage, where the actors and the crowd go quiet waiting for the response of the next scene. An obvious silence – an awkward silence ensues – like the One to speak next had lost His lines, had forgotten His cue. But He hadn’t. He was just waiting for all present to hear, really hear, His next line…
Let the one who has never sinned throw the first stone
The law said that the witness, the one who brings the charge and who has the proof of the crime would be the first to throw the stone, but Jesus adds, “the one who has never sinned”. He was bending down in the dusty streets before this guilty, broken, humiliated woman, and before the crowd, and before all who are there to both accuse her – and to test Him. He knew everyone who was present – their hearts, and their secrets. He knew they too were guilty, caught in their sin.
When the accusers heard this…
The Pharisees, the so-called righteous, the religious leaders, the trappers, all…slipped away until only Jesus was left…only Jesus was left. The only sinless One, the only One with the right to accuse and pass judgment and condemn, the very One who instituted the rules and commandments in establishing this nation of people that she stood in front of…was left. What do you say – Jesus?
Where are your accusers? Didn’t even one of them condemn you?
She found herself still standing, alone before Jesus with no one left to sentence her. No one to judge her of her sin. No one to condemn her in her guilt. No one to throw the first stone of punishment at her.
“No, Lord, she said.”
What do you say – Jesus?
“Neither do I.”
Neither do I? For the first time perhaps she throws her head up to look at him, incredulous! How can her sin be looked over? How can a sinner found guilty of a punishment worthy of death be given a second chance?
Go and sin no more.
Her shame was removed in that instant. Her life was spared and her
…
Oh my soul, oh my girlfriends, oh humanity, what sin do we find ourselves caught in – guilty like this woman, was guilty? Have we been caught in the act of adultery? Anger? Jealousy? Revenge? Bad choices? Bitterness? Gossip? Destructive habits? Lies? Theft? Disobedience? Yes! Yes! Yes! We all, are caught in something. “All have sinned” Romans 3:23. All are ruined. “Everyone has turned away, all have become corrupt; there is no one who does good, not even one” Psalm 53:3.
We, too are exposed – put in front of the crowd –
Before God, “My eyes are on all their ways; they are not hidden from me, nor is their sin concealed from my eyes” Jeremiah 16:17. He knows our sin, the intent of our heart, our actions, and our secret thoughts. It cannot be hidden from Him. We are guilty before Him.
Yet it is He who loves us entirely, and who from the beginning of time has set about to redeem and restore us. He does not condemn us. Yes, He knows our sin, it cannot be hidden from Him, but He does not know it in order to use it against us, or as evidence to judge us, as the religious did to the woman. He came to free us of our ruin and to break the hold that it has had on us, not to judge us for it.
The Law of Moses says, just as the law of our country says, that crime, offenses, wrongdoing, sin, requires punishment. But…what does Jesus say?
Let the one who has never sinned throw the first stone
We are all guilty. All caught in sin.
only Jesus left
Oh, this is so significant! Oh, how I love this…only Jesus left! The only One that has the right to condemn, doesn’t! When all others have had to walk away, they too caught guilty, and we are left standing before Him, He says –
Where are your accusers?
Where are the people that we feel judged, ashamed and looked down by? Can they even dare judge us – they who do the same things?
What about ourselves? Do we live in the guilt and shame that our own hearts accuse us of?
What about the evil one? “our accuser who accuses us before God both day and night” Job 1:6-11,Revelation 12:10 who would say, Look, did you just see what she did? What are you going to do about that? It’s not the first time she’s done it you know…
But, what does Jesus say?
Neither do I condemn you.
A story of incredible love. Right from the beginning, when this woman and her sin with its bloodthirsty accusers, was brought to him, He was ready to forgive her. She just didn’t know it, yet. Her world was full of religious rules and her god was too cruel, exacting punishment if she was caught. Her people were the same, with their ever-present and fiercely judicious eyes always on her. And then there was her own accusing heart…she couldn’t find
The love story of this terrible, but glorious day – oh, the part that makes me laugh in wonder – is that the Pharisees and religious leaders placed her before Jesus. Oh! What an incredible twist! Thinking He was the condemner, the pronouncer of judgment, the O
She was caught that day, but she was also found that day. She found herself standing before Mercy, Grace, Compassion and Perfect Love. I wonder at the woman’s heart and mind and posture, once forgiven. Where before she wanted to fall down in shame, was there now a lightness replacing the heavy load she had carried? Was there a freedom and joy in the place of shame and guilt? Did the eyes of those that looked on to condemn and judge her, now shake their heads in wonder? What would be the story she told to anyone who would take the time to listen?
It had begun with a night with her lover, where she thought she had found the love she had longed for. But this lover was one who would betray her, fail her, deeply hurt, and shame her, even give her over to save his own life – it is a mistake for her to think that a relationship with another human could ever satisfy the deep love needs she had.
At the end of the day, her adultery had been forgiven, but so too had her pursuit of looking for love in someone other than its true Source. Her eyes had been opened to the truth, and when Jesus says, Go and leave your life of sin, Go, and leave your life of adultery, Go, and leave your life of looking for love in human relationships, she knew she had received an invite into Perfect Love.
God, if…(sigh)…when…I am to be caught, oh please let me be made to stand before You, Lover of my soul. Forgiven! Loved!