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He Who is Without Sin

Father Anthony reflects on the disarming mercy of John 8:1–11, set in the early hush of morning as Jesus returns to the Temple and sits to teach—until the lesson is interrupted by accusation and spectacle: the scribes and Pharisees drag a woman caught in adultery into the center, turning her into a test case meant to trap both her and Him—“Moses commanded us to stone such. What do you say?” Father Anthony lingers on the quiet authority of Jesus’ response, how He refuses to let cruelty set the tempo of the scene, bending to write on the ground before speaking the sentence that unmasks every hidden hypocrisy: “Let him who is without sin among you be the first to throw a stone.” One by one the accusers slip away, and Father Anthony draws us into the tenderness of what remains—no public shaming, but a personal restoration—as Jesus stands and asks, “Where are they? Has no one condemned you?” When she answers, “No one, Lord,” He holds together truth and mercy with the words that reveal the heart of the Gospel: “Neither do I condemn you; go, and from now on sin no more”—a forgiveness that does not deny sin, but breaks the power of condemnation, shielding the vulnerable and opening a future where grace doesn’t merely spare death, it teaches the soul how to live.

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