John 4:1-26 · Jesus Talks With a Samaritan Woman
Jacob's Well
John 4:1-26, John 4:27-38, John 4:39-42
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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With joy you will draw water from the wells of salvation. (Isaiah 12:3)

My people have committed two evils: they have forsaken me, the fountain of living water, and dug out cisterns for themselves, cracked cisterns that can hold no water. (Jeremiah 2:13)

Props: a fountain of water (you can find small fountains at most greenhouses or online) running; large pot made of pottery or clay; bottle of spring water; baptismal font or other large bowl of water with nearby towel; fishbowl; glasses of water that look the same (but one is salt-water, one spiked with unsweetened lemon juice, one from a river or creek nearby, one with some bitter herbs in it; one with sparkling water in it or from a local impeccably clean water source)

Open your sermon by holding a glass of water--have a few more glasses of water nearby on a table

I have here a glass of water.   It looks refreshing….right? Especially on a hot day like today.

Anyone care to taste it?   [get a volunteer]

[as they say yuck or turn up their noses…..]

It’s salt water!   It tastes terrible. It’s not going to quench your thirst, is it?

I won’t ask for any more volunteers….. You will probably never trust me again. Please forgive me.

But I have up here on this table a number of glasses of water.

This one has unsweetened lemon juice in it. This one is water from the nearby creek. This one has some bitter herbs in it. You can take my word for it. It tastes terrible.

And then there’s this one…… I drew it from a fresh water spring down at __________. [Or the sparkling water.]

THIS is as good as it gets! [Ask for a volunteer to taste it –no tricks this time –promise!]

THAT’s good water. And that’s the kind of living water Jesus has for you.

In this world though, we think we can get our water from all kinds of places. We spend our time trying to create our own water, store the water we find, look for water everywhere but in Jesus. We have an identity problem.

All of you have no doubt at some point seen a pond that has been untouched by running, flowing water. It’s gone stagnant, putrid.

A stagnant pond is not pretty. It’s filled with weeds, bacteria, slime, and scum. It smells rancid. Nothing edible can live or grow there. Some of you have seen stagnant happen if you have a pet fish or turtle and you don’t clean the bowl for a long while.

It gets cloudy, gooey, odd and unusual things start to grow in it, a green slime forms on the top of it. Fish cannot last too long in that environment.

Now picture that pond or fish tank as your soul. We start out clean and fresh, poured out with the Holy Spirit. But something happens to us when we are not continually flushed and filled with the living waters of God. We can suck on our own juice only so long, but without prayer, without scripture, without worship, we can stray away from the fresh waters of the Spirit that cleanse us, remove the impurities that surround us, provide fresh nourishment and oxygen so that we can see and hear and taste clearly again.

Something happens when the source of our water is cut off. Sin is essentially the absence of God.

[hold up a fishbowl of water] This is your soul on sin.

When some of you were young, you encountered a well. Some houses still draw from well water. Close to the house somewhere in the yard, back or front, would be a well, of stone and perhaps concrete, with a bucket and rope, or with a pump attached and a faucet with a spigot. To draw water, you would need to let down the rope and bucket and draw up the water, OR you would pump the metal pump beside the well, and the water would bubble up and burst out of the spigot in front, hopefully into your waiting bucket.

Ever wonder where that water came from? Wells are like little peepholes into underground springs. They tap the running subterranean waters in the earth, fresh and filled with minerals, and pull it up to the surface where we can drink it, bathe in it, use it to water our land and our animals on the farms. The well was an important way to tap the clearest cleanest waters in the underground places of the earth.

When wells become contaminated by garbage, nearby mining, or chemicals, the water is no longer the fresh, clean water it started out to be. But when left untouched by human hands, it’s the cleanest, clearest water you can find!

“Living water” is the name of those freshwater underground running streams, untouched by human hands and human sinning against God’s land and water. Living water is our pure, unadulterated life source.

We cannot live without water! We are blessed in our country to have abundant sources of water, although Canada is blessed above everyone. Some nations are not so fortunate. No wonder they value those wells and springs above all else. Fresh drinking water, water for farms and animals, water for bathing is a treasured source and force, especially in regions where there isn’t much rain.

This was the case too in Jesus’ time. People depended upon the abundant springs running under the earth, and the wells that would tap them. They would go daily to the well to draw up the fresh, running, clean, clear water that would taste so good and sustain their life in the desert environments.

This “living water” was truly a life source and a life force.

Our kids may think that drinking water comes out of bottles, but if you are ever in the wild or in the mountains and have the opportunity to drink from a natural spring, you know that there is nothing like it. It’s mouth-watering fresh and thirst-quenching pure. It’s water untouched by humanity. Its sources are mysterious to us, its nature and how it gets to be so pure, only a secret of the rocks and the earth itself.

This is the kind of living water that Jesus wants to give us –to nourish our stagnant minds and dry souls.

This is the message had for the woman he met at Jacob’s Well that hot day outside of Sychar. And it’s the message he still has for us today.

Samaria where Jacob’s Well was built by the hands of Jacob as an altar to God many years ago was part of the original Israel –the northern kingdom whose Jewish people were scattered, who intermarried, who were lost to the faith. Jesus is seeking all of those lost sheep of Israel to bring them back to God, back to faith, back to wholeness and life.

And God is seeking YOU. Many of you have strayed. Even those of you who attend church every single week –some of you have weakened in your faith, have stopping believing in the coming kingdom, in the power of the risen, living, present Jesus in your life in the here and now. Jesus is telling us in this scripture today –he is here! He IS the Life. HE is the living water, the eternal fountain. God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. And He is here for YOU.

God’s living water is paradoxical: a fountain is always the same, and always changing; it is always still and always flowing. God is the eternal fountain that can nurture and nourish anyone anytime. For those who live on dry land . . . and we all live in a dry and thirsty land . . . this is e “good news.”

It’s a hot summer day today. Remember that water you tasted earlier? Imagine being out all day, thirsty and tired, and being given that amazing, spring water. It would taste so awesome, wouldn’t it? Refreshing, cool, fresh, wonderful?

This is what God’s grace is like for your soul. That is why the Psalmist could sing,

“Taste and see….that the Lord is good!”

Letting Jesus into your life is like standing under a clean, fresh waterfall, or gulping down the fresh, clean water of that mountain lake on a hot and dusty day. It restores your body. He restores your soul.

What are the words to the 23rd psalm? Recite them with me now:

“The Lord is my shepherd, I cannot want [for anything]; He makes me lie down
In green pastures; he leads me beside still waters; he restores my soul.
He leads me in right paths for his name’s sake.
Even though I walk through the darkest valley,
I fear no evil, for you are with me;
your rod and your staff they comfort me.
You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies,
You anoint my head with oil;
My cup overflows,
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life,
And I shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever [eternally].”

Letting Jesus into your life is as simple as putting your faith and trust in him to lead you wherever He will take you, knowing that wherever you are sent in mission and ministry, there will be living water from him nearby.

We don’t like trusting that much. We are prideful, and we want to control our own lives. This is why some of our wells are now contaminated. This is why we have destroyed some of our mountain streams with mining and chemicals. This is why we have tried to control our water supplies by putting them in holding tanks, and cisterns, and drawing them from dirty rivers and then infusing them with cleansing chemicals. We are a species that loves control.

[point to the clay jar]

We would rather hoard away our water in jars and tanks then be dependent upon God to give us our “daily draught,” wouldn’t we?

Our fear is making our faith rank. Our fear is like that slime in that rancid tank, the muck that lays over that stagnant pond. Not just our apathy, not just our ignorance of where to find the living water, but our fear and our stubbornness and our need to control is choking out the sources of living water and allowing our soul to corrode in the rank, stagnant waters of life without God.

The greatest folly we can make is to think we can make water better than God, or to bottle up the “living water” rather than let it run free and flow.

Proverbs 4:23 tells us “Keep your heart with all vigilance for from it flows the springs of life.” Our heart is the place where God wants to dig a well, from whence we can draw on the living waters of God’s Holy Spirit and allow it to refresh and renew our lives.

You can’t stop the flow of a natural spring, or it can’t feed the well. We thirst, all of us, for God. And only Jesus can nourish us, satisfy us bodily and spiritually.

Many of our churches have become like bottled water, keeping Jesus contained and to ourselves. Even more churches have become like those stagnant ponds, with no life source to move and purify and keep it teeming with life.

Only Jesus can supply what we are missing in our lives. Jesus is the living water. THIS is what truth tastes like.

There was once a man whose home was caught in a flood. He sat on the roof wondering what to do. He was afraid to get into the boat with the others. He was afraid to ride the waves. And so he sat, and he waited until the water covered the house.

We are all of us volunteering to drown in stagnant or raging waters, when God offers us the clean, mysterious, springs of living water that can transfigure our lives, cleanse our souls, invigorate our hearts.

It’s all about the relationship.

In the Hebrew tradition, the “underground waters” of our souls are our hidden imagination, our dreams, our springs of hope. We need to continually allow our wells to (over)flow with living water, the creative, generative, healing power of Jesus that has all of the ancient connotations of God’s creative power and the mystery of the Deep.

Your life can be a mikveh of God’s healing and blessing, a wellspring of God’s restorative power.

Water is essential for life. The living water of Jesus is vital to your soul. Let the mystery live in you. Jesus is calling all of you to meet him at the well. Jesus IS the living water and the gift of God to all of us. He is the path in the wilderness that flows and waters your life and mine:

“I will even make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert. For I will pour water upon him who is thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground. I will pour My Spirit upon your offspring and My blessing upon your descendants. And they shall spring up among the grass like willows or poplars by the watercourses --Isaiah 43

I invite all of you now to come forward to the altar and washing your hands and face in the living waters of the baptismal font (or bowl). You may also wash the hands of another. Come and renew your faith, let Jesus live in you anew!

[The congregation may sing: Rivers of Living Water, or someone may sing it as people come forward]:

Rivers of living water, Rivers that flow from the throne,Rivers o’erflowing with blessing, Coming from Jesus alone.                                                                                                                                                  

Rivers of living water, Rivers of life so free,Flowing from Thee, my Savior,   Send now the rivers through me.

Whoso is thirsty come hither, Here is abundant supply;Water transparent as crystal, Come without money and buy.

Cleanse me, oh, cleanse me, my Savior, Make me a channel today;Empty me, fill me and use me, Teach me to trust and obey.

Then, and then only, Lord Jesus, Through me the rivers can flow;Thus and thus only will others Learn Thy great fulness to know.

Now I surrender to Jesus, Here I lay all at His feet;Anything, anywhere only, Just for His service made meet!


*Notes: When Jesus traveled from the Judean wilderness and John the Baptist back to Galilee, he had to travel through Samaria. (Map taken from online article “7 Differences Between Judea and Galilee in the Time of Jesus” by Justin Taylor, August 17, 2011, to be found at http://www.thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/justintaylor/2011/08/17/7-differences-between-galilee-and-judea-in-the-time-of-jesus/ ).

Based on the Story Lectionary

Major Text

John’s Witness (Chapter 4): Jesus at Jacob’s Well

Minor Text

Genesis (2:4-25): The water that springs forth from God

Genesis (26): Isaac reopens the wells his father had dug

Genesis (35:7): Jacob builds an altar that becomes Jacob’s Well

Genesis (12:7, 12:8, 8:20): Abraham and Noah build altars (wells)

Exodus (17): The Lord provides water from a rock

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 (47): Ezekiel’s vision of the flowing waters of God

John’s Witness of Jesus at Jacob’s Well

Now when Jesus learned that the Pharisees had heard, “Jesus is making and baptizing more disciples than John” —although it was not Jesus himself but his disciples who baptized— he left Judea and started back to Galilee. But he had to go through Samaria. So he came to a Samaritan city called Sychar, near the plot of ground that Jacob had given to his son Joseph. Jacob’s well was there, and Jesus, tired out by his journey, was sitting by the well. It was about noon.

A Samaritan woman came to draw water, and Jesus said to her, “Give me a drink.”  (His disciples had gone to the city to buy food.) The Samaritan woman said to him, “How is it that you, a Jew, ask a drink of me, a woman of Samaria?” (Jews do not share things in common with Samaritans.) Jesus answered her, “If you knew the gift of God, and who it is that is saying to you, ‘Give me a drink,’ you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water.” The woman said to him, “Sir, you have no bucket, and the well is deep. Where do you get that living water? Are you greater than our ancestor Jacob, who gave us the well, and with his sons and his flocks drank from it?”  Jesus said to her, “Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again, but those who drink of the water that I will give them will never be thirsty. The water that I will give will become in them a spring of water gushing up to eternal life.” The woman said to him, “Sir, give me this water, so that I may never be thirsty or have to keep coming here to draw water.”

Jesus said to her, “Go, call your husband, and come back.” The woman answered him, “I have no husband.” Jesus said to her, “You are right in saying, ‘I have no husband’; for you have had five husbands, and the one you have now is not your husband. What you have said is true!” The woman said to him, “Sir, I see that you are a prophet. Our ancestors worshiped on this mountain, but you say that the place where people must worship is in Jerusalem.” Jesus said to her, “Woman, believe me, the hour is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem. You worship what you do not know; we worship what we know, for salvation is from the Jews.  But the hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father seeks such as these to worship him. God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.” The woman said to him, “I know that Messiah is coming” (who is called Christ). “When he comes, he will proclaim all things to us.”  Jesus said to her, “I am he, the one who is speaking to you.”

Just then his disciples came. They were astonished that he was speaking with a woman, but no one said, “What do you want?” or, “Why are you speaking with her?” Then the woman left her water jar and went back to the city. She said to the people, “Come and see a man who told me everything I have ever done! He cannot be the Messiah, can he?” They left the city and were on their way to him.

Meanwhile the disciples were urging him, “Rabbi, eat something.” But he said to them, “I have food to eat that you do not know about.” So the disciples said to one another, “Surely no one has brought him something to eat?” Jesus said to them, “My food is to do the will of him who sent me and to complete his work. Do you not say, ‘Four months more, then comes the harvest’? But I tell you, look around you, and see how the fields are ripe for harvesting. The reaper is already receiving wages and is gathering fruit for eternal life, so that sower and reaper may rejoice together. For here the saying holds true, ‘One sows and another reaps.’ I sent you to reap that for which you did not labor. Others have labored, and you have entered into their labor.”

Many Samaritans from that city believed in him because of the woman’s testimony, “He told me everything I have ever done.” So when the Samaritans came to him, they asked him to stay with them; and he stayed there two days. And many more believed because of his word. They said to the woman, “It is no longer because of what you said that we believe, for we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this is truly the Savior of the world.”

Image Exegesis: Jacob’s Well

In that day the mountains shall drip sweet wine,     the hills shall flow with milk, and all the stream beds of Judah     shall flow with water; a fountain shall come forth from the house of the Lord     and water the Wadi Shittim. (Joel 3:18)

As we can see in the Hebrew scriptures, some of which are in today’s lectionary passages, although there are many more, the metaphors of “well,” “fountain,” “spring,” “river,” and “water,” particularly “living water” are recurrent throughout the scriptures in both the Torah and the prophets. Jacob’s Well in Jesus’ time was located in Samaria, where no Jew would go. The Pool of Siloam, which has similar themes, and is seen later in scripture, was located in Judea outside of Jerusalem and was used frequently, especially in the celebration of Sukkot. It was the place of one of Jesus’ healings. The pool of Bethesda, also located outside of Jerusalem was a source also of Jesus’ healings. Water, as in baptism, is a powerful metaphor for the power of God, for the identity of the Son, and for the movement of the Holy Spirit, as we saw in prior exegeses.

If you look at the scriptures, beginning with Genesis and through all of the prophets, God’s Holy Spirit is represented by Water. God is the Living Water and the Well of Salvation (Isaiah). But not just any water –moving water. God’s breath moves across the waters in creation and creates land from the deep. The waters rise up through the dry land to moisten the soil in Genesis 2. God moves the waters in the Exodus so that people can cross through; God provides water from rock in the wilderness, so that people can drink. God’s voice appears in the baptism of Jesus in water, just as God’s Spirit moves the springs that provide water to the wells in the Hebrew scriptures.

The waters of the Holy Spirit are mysterious, deep, hidden, but moving, fresh, clean, pure. And they rise up within wells, which are the vehicles of revelation between God and humankind. The metaphor of the well is a communicator for the fresh springs of God’s presence.

Underground springs are the source of all water in the middle eastern regions, other than lakes and rivers. In desert like environments, water is the most important and vital source of life. It isn’t surprising that water plays such an important part metaphorically in the scriptures. Without it, people literally could not live. Underground springs run through many of the regions. The springs are subterranean freshwater sources that are fresh, clean, sparkling, and clear. When a well is built upon a spring, it will bubble forth and fill the well, so that the water can be obtained. These wells are built from hewn rock in the earth, and the source is tapped in order to nourish and water the community and the land. The image is identical to the one in Genesis 2, in which the springs rise from underneath the grounds to water the earth and create an environment for life. With the water and the earth, God would create humankind (adama).

God IS the source of the waters of life. And in the gospel of John, Jesus clearly maintains that HE is that source. The encounter at the well is a clear sign pointing to the messiahship of Jesus, but also to Jesus AS the Son of the living God with the power to restore, heal, give eternal life. He is the living water in which all people can be planted and sustained. And through the roots, they are given life and fruit. Righteousness and life happens through relationship with God:

They will be like a tree planted by the water that sends out its roots by the stream. It does not fear when heat comes; its leaves are always green. It has no worries in a year of drought and never fails to bear fruit." (Jeremiah 17:8)

My roots will reach to the water, and the dew will lie all night on my branches. (Job 29:19)

That person is like a tree planted by streams of water, which yields its fruit in season and whose leaf does not wither-- whatever they do prospers. (Psalm 1:3)

Fruit trees of all kinds will grow on both banks of the river. Their leaves will not wither, nor will their fruit fail. Every month they will bear fruit, because the water from the sanctuary flows to them. Their fruit will serve for food and their leaves for healing." (Ezekiel 47:12)

And there are many, many more references to this relationship between God/Jesus and humankind. Jesus is both the Water that nourishes and the Tree of Life in which we become part. This is a supremely important metaphor in that it shows what Paul would later to refer to as “you in Christ” and “Christ in you.” When you are fed by the source, the source lives in you, and you become your best self.

The meeting at the well between Jesus and the Samaritan woman is yet another sign of God’s coming restoration, and it is significant that it happens here in Samaria, near Sychar at the Well of Jacob, in the land which was the former northern Kingdom of Israel. This was ground that Jacob gave to Joseph. Jesus passes through it on his way back to Galilee with his disciples, but he purposely stops by the well and sends his disciples on to the town to buy food. And there, he encounters the woman.*

She may be one of the “lost sheep” of Israel. But there are so many shockers about this story. She is a Samaritan, with whom the Jews don’t associate, as they have fallen away from the faith. She is a woman, with whom these men would certainly not associate, as it would have been uncouth. She is a woman who has been married multiple times but now lives with another man, which would have been a “no-no” in Jewish tradition. She is coming to the well at high noon, probably when no one else will be there, so she may not be the most respected in her society.

The woman is bringing her bucket and rope. The well, similar to the one that bears its name in Texas pictured above, would have been hewn in solid rock and surrounded by a rock lip. The well was deep, she said. The well (Jacob’s Well where Sychar would have been) is today about 66-75 ft deep. It was 105 ft deep when discovered in 1697, and was most likely even deeper in Jesus’ day. It was about 9 or 10 ft in diameter but with a stone arched lip that made it about 20 inches around the ledge. It was simply a hold in the ground, not a raised structure as our modern wells. And it had no attached rope or bucket. But one would need to bring their own apparatus in order to draw up the water. The well lay near Mt. Gerizim, one of the most visited and holy sites in the Hebrew scriptures, where encounters with God abounded.

The area was dependent on the well. The weather and ground would have been dry with little rain. The water would have been used for cooking, washing, as well as holy rituals, such as water for a mikveh. It was fresh water, running water, not still water that came from the well and its subterranean springs.

But the well as metaphor also has relational connotations. It is a “meeting place.” At a well is where Jacob met Rachel. At a well, Abraham’s servant finds Rebecca for Isaac. Moses met his wife at a well. It is a place where God dwells, and God’s presence is known. We see this especially in the story of Miriam. Upon Miriam’s death, the well water departed. God’s presence was upon that relationship.

The well was also a place of relationship with God in that in scripture, wells are built where altars are built. In fact the two become almost interchangeable. Abraham builds an altar to God, and digs a well. Noah builds an altar. Isaac builds an altar. Jacob builds an altar. As the early fathers of the faith follow God into the new land, they stop on their way, and they built altars to God. And they build wells, so that their animals and their families can be nourished. They are nourished by both the fresh waters and by the Spirit of God, and their faith that is strengthened within that relationship of “tree” and “water.”

Here within this super-packed powerful metaphor Jesus meets a Samaritan woman --a lost sheep. And he guides her back to the “living water.”

As with Jesus’ disciples, and certainly many others, she doesn’t get it right away. Jesus uses a word play on “living water.” All undergrounds springs are referred to as “living water.” They are fresh, moving, subterranean waters accessible from the well. But Jesus refers to “living water” as a sign that this well, and these waters are holy waters of God, that HE is the living water of God, that HE is God come to restore. Only when he “tells her her life” in the midst of that miracle, she realizes, he could be the true messiah. And she runs back to tell the others in her town, who then invite Jesus to stay for two days with them.

Interestingly, the disciples come back from town to see Jesus speaking with a woman, and are taken aback by his behavior. But they wisely keep quiet and go with it. They then witness to Jesus’ ministry to the Samaritans for two days, in which Jesus tells them of God’s coming kingdom.

Jesus’ ministry is not just to Judea, but to everyone, and he invites those from the lost of Israel to come back to the fold. God’s restoration is for all God’s people. We see that the woman is one of those lost, because she knows the traditions. She speaks of her ancestors worshiping on the mountain of God. She knows a messiah is supposed to come to proclaim God’s will. She is obviously an ancestor of Israel. And Jesus appeals to her telling her “the water I will give will become in them a spring of water gushing up to eternal life.” He says, “I am he, the one who is speaking to you.” The woman is so excited, she leaves her jar and runs back to the town.

Jesus then tells his inquiring disciples, “the fields are ripe for harvesting.” It is time. The sower and reaper rejoice together (the Father and the Son).

After spending those days with the Samaritans, surely convincing many, bringing back many to God, Jesus goes back through Cana to Galilee, stopping to heal a royal official’s son. And he is welcomed in Galilee. They have already heard what he did in Judea. His fame is spreading.

Jesus is proclaiming the coming of God’s restoration everywhere from town to town, preaching in their synagogues, and on hillsides, stopping along the way. He is the living water, rushing through the town. He is the voice of God flowing out to the people that the time has come.

Isaiah, the prophet echoed by John the Baptist (43) said, “I will even make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert. For I will pour water upon him who is thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground. I will pour My Spirit upon your offspring and My blessing upon your descendants. And they shall spring up among the grass like willows or poplars by the watercourses.”

This is the announcement of John and the verification that Jesus gives to the woman at the well. Jesus IS the way in the wilderness. He IS the river in the desert. He IS the water poured out to those who are thirsty, and the flood on dry ground. Jesus IS the Holy Spirit poured out to all of God’s people in restoration. And like the mustard seed, Jesus’ followers will begin to spring up, repent, return to God. Jesus IS God’s promise.

We all need to be filled with the freshness, cleanness, healing properties of the living water. And rooted in Jesus, our faith will move mountains. The living Holy Spirit is always moving within us. Without the stream of God’s spirit, our faith becomes rancid and still. With Jesus, we become vital, a formidable source and force of God’s love and restoration for all people.

He is calling all of us to meet him at the well.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner