“To err is human“, famously wrote Alexander Pope. This is very true. But what do we do about it? When people err, the modern approach as seen on social media seems to be to condemn them for it, and if the error is severe enough, to cancel them for it. For Jesus, the sort of error that matters most is sin, and yet Jesus does not use the “social media” approach for sinners. Instead, he looks to the real person and, instead of calling out the sin, he calls the sinner.
The gospels tells of a woman caught in the act of adultery. The voices of those who caught her demanded from Jesus a quick condemnation. Indeed, she was guilty of a serious sin, which Jesus did not deny. Yet Jesus looked beyond the adultery to the woman herself:
Yes, Jesus saw that the woman had done wrong: he called it sin. But he did not condemn her for it. Nor did he extract concessions from her. He simply called her to repentance, rescued her from her enemies, and set her free.
Jesus called other serious sinners too. Palestine, where Jesus lived and taught, was at the time ruled by the Roman empire, which outsourced tax collection to locals. These tax collectors used their role to extort from taxpayers additional funds for themselves. One such extortionist, Levi, Jesus invited to follow him. Levi threw a dinner party and invited his fellow tax collectors to have dinner with Jesus. Voices were raised against Jesus, condemning him for associating with Levi and his colleagues:
Jesus acknowledged that Levi was a sinner. But in response to voices clamoring for condemnation, Jesus explained that it was exactly sinners that he had come to call. Indeed, Levi, extortionist no more, became the faithful apostle Matthew, one of the twelve apostles and writer of the first Gospel.
Jesus’ attitude to those who sin was, and is, not just for himself alone, it is one he expects his followers to hold:
These are challenging words, especially coming from Jesus, who had some cruel enemies. He did call them out when he had to, when they were teaching others wrongly, and they despised him for it. They hated Jesus so much that they trumped up false charges against him and had him publicly tortured and executed. But Jesus loved them anyway, even praying for them as he was being crucified [Luke 23:34]. For Jesus, loving one’s enemies is not a mere pious feeling or intention, it is a choice of love over condemnation, a real, concrete act of disregard for the natural voices in every human being, voices that call for destruction and vengeance on those who wrong us.
When faced with human sin, even when clamorous voices call for dire action, Jesus shows a way to cut through the noise to get to what is really important. Jesus acknowledges the sin, but focuses on the person first, and invites them to repentance. Yes, to err is human, but Jesus’ approach to this is not the “social media” approach, which focuses on condemning the error: instead, Jesus focuses on loving the human. We would do well to do the same.
Image by kalhh from Pixabay
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