The
saddest thing about this gospel is that they walked away, these people with
stones in their hands. And there’s
pretty stiff competition for the saddest thing about this gospel. There’s the fact that there were going to
stone a woman to death. There’s their
desire to test Jesus. There’s the
possibility that an act of adultery had been occurring, and the (worse)
possibility that their accusations were false.
There is a lot to lament in this Gospel, about this happening retold to
us, and about people and events in our lives whose memories it evokes. But, I still contend that the saddest thing
about this gospel is that they walked away, these people with stones in their
hands.
Of course,
I don’t mean that it would sadden me less if they had cast those stone, if they
had added murderous defilement of human life to the sins of their hearts. No, it saddens me that they didn’t drop their
stones and go to Jesus. And what gives
me hope, what gladdens my heart, what excites me to strive for holiness, what
allows me to proclaim this as gospel, as good news: is this woman, that she
stays. And unlike these people with
stones in their hands, who desert, who flee, who cannot bear to be in the presence
of the one who has convicted them of their sins, she is sent.
All
depart, but only she is sent by Christ.
Only she leaves having been raised up, head held high to gaze in wonder,
love and awe at the lofty grandeur of mercy incarnate; they skulk away, with
heads bowed, made lower. And that still
saddens me. If I’d have been writing
this story, they would have dropped their stones and gone to Jesus for healing,
and been sent and done marvelous things in his name. I didn’t write that story; but, I can help
write a new story, we can help write a new story: a story in which sinners
never skulk away but come to Jesus and are sent out with heads held high. Lament can become fuel for zeal. And if we want to invite others to God’s
mercy we have to start by encountering it for ourselves.
Throughout
our lives, and maybe particularly in this season of Lent, we find ourselves
convicted of our sins and experience compunction. And however God uses the created order to
show us that, it’s the Spirit who convicts, who shows us the stones in our
hands, that we don’t know how they got there; or the stones a stone’s throw
away from us, that in our heart of hearts we did not want to hurl, but we
did. And I don’t want to flatten out all
sin, to say that all sin is equally deadly or equally vicious. But all sin is sin, and what I long for is
for us each to drop it, but not skulk away; instead, to come to Jesus and leave
sent.
These
past few Lents, I’ve made part of my fasting to fast from taking the best
available parking space, to try and train myself to think humbly of others as
more important than myself, to recognize that someone else has heavier bags, a
tighter schedule, or more fatigue in their bones. I’ve found that over a few years of doing
this, it’s changed. When I started, I mainly noticed how bad I was at it, how
quickly my spidey sense would kick in and auto-pilot me to the best spot, which
I wouldn’t then leave because that would be wasting gas. I’d notice the stone,
and kind of hide it behind my back and skulk away. I’ve gotten a little better
at it now, which I don’t say to pat myself on my back, but as partly as a
reminder to myself that now that that stone is dropped, there’s space for me to
see other stones in my hands, to try to apply the fruits of that change to
other areas of my life.
Here, in
this place, in this Mass, we try to make some space to look at our hands more
carefully. We try to drop our stones. But, we do not skulk away. We don’t just leave right after the
penitential act. (Mary and the saints
are praying for me? Great, I’ll be moving on then!) No. We acknowledge our
sins, we profess our longing to drop our stones, and then we stay, and we hear
the words of everlasting life. We have
our tender, intimate encounter with Jesus.
We pray, through the priest’s prayer that precedes the sign of peace, that
God would not look upon our sins, but upon the faith of the Church. And we trust that He is faithful in answering
that prayer. And then we’re sent. “Go.”
“Go in peace, glorifying the Lord by your life.”
We are
sent, with the woman who was sent. We
are sent to seek those who skulked away and invite them to this wondrous going
forth, this pilgrimage together to holiness.
We are sent to seek those with stones still in their hands, and invite
them on the same journey. It’s a journey
in response to that upward calling of which St. Paul wrote, being raised to
walk with heads held high because we gaze with love and longing at what lies
ahead, and with arms outstretched to beckon others to join us on the way
because we want to share that with them.
And it
is hard. It does require straining
forward. But, we’re not journeying under
our own steam. Our reading from the book
of Isaiah proclaims how God acts to create that way for us: that paths are
forged in seas; deserts are watered; wild beasts made not just benign, but
devout. All this that we might come to
our goal; that we, the people God formed for Himself, might announce his
praise.
No comments:
Post a Comment