March 22, 2021. Monday of Week 5 in Lent

March 22, 2021

Monday of the fifth week of Lent

1st Reading: Daniel 13:1-9, 15-17, 31-62

Susanna and the elders

In Babylon there lived a man named Joakim. He had married Susanna daughter of Hilkiah, a woman of great beauty; and she was God-fearing, because her parents were worthy people and had instructed their daughter in the Law of Moses. Joakim was a very rich man, and had a garden attached to his house; the Jews would often visit him since he was held in greater respect than any other man. Two elderly men had been selected from the people that year to act as judges. Of such the Lord said, ‘Wickedness has come to Babylon through the elders and judges posing as guides to the people.’ These men were often at Joakim’s house, and all who were engaged in litigation used to come to them. At midday, when everyone had gone, Susanna used to take a walk in her husband’s garden. The two elders, who used to watch her every day as she came in to take her walk, gradually began to desire her. They threw reason aside, making no effort to turn their eyes to heaven, and forgetting its demands of virtue. So they waited for a favourable moment; and one day Susanna came as usual, accompanied only by two young maidservants. The day was hot and she wanted to bathe in the garden. There was no one about except the two elders, spying on her from their hiding place. She said to the servants, ‘Bring me some oil and balsam and shut the garden door while I bathe.’
Hardly were the servants gone than the two elders were there after her. ‘Look,’ they said ‘the garden door is shut, no one can see us. We want to have you, so give in and let us! Refuse, and we will both give evidence that a young man was with you and that was why you sent your maids away.’ Susanna sighed. ‘I am trapped,’ she said ‘whatever I do. If I agree, that means my death; if I resist, I cannot get away from you. But I prefer to fall innocent into your power than to sin in the eyes of the Lord.’ Then she cried out as loud as she could. The two elders began shouting too, putting the blame on her, and one of them ran to open the garden door. The household, hearing the shouting in the garden, rushed out by the side entrance to see what was happening; once the elders had told their story the servants were thoroughly taken aback, since nothing of this sort had ever been said of Susanna.
Next day a meeting was held at the house of her husband Joakim. The two elders arrived, in their vindictiveness determined to have her put to death. They addressed the company: ‘Summon Susanna daughter of Hilkiah and wife of Joakim.’ She was sent for, and came accompanied by her parents, her children and all her relations. All her own people were weeping, and so were all the others who saw her. The two elders stood up, with all the people round them, and laid their hands on the woman’s head. Tearfully she turned her eyes to heaven, her heart confident in God. The elders then spoke. ‘While we were walking by ourselves in the garden, this woman arrived with two servants. She shut the garden door and then dismissed the servants. A young man who had been hiding went over to her and they lay down together. From the end of the garden where we were, we saw this crime taking place and hurried towards them. Though we saw them together we were unable to catch the man: he was too strong for us; he opened the door and took to his heels. We did, however, catch this woman and ask her who the young man was. She refused to tell us. That is our evidence.’
Since they were elders of the people, and judges, the assembly took their word: Susanna was condemned to death. She cried out as loud as she could, ‘Eternal God, you know all secrets and everything before it happens; you know that they have given false evidence against me. And now have I to die, innocent as I am of everything their malice has invented against me?’
The Lord heard her cry and, as she was being led away to die, he roused the holy spirit residing in a young boy named Daniel who began to shout, ‘I am innocent of this woman’s death!’ At which all the people turned to him and asked, ‘What do you mean by these words?’ Standing in the middle of the crowd he replied, ‘Are you so stupid, sons of Israel, as to condemn a daughter of Israel unheard, and without troubling to find out the truth? Go back to the scene of the trial: these men have given false evidence against her.’
All the people hurried back, and the elders said to Daniel, ‘Come and sit with us and tell us what you mean, since God has given you the gifts that elders have.’ Daniel said, ‘Keep the men well apart from each other for I want to question them.’ When the men had been separated, Daniel had one of them brought to him. ‘You have grown old in wickedness,’ he said ‘and now the sins of your earlier days have overtaken you, you with your unjust judgements, your condemnation of the innocent, your acquittal of guilty men, when the Lord has said, “You must not put the innocent and the just to death.” Now then, since you saw her so clearly, tell me what tree you saw them lying under?’ He replied, ‘Under a mastic tree.’ Daniel said, ‘True enough! Your lie recoils on your own head: the angel of God has already received your sentence from him and will slash you in half.’ He dismissed the man, ordered the other to be brought and said to him, ‘Spawn of Canaan, not of Judah, beauty has seduced you, lust has led your heart astray! This is how you have been behaving with the daughters of Israel and they were too frightened to resist; but here is a daughter of Judah who could not stomach your wickedness! Now then, tell me what tree you surprised them under?’ He replied, ‘Under a holm oak.’ Daniel said, ‘True enough! Your lie recoils on your own head: the angel of God is waiting, with a sword to drive home and split you, and destroy the pair of you.’
Then the whole assembly shouted, blessing God, the saviour of those who trust in him. And they turned on the two elders whom Daniel had convicted of false evidence out of their own mouths. As prescribed in the Law of Moses, they sentenced them to the same punishment as they had intended to inflict on their neighbour. They put them to death; the life of an innocent woman was spared that day.

Responsorial: Psalm 23

R./: Though I walk in the valley of darkness I fear no evil, for you are with me

The Lord is my shepherd;
there is nothing I shall want.
Fresh and green are the pastures
where he gives me repose.
Near restful waters he leads me,
to revive my drooping spirit. (R./)
He guides me along the right path;
he is true to his name.
If I should walk in the valley of darkness
no evil would I fear.
You are there with your crook and your staff;
with these you give me comfort. (R./)
You have prepared a banquet for me
in the sight of my foes.
My head you have anointed with oil;
my cup is overflowing. (R./)
Surely goodness and kindness shall follow me
all the days of my life.
In the Lord’s own house shall I dwell
for ever and ever. (R./)

Gospel: John 8:1-11

Mercy shown to the woman caught in adultery

Jesus went to the Mount of Olives. Early in the morning he came again to the temple. All the people came to him and he sat down and began to teach them. The scribes and the Pharisees brought a woman who had been caught in adultery; and making her stand before all of them, they said to him, “Teacher, this woman was caught in the very act of committing adultery. Now in the law Moses commanded us to stone such women. Now what do you say?” They said this to test him, so that they might have some charge to bring against him.
Jesus bent down and wrote with his finger on the ground. When they kept on questioning him, he straightened up and said to them, “Let anyone among you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her.” And once again he bent down and wrote on the ground. When they heard it, they went away, one by one, beginning with the elders; and Jesus was left alone with the woman standing before him. Jesus straightened up and said to her, “Woman, where are they? Has no one condemned you?” She said, No one, sir.” And Jesus said, “Neither do I condemn you. Go your way, and from now on do not sin again.”


Defending the defenceless

Susanna’s story illustrates the depth of her faith: “she trusted in the Lord with all her heart.” By contrast, lust drove her accusers to suppress their consciences, driving out any thought of mercy or justice. Her story suggests that if we reach out to God, we get a true perspective on things, even in very dark moments. Things may look hopeless but the Lord knows our need. In that spirit Susanna prayed: “Eternal God, you know what is hidden and are aware of all things.” She did not lash out against her accusers or faint in panic, but trusted God and declared her innocence aloud. Then, in the light of her obvious innocence Daniel is led to find the right solution.
We pray for the wisdom to know when to choose silence and when to speak. It is this kind of character that we seek in the presence of God. He becomes our light, our witness, our justification. It can be true of us too, what was said about Susanna, “blessed is God who saves those who hope in him.”
In the Gospel, an unfortunate woman was dragged into Jesus’ presence. We admire his restraint in responding to the case put to him, for he simply bent down and started doodling on the ground in the dust. Then he looked up and suggested, ‘Let whoever among you is without sin be the first to stone her.’ The accused woman showed equal restraint. She might have accused the man who was caught with her but was let off scot free. Clearly her accusers were just using the woman to put Jesus into a dilemma. But he refused to be trapped, and so did the woman lying on the ground, who projected more dignity by her silence than the pomposity of her accusers. Eventually they went off one by one, beginning with the elders.
The judges who brought the sinful woman to Jesus were suggesting a radical punishment for her moral failure: death by stoning. The story shows that this was not Jesus’ response to moral failure. The situation was far more complex that the crude solution proposed in the Law of Moses. The ones judging the woman saw her only in terms of one wrong action. Jesus’ assessment was far more generous, taking into account the whole shape of her life rather than just one little part of it. Seeing the whole picture, he saw a good future, which her accusers would have denied her.
When Jesus looks at us he sees us through and through. Knowing the full story about us, he does not judge us on our lapses. Our story is still unfinished, and will only be complete when he returns to transfigure our lowly bodies into full union with himself.


 

One Comment

  1. Sean O'Conaill says:

    It was obviously far easier for the Holy Spirit to rouse a young boy to protest in defence of an innocent woman in ancient Babylon – in a Jewish assembly – than it is to motivate our church elders today even to risk the holding of assemblies.
    So what is the point of a Confirmation ceremony that tells pre-adolescents to pray for the gifts of the Holy Spirit in a church still structured to imply that the same Holy Spirit could have nothing to tell us adults through them?
    What havoc has the cult of authority-from-above wrought in Ireland – especially in convincing so many young people that the Holy Spirit is an elder’s fiction. Pope Francis’s insistence that Christian authority rests upon service, and upon listening, comes almost too late, given that assembly is now problematic for other reasons. If synodality is to take hold we need to solve this problem quickly – especially because the pandemic is posing unprecedented problems for young people.

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