John 4:1-30
Today we meet a Samaritan woman who has found herself treated very badly by life and society, but finds herself in conversation with the Messiah himself, discussing ‘living water’.
Everything about this interaction is wrong. To be in Samaria is risky, to stop to talk to a Samaritan is not culturally acceptable. Worse than that, she is a Samaritan woman who is alone. The disciple’s reaction in 4:27 shows us how surprising this was. She has come at noon to collect water, the worst time of day, perhaps because she is an outcast and her life circumstances are reviled.
None of that matters to Jesus, who gets straight to the point and challenges her need for living water (John 7:37-39). She doesn’t understand to start with, but she is desperate and in compassion Jesus draws her need out of her and then reveals himself as the answer to her pain. As he does so we learn that places, either Jerusalem or Gerizim, are not important when it comes to the worship of God. What matters is what is happening in our hearts. As soon as she knows who he is she puts aside any social difficulties there may be to tell her neighbours about what has happened. It seems that they too are desperate for answers and come running to meet him.
Jesus approach to this woman may feel a little uncomfortable in our modern society with its anxiety not to offend, but Jesus knows the kindest thing he can do is break past our defences to draw us to the father.
Response: Choose a word, phrase, idea or action that strikes you as significant at this moment in your life and spend a few minutes reflecting on it.
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