he Feast of Tabernacles had
just ended. The priests and rabbis at Jerusalem had been defeated in their plottings
against Jesus, and, as evening fell, "every man went unto his own house. Jesus went
unto the Mount of Olives." John 7:53; 8:1. From the excitement and confusion of
the city, from the eager crowds and the treacherous rabbis, Jesus turned away to the quiet
of the olive groves, where He could be alone with God. But in the early morning He
returned to the temple; and as the people gathered about Him, He sat down and taught them.
He was soon interrupted. A group of Pharisees and scribes approached Him, dragging with
them a terror-stricken woman, whom with hard, eager voices they accused of having violated
the seventh commandment. Pushing her into the presence of Jesus, they said, with a
hypocritical display of respect, "Master, this woman was taken in adultery, in the
very act. Now Moses in the law commanded us, that such should be stoned: but what sayest
Thou? Verses 4, 5.
Their pretended reverence veiled a deep-laid plot for His ruin. Should Jesus acquit the
woman, He might be charged with despising the law of Moses. Should He declare her worthy
of death, He could be accused to the Romans as one who assumed authority belonging only to
them.
Jesus looked upon the scene--the trembling victim in her shame, the hard-faced
dignitaries, devoid of even human pity. His spirit of stainless purity shrank from the
spectacle. Giving no sign that He had heard the question, He stooped and, fixing His eyes
upon the ground, began to write in the dust.
Impatient at His delay and apparent indifference the accusers drew nearer, urging the
matter upon His attention. But as their eyes, following those of Jesus, fell upon the
pavement at His feet, their voices were silenced. There, traced before them, were the
guilty secrets of their own lives.
Rising, and fixing His eyes upon the plotting elders, Jesus said, "He that is
without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her." Verse 7. And,
stooping down, He continued writing.
He had not set aside the Mosaic law nor infringed upon the authority of Rome. The
accusers were defeated. Now, their robes of pretended holiness torn from them, they stood,
guilty and condemned, in the presence of infinite purity. Trembling lest the hidden
iniquity of their lives should be laid open to the multitude, with bowed heads and
downcast eyes they stole away, leaving their victim with the pitying Saviour.
Jesus arose and, looking upon the woman, said, "Where are those thine accusers?
hath no man condemned thee? She said, No man, Lord. And Jesus said unto her, Neither do I
condemn thee: go, and sin no more." Verses 10, 11. The woman had stood before Jesus,
cowering with fear. His words, "He that is without sin among you, let him first cast
a stone," had come to her as a death sentence. She dared not lift her eyes to the
Saviour's face, but silently awaited her doom. In astonishment she saw her accusers depart
speechless and confounded; then those words of hope fell upon her ear, "Neither do I
condemn thee: go, and sin no more." Her heart was melted, and, casting herself at the
feet of Jesus, she sobbed out her grateful love and with bitter tears confessed her sins.
This was to her the beginning of a new life, a life of purity and
peace, devoted to God. In the uplifting of this fallen soul, Jesus performed a greater
miracle than in healing the most grievous physical disease; He cured the spiritual malady,
which is unto death everlasting. This penitent woman became one of His most steadfast
followers. With self-sacrificing love and devotion she showed her gratitude for His
forgiving mercy. For this erring woman the world had only contempt and scorn, but the
Sinless One pitied her weakness and reached to her a helping hand. While the hypocritical
Pharisees denounced, Jesus bade her, "Go, and sin no more."
Jesus knows the circumstances of every soul. The greater the
sinner's guilt, the more he needs the Saviour. His heart of divine love and sympathy is
drawn out most of all for the one who is the most hopelessly entangled in the snares of
the enemy. With His own blood He has signed the emancipation papers of the race.
Jesus does not desire those who have been purchased at such a cost to become the sport
of the enemy's temptations. He does not desire us to be overcome and perish. He who curbed
the lions in their den, and walked with His faithful witnesses amid the fiery flames, is
just as ready to work in our behalf to subdue every evil in our nature. Today He is
standing at the altar of mercy, presenting before God the prayers of those who desire His
help. He turns no weeping, contrite one away. Freely will He pardon all who come to Him
for forgiveness and restoration. He does not tell to any all that He might reveal, but He
bids every trembling soul take courage. Whosoever will, may take hold of God's strength,
and make peace with Him, and He will make peace.
The souls that turn to Him for refuge, Jesus lifts above the accusing and the strife of
tongues. No man or evil angel can impeach these souls. Christ unites them to His own
divine-human nature. They stand besides the great Sin Bearer in the light proceeding from
the throne of God.
The blood of Jesus Christ cleanses "from all sin." 1 John 1:7.
"Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect? It is God that justifieth.
Who is he that condemneth? It is Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again, who is
even at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us." Romans 8:33, 34.