Go now, you are forgiven.
The song is about a general and his men. They set up camp somewhere, about to go to battle. The general has a bad dream that night and it wakes him up, and he can't go back to bed because he doesn't understand what it means. That morning, all the men stood tall, ready to go to war and somewhat unafraid. They were prepared "chests in the air, with courage in their blood and a fire in their stare" and they awaited the general's orders. He came slowly out of his tent, no doubt weary, troubled and tired and said this:
I have seen the others
and I have discovered
that this fight is not worth fighting
I have seen their mothers
and I will no other
to follow me where I'm going
So,take a shower, shine your shoes
you got no time to lose
You are young men you must be living
Take a shower, shine your shoes
you got no time to lose
You are young men you must be living
Go now you are forgiven
The men were all confused because they'd been ordered into battle. But eventually one by one, they all left until he was alone to face what he felt no man should have to endure. Kindness.
Earlier today, a friend and I were in the front office at school. My friend had too many tardies and wanted to know if she would end up in ideal for it. There were words exchanged, and as we were about to leave, the principal smiled and said "Go on and sin no more." As far as I know, he didn't really answer his question, but I think I didn't really need to hear his answer. I heard what I needed to hear from her conversation. Go on and sin no more.
[This passage is taken from The Message paraphrase of the Bible. It isn't a translation, but I like the storytelling of The Message. It's lovely.]
John 8
To Throw the Stone
1-2 Jesus went across to Mount Olives, but he was soon back in the Temple again. Swarms of people came to him. He sat down and taught them. 3-6The religion scholars and Pharisees led in a woman who had been caught in an act of adultery. They stood her in plain sight of everyone and said, "Teacher, this woman was caught red-handed in the act of adultery. Moses, in the Law, gives orders to stone such persons. What do you say?" They were trying to trap him into saying something incriminating so they could bring charges against him.
6-8Jesus bent down and wrote with his finger in the dirt. They kept at him, badgering him. He straightened up and said, "The sinless one among you, go first: Throw the stone." Bending down again, he wrote some more in the dirt.
9-10Hearing that, they walked away, one after another, beginning with the oldest. The woman was left alone. Jesus stood up and spoke to her. "Woman, where are they? Does no one condemn you?"
11"No one, Master."
"Neither do I," said Jesus. "Go on your way. From now on, don't sin."
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Jesus sat in the temple, teaching when the doors flew open and a crowd swept in, yelling and shouting all sorts of things – some directed at Jesus, some directed at the frail, weeping woman they were roughly leading in by the elbow. The mass shoved through the crowd to the front of the room to talk to Jesus. A man came forward, the one who had the disheveled woman's arm, with an arrogant glint in his eye. Surely even this "son of God" knows she deserves death, he thought and laughed inwardly. "I caught this woman," he said, his tone lofty, "in the very act of adultery. As you know, teacher, Moses said in the law given to him by God himself that any adulterer is to be stoned. You know this to be true." He addressed the crowd, "We all know this to be true!" The mass shouted in response. "Now, rabbi, even you wouldn't dare to defy the law given to you by God, who is above us all?"
Jesus considered this a moment, then smirked and chuckled a bit, as one would do to a child misbehaving trying to be sneaky with his latest scheme, and knelt down and began to write in the dirt that had loosened from the floor. The accuser began to get irritated. "Jesus!" he shouted. "What do you say to this woman's crime?" The mass began to yell again, and they shook the woman, who wept all the more.
Finally, Jesus stood, silently, and addressed the arrogant man cooly. "Whoever it is among you," he said, his voice calm and full of authority, "who has yet to sin once, you throw the first stone. The rest of you then can follow." Then he simply bent down and began writing again.
The accuser looked shocked and stared. The older men began to peel of, knowing that they were far from perfect. They'd no right to condemn her. Then the men of middle age left, and finally the younger, until the only one left was the accuser. He looked at the woman, then Jesus, then his eyes dropped to the writing on the ground, and he left. The woman sank to her knees as Jesus stood.
"Where did they go?" Jesus asked, his voice rich with tenderness. "Where are your accusers? Does anyone accuse you anymore?"
"No, master. No one does." She didn't dare look up at him, but kept her eyes on what he'd written on the ground.
"Neither do I," He said and bent down to help her up. He smiled at her a smile that radiated warmth from his very core. "Go on and sin no more."
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I believe that God would say to us now, "Go and sin no more. You are forgiven, you are beloved." If we learn to lean on Him and on His strength, if we learn to rely on his infinite and amazing knowledge, and if we learn to trust Him and His promises, we will never fall. If we seek Him- if our delight is found in Him and Him alone, we will have no desire for the sin we're going from. That used to sound so cheesy to me until about two days ago. But it makes so much sense now. God is all-consuming, and that means he consumes all. It means he occupies every inch and every corner of our hearts and our lives, and when we let go of our fears and our reservations, and just let Him do what only He can, we'll have a real and intense desire for Him and only Him. And that's where I want to be. I'm not there yet though. I'm a work in progress.
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