THIRD SUNDAY OF LENT

Jn 4:4-42

Dear Friends, Today’s story of the Samaritan woman is the first of three addressing the reality of our sinful humanity being called to salvation this Lent.  The blind man and the raising of Lazarus conclude John’s powerful invitation into the saving powers of encountering Jesus in our life.

There is level after level of messaging in today’s Gospel.  I want to develop the beauty of being drawn into a saving dialogue with a very persistent God.

Right off, the woman basically rejects any kind of dialogue. For a man and woman to be talking in public was a gross violation of the customs.  Then add the centuries of hostility of the Jews and Samaritans and you have an explosive situation. It is as if she says to Jesus.”You truly are one ignorant hombre to ask me for a drink.  Do you have any idea how much trouble this can bring to both of us?”

Jesus cuts through her defenses for the first of many times.  Soon He asks about her husband.  She goes theological on him to avoid this delicate topic.  Her relationships are the last thing she wants to talk about.


Jesus persists.  As before, He takes her response and goes deeper and His truth bubbles to the surface.  Eventually, she takes a sip. It frees up her fears and resistance. She soon discovers she is on to something good here.

As she finally opens herself up to Jesus, she experiences a new freedom and a power beyond her dreams.  She casts off the burden of her disgrace and all the other destructive baggage that was her life along with the hurt in her heart.

She embraces the living water of Jesus and begins to grasp that this is what she had always been seeking in the confusion and self-deception that had been the driving force of her life.

As Jesus had said earlier to the first disciples, she now proclaims to her townsfolk, “Come and see!”  They do and are joyful in what they find.

This is a story of salvation and how it works.  It is our story.  Our God is a patient and persistent God who is open to our search, accepts us in our brokenness and has a permanent invitation to the living water.  As with the Samaritan woman, who is also a symbol of sinful humankind, God is waiting for us.  The dialogue of our life experience is pregnant with the possibility of the new life that the living water brings.  As we gradually surrender our fears and defenses, we are able to admit and name our thirst.  It is of such depth and magnitude that only Jesus can quench it with the power of His word that is the living water.

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