Saturday, March 16, 2013

V Sunday of Lent( c ): Is 43:16-21; Phil 3:8-14; Jn 8:1-11

V Sunday of Lent( c ): Is 43:16-21; Phil 3:8-14; Jn 8:1-11

What was going through her mind?  She was being dragged to the Lord. She had to have been terrified. Certainly these men were going to kill her. The woman was caught in adultery.  Women have been killed for far less. Even in our modern times, women are treated throughout the world as chattel, their lives completely dependent on the will of their fathers, brothers or husbands. Horrible things continue to happen to women in the name of religion.

Another travesty was about to take place, when the woman was brought before the Lord. She certainly expected to die. She must have been panic struck as they threw her before the Lord.

She also must have been ashamed. People were laughing at her.  They treated her like dirt. Perhaps she herself thought she was dirt. If they didn’t kill her, what type of life would she have left? Who would marry her?  Who would give her a place to stay?  Who would have mercy on her? She might as well die.

The better-than-thous of her society, shouted that she had to die.  The Law of Moses demanded it. What would this Jesus say about that?  They were certain that they had him. His hands were tied. This, the Kindest Man to ever live, would have to oppose the Law or agree that she should die.

And through the clamor, she looked up, and saw the Lord looking at her. Compassion for her flowed through him. Nobody cared about her before. The man or men who used her sexually, didn’t care that she was going to die. The leaders of her people didn’t care about her. Her own family probably disowned her. But Jesus cared. 

Then there was the silence. He knelt down and began writing on the ground. Silence. The silence must have been overpowering. Finally, he spoke. “Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.”  And the sheer dynamism of his voice, the kindness and compassion of his voice, forced her accusers to return to the holes from which they had climbed out.

“There is no one to accuse you. Then, nor shall I. But go and sin no more.”

She left, not just with her life, but with a new dignity. She had been forgiven. She now could embrace a new life.


Tradition holds that the woman was Mary Magdalene. Tradition also holds that Mary Magdalene later became a close follower of the Lord and that this was the Mary who was the first to experience the Resurrection. 

Joke: One Sunday morning, Satan appeared before a small town congregation. Everyone started screaming and running for the front church door, trampling each other in a frantic effort to get away.  Soon, everyone was gone, except for an elderly gentleman who sat calmly. Satan walked up to the man and said, "Don't you know who I am?"  The man replied, "Yep, sure do."  Satan asked, "Aren't you going to run?"  "Nope, sure ain't," said the man.  Perturbed, Satan asked, "Why aren't you afraid of me?"  The man calmly replied, "Being married to your sister for over 48 years."

There are many who will approach the Sacrament of Penance during these remaining days of Lent. Some come to Church regularly, lead good Christian lives, but recognize that they are full of little sins, venial sins that are holding them back. Others have been away from the Lord for a long time. Full of guilt, full of shame, they seek restoration. They seek redemption. All are welcomed back. All receive the compassion of the Lord. All are told, “Neither do I condemn you. Go now and sin no more.”

Practical Implications: We pray today for the conversion of sinners, beginning with ourselves. The time is right for the harvest. This is the time of year, the last weeks of Lent, when many people will be reconsidering their lives, thinking that they can be better, infinitely better than they have been. Pray for the conversion of sinners, starting with ourselves, and extending our prayers to all who are full of guilt, full of shame, afraid to change, and wondering is there any hope of forgiveness for them. 

Introduction: Fifth Sunday of Lent
Message: To the exiles in Babylon, Isaiah foretells a new exodus, when the Lord will lead his people from captivity to freedom.  True freedom is rooted in the person of Jesus, not in observance of the Law.  It is he who challenges us to examine our own hearts before self-righteously judging others.

Saints and events in this week: Eighteenth: Monday: Saint Cyril of Jerusalem, bishop, doctor of the church; Nineteenth: Tuesday: Saint Joseph, spouse of the Blessed Virgin Mary; Twenty Third: Saturday: Saint Turibius of Mogrovejo, bishop; Twenty Fourth: Sunday: Palm Sunday of the passion of the Lord.

No comments:

Post a Comment