Nope,
Look at the passage more closely. It notes that the Pharisees were looking to trap Jesus.
So what was the nature of the trap?
In presenting the woman, they were leaving Christ two choices.
- Agree that she should be stoned
- Deny that she could be stoned.
In the first case, they would have a case to bring before the Roman authorities, that Jesus of Nazereth advocated the violation of Roman law. Roman law prohibited Jews from putting anyone to death.
In the second case, they could say that Christ advocated the violation of the Mosaic Law, in which case, they could use that with the people to show that Jesus was not the Messiah.
If what you say is true, that Christ could deny Mosic law in this matter, if He said that the woman should NOT be stoned, then He fell for the Pharisee’s trap. But that is NOT what happened.
He told them to go ahead and stone her!!! Under the Jewish Law, the Pharisees WERE sinless. They kept not only the law of Moses, but all the other man made laws, to the last iota. That was their entire philosphy.
So Christ evaded their trap. The Pharisees could not go to the Roman authorities, as they would not have considered the Pharisees to be ‘sinless’ and they would have been laughed out of court.
And they could not go to the people claiming that Christ broke the Mosic Law, because they would have recognized what Christ said, that the Pharisees could begin the stoning.
If they went to the Jewish people, no Pharisee could claim that Jesus violated the Law. After what Jesus said, any Pharisee would have felt fully justified to throw that stone. After all, they considered themselves sinless. They could not actually DO IT, since to execute someone, they needed Pilate’s permission first.
Now, of course the Pharisees knew they could not actually stone her (as did Christ), as that would have run afoul of Roman law, they recognized that Christ escaped their trap. Note that the eldest Pharisees, the ones most learned in the law, left first, they recognized that their trap did not work.
Christ neither advocated going against Roman Law, nor did He advocate a violation of the Mosic Law (which He could not, as Christ was the one who gave that Law to Moses in the first place )