From the Editor Emeritus / John F. Fink
Jesus in the Gospels: He claims divinity
See John, Chapter 8
 Those who say that Jesus was a great man, but never  claimed to be God—and they are numerous today—should read this chapter of  John’s Gospel. He was clear enough to those who heard him that they took up  rocks (they’re everywhere in Jerusalem) to try to stone him. They thought that  he blasphemed, calling himself God—and he would have if what he said wasn’t  true.
The author of John’s Gospel has Jesus arguing with  people whom he characterizes simply as “the Jews,” reflecting the animosity that  existed between the Jews and Christians when the Gospel was written. Jesus was  pretty rough with his antagonists, at one point telling them, “You belong to  your father the devil and you willingly carry out your father’s desires,” and  in another place, “If you do not believe that I AM, you will die in your sins.”
Three times, Jesus deliberately called himself “I AM,” which Jewish tradition  understood as God’s own self-designation. When God sent Moses to the Israelites  while they were enslaved by the Egyptians, he told him to say to them, “I AM sent me to you” and, “This is my name forever;  this is my title for all generations” (Ex 3:14-15). Now Jesus was telling them  that, if they didn’t believe that he was on a par with God (Yahweh), they would  die in their sins.
“The Jews” then argued that they were children of  Abraham. But Jesus claimed that he was greater than Abraham or the prophets,  and he said, “Abraham your father rejoiced to see my day; he saw it and was  glad.” He explained how that was possible by saying, “Before Abraham came to  be, I AM”—clearly a claim that he was eternal, God.
They understood that claim when they picked up the  rocks to stone him.
If you read John’s Chapter 8 as I indicated at the  top of this column, you already know that it begins with the episode of the  woman caught in adultery. It’s the episode where Jesus told those who wanted to  stone the woman, “Let the one among you who is without sin be the first to  throw a stone at her.” If you think that the episode doesn’t belong here,  you’re right. It’s missing from all early Greek manuscripts of this Gospel.
Scholars tell us that the style of the story is  similar to that of the author of Luke’s Gospel rather than John’s, and probably  belongs there. It’s found in different places in different manuscripts.  Nevertheless, the Church accepts the passage as canonical Scripture.
Besides the obvious lesson that we are all sinners  and should not judge another person, we can observe that Jesus, too, did not  judge the woman. He simply told her, “Go, and from now on do not sin any more.”  As he earlier had told Nicodemus, he was not in the world to condemn it, but to  save it. He will return as judge, but he was sent by his Father as redeemer. †