In today’s first reading, Daniel 13: 1-9, 15-17, 19-30, 33-62 and Sunday’s
Gospel, John 8: 1-11, we meet God’s justice, forgiveness, and compassionate
intervention in the lives of two women: one unjustly accused of adultery and
the other guilty of adultery. Both,
according to the Mosaic Law, faced being stoned to death if found guilty. Injustice exists in both instances: the one
accused falsely by two wicked judges and the other accused of this sin without
the male partner also being made to accept responsibility for his role.
In the case of Susanna,
God inspires Daniel to speak up on her behalf and confront the wicked judges.
In the case of the woman in the Gospel, Jesus intervenes and challenges those
who confront her and who are using her to trap Jesus. Jesus asks those without
sin to cast the first stone and all walk away.
You and I, had we been
among her accusers, would also have had to walk away, as we, too, are not
without sin. Jesus is our mediator, the
One who intervenes for us, as Daniel intervened for Susanna. Yahweh says to us
through the prophet Isaiah, “though our sins are like scarlet, they shall be
white as snow; though they are red as crimson, they shall be like wool” (Is. 1:
18). That theme is re-echoed in the responsorial psalm of today’s Mass in the
words: “Only goodness and kindness
follow me all the days of my life.” Why?
Because we are redeemed, called to and empowered to conversion every moment of
every day! Like the good thief on the cross, God says to us: “This day you
shall be with be in Paradise.” For you and me, that does not only refer to the
day we die, it refers to today. “Salvation
is now,” Paul tells us in 2 Cor 6:2.
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