November 6, 2023 Bible Study — We Do Not Bring Glory to God by Condemning Sinners

Today, I am reading and commenting on  John 8-9.

Today’s passage begins with the account of the woman caught in adultery.  The oldest sources do not contain this story, which suggests that it was not in the original.  Nevertheless, I think the fact that it became ubiquitous in later versions of the Gospel of John suggests that God intends for us to learn lessons from it.  I think the most important of those comes from Jesus’ final statement to the woman.  “Neither do I condemn you.  Go now and leave your life of sin.” (or, as other translations put it, “Go, and sin no more.”)  We should not condemn those who sin, but we should call them to stop sinning (just as we should strive to stop committing whatever sins come into our lives).

This passage contains two stories I think teach us a lot about following Christ.  The first I wrote about in the first paragraph.  The second is the story of the man born blind.  Jesus’ disciples thought that the man had been born blind either because of sins he later committed, or because his parents had sinned.  That is a potentially interesting theological debate, which the disciples took to Jesus, probably because they thought that His answer would reveal a lot about His understanding of God.  And it did, but not in the way in which they expected.  His answer tells us that people do not necessarily experience what we consider suffering because of sin.  In this case, the man was born blind so that Jesus could demonstrate God’s power through him.  When we see people suffering, our question should not be about why they are suffering.  Our question should be, “How can God’s power be displayed through relieving the suffering so that people will glorify God?”  When we see people suffering we should seek ways to relieve that suffering in a manner which brings glory to God.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.