When he was at table with them, he took the bread. He blessed the bread, and broke it, and gave it to them. And their eyes were opened and they recognized him!(Luke 24:13-35)

Sunday, April 3, 2022

Finding comfort in God's fidelity and mercy

 

It’s interesting to juxtapose the story of Susanna [Daniel 13:41-62] with the story of the adulterous woman [John 8:1-20].  The contrast between the two women couldn’t be clearer.  Susanna was completely virtuous and guiltless, while the woman in John’s gospel was actually “caught in the act of adultery.”  In other words, she was guilty according to the “law of Moses,” the very law that Susanna kept diligently.  Yet, both were saved.  Susanna was saved because of God’s fidelity and the adulterous woman because of the mercy of God that Jesus extended to her.  Both of these salvations give me hope.  It's a comfort to trust that God will somehow honor my efforts to be faithful to Him, to my wife, and to my children and grandchildren.  It’s equally comforting to know that my failures (and they are many) will not ultimately condemn me. 

Susanna’s accusers and their fate offer a warning to temper any false sense of security that we might get from reading of the mercy extended to the adulterous woman.  Two phrases from my reading of Daniel leapt out at me today as I read it, both in reference to the elders: “they suppressed their consciences” and “how you have grown evil with age.”  For them, deceit and hypocrisy had become ways of life.  They had actually practiced alienation from God and this practice became hardened over time.   If we do this enough and for long enough, we can cut ourselves off from that font of mercy experienced by the adulterous woman.

Although I haven’t been sitting around lately plotting to defame any women (nor would I ever do so), I can see plenty of ways in my life that I “suppress my conscience” and live with far less trust in God (in far more trivial circumstances) than that exhibited by Susanna.  Thankfully, the season of Lent, and these Bible readings, calls us back to fidelity to God—"the Lord is my Shepherd”, as it says in the Psalms [Psalms 23:1-6].  In a way, this seasonal refocusing helps us to avoid “growing evil with age.”  This basic fidelity and trusting in God makes it possible to recognize the mercy of Jesus when we sin and gives us the courage to “sin no more.”

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