We find the defendant- NOT GUILTY!
"What are we going to do with
this Jesus," the chief priest asked the group. "He is going about
healing people left and right. Everywhere I go the buzz is about Jesus. It's
Jesus this, and Jesus that. And the crowds are calling him the Messiah!
Everyone knows that the Messiah will not come from Galilee. If we don't get rid
of him, we are going to have an insurrection on our hands."
"And ever since the buzz about
him multiplying a few loaves and fish to feed over 5,000 people has circulated,
his followers have multiplied as well. He must be
stopped."
"I have an idea," Lucius
responded with a gleam in his eye. "I happen to know a certain married man
who is sleeping with his mistress at this very moment. I happened to see him
slink into her house last night." And as the hard-hearted Pharisees
gathered round, a spiteful plan to trick Jesus began to unfold.
The sun was just peeking through the
securely locked shutters of Morah's bedroom window. The predawn stillness
was broken only by the songs of early rising birds floating on the breeze.
Morah was a tangle of sheets, arms and legs as the man she loved lay
sleeping beside her.
"Oh, Zachariah," she
whispered as her fingertips brushed a stray lock of hair from his closed eyes.
"If only you weren't married. I know this is wrong, but I love you
so. And I have to believe you when you say you love me as well. We are risking
our very lives with these frequent trysts."
Morah's musings were suddenly
interrupted by a banging on the door.
"Open up!" the gruff voice
demanded.
"Who is there?" Morah
cried as she scrambled to find her robe.
"Open up or we'll break the
door down."
"What's all the
commotion," Zachariah mumbled as he groggily sat up in bed.
"What's going on?"
Before Morah could even think to
answer, the angry mob of religious men broke through the simple lock and into
the lovers' hideaway.
"What is the meaning of
this?" Zachariah barked. "What do you think you are doing?"
"What do you think you
are doing, my friend," the Pharisee countered. "That is the real
question here."
"Morah, daughter of Omar, you
are under arrest for adultery under the Law of Moses!" the moral police
spat. "Get dressed and come with me."
The Pharisee tossed Morah her night
robe, but failed to turn his head as she slipped her trembling frame from the
cover of the sheets and into the thin cloak. He grabbed her by the arm and
began dragging her to the door.
"Where are you taking me?"
she cried.
"You'll find out soon
enough," the Pharisee growled.
"What about Zachariah?"
the youngest man of the group inquired.
"Just leave him," the
Pharisee replied. "We don't need him."
"Why don't you go back to your
wife where you belong," the Pharisee called over his shoulder as the group
left the room. And with that, the conspiring mob continued their trek to the
temple with the half-clad trembling woman in tow. Two men flanked the weeping
woman on either side, dragging her through the early morning hustle and bustle
of the city. The bait was hooked, and now it was time to reel in the catch.
Like mice following the Pied Piper,
a curious stream of townsfolk joined the parade. Jesus was already
teaching in the courtyard with a group gathered at his feet. As always, Jesus'
message and miracles drew large crowds. A distant rumble interrupted his gentle
teaching as the angry mob and curious crowd approached. They marched right into
the inner circle of the classroom and thrust the woman at the Master's feet.
Morah's unbound hair fell around her
bare shoulders and fluttered in the early morning breeze. Her
shame-filled eyes stayed riveted on the earthen floor, refusing to meet Jesus'
gaze. Then one of the men pulled her to her feet and displayed her for all to
see.
She didn't need to look at the man
before her. She recognized his voice. It was Jesus.
"Teacher," the pious
Pharisee began, "this woman was caught in the act of adultery. The Law of
Moses commands us to stone such a woman. Now what do you say?"
Jesus didn't look at the woman's
half-clad body as the others openly gawked. He looked into her soul.
Morah lifted her eyes and looked
into the face of love. What do I detect in his gaze? She thought
to herself. It wasn't contempt, disgust, or condemnation, but rather
compassion, concern, and pure, unadulterated love. Somehow she knew that this
was the look she had been searching for her entire life.
As Morah listened to the Pharisee's
question, she understood Jesus' dilemma. If he set her free, the Pharisees
would accuse him of ignoring the Law of Moses and deem him a heretic. If
he sentenced her to death by stoning, then his teachings of grace and
forgiveness would be negated.
The religious leaders already held
the stones in their clenched fists, anticipating his reply. Their hearts were
as hard as the rocks they held in their hands. But rather than give a quick
answer, Jesus moved his gaze from the trembling woman and stooped to the
ground. With his finger, the very hand of God-made-man, he began writing
in the dirt. A frigid chill swept through the Pharisees pious robes.
Suddenly they felt the rawness of naked exposure as Jesus' eyes looked up at
each of them and without a word, uncloaked their sinful thoughts and desires.
With one look from Jesus, they stood soul bare and more exposed than the
half-dressed woman before them.
Everyone held their breath. The
silence was deafening. The tension was palpable. Finally, Jesus rose and
delivered the verdict.
"If any one of you is without
sin, let him be the first to throw a stone at her."
The religious leaders already held
the stones in their clenched fists, anticipating his reply. Their hearts were
as hard as the rocks they held in their hands. But rather than give a quick
answer, Jesus moved his gaze from the trembling woman and stooped to the
ground. With his finger, the very hand of God-made-man, he began writing in the
dirt. A frigid chill swept through the Pharisees pious robes. Suddenly they
felt the rawness of naked exposure as Jesus' eyes looked up at each of them and
without a word, uncloaked their sinful thoughts and desires. With one look from
Jesus, they stood soul bare and more exposed than the half-clad woman before
them.
Everyone held their breath. The
silence was deafening. The tension was palpable. Finally, Jesus rose and
delivered the verdict.
"If any one of you is without
sin, let him be the first to throw a stone at her."
Then Jesus squatted once again and
continued to write.
One-by-one the Pharisees unclenched
their fists, dropped the stones, and filtered through the crowd. The older men
who had accumulated a longer list of sins turned to leave first, with the
younger ones not far behind.
The remaining crowd listened closely
as the drama continued to unfold. After the last of the Pharisees cleared
the scene, Jesus straightened up and asked her, "Woman, where are your
accusers? Has no one condemned you?"
"No one, sir," she
replied.
"Then neither do I condemn
you," Jesus declared. "Go now and leave your life of sin."
"No one, sir," she
replied.
The woman turned to leave, but not
before picking up a discarded stone to take with her.
"To remember," she
whispered.
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Imagine yourself standing before God on your day of judgment. You know
all that you have done. Satan is pacing back and forth reading your long list
of sins. But then Jesus steps forward and takes the list from the accuser.
Looking over the accusations he begins: "I paid for this one, and this
one, and this one, and this one…."
Finally, reaching the end of Satan's
meticulously penned and amazingly accurate enumeration of all your
shortcomings, Jesus begins to tear the paper into shreds. He cups the pieces of
the destroyed list of failures in his nail-scarred hands and then, with the
breath of grace, blows them as far as the east is from the west. Wiping his
hands together as if completing a work, he glances back over to the Judge, "All
gone," he says with a smile.
Satan grumbles under his sulfurous
breath, and slinks back to his darkened cave - foiled again.
God looks up and asks you, "Has no one condemned you?"
God looks up and asks you, "Has no one condemned you?"
"No one, sir," you reply.
"Then enter my eternal kingdom
and find rest."
Friend, if you have accepted Jesus
as your Lord and Savior, and if you are still feeling condemned, know that
condemnation is not coming from God. Our enemy, the devil, is called the
"accuser of the brothers," and he is the accuser of the sisters too.
The Bible tells us that he marches before God accusing believers night and day
(Revelation 12:11).
"She did this and she did that and this and that and this," he
hisses.
And God replies
"Really? I don't remember? "
Then He looks at you with a
welcoming smile.
CC: Girlfriends in God
This is very educative, i love it, infact i am blessed.
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