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The Well Is Deep
John 4:5-26
Grace to you and peace from God our Father, and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Without water, nothing can live. Two-thirds of the earth is made up of water. 75% of the human body is water. Ultimately, even the desert camel must drink water, or it will die. Water is essential to life. Some might even say that water is life.
One can surely understand why Jesus sat down by the well. He was tired after traveling through Samaria. In the warm, dry climate, Jesus was tired and undoubtedly thirsty. The sun was no doubt high in the sky, beating down on Him. While He sat by the well, a Samaritan woman came to draw water. This is unusual. It was about 12 noon, the sixth hour. Water was usually drawn from the village wells in the cool of the early morning, and again in the evening. Seldom did someone come to the well in the heat of the day to draw water.
Nevertheless, this woman comes to get water; and there sits Jesus. Certainly, it would have been out of place for a woman to initiate conversation. She was also a Samaritan, whom the Jews regarded as “half-breeds” and held in contempt. In the eyes of the culture, this woman was to be disregarded. Yet, Jesus ignores all of that. He says to this woman, “Will you give me a drink?” The woman replies, “You are a Jew and I am a Samaritan woman. How can you ask me for a drink?” In effect, she wanted to know what was wrong with this guy.
But the Samaritan woman is thirsty, too. Jesus wanted her to recognize her spiritual thirst, to see Him as the One who is the Giver of living water, eternal life. As we encounter Jesus in His Word today, we also must consider our own thirst—not thirst for earthly water, but for living water. Jesus says, “If you knew the gift of God, you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water.” As Christians, we’d like to think that we do know God’s gift and who it is that is the Giver of those gifts. We’d like to think we ask that Giver for living water.
But we don’t always. How can that be true? It is true because of sin. Sin clouds our spiritual thinking. Sin separates us from God and from desiring the gifts of God. Sin has left us spiritually parched, dead in trespasses. We were dead to God. There was no desire for the gifts of God, no longing for God. This estrangement from God accounts for all the griefs and sorrows, worries and heartaches, the restlessness and unhappiness, the despondency and despair of the human heart.
Sin causes us to thirst for the things of this world that please our sinful nature. We thirst for that which can satisfy our sinful cravings. We desire wealth and power, money and popularity, advancement at work, success in school, thinking these things can make us truly happy. We desire to better ourselves by any means possible, whether that means speaking lies against a co-worker or classmate, cheating on a test in school, or being lazy at work. Do we know the gift of God? Do we ask Jesus for living water?
Left to ourselves, our sinful nature does not let us understand and know the gift of God. Satan and the world influence us not to ask Jesus for His gift of living water. So we thirst. We are spiritually thirsty people. God in His mercy does not want us to die of spiritual thirst because of our sins. So out of His great love for sinners, God sent His only Son, Jesus Christ, into our sin-filled world. Jesus became subject to human need, even to thirst.
As our Lord hung on the cross, bleeding and dying, John tells us that Jesus said, “I thirst.” Jesus became thirsty for you so that you would never thirst again. The very living water, Jesus Christ, thirsted as He hung on the cross, bearing our sin and enduring our death. Burdened with our sin, Jesus became sin for us. We can certainly say that on the cross, Jesus became spiritually thirsty too, as our sins were upon Him.
Jesus gave us His life on the cross so that you would have life forever with God. This life was for not only for the Jews; it was for the the Samaritans and the Gentiles—indeed, it is for all who are spiritually thirsting because of sin. That life is for you. By God’s grace alone, your sins are forgiven because of Jesus. You have new life through the living of Holy Baptism. As a Baptized child of God, through the power of the Holy Spirit, you are given faith which trusts Jesus as your Savior. Because of that faith, Christ has become a spring of water welling up in you to eternal life.
You no longer thirst, for Jesus has given you His living water. His death on the cross has quenched your spiritual thirst. While we were still sinners, when we didn’t deserve forgiveness, Jesus died to save us. It is by grace, through faith, that you have been saved. His living water is truly a gift of God.
As we continue our Lenten journey to the cross, remember the living water of forgiveness and life which has been given to you. Because of Jesus, we no longer thirst. His love and mercy as He gave up His life for us has quenched our thirst better than any earthly water. The living water Jesus has given to you is a spring of water welling up to eternal life…and the well is deep. In the name of the Father and of the Son (†) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
The peace of God which passes all understanding will keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus always. Amen.


