thirst

Living Water

Living Water

Thirst: Part 3
March 8, 2026

John 4:11-15, Isaiah 55:1-3

Jesus answered, “Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks from the water that I will give will never be thirsty again. The water that I give will become in those who drink it a spring of water that bubbles up into eternal life.”

The woman said to him, “Sir, give me this water, so that I will never be thirsty and will never need to come here to draw water!”

John 4:13-15

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We all get thirsty. We all need water. But in our consumerist culture, we have developed a thirst for many forms of “water” to quench our desires and satisfy our souls.

The woman at the well still sees only what is in front of her, a bucket, a deep well, and a weary traveler with nothing to draw with. “Sir, you have no bucket, and the well is deep. Where do you get that living water?” she asks. She cannot yet imagine water that does not come from Jacob’s well, water that becomes “a spring of water gushing up to eternal life.” So she asks for it, not because she understands it, but because she is tired of coming back day after day. “Sir, give me this water, so that I may never be thirsty or have to keep coming here to draw water.”

The woman may not have known who Jesus was or what he could give, but we know all too well, or at least we think we do. And we are more than willing to ask for “water” from the master.

We are quick to pray for health, for security, for comfort, and for more of just about anything we can imagine for ourselves or our loved ones. “Ask anything in my name,” Jesus promises, and so we ask. But his name can become little more than a set of magic words to make our every wish come true, much like the whiny “please” of a child that comes only as an afterthought when their initial demand does not produce the result they wanted.

Like the woman who is just beginning to realize the power of Jesus’ offer, we want a quick fix for all of our problems. We do not want to have to keep coming back to the well every time we get thirsty. We would rather bypass the deeper work and simply eliminate the inconvenience. But the prophet Jeremiah names our condition plainly. “My people have committed two evils,” God says. “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). We trade the spring for storage tanks. We settle for what we can control, even when it leaks.

Jesus is not so quick to grant the woman’s desire, even though he is the one who offered the living water in the first place. For him, it is not just about helping her avoid the daily toils of life, such as coming to the well. Jesus wants so much more for her than she could possibly ask or imagine. He wants not simply to quench her thirst for a moment, but to become in her a source that never runs dry.

It would seem that Our Lord finds our desires not too strong, but too weak. We are halfhearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.

~ C. S. Lewis, The Weight of Glory

Give Me a Drink

Give Me a Drink

Thirst: Part 2
March 1, 2026

John 4:7-10

 The Samaritan woman asked, “Why do you, a Jewish man, ask for something to drink from me, a Samaritan woman?” (Jews and Samaritans didn’t associate with each other.)

 John 4:9

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We all have those times when God seems distant.  We feel like our prayers are empty and our works of piety are in vain.  We realize that we are empty, that we are nothing, and we would not be surprised in the least if God gave up on us. 

But what if the problem is not that God is too distant, but too close... in fact, way too close for comfort?

By every religious and social custom of his day, Jesus clearly should not have been talking with this woman at a public well in Samaria.  She had three strikes against her that would keep any righteous man far away... she was a Samaritan, she was a woman, and she had a shameful history, even if it was not entirely of her own making. 

Some have speculated that she did not come to the well during normal cooler hours because she didn't want to face the gossip the other women in town must have been speaking about her as they drew water for their "proper" families.

It's interesting how she is so blatantly aware of Jesus' impropriety in asking her for water, and yet Jesus seems entirely unconcerned with her status as a Samaritan or a woman with a past.  Jesus is not worried about being made unclean.  He is not concerned about what others might think.  And he's not even coming with some ulterior motive to convert her to his religious beliefs.

Jesus is simply tired and wants a drink of water.  Period.

I wonder how many times Jesus has come to us, to ask us for a drink or even just to sit down and enjoy a casual conversation, and we responded by pulling away because we knew deep down that we were unworthy of his company. 

What if Jesus wanted to come to us in the form of a homeless person, or an irritating co-worker, or a family member who has hurt us deeply, or a child who won't sit still and be quiet for five minutes.  The faces of Jesus are everywhere, for he says that whenever we care for the "least of these," we have provided for him. 

We don't always recognize his presence, but we can sense the uncomfortable holiness of each encounter stirring deep in our souls, or maybe in the pit of our stomachs, and we want to retreat. 

We know that God already knows us better than we know ourselves, but somehow, we still want to pretend we can keep the worst parts of ourselves a secret.  We're afraid of being exposed.  We like to pretend we're OK, but next to Jesus, we know we are not. 

And if we're truly honest, there are just certain places we don't want to be seen walking around with Jesus.

Just like the woman at the well, we are far more uncomfortable around Jesus' holiness than Jesus is around our sin.

  • What is one place in your ordinary routine that Jesus might show up unexpectedly if you were open to it? 

  • How would you respond?