READINGS FROM HOLY SCRIPTURE:
Genesis 22:1-14
Hebrews 9:11-15
- St. John 8:46-59
Grace to you and peace. (1 Thess 1)
Who speaks to you on this day from His Gospel heard, saying:
“Which one of you convicts me of sin? If I tell the
truth, why do you not believe me?”
Our 6th Commandment is “You shall not commit adultery”. This means that we should fear and love God so that we lead a chaste and decent life in what we say and do, and husband and wife love and honor each other”.
If we convict Jesus of this sin, then we are convicting God of sin. What we are to see in today’s Gospel is that Jesus has no sin, but comes to take away the sin of the world. We are to then bring this same forgiveness into our lives and to all people surrounding us.
Our Gospel reading is from John chapter 8 and that chapter starts off with the woman caught in adultery. This is the “let he who is without sin cast the first stone”, moment for Jesus. And all those who had brought the woman to be stoned to death, by the Law of Moses, began to leave one by one, until Jesus said alone to the woman, “Neither do I condemn you. Go and sin no more.”
We are not given the details of the affair, but how is that fair? How is it fair that this woman gets away with cheating? Even those who do not believe in Jesus have those sorts of rules. Cheating is tantamount to betrayal, treason. You promise to be with each other exclusively and find out the other was lying.
Here are some facts about infidelity that some people don’t get:
Even people in happy marriages and those who are totally “against” infidelity have affairs, as getting closer to an attractive & attentive colleague or friend is intoxicating and can be a slippery slope.
Emotional affairs (non-physical) are often considered as damaging or even more damaging than purely physical affairs, even if they are online. Emotional affairs often become physical anyway, in one form or another.
A partner’s infidelity is traumatic and even causes clinical PTSD symptoms, as well as a mix of anger, insecurity, rejection, fear, paranoia, depression, loneliness, confusion, betrayal, envy, and resentment. Those who discovered a partner’s infidelity were 6 times more likely to be depressed. Infidelity is a leading cause of suicidal thoughts.
A partner’s infidelity is connected to long-term physical health problems, such as heart disease, diabetes, and migraines.
The negative mental health effects can also affect the cheater, as being exposed can destroy their family, relationships, reputation, career, and finances. To avoid all that, 90% say they would lie about an affair, even though similar numbers report it would be wrong to do so.
The divorce rate is reportedly 80% for secret affairs that are discovered and only 43% when the partner comes forward. 60% of divorced couples say infidelity was a reason. When a cheater marries their affair partner, that marriage ends in divorce nearly 75%-80% of the time.
So what is Jesus doing excusing this woman? On top of that, it appears as if Jesus is violating or stepping on some ancient laws. And yet the entire crowd is complicit! The cheater gets away and her accusers drop the charges, even though they said she was caught.
Jesus is not going easy on the woman, in fact He is raising the bar. For what Jesus touches in this encounter is guilt. The scribes and the Pharisees who brought the woman felt their guilt increase when Jesus said you can’t kill this woman if you have your own sin and it caused them to leave in shame.
The woman was too overcome with guilt to leave or say anything until Jesus addressed her directly. She received a big punishment too, “go and sin no more”. This is punishment because cheating is addictive and now she has to change.
And at this point we have built a good explanation of what sin is. It is desirable, it is tempting. It is also devastating, not just to the victims, but also their entire environment of people around them. On top of that, even those who appear to be right and upstanding, have a deep measure of this guilt.
What keeps these harmful behaviors coming back to our thoughts and actions? That is sin and the actions that follow are also called sin. Now it is easy to spot sin in the public offender, but not so much the others. To say the victim has their own sin, is automatically ruled out. You don’t blame the victim, they have done nothing wrong to deserve what they now have to deal with.
That is, if we are only dealing with one issue. Here, the scribes and Pharisees teach us better. They know that if one sin is present, then many are present. If you cheat in one area of your life, then you are bound to take up that same stance in other situations, not just relationships.
In this way, sin becomes a real pandemic and terminally infectious. Once we sin, it leaks into all areas of our life and when we sin, we make the world a worse place, because of that darkness. St. James puts it this way, “whoever keeps the whole law but fails in one point has become guilty of all of it” (Jas 2:10).
So when we move forward to the Gospel we heard today, we are offended at Jesus saying, “Which one of you convicts me of sin?” As in, we have sin and He doesn’t. Yet we diagnose Jesus with two terminal illnesses. First that He has a demon and second that He will die.
The first accusation means that Jesus is touched in the head, He doesn’t know what He’s talking about, and is just making up His guiltlessness. There is no way that a human who is just like us does not have His own guilt destroying Himself and ruining the world like the rest of us.
The second is more a proof than an accusation. We know you have sin, they say, because you will die just like us and death is the punishment for sin. And by the end of our Gospel reading, they simply move on to the punishment of death, by attempting to stone Him.
The same stoning that the woman was to receive at the beginning of this same chapter. Jesus is this woman’s substitute.
If you care about someone, you tell them the truth. You do not enable their dark compulsions and addictions in exchange for a fist-full of sweaty dollar bills. Jesus cares enough to tell the truth and the truth is: God has spoken on this issue and He has acted on this issue.
He has said, the evil and darkness that is destroying you and the world around you is sin. It is a direct rebellion against the order He has created. When you sin, you are actively trying to undo all of creation and going against the Creator. With that, it makes sense that things go wrong for people who choose to do bad things.
Jesus goes on from there, however, and this is what we don’t like. Though His words seem to be a triumph of justice, they are also condemning when He says, “let him who is without sin cast the first stone”. That means no one is without sin. The men accusing, just leaving, is not enough to stop it either.
He also says, “If anyone keeps my Word, he will never taste death.” Yet, Jesus will die on the cross. Though not with His own sin, with the woman’s, with the Pharisees’, with yours. Your substitute. He has told you the truth, as any caring, loving person would. You have sin, He will take it away. Go and sin no more.
In Christ, there is the opportunity to be a part of cleaning up the world. Not that we will never sin again. That’s not the point. The point is that when we keep Jesus’s Word, we are bringing more and more of His sinless self into the world. Where once we had to give up and declare ourselves evil, He gives us His Good Life to live.
The Blood of Jesus that forgives sins, remakes all that guilt and condemnation into innocence and blessedness. Not that we get to keep being evil, but that we now get to know what it is to actually do Good. And it is the Good that Jesus gives, that is His own Heart, His own Spirit, and His own Life, that we now get to commune in.
Excuses? No. Hope. Rest. Peace from all that judge and attack us. We do not leave the presence of Christ unchanged. He does not come to us, confirm our life choices, and leave us alone. He suffers, dies, and rises again to change us. To give us a heart to love Him rather than sin. To give us a spirit of truth, rather than self-gain. And to give us a life that we can be unashamed of, rather than shameful.
All this because Jesus is God. He made that Law of adultery and He gave to Moses, not to be unthinking and unmerciful, but to correct the sinner. He brings guilt and condemnation close to the sinner in order that he turn from his evil ways and live.
We cannot convict Jesus of sin. Yes, He did die, but came back to life proving His death was not a death He deserved. In Jesus, neither do we deserve death. In baptism we are covered in the Blood that merits the forgiveness of sins so that we may be judged by God and found not-guilty.
Not that we weren’t guilty, but that God has accomplished His greatest work, despite ourselves, in sending His only Son to the cross that we might find true repentance, that we might find true shame, and that we might find true mercy. Repentance that acknowledges God’s definition of sin, shame that admits that we have it, and mercy that removes the death sentence hanging above our heads for it.
Baptized into the Body of Christ, you are perfect. Communing in the Body and Blood of Jesus now you are set free to sin no more. Keeping the Word of God close to you, in your heart and on your lips, you now will never taste death.
For Jesus is the Creator of this world and He has declared forgiveness to be the Way. He is I AM Who has shown the truth of this world and offered His gifts to enlighten the world regarding salvation. Adultery is just the tip of the iceberg. But the Crucifixion of Jesus is the sun of righteousness Who melts our sinful hearts, in order to give us His heart of sinlessness.