Healing of the Soul
            
            
              53
            
            
              of the olive groves, where He could be alone with God. But in the
            
            
              [87]
            
            
              early morning He returned to the temple; and as the people gathered
            
            
              about Him, He sat down and taught them.
            
            
              He was soon interrupted. A group of Pharisees and scribes ap-
            
            
              proached Him, dragging with them a terror-stricken woman, whom
            
            
              with hard, eager voices they accused of having violated the seventh
            
            
              commandment. Pushing her into the presence of Jesus, they said,
            
            
              with a hypocritical display of respect, “Master, this woman was
            
            
              taken in adultery, in the very act. Now Moses in the law commanded
            
            
              us, that such should be stoned: but what sayest Thou?”
            
            
              Verses 4, 5
            
            
              .
            
            
              [88]
            
            
              Their pretended reverence veiled a deep-laid plot for His ruin.
            
            
              Should Jesus acquit the woman, He might be charged with despising
            
            
              the law of Moses. Should He declare her worthy of death, He could
            
            
              be accused to the Romans as one who assumed authority belonging
            
            
              only to them.
            
            
              Jesus looked upon the scene—the trembling victim in her shame,
            
            
              the hard-faced dignitaries, devoid of even human pity. His spirit of
            
            
              stainless purity shrank from the spectacle. Giving no sign that He
            
            
              had heard the question, He stooped and, fixing His eyes upon the
            
            
              ground, began to write in the dust.
            
            
              Impatient at His delay and apparent indifference the accusers
            
            
              drew nearer, urging the matter upon His attention. But as their eyes,
            
            
              following those of Jesus, fell upon the pavement at His feet, their
            
            
              voices were silenced. There, traced before them, were the guilty
            
            
              secrets of their own lives.
            
            
              Rising, and fixing His eyes upon the plotting elders, Jesus said,
            
            
              “He that is without sin among
            
            
              you,
            
            
              let him first cast a stone at her.”
            
            
              Verse 7
            
            
              . And, stooping down, He continued writing.
            
            
              He had not set aside the Mosaic law nor infringed upon the au-
            
            
              thority of Rome. The accusers were defeated. Now, their robes
            
            
              of pretended holiness torn from them, they stood, guilty and con-
            
            
              demned, in the presence of infinite purity. Trembling lest the hidden
            
            
              iniquity of their lives should be laid open to the multitude, with
            
            
              bowed heads and downcast eyes they stole away, leaving their victim
            
            
              with the pitying Saviour.
            
            
              Jesus arose and, looking upon the woman, said, “Where are
            
            
              those thine accusers? hath no man condemned thee? She said, No