Saturday, April 5, 2025

A Debt Paid - Lent 5 - April 6, 2025

 

Homily for Lent 5

April 6, 2025

A Debt Paid

 

            We just read the powerful story of the mercy of Jesus, who did not condemn but pardoned the woman caught in adultery. But it begs the question: why did God command adultery to be punishable by death? This law is in both Leviticus and Deuteronomy in the Old Testament. Some have said that God in the Old Testament was a God of unflinching justice, doling out punishment to evildoers, while the God of the New Testament was a gentle, merciful, and loving God. But that’s actually a heresy called Marcionism (Marcion said there were two different Gods, one for the OT and one for the NT). God is quite kind and merciful in the Old Testament, and Jesus can be strict with those who refuse to repent!

            So, how do we explain such a severe punishment for this sin? There are three explanations for it. First, as the great Catholic writer Flannery O’Connor once said, “to the hard of hearing you shout, and for the almost-blind, you draw large and startling figures.” The Israelites were spiritually blind and deaf. Surrounded by the pagan nations for hundreds of years, they had become numb to their immoral ways - including polygamy and loose morals surrounding marriage. So God needed to “shout” to get their attention: hey, adultery is not acceptable!

            Second, God often uses the physical to reflect the spiritual. Thus, Israel’s slavery in Egypt is a symbol of slavery to sin…crossing the Red Sea into the freedom of the Promised Land is symbolic of baptism, which “drowns” sin and opens the Promised Land of Heaven to us…and the like. So in this case, adultery being punishable by physical death is a symbol that lust is spiritually deadly, without repentance and Confession.

            But third, and most importantly, adultery is punishable by death because all sin is punishable by death - Jesus’ death on the Cross. It says in Scripture that “the wages of sin is death” - if sin means turning our back on God Who is the source of Life, what have we chosen? Death. But Christ could precisely say to that adulterous woman, “I do not condemn you,” knowing that He would be condemned for the sin Himself in a few short weeks, upon the Cross.

            Isn’t this the meaning behind Jesus’ enigmatic action of writing in the dust? What He wrote is anyone’s guess, but some ancient writers conjectured that Jesus was writing the sins of all present in the sand – sins that would be as easy to wipe away as simply as brushing one’s hand against the dust. Once the penalty was paid upon the Cross, all forgiveness could be unleashed, and sins could be wiped away.

            There was an old Tide laundry detergent commercial that illustrated this well. A middle-aged mother had borrowed her teenage daughter’s fashionable shirt, without the daughter’s permission. But while enjoying the night out, the mom spilled something on it. She knew her daughter would be furious – so she had to get the stain out to reconcile the relationship. Tide to the rescue! The shirt returned clean, the relationship restored.

            This adulterous woman’s sin was a scarlet letter upon her, preventing her from being one with God or her fellow believers. Our sin is a blot which also destroys relationships, because our sin shows that we are disobedient and have used God’s gifts of life, health, possessions, and free will very wrongly. Mercy to the rescue! We put our souls in the wash (the Confessional) and come out clean, the relationship restored – because the cleansing detergent is the Precious Blood of Jesus Christ.

            And then we live like the redeemed we are. Another example: imagine you are teaching a young person how to build a fire with flint and steel. They need two things: the tools, and the instruction. Instruction without tools would be futile; tools without instruction would be frustrating and doomed to failure. The Cross is the tool – without it, salvation would not happen. And the instruction is what Jesus ends the Gospel with: “Go, and sin no more.” We can’t “go” or “sin no more” without the grace won for us on the Cross, but the Cross is of no avail unless we are willing to go and sin no more. Christ wins the forgiveness, and then teaches us how to live like the forgiven.

            Back in the early 1900s in Paris, two 13-year-old boys were being forced to make their weekly Confession, but this time they wanted to have some fun. They invited their Jewish friend Aaron to play a prank on the priest – he was to make up ridiculous sins in a mock Confession. Aaron readily agreed, and went in to the priest, confessing bizarre and outrageous sins. The priest listened patiently, then said, “I will offer you Absolution, but first you must do something. Go up to the life-sized cross in the church and declare three times, You did all this for me, and I don’t even care. Then come back.”

            The imperious boy marched to the front of the Church, where he said to the crucifix with arrogance, “You did all this for me, and I don’t care!” Then a second time, a little less sure: “You did all this for me…and I don’t care?” Finally a third time he declared, “You did all this…for me.” And he broke down in tears, returned to the priest, and asked for baptism. He was baptized and eventually became the Cardinal Archbishop of Paris, Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger, who died in 2008.

            Adultery was punishable by death because this is the cost of all sin: the death of Jesus Christ upon the Cross. But the stain of sin has been wiped away for those who believe and confess, allowing us a right relationship with the Living God.

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