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Lunam_Meam
Guest
Again, I did not say it was.Again, that’s nowhere to be found in the account.
Perhaps in the attempt to bring him in he fled, etc. Again, whatever the reason for his absence, it did not nullify the Law on adultery for him, or the woman for the requirement to apply the death penalty to the guilty isn’t that they be in each other’s presence when they’re condemned, rather there be the testimonies of two or three truthful witnesses of the crime, or sin (Deut. 17:6-7, 19:15)It does “nullify” it, if it’s none of the stories you’ve made up, but merely that they didn’t present the man for punishment (which is all we see in the passage).
Again, Jesus confirmed the Law on adulterers by referencing Deut. 17:6-7 in Jn. 8:7, but He also saved the woman because not one lapidator could be found. He could have killed her, it would have been justice, but it would not have been mercy. He gave that soul time, and possibility to arrive at repentance, and holiness, if she wished to reach them. Patient mercy gives souls time to recover and fortify themselves. Not every soul recovers instantaneously from its wounds. Some do so by successive stages, which are often slow, and subject to relapse.I don’t see a confirmation there.
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