Vs. 10-14
“You have nothing to draw water with and the well is deep. Where then
do You get that living water?”
The woman must have been really puzzled,
because the man before her claimed to have living water and yet asked her for a
drink. Furthermore, can He provide better water than the one her ancestor did?
This well had been used for centuries, and here is a man who says he could give
something better to her.
Here we also see Christ making His move
to bring the conversation past physical satisfaction to spiritual satisfaction.
As we know, even the best pleasures and satisfaction this world can offer would
not last. Deep down, we all have a need, a craving, for something lasting, but
we need to realize that eternal satisfaction can only come from an eternal
Giver, an eternal Fullness, an eternal Joy, an eternal Well of Living Water.
“. . . but the water that I will give him will become in him a well of
water springing up to eternal life.”
The woman came to the well, but Christ
wanted to place the well within her.
What are the wells we go to for
fulfilment? Do we find ourselves searching for wells of riches, wells of
entertainment, wells of lust? The Lord wants us to come to Him, the Eternal
Well, and place in us wells of living water to overflow onto those around us.
Vs. 15-20
But this Samaritan woman had a difficult
time grasping the words of our Lord. She was still thinking of the water in the
well.
“Sir, give me this water, so I will not be thirsty nor come all the way
here to draw.”
The prospect of eternal fulfilment
attracted her, but her focus still needed to shift to a different dimension—the
realm of the soul.
So Jesus said to her, “Go, call your husband and come here.”
And when she said she had none, He pointed out her sinful life. He was moving
the subject from physical thirst to spiritual emptiness.
Perhaps the Samaritan woman was
uncomfortable with where the conversation was going, so she changed the
subject: the right place of worship. The Samaritans worshiped on Mount Gerizim while
the Jews worshiped in Jerusalem. Is there a right location to worship?
Vs. 21-24
Christ said no. “Salvation is from the
Jews” because the Messiah was a Jew, and the Jews were the first messengers of
the Gospel. But we will worship neither on the mountain nor in Jerusalem,
because the true worshipers will worship in spirit and truth, regardless of
location. However, does this mean that we can stop going to a physical church
building every Sunday? Although it is not a sin to stop going to church, we
know that God desires that everyone of us will join in the fellowship of His
people, and there is power in a gathering of believers.
What does it mean to worship in spirit
and in truth? Worship is primarily an intimate communion and communication with
our Heavenly Father. And since God is spirit, we must worship, or communicate,
with Him in spirit. Can we then still worship with our bodies and minds? Of
course! Our bodies are the temples of the Holy Spirit, so use it for worship! “Love the Lord with all your heart, all your
soul, all your mind, and with all your strength.” The
intellect and physicality were not excluded in worship. And we must worship God
the right way—in truth, not falsehood.
I am reminded of what Archbishop William
Temple of Canterbury said about worship, and I believe it is the best
definition I’ve come across:
“Worship
is the submission of all of our nature to God.
It is the quickening of conscience by His holiness,
Nourishment of mind by His truth,
Purifying of imagination by His beauty,
Opening of the heart to His love,
And submission of will to His purpose.
And all this gathered up in adoration is the greatest of human
expressions of which we are capable.”
It is the quickening of conscience by His holiness,
Nourishment of mind by His truth,
Purifying of imagination by His beauty,
Opening of the heart to His love,
And submission of will to His purpose.
And all this gathered up in adoration is the greatest of human
expressions of which we are capable.”
The woman at the well must have been
confused at all this. Perhaps this was too deep for her limited understanding. “I know that the Messiah is coming, and that
He will explain all these things to us.”
This is where Jesus made one of the
clearest declarations of His identity in the Bible. “I who speak to you am He.”
We can learn a lot from Jesus’ method of
conversation. We cannot give water to one who is not thirsty. We cannot give
food to one who is not hungry. We need to help that person come to realize and
acknowledge his need so that he would be able to receive the fulfilment that we
present to him in the person of Jesus Christ. Though the woman attempted to
change the subject, He used the new topic to continue revealing Himself as the
answer to all of life’s questions. By declaring “I am He,” Jesus was explicitly offering the living water which He
was speaking of, and the soil of the woman’s heart was ready to receive.
Next, the disciples arrived on
the scene. . .
Blessings,
Nathanael Chong
Nathanael Chong