Isaiah 43:16-21; Phil
3:8-14; John 8:1-11
Today's gospel story is probably one
of the most popular stories of New Testament, and Jesus' words about casting
the first stone are repeated in an endless variety of contexts inside and
outside the church. They are used most often as a check on moral self-righteousness.
If we read the different commentaries considering this story we find different
interesting information, such as:
1. There are several irregularities in
the scribes' and Pharisees' presentation of their legal case.
a. For
example, they provide no witnesses to sustain the case that the woman was
caught in the "very act" of adultery. They needed at least two of
them. Where are those witnesses?
b. They speak as if Mosaic law requires the death
penalty for adulterous woman only and completely ignore the fate of her male
sexual partner. Mosaic law, however, makes explicit that both man and the woman
involved stand under the death penalty. In fact, the fundamental concern of
Mosaic adultery laws is the protection of stability of men's property (their
wives and their offspring), and the law is worded to focus primarily on men.
For example, the commentary to that law, Mishnah, explicitly mentions only the
man's punishment by stoning for adultery. Where is that man? Was he already
stoned to death? Or he was let go because he explained to them that she made
him do it, she seduced him?
2. Jesus' writing
on the ground indicates his refusal to engage the question of the scribes and
the Pharisees. It seems as he knew that regardless of what he would say that
would be used against him:
a. if he said she should be stoned to death he would speak
against the Roman Law which preserved the right of deciding the death capital
cases in Palestine. They also could easily say that afterwards Jesus was not so
compassionate.
b. if he said she should not be stoned to death they would
definitely talk about Jesus disregard to respect the traditions of their nation
and the laws of Moses.
The scribes
and the Pharisees just wanted to entrap him, and the woman was used only as an
object to reach that goal.
3. Some of
us who are more radical could say the elders' departure signaled at least that
they were able to recognize their own sinfulness and walked away. But many of
our own bishops who covered up the abuse scandals for years or decades never resigned on their own, or never admitted
any guilt on their own.
As much as we perhaps want to focus on
and to talk about all those different interpretations of today's story the
bottom line is this gospel story is not primarily about the scribes' and
Pharisees' "sin" of self-righteousness nor the woman's sexual sin. Rather
, it is about the challenge that Jesus brings to any embedded religious
authority and at the possibilities of new life that arise from that challenge. Jesus places his authority to forgive and to
offer freedom over and against any religious establishment's determination of
their categories of life and death.
Today's parable is mainly directed to
people like me! The people who hold the position of religious authority. We,
the religious leaders, are to keep asking ourselves some challenging questions,
and not only after reading today's story but on regular basis.
The questions
such as:
What are the categories of life and
death, or what laws or regulations, we might be choosing or supporting, for
whatever reason, that they might against freedom and forgiveness which God
offers to His people through Jesus?
What does entrap us, the religious
leaders, preventing us from following Christ and from being his disciples?
Do we in our own cleverness entrap
others?
Do our own words and actions become an
obstacle to others so they cannot fully experience the gifts of God's mercy and
forgiveness, healing and freedom?
What is it that puts us, the religious
leaders, on a collision course with
Jesus and his gospel:
· Our legalism?
· Fostering of clerical culture?
· Love of politics and our quite bias
involvement in it?
· The
love of riches?
· Using the sacraments as the means of
discipline?
· Sacrificing charity, justice or well
being of individuals to protect the institution?
I hope that with the election of the
new pope, Francis, and with an aid of the example of his life we will gain some
new perspective and the new insights into how to answer those questions and how
to address the issues which I have just mentioned.

