John 4:1-26 · Jesus Talks With a Samaritan Woman
John 4:5-42
John 4:1-26
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
Loading...

A quick study of the viral-like growth of Protestantism after the Reformation makes one things agonizingly obvious: nothing divides Christians more quickly or fiercely than familiarity. Small differences in practices, subtle translation preferences, and genuine theological disagreements severed similar Christians into antagonistic opponents. And it’s not just Christians who are doing this. In the past decade we have become acutely aware of the deep, often deadly divides between Shiite and Sunni Muslims. But in the first century the deep divide between Jews and Gentiles was not nearly as rancorous as were the animosities that simmered between the Jews and their “kissing cousins,” the Samaritans.

That long-established lack of love between Jews and Samaritans is the underlying landscape of today’s gospel text. Jesus left Judea and started back towards Galilee using the more-traveled, but less-desirable route that passed through Samaritan lands. John’s text insists that Jesus “had to go through Samaria,” a mandate that ignores the TransJordan route and suggests to some scholars that this was a missional, not a geographical choice. If so, Jesus’ side-trip into Samaria was part of divine design, not just an easier road.

This week’s gospel text is lengthy. It encompasses the entire Samaritan sojourn and Jesus’ multiple exchanges between the local woman, then with his disciples, and finally with the villagers’ eventual response to his words and witness. We will focus on the initial discussions that ensued between Jesus and the Samaritan woman.

Jews considered Samaritans racially suspect. Typically Samaritans were Jews who had escaped the Assyrian exile and inter-married with the local Canaanite population. But on top of being racially suspect, they were deemed theologically stunted. Samaritans accepted only the Pentateuch as scripture, disregarding the other Old Testament books.

For Jew and Samaritan both, there is no mistaking the significance of Jesus’ midday resting spot. Jacob gave this site over to his beloved Joseph (Genesis 48:22). For centuries the well had furnished the flocks and families of the patriarch with fresh water.

Here John’s gospel emphasizes Jesus’ simple humanity. After walking all morning in the heat of the midday sun, Jesus was tired, hot, hungry, and thirsty. As this most sacred personage in Christianity rests at a sacred spot for both Jews and Samaritans, a most un-sacred individual approaches.

A Samaritan woman comes to Jacob’s well at midday. She comes at a time when no one did “chores” and she is a alone (not with a friendly entourage of fellow females). These simple facts speak volumes about her acceptability within her own community. No Jewish male should speak to an unaccompanied woman, much less to a Samaritan woman.

Yet Jesus addresses her directly and invites her interaction with him. “Give me a drink”(v.7). No wonder the woman is astonished! She knows well the history of animosity between Jews and Samaritans. She knows well that, as John’s text notes, ”Jews do not share things in common with Samaritans.” In other words, according to Jewish law, she and her water-hauling vessel were considered “unclean.”

Jesus’ response moves his request to a higher plane. He challenges the Samaritan woman to consider something more soul-saturating than the water in Jacob’s well. Jesus tries to redirect her attention from the water at the bottom of the well. The well offers “water,” but Jesus offers “living water.”

Water was a vital, life-giving, never-taken-for-granted fluid in those arid middle eastern lands. Plain old water was never “plain old.” It was an absolute necessity, a sought after and fought over commodity. “Living water” was an established metaphor for something more than a wet slurp. “Living water” evoked scriptural images from the wilderness wanderings, to the establishment in Carnaan, to the words of the prophet Isaiah promising a flourishing, fulfilled existence to an Israel that faced exile.

Suddenly the encounter between Jesus and the Samaritan woman takes on a different hue. Jesus’ previous discussion about being “born again” with a learned, scripturally savvy orthodox Jew had suffered from the inability of Nicodemus to get beyond the literal meaning of Jesus’ words. Similarly, here the simple Samaritan woman, whose moral lapses will soon be exposed, is also incapable of moving beyond the literal meaning of “water” into the metaphor for eternal life Jesus is offering.

Yet while the woman at the well might miss the metaphorical meaning Jesus alludes to, she is quick to offer historical backbone for her brickbats. The Samaritan woman knows her heritage. She challenges Jesus to prove that he is somehow greater than “our ancestor Jacob.”

Jesus responds not by negating her history, but by offering a new chapter she might embrace. Jacob’s well is not demeaned, but its physical limitations are exposed: those who drink of it “will be thirsty again” (v.13). The “water” Jesus offers, the “living water,” banishes thirst forever. No refills are necessary. Although the woman fails to grasp the true significance of what Jesus is offering, his startling words have grabbed her attention and raised her estimation of the man who sits before her. While she had first addressed Jesus rather callously as “a Jew,” she now respectfully refers to him with the title “sir” (“kyrie”).

Abruptly Jesus changes the focus of their conversation from “living water” to living arrangements. What might seem like an odd and unrelated directive on Jesus’ part “Go, call your husband and come back!” -serves to engage the Samaritan woman on a different level. Her reply, while accurate, “I have no husband,” is hardly revealing. In fact, it seems at first to be an attempt to firmly close the door on any more inquiries into her personal life. But her reply gives Jesus the perfect key to open the door to her private failures. We are not told whether her five marriages came to an end because of death or divorce. But even if strictly legal, rabbinic authorities firmly frowned on any more than three marriages. This woman’s moral reputation was clearly in the dumpster.

While the Samaritan woman may have been hoping to sidestep Jesus’ probing into her personal life it is his spot-on knowledge of her marital situation that convinces her that he is “a prophet.” (v.19) This new understanding of Jesus leads her to begin discussing the theological differences between Jews and Samaritans. Despite the fact that her immoral lifestyle choices have surely put this woman outside “acceptable” status within her community, she nevertheless knows well the decisive differences that divide Jews and Samaritans. Most basic among those was the central place of worship—for Jews it was the Temple in Jerusalem, for Samaritans it was at the site of much earlier temple located on Mt. Gerizim. The Gerizim temple had been destroyed in 128 BCE, but the site was still the sacred center for Samaritan worship and sacrifices.

Jesus’ response opens a new third way for acceptable worship. First, Jesus affirms the covenant heritage of the Jews over that of the Samaritans, because of that divine promise “salvation is from the Jews” (v.20). But the salvation story is not complete. A new chapter is about to unfold — a time when “true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth” (v.21). The physical location of worship is no longer crucial because it is Jesus’ presence that offers the new “location” of God’s “spirit” and God’s “truth.”

Perhaps because she cannot fully comprehend Jesus’ startling new information the Samaritan woman responds by offering yet another theological tenant that she does know, “…the Messiah is coming.” Her understanding of this “messiah” is defined by her Samaritan heritage, which taught that the “Ta’eb” (the Samaritan messiah) would reveal all things. Jesus’ knowledge of her own private life has apparently triggered that association in her mind.

Jesus’ answer seemed to be an affirmation to the woman. It is the first of many “ego eimi” or “I am” declarations found in John’s gospel. Since Exodus 3:14 “ego eimi” has indicated the very presence of God. Jesus’ assertion to the woman that “ego eimi” challenges the Samaritan woman to recognize as Messiah the one who brings God’s presence “in spirit and truth” to the people, not just as someone who can know her secrets.

The first section of this Samaritan scene ends with the return of the disciples. They appear suitably astonished and subtly appalled to find Jesus talking with a Samaritan and a woman. The woman herself leaves immediately. The telling detail of her abandoned water jar suggests she might return.

Although she leaves Jesus at the well, the woman takes the possibility of a new reality with her. Considering all Jesus has said to her, she wonders if he truly may be the Messiah. Her definition of messiah, one who knows all about her, still reflects her old understanding. It is her imperfect testimony, however, that motivates the movement of those who hear her to go and seek out Jesus.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Commentary, by Leonard Sweet