terrible <\/em>sin which caused God to strike him down as an invalid for the next four decades? I mean, what sort of terrible sin had this child from 38 years ago (or possibly a teenager) committed, which would cause God to punish him in such a terrible way? <\/p>\nAnd then, Jesus comes along and say, “Now don’t do that again, or I’ll have to punish you even worse!” <\/p>\n
Does that sound anything like Jesus? Not the Jesus I know. I don’t think that sin led to this man being an invalid for 38 years, and I definitely don’t think that Jesus was threatening this poor man with some greater punishment if he committed that sin again. <\/p>\n
So how then are we to understand Jesus’ statement, “Go and sin no more”?<\/p>\n
Well, notice that it is not in the context of healing the man from being an invalid that Jesus says \u201cGo and sin no more.\u201d It is in the context of the religious leaders threatening the man\u2019s life because he had the audacity to carry his bedroll on the Sabbath (John 5:10). Why do I say there were threating his life? I believe there is a parallel in John 5 with something that happens in Numbers 15:32-35.<\/p>\n
There, man is caught picking up sticks on the Sabbath, so they arrest him and take him to Moses, who consults God on the matter. God (apparently) tells Moses that the community should stone the man for the high crime of picking up sticks on the Sabbath.<\/p>\n
So when Jesus tells the man \u201cGo and sin no more or else something worse might happen to you,\u201d I think he says it with a sparkle in His eye, some satire in His voice, and a head nod toward the disapproving and judgmental religious leaders.<\/p>\n
Essentially Jesus tells the man (read the following with soft sarcasm): \u201cOh no! You carried your bedroll on the Sabbath! How could you do such a terrible thing! You sinner! Stop it! If you don\u2019t, they\u2019re going to have your head.\u201d<\/p>\n
Of course, although Jesus was speaking to the man with satirical humor, the situation was deadly serious as well, and Jesus knew it. It was true that if the man was not careful, the religious leaders would try to kill him simply because he carried his bedroll on the Sabbath. In fact, in the very next verses, their murderous rage gets redirected toward Jesus because He is the one who told the man to carry His bedroll (John 5:15-18). The text says they sought for a way to kill Jesus. The \u201csomething worse\u201d which was going to happen to the man is now directed toward Jesus.<\/p>\n
So was Jesus telling the man to \u201cGo and sin no more\u201d? Well \u2026 yes, but it is more like this: \u201cGo and \u2018sin\u2019 no more, or the sin police over there are going to kill you.\u201d<\/p>\n
That\u2019s how I read John 5:15-18.<\/p>\n
Based on this, you can probably predict how I understand John 8:1-11.<\/p>\n
“Go and Sin No More” in John 8:1-11<\/h2>\n I think John included this incident in his Gospel just a few chapters after the \u201cgrievous sin of bedroll-carrying incident\u201d because unlike the carrying of the bedroll on the Sabbath, the woman in this event was truly sinning. She was caught in the act of adultery.<\/p>\n
The religious leaders are about to stone her to death when Jesus shows up, scribbles in the sand, and when no one is left to condemn her, tells her to \u201cGo and sin no more.\u201d<\/p>\n
Most commentators note the connection here with the Levitical law that the punishment for adultery was death by stoning (Lev 20:10; Deut 22:22). Most commentators also point that the Levitical law required that both <\/i>the man and the woman are to be stoned, but in John 8, only the woman is present. This was not because the religious leaders didn\u2019t know who the man was, for they had caught the woman in the very act of adultery. Where is the man? We do not know.<\/p>\n
There is some speculation that this woman was simply the innocent bystander in a malevolent plan by the religious leaders to accuse and attack Jesus (John 8:6). Since John 5:1-18, the religious leaders had been looking for ways to discredit and kill Jesus, and they had now found (or created?) a way in this poor woman. Could it be that her guilty partner was involved in the scheme himself?<\/p>\n
It is likely that the woman was actually a prostitute, and the religious leaders saw this situation as a \u201cwin-win\u201d opportunity for them. If Jesus did not defend her, then they got to stone a prostitute. Yay! If Jesus did defend her, then they could stone Him too as a bonus.<\/p>\n
The plan, of course, didn\u2019t go as expected, and Jesus wrote something in the sand which caused all the men to slink away. We don\u2019t know what He wrote, though there is endless speculation about it might have been.<\/p>\n
Anyway, once they have all left, Jesus tells the woman that He does not condemn her (and He is the only one present who could have!), and that she should \u201cGo and sin no more.\u201d<\/p>\n
Why? For the same reason Jesus told the man in John 5 to go and sin no more: because the religious leaders were out to get her. Now that they had been rebuffed by Jesus and their righteous activity of stoning a prostitute had been denied them for the day, they would doubtless begin looking for a way to kill her again.<\/p>\n
Basically, Jesus is saying, \u201cMy beautiful lady, I am sorry you got caught up in this. They were after me; not you. They framed you to get at me. I want to protect you from them, so please, consider leaving your current profession. They are likely going to seek to frame you again, and the next time, they won\u2019t bring you to me. They\u2019ll just kill you. Neither one of us want that, so go \u2026 do something different with your life.\u201d<\/p>\n
Clearly, Jesus did not mean that the woman should never sin again in any way whatsoever. He knew, and we know, that this is impossible. He was simply warning her about the danger of continuing in her current lifestyle.<\/p>\n
Can you “Go and Sin no More”?<\/h2>\n So what does this way of reading these texts say to you and me? Several things.<\/p>\n
First, please, please, please \u2026 don\u2019t be a religious jackass. If Jesus is the only one who has the right to condemn and judge a person, but He chooses not to (cf. John 8:11, 15), then we all better think twice (and thrice!) before we cast the first stone. Don\u2019t call for people\u2019s jobs, or pray for their house to burn down, or tell them that because of their lifestyle they are headed for hell.<\/p>\n
Such behavior looks less like Jesus and more like the religious leaders who sought to kill Jesus.<\/p>\n
Second, recognize what sin is (and isn\u2019t). Sin damages our relationship with God and with one another. Sin destroys our lives and causes emotional, financial, physical, spiritual, and psychological harm. The reason God wants us to stop sinning is simply because God wants what is best for us, and sin does not result in God\u2019s best.<\/p>\n
Our sin doesn\u2019t cause God to turn away from us, reject us, hate us, or cast us out. Our sin grieves God because He knows how much sin hurts us, and as our loving Father, He doesn\u2019t want us to get hurt.<\/p>\n
God doesn\u2019t care about our sin; He cares about us — which is why He wants to help us not sin.<\/p>\n
Finally, as I\u2019ve said before, we stop sinning not by trying to stop sinning, but by walking with Jesus and inviting God into the dark places of our life. When a room is dark, you don\u2019t chase away the darkness by talking against it, praying against it, and commanding the darkness to leave. No, darkness naturally recedes when light enters the room. You want to stop sinning? Invite God into it, and watch the light of His love cast out all sin.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
Why does Jesus say \u201cGo and sin no more\u201d when it is impossible to \u201cgo and sin no more\u201d? By looking at John 5 and John 8, a beautiful truth emerges about Jesus’ statement that people should “Go and sin no more.” <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":34748,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_bbp_topic_count":0,"_bbp_reply_count":0,"_bbp_total_topic_count":0,"_bbp_total_reply_count":0,"_bbp_voice_count":0,"_bbp_anonymous_reply_count":0,"_bbp_topic_count_hidden":0,"_bbp_reply_count_hidden":0,"_bbp_forum_subforum_count":0,"_genesis_hide_title":false,"_genesis_hide_breadcrumbs":false,"_genesis_hide_singular_image":false,"_genesis_hide_footer_widgets":false,"_genesis_custom_body_class":"","_genesis_custom_post_class":"","_genesis_layout":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[1361,1747,19,1876,1227,1874,1875,1272,38,1877],"class_list":{"0":"post-34745","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"tag-adultery","8":"tag-bible-and-theology-questions","9":"tag-discipleship","10":"tag-go-and-sin-no-more","11":"tag-jesus","12":"tag-john-5","13":"tag-john-8","14":"tag-sin","15":"tag-theology-jesus","16":"tag-woman-caught-in-adultery","17":"entry"},"yoast_head":"\n
Why does Jesus say \u201cGo and sin no more\u201d when it is impossible?<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n