Gospel
            Reflection
          Fifth Sunday of Lent 
            6 April 2025, Church Year C
          John
            8:1-11
He
          Who Is Without Sin
        By Fr.
          Steven G. Oetjen 
Home Page
        To Sunday
          Gospel Reflections Index
Jesus looks
        up at the crowd who wants to stone the woman caught in adultery,
        and he says, “Let the one among you who is without sin be he
        first to throw a stone at her.”
The word or
        sin in the Bible (“hamartia” in Greek) comes from archery, and
        it means “to miss.”  When
        we sin, we “miss the mark,” like the archer who has bad aim.  Therefore, Anthony
        Esolen cleverly observes, “Who then would be more fit to cast
        the first stone at the sinful woman, than one whose aim has
        always been true?  But
        we know that our aim is not true. 
        The people know it. 
        That is why they leave, quietly, one by one, from the
        eldest to the least.”
Only the one
        without sin has true aim.  That
        is why we sinners make poor judges of the heart.  Our own sin blinds us,
        so our vision of others is skewed as well.  When we are frustrated
        by the faults of others, it is remarkable how often the very
        same kinds of faults, or similar ones, exist in our own hearts –
        if only we would direct our attention there.  Instead, we get
        fixated on the faults of our neighbors in order to distract
        ourselves from our own faults.\
Our Lord
        taught us elsewhere, “Why do you see the speck that is in your
        brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own
        eye?  Or, how can
        you say to your brother, ‘Brother, let me take out the speck
        that is in your eye,’ when you yourself do not see the log that
        is in your own eye?  You
        hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you
        will see clearly to take out the speck that is in your brother’s
        eye” (Lk 6:41-42).  Similarly,
        he tells us today, “Let the one among you who is without sin,”
        or, we could say, with true aim, “be the first to throw a stone
        at her.”
Before he
        said this, and again after he said it, he stooped down and wrote
        on the ground with his finger. 
        We do not know what he was writing exactly, but his
        action is richly symbolic. 
        The eighth-century scholar Alcuin of York says that the
        ground represents the human heart, which is like land that
        yields a harvest – whether the fruit is good or bad, it grows
        forth from the ground of the human heart all the same.  And the finger,
        because it is flexible and has joints, represents discretion.  So, the Lord Jesus, by
        writing with his finger on the ground, instructs us not to
        condemn our neighbors immediately and rashly when we see faults
        in them, but first to search our own hearts, examining them with
        the finger of discretion.
When you
        find yourself taking on the role of the scribes and Pharisees in
        this passage, setting yourself up as a judge over others, then
        hear Our Lord’s words as addressed to you.  See Ou Lord’s finger
        as writing in the ground of your heart, and direct your
        attention there.  You
        are bothered by the fault of another.  Could it be that you
        are guilty of the very same thing? 
        Even if not the same thing, what faults are you guilty
        of?  Where have you
        been unfaithful to the Lord Jesus? 
        How has the Lord already shown you mercy?  Where do you still
        need to repent and let him show you mercy?
Taking up
        this practice, we will find that temptations to judge others
        rashly can be flipped on their heads and turned into
        opportunities to grow in humility. 
        Humility will in turn make us more merciful toward
        others, Dietrich von Hildebrand writes, “Our possession of the
        highest human virtue (which is humility) constitutes the
        necessary foundation for our progress towards sharing the
        specifically divine virtue of mercy …  The virtue by which we
        live hourly is precisely the one of which we ought to be most
        mindful.  And the
        mercy of God is what we live by … 
        The way to attain the virtue of mercy lies in our
        constant awareness of being encompassed by mercy: of the fact
        that mercy is the air we children of God are breathing.”