Isaiah 43:15-21
Ps 126:1-6
Phil 3:8-14
Jn 8:1-11
We are rapidly approaching the singular event in Jesus’ life. It is the sole reason
for His Incarnation that we celebrated a few weeks ago on the Solemnity of the Annunciation. Next Sunday we will bless and distribute palms to commemorate His triumphant entry into Jerusalem. We will hear the chilling introduction: “The Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ according to Luke.”
Throughout the rest of Holy Week we will recall the most important events in the history of the world. On Holy Thursday the Church will commemorate the institution of the Eucharist. We will be reminded of the Passover in the first reading from the Book of Exodus. The second reading from Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthians includes the words of the formula for the consecration of the bread and wine at Mass.
The Good Friday liturgy does not include Mass. Following the reading of the Passion According to John, the cross is venerated in solemn fashion. We will then receive communion using the bread consecrated at Mass the night before.
Holy Saturday is marked by a peculiar emptiness. That emptiness is highlighted by a reading in the breviary that begins: “Something strange is happening—there is a great silence on earth, a great silence and stillness. The whole earth keeps silence because the King is asleep . . . God has fallen asleep in the flesh and he has raised up all who have slept ever since the world began. God has died in the flesh and hell trembles with fear.”
During the vigil Mass of Easter we will be reminded of the forging of the Old Covenant
and will sing Alleluia, He is Risen, in celebration of the New Covenant.
The covenant God formed with His people was not and is not a pact between equals.
It was not, is not, and never will be a democracy. God decided in freedom to grant His allegiance to Israel. He dictated His own conditions. Similarly Jesus dictated the conditions of the new covenant. We are free to accept or reject those conditions. We are not free to negotiate them to suit our taste or current social trends.
God chose Israel without any merit on her part. Similarly, God has chosen us. Like Ancient Israel we are sinners. Like the Ancient Israelites we are sinners loved by God,
a love that God gave freely. The parable of the woman caught in adultery is well-known and extraordinarily complex. The motif of the adulterous woman is used throughout the Old Testament as a metaphor for Israel’s recurrent infidelity to the covenant. But there is one question that will never be answered. What did Jesus’ write in the dirt? There is no indication. We will never know
During these last weeks of Lent we hear much about how the authorities tried to trap Jesus into saying something that could be used against him in a charge of blasphemy.
The question about what to do about the woman presented Jesus with a choice: Contradict the law that deemed stoning the penalty for adultery or make an exception to God’s law, a very popular activity today.
Either of these arguments could have been against Jesus. Yet, once again, the authorities could not trap Him. The interrogation continued for a bit whereupon Jesus said what has almost become a figure of speech in English, “He who is without sin cast the first stone.”
The accusers dispersed slowly until only Jesus and the woman were left at the scene.
Jesus chose not to condemn the woman caught in her sin and told her to go. But then he added an important condition: “sin no more.” Important advice, particularly during this Passiontide.
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Two photos taken during Lent 2011 while our tertian class was on the thirty day retreat. It ended on Palm Sunday. After a day in Adelaide half of us made the two-day drive back to Sydney. The Outback is very different. We made the retreat at the Sevenhill retreat house. Both photos were taken there.
Fr. Jack, SJ, MD