John 4:1-26 · Jesus Talks With a Samaritan Woman
Deep Well
John 4:1-26
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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“Dig deeper!” the prospector cried.

Imagine digging a hole in the earth only 4 ft wide, being lowered on a ladder into a dark, narrow passageway down to nearly 1285 ft. That’s a quarter of a mile deep –with only a candle for light. That’s deeper than the height of the Empire State Building and 850 feet below sea level. And imagine using only hand tools to chip away at stone and earth, piling it all into buckets to be raised to the top, one bucket at a time. Now imagine doing that for 24 hours a day for four years!

That’s how Woodingdean Well was built –the deepest hand-dug water well in the world, located in Woodingdean in the UK.*

The digging took place from 1858-1862. It took 438 feet to reach water, but when it did, the men had to quickly scramble to the surface, as the water bubbled up and burst out, sending a fountain from the earth into the sky high above the ground. For years, the well served as a water source for towns miles around.

Other wells have garnered similar attention. The hand dug well in Greensburg, Kansas is 109 feet deep. The hand dug well in South Africa called Big Hole is 790 feet deep.

In fact, the Africans never even intended to dig a well, although the well was later used for water! It was a hole dug for the mining of diamonds. The excavators kept going down further and further into the earth until they found the glittering stones. They were inspired by the thought that something valuable was somewhere down there in the earth waiting to be found. They couldn’t give up. They just kept on digging.

Today in South Africa, use of explosives and drilling machines have made mining a high tech business, creating subterranean mining caverns up to 2.5 miles deep with a temperature of 138 degrees Fahrenheit, necessitating cooling devices and oxygen just to tolerate the temperatures and lack of air closer to the earth’s core.

But the fascination with what lies beneath the ground is not merely practical. In early times, Christians would build underground crypts and hiding places where they could be safe, worship, and bury the dead. And in the ancient city of Derinkuyu below Cappadocia, Turkey, an entire underground labyrinth housed 20,000 citizens. The underground tunnels went down 5 levels under the ground, and people lived in those labyrinthine cavities.**

Jacob’s Well in Texas is a huge naturally dug well now used at times as a swimming and diving hole. Although the clear, cool waters and beautiful underground caves are an attraction to swimmers and explorers, many have lost lives in the cool well located in central Texas about an hour southwest of Austin. Underwater caves and turns have made it difficult to get out or to find one’s way to the surface.

Like the frontier of space above the earth, the world under the earth is equally as mysterious, and as fascinating to us.

Jesus told a parable to His disciples in which he describes a valuable “pearl” hidden in a vast field. He points out that a merchant would buy the entire field just to search for that one small pearl hidden somewhere in the earth. And that, Jesus says, is what it’s like to seek the kingdom of God.

We are fascinated about how pure, clean, mineral-fed, life-giving water can flow deep inside of the earth. We are intrigued and stunned by the beauty of diamonds and other gems embedded into the earth’s crust or the underground beauty of caverns and undersea alcoves.

We would be even more fascinated by the Kingdom of God, if we really understood the beauty, the mystery, the intrigue, the anomaly Jesus was describing to us, --something so strange and exquisite, rare and amazing, that if we really comprehended what it was truly worth, we would go to any lengths to see it, feel it, be part of its eternal visage.

How far would you go to see the most beautiful places on earth? To experience the most exciting and intriguing adventures money could buy? Across the country? Across the seas? Into space? To the center of the earth?

Today, you can reserve a room in one of the world’s eight underwater hotels! In Dubai or Sweden or the Caribbean or in Florida –you can literally “sleep with the fishes.” Your room is essentially surrounded by a vast aquarium.

How many of you would stay at that hotel? I think I’d be too nervous to fall asleep! But water fascinates us. It soothes us and calls to us.

How many of you have gone to the beach this summer? To the ocean? Or to a lake? There’s something about water, the power of water, the sound of water, the idea of water that simply excites us. In fact, the US has more than 5,400 miles of shoreline, over 12,400 of which are sea coast. Guess where the majority of people in the US live, or want to live? “The meek shall inherit the earth.” But every weekend, it seems, the rest shall go to the coasts –to the beautiful blue water!

How many of you can imagine the Kingdom of Heaven as equally as fascinating and beautiful?

The scriptures are full of passages about water! We listen to psalm after psalm filled with promises of quenched thirst and quenched needs in the promises of God. We hear about God’s people wandering in the desert, their thirst quenched by waters sprung from rock at Massah and Meribah. How awesome must that have been to see and experience!

But even more fascinating is the story of Jesus in Samaria, who meets a woman at Jacob’s Well. The Samaritans, perhaps more than anyone, except maybe the desert abiding Essenes, were waiting for a Messiah, someone who would understand them, reassure them that they too belonged to the people of God, someone who would bring peace and restore beauty to their people and their land, someone who would break away the rock-hard prejudices bestowed upon their people and restore them into the folds of God’s beloved arms.

Jacob’s well was the original stone-set well and altar dug by Jacob in the land of our ancestors. The well represented the promise made by God to Abraham and Jacob, to Israel, and to all of God’s people, everyone who would follow the One True God of the world.

Jacob’s well was a meeting place, a covenant place, a worship place, a place of promise, where one could look inside and catch a glimpse of the beauty of the kingdom of God.

In Jesus time, that well was no longer in the realm of Jerusalem, but in the land of Samaria, where no “good” Jew would dare trod –except of course, Jesus.

Jesus did not go around Samaria to get to Galilee or to Jerusalem as his colleagues would do, but he deliberately traveled straight through. And he stopped at Jacob’s well.

The people of Jesus’ time continued to be fascinated by the concept of water flowing beneath the earth, rising from inside the earth. This pure, clean drinking water that appeared to come from the very bowels of the earth, just in the way the springs rose from the ground in the account of the Creation in Genesis, was to them a Godsend. It allowed the people in that area access to life-giving sustenance and the ability to drink, wash, cook, and raise animals.

They called this underground source which access point was a stone well dug into the ground –living water. Living water was the stream that flowed underneath the ground, waiting to be accessed and tapped, waiting to be raised to the lips of those who sought it. Living water was life saving. Living water was life giving.

When Jesus meets the woman at the well in the gospel of John, the conversation that follows is priceless. Jesus is again on the lamb, as he would be for most of his ministry. The Pharisees had heard that he was gaining (and baptizing) more disciples than John was (although the scriptures tell us it wasn’t Jesus who was doing the baptizing but his disciples who were carrying out the ritual). But as things were heating up in Judea, he decided to travel back to Galilee for a while. So, in doing so, he journeyed through Samaria and stopped at Sychar, Jacob’s ancestral land. And Jesus sat down by Jacob’s well to rest.

When a Samaritan woman came by to draw water from the well, Jesus asked her for a drink. She was initially shocked, as she knew that mainstream Jews did not associate with Samaritans. But Jesus then says something even more shocking that she would never forget:

“If you knew the gift of God –and who it is who asks you for a drink, you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water!”

At first, she interprets his words literally, and she says, “how would you give me living water, the well is deep, and you have nothing to draw with!”

And then she thinks further and thinks about what he said. Then says to him, “Are you greater than our father Jacob, who gave us the well and drank from it himself, as did also his sons and his livestock?”

Notice how she says, “who gave US the well.”

Jesus answers, “Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again. But whoever drinks the water I give them will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give them will become in them a spring of water welling up to eternal life.”

Whoa! Listen to that again: “the water I give them…..will become IN them a spring of water …..welling up….to eternal life.”

God’s gift is that we ourselves will become a well with an underground source that wells up and overflows –like God’s cup of blessing, overflows with life. Eternal life. The fountain of youth. The eternal spring of God. God the source of life in the midst of every desert. A walking Source of life.

And in fact in the midst of their next conversation, Jesus assures her, ultimately, it’s not going to matter where and in what “temple” one worships. But whether one worships in “spirit and in truth.”

“God is spirit. And his worshipers must worship in the Spirit and in truth.”

If we want to experience the wonder and the beauty of God’s “eternal kingdom,” we must literally allow God to establish the Holy Spirit within us, so that God’s LifeSource dwells within us like an ever-flowing fountain and a pure, clean spring. Then, we can never go “thirsty.” For God’s presence is with us and within us.

How far would you go to find this eternal spring?

Today, all of us seek our own “fountains of youth” in our own ways. Tales of an actual “fountain of youth” have been recounted for thousands of years. But an actual “place” has never been found. But still, we seek out anything that will help us to fend off the years that age us, make us ill, drag us down, draw the life from us. And we will go far and wide to seek out those recipes and those ideas that might extend our lives just a little bit longer.

How far would you go to experience the Kingdom of God?

Jesus tells us, we don’t need to go anywhere. The kingdom of God is right “at hand.” It’s in our midst. It’s in our grasp. That amazing, seemingly elusive, fascinating, beautiful place that we seek in this world is around us and amidst us if only we could take off our rose-colored glasses and see.

All we need to do is “dig a well.” We need to go deep. We need to seek that “pearl” in the field of our world as though we are explorers seeking the most valuable gift in the world. But that pearl can be found right in the hands of God.

Faith is a journey and an excavation of the soul. God can be found in any place and in any time. In the midst of every desert place. In the midst of any vast field. In the depths of the oceans or on the tops of mountains. God is there. All we need to do is open our eyes and ears and take in the sights and sounds of the Living Water of the Lord.

Taste and see.

And the Lord will establish that never-ending spring inside of you! You will experience what it’s like to be filled with the joy and glory of the Lord, to be filled up with good thoughts and tender love, with joy and with mirth so powerful that nothing can quell it.

Jesus is the well. Jesus is the Source.

Jesus is Messiah.


*hometownwaterwells.com
**www.bbc.com

Based on the Story Lectionary

Major Text

Jesus at Jacob’s Well (John 4)

Minor Text

The Water That Springs Forth from God (Genesis 2:4-25)

Isaac Reopens the Wells His Father Had Dug (Genesis 26)

Jacob Builds an Altar that Becomes Jacob’s Well (Genesis 35:7)

The Lord Provides Water from a Rock (Exodus 17)

Psalm 63: The Soul Thirsts for God

Psalm 42: The Lord is the Source of the Waters for Which the Soul Thirsts

Psalm 36: God is the Fountain of Life

Psalm 1: The Faithful are Planted like Trees in Water

Psalm 107: The Lord Satisfies the Thirsty

Psalm 23: He Leads Me Beside Still Waters and Restores My Soul

Ezekiel’s Vision of the Flowing Waters of God (47)

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner