Behold, I Do Something
New
To the church in the
diaspora[1]
& to the church of
the unchurched[2]
Isaiah 43:16-21 Philippians 3:8-14 John
8:1-11
The woman caught in adultery
In Jesus’ day every good Jew went to
These
men who were always in hot pursuit of other people’s sins managed to come upon
a woman in the very act of adultery. They seized and dragged her before Jesus.
There she stood scarcely clothed, face-down in her
shame and surrounded by men in the temple during the very busy time of Sukkot. They said to Jesus, “Teacher, this woman was caught in the act
of adultery. The Law of Moses commands us to stone such women (Lv
A
trap
It was a trap they set for Jesus. In Jesus’ day, a Jew had no say
in the corporal punishment of such a crime; that was
Jesus
did not buy into their trap. Rather than answering them, he bent down to the
floor and began to write with his finger in the dust caused by construction
going on in the temple. Then he stood up and said, “If any one of you is
without sin, let him be the first to cast a stone at her.” Dismissing these
busybodies, he again bent down to the floor and started to scribble in the dust.
The scribes and Pharisees got the point and started to sleek away one by one.
Left alone with the woman caught in adultery, Jesus said to her, “Neither do I
condemn you.” Then he commanded her to, “Go and sin
no more” (John 8:1-11).
Not condemn nor condone
That great spiritual leader and bishop of
Without any doubt Bishop Untener preached life-long commitment.
But he asked,
What if, for some reason, it all falls apart? I like
the distinction Jesus carefully used upon the woman caught in adultery. He
said, “Neither do I condemn you.” But
some people think the opposite of condemn is condone. Condemn comes from the
Latin word “to damn.” And the opposite of damning someone is helping someone.
The compassionate Bishop Untener said, “I am not
here to condemn divorced people nor am I here condone them. I am here to help
them.” Untener was like the compassionate Jesus who did not condemn the woman
caught in adultery nor condone her but helped her with his compassion.
The compassion of Jesus
Contrast
the cruelty of the scribes and Pharisees with the compassion of Jesus. They had
no regard for the woman. They were only
interested in using her to trap Jesus. On
the other hand, Jesus is filled with compassion for her. If she was caught in the very act of adultery, she probably was
very sparsely clothed. Maybe she hastily had to cover herself with a bed sheet.
It is no stretch of the imagination to see Jesus taking off his outer garment
and wrapping her in it. Perhaps he even stood in front of her to hide her nakedness.
He tells the frightened woman whom her accusers want to stone to death that he
doesn’t condemn her. His compassion restores her spiritually, and she heeds his command to go
and sin no more.
This
narrative of the woman caught in the very act of adultery makes almost
everyone's top ten list of favorite scriptures.
A wandering passage in search of a home
But
strange to say this favorite passage has no fixed place in the gospels! Some
editions of the gospels do not contain the passage at all. The New American Bible puts this story in brackets because it is
not included in the best and oldest manuscripts of John. When it is included in
the gospel of John, it is sometimes placed in the 7th chapter or the
8th chapter (as today) or even in the 21st chapter of
John. Some even place this story not in
the gospel of
Why no home
For
cultural and psychological reasons we've always been obsessed with sexual
moralism which strongly implies that the heights of all morality as well as the
depths of all immorality is somewhere in the area of sex. Some time
ago Bishop Sanchez of
Sexual
moralism zeros in on sex so nervously and swiftly that it neglects to heed the
morality Jesus teaches in the Parable of the Prodigal Son which forgives a
wayward son (Lk 15: 1-32). It also neglects
to heed the morality which Jesus displays when he forgives a wayward daughter
caught in an act of adultery. If that forgiveness
morality of Jesus had inspired Holy Mother Church, she would have forgiven her
two wayward bishop sons and said to them what Jesus said to the woman caught in
adultery, “Neither do I condemn you; your sins are forgiven you. Go your way
and sin no more" (Jn
The
Prodigal Son didn’t fall from grace; he fell into grace—the grace of his
father. The woman caught in adultery didn’t fall from grace; she fell into
grace—the grace of Jesus. The two
bishops caught in adultery didn’t fall from grace. If the church had been more
like Jesus, they, too, could have fallen into grace. And that would have
edified (built up) both them and the entire church.
We
wonder why this passage of the woman caught in adultery had to wander about
searching for a stable resting place in the gospels. Was sexual moralism alive and well in the
early church? And does that explain the tendency to disown the passage or to give
it a wandering location in the gospels? Was it sexual moralism which turned the
passage into a wandering Jew in search of a place to rest?
Behold, I am doing something new
There
is no ambiguity in the Old Testament concerning adultery; it is crystal clear
about how it should be handled. “If a man commits adultery with the wife of a
fellow Israelite, both he and the woman shall be put to death” (Lv
In
the first reading from Isaiah the Lord God exclaims,”Behold, I am doing
something new” (Is 43: 19)! When, in the
moral climate of his day, Jesus says to a woman caught in an act of adultery, “I
do not condemn you” he is, indeed, announcing, “Behold, I am doing something
new!” When on another occasion he tells the same scribes and Pharisees who
caught the woman in adultery that tax collectors and
prostitutes were entering the kingdom of God ahead of them (Mt 21:31) he is
again announcing, “Behold, I am doing something new!” If, instead of heeding the prevailing
morality, the pope would have forgiven his two wayward bishop sons caught in an
act of adultery, he, indeed, would have been announcing, “Behold, I am doing something
new!”
When Jesus was scribbling with his finger in the
dust on the temple floor we wonder what he wrote. Some say he wrote “ho-hum”
for the benefit of those busybodies who were not busy with their own sins but
the sins of others. Some say he scribbled a list of the names of all the men in
her life (adultery takes two), and a list also of all their other sins. Still
others say he was writing, “Behold I am doing something new!”
Jesus'
exchange with the sinful woman is a constant reminder to his followers that he
is doing something new-- that he does not stop at the boundaries which
Christian churches and theologians and busybodies set for him, but rather he
does something new. Jesus does not buy
into a sexual morality which stones adulterers. But he does buy into a compassion
morality which stones a Jewish priest and Levite for not stopping to pour the
oil of compassion into a man waylaid by robbers and left half-dead.
Compassion: the highest morality
With
a marvelously crafted and immortal parable he tells the story of two men who
commit a grossly immoral act right out on an open highway for all to see. A man
journeying from
Then
along came a Samaritan. He wasn’t a very religious man. For one thing, he worshipped
in the “wrong” place (Jn
Conclusion
A church that does something new
The
period immediately following the close of Vatican II in 1965 was, indeed, a
stormy period. But it was also a period
filled with vitality and excitement. At the end of the day, that Council had given
us a church which, at long last, was saying, “Behold, I am doing something new!
Behold I am pouring new wine!” That was a great relief, for the church had done
nothing new for four hundred years. The Council of Trent (1545-1563) had put
everything into deep freeze. That was a great relief, for the old wine was beginning
to turn into vinegar.
On
You
can’t put new wine into old wine skins. It’s time for the old skins to burst
apart so that a church according to Vatican II and the Spirit of God can pour
new wine (Mt 9: 17).
[1] Diaspora is a Greek word
meaning dispersion. Originally it referred to the settling of scattered
colonies of Jews outside
[2] By the “the unchurched” is especially meant not those who have left the church but those whom the church has left!
[3] When New Ways
Ministry was holding a three-day symposium attended by 500 people in a
hotel in Minneapolis, March 16-18, to discuss gay and lesbian Catholics and the
sacraments, Archbishop Harry Flynn of the St. Paul and Minneapolis Archdiocese
denied the group permission to celebrate Mass during the event. Archdiocesan
spokesman Dennis McGrath said that when the archbishop found out that some of
the speakers consistently challenged church policy and teaching, the bishop
just couldn’t allow Mass to be said at that event “because it was a cause for,
among other things, scandal!"