Jesus was teaching in the temple when some scribes and Pharisees approached, bringing a woman who’d been caught in adultery, who they thoroughly had reproached.
Setting her down before Him, they brought up the command that she be stoned; and what were His thoughts on that—should Moses’ law now be condoned?
Jesus stooped down and wrote on the ground, as though He didn’t hear. Soon the woman would find, through Christ, her deliverance from a death fear.
So when they persisted in asking Him, she surely was fearing the worst. But He said, “He who is without sin among you, let him throw a stone at her first.”
He again stooped down to write—perhaps knowledge of the sins of those accusing. They began to all leave, then, one by one, knowing their own sins they couldn’t be excusing.
Jesus stood up then, seeing only the woman, left there in the midst of the crowd. He asked her where her accusers had gone, their condemnation having been so loud.
“Has no one condemned you?” Jesus asked. “No one, Lord.” Not one of them had stayed. Then He said He didn’t either, but to go and sin no more. She received pardon despite having strayed.
After this event, Jesus declared that He was this world’s light…and that those who follow Him will not walk in darkness but, through Him, will “see” to live right.
P. A. Oltrogge
(poetically related from reading the actual account in John 8:1-12)

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