March 23, 2014
John 4.5-42
+ In a few weeks, I will have gone five
months—five very long months—without that wonderful nectar, Diet Coke. Five
months. After over twenty-five years of having at least three every single day
of my life.
Now, as many of you know, I have been a
vegetarian for over a year and I’ve been vegan for almost four months. And I
can say that St. Stephen’s has been one of the friendliest vegetarian/vegan
friendly congregations I have ever encountered (and we should be very proud of
that). For all of you who have to suffer
through my as nauseam discussions on my vegetarian and veganism, I can say
this:
Meat was very easy to give up. Dairy and
eggs was harder, but, being lactose intolerant, I have really felt the benefits
of such a change. For the first time in
my life, I have had no allergies. And, for the first time in my life, I have
made it through it the winter without one instance of the flu or a cold. For
the first time ever. So. those things
have been good.
But, Diet Coke. Not as easy. In fact,
just last night I was at Space Aliens, of all places (they have really great
cheeseless pizza!): there was a Diet Coke on the next table. I found myself
looking over it kind of longingly. It
looked so good.
I never feel that way about meat. I
very rarely ever feel that way about dairy. But, awww Diet Coke. I could almost
taste it. Certainly I can say, I was
thirsty for a Diet Coke. But I did not (and will NOT) partake.
Thirst if one of those things we don’t
worry about too much in our lives in our privileged Western world. Most of us
don’t physically thirst. We have our
coffees, our clean water, our water machines and water tanks, not to mention
our sodas and our recreational alcohol. So much of our life our life revolves
around what we drink, that thirst very rarely ever plays into our lives
anymore. But although we might not
thirst for liquid often in our lives, we do find ourselves thirsting.
We do thirst for knowledge, we thirst
justice, we thirst for fulfillment. And
we definitely thirst for spiritual truth.
And I think that’s very close to what
Jesus is talking about in today’s Gospel. In our very long Gospel reading, we find Jesus
confronting this Samaritan woman at Jacob’s well. More often than not, when we encounter a story
like this in scripture, we don’t often think about what happened to some of
these people their experience with Jesus.
Every so often, it might not hurt to
ask ourselves: what happened to this woman at the well? Did she heed the words of Jesus to her, or did
she go on in her old lifestyle? We know
she shared the news with other Samaritans. But did she reform her life? We will never know.
But, what is more important is the
message that is here for all of us. When
Jesus sits with the woman at the well, he offers not only her that water of
life—he offers it to us as well. And we,
in turn, like her, must “with open hand” give it “to those who thirst.”
To truly understand the meaning of
water, here, though we have to gently remind ourselves of the land in which
this story is taking place. Palestine
was and is a dry and arid land. And in Jesus’ day, water was not as accessible
as we take for granted these days. It
came from wells that sometimes weren’t in close proximity to one’s home. The
water that came from those wells was not the clean and filtered water we enjoy
now, that we drink from fancy bottles. They
didn’t have refrigeration, so often the water they drank was lukewarm at best. And sometimes it was polluted. People got sick and died from drinking it.
But despite all of that, water was
essential. One died without water in
that arid land. Water meant life.
In that world, people truly understood
thirst. They thirsted truly for water. And
so we have this issue of water in a story in which Jesus confronts this
woman—who is obviously and truly thirsty. Thirsty for water, yes, but—as we learn—she is
obviously thirsty also for more. She is
thirsty as well for love, for security, for stability, all of which she does
not have.
Now, we have to be fair to her. For a woman to be without a man in her day would
have meant that she would be without security, without a home, without
anything. A woman at that time was
defined by the men in her life—her husband or father or son. And so, widowed as many times as she was, she
was desperate to find some reason and purpose in her life through the men in
her life. This woman is truly a broken
woman. She is thirsty. Thirsty for the water she is drawing from the
well and thirsty for more than life has given her.
In a sense, we can find much to relate
to in this woman. We too are broken people, as you have heard me preach again
and again during this season of Lent. We
too are thirsty. As broken people, we
are thirsty for relationships, for money, for food, for alcohol for anything to
fill that empty parched feeling within our broken selves. And as broken people, we find that as much as
we try to quench that thirst, it all seems to run right out of us. We find that we will never be quenched until
we drink of that cool, clean water which will fill us where we need to be
filled.
That cool, clean Water is of course
Jesus. He is the Water of which we drink
to be truly filled. It is the Water that will become in us “a spring of water
gushing up to eternal life.”
What better image to take with us in
these long days of Lent? As we journey
through the desert of Lent toward Holy Week, toward the darkness and violence
of Good Friday, what better image can we cling to? Because that is what we are doing during Lent.
We are traveling through the desert. We are walking through the arid wasteland of
our own lives. We are journeying toward
the Cross and the destruction, pain and death it brings. We are wandering toward that tomb, that dark,
dank place. We are that woman at the
well—parched and alone, thirsting for something more.
In Lent, we bring ourselves—our
fractured, shattered, uncertain, frightened, insecure selves—to the well,
expecting only for a temporary quenching. But at Easter, that day we are longing for,
that we are traveling toward, that we are striving toward despite our thirst—on
that day we will find more than we expected to find. On Easter, we will find Jesus, alive and
vibrant, offering us water that will truly quench our thirst. At the empty
tomb—that other well—he gives us the water that will fill us and renew us and
make us whole and complete. There, he
offers us the water that will wash away the grit and ugliness of all that we
have done and all that we have failed to do, as we say to God in our confession
of sins.
We find glimpses of this Easter feast
in the Eucharist we celebrate together. Here
too we our thirst is quenched in the blood shed from the broken body of Jesus. Here we too drink to quench our thirst. And in
the brokenness of Jesus, we find our brokenness healed.
Like the Samaritan woman, we approach
the well of this altar, trapped in our own brokenness. But, like her, we are able to leave the well
of this altar and of the Easter tomb different people. We walk away from this altar and that tomb
transformed people—a person made whole. We
walk away no longer fractured people. We
walk away remade into saints.
So, as we approach Easter and the
Living Water that pours forth from the tomb of Easter, let us drink fully of
the water that is offered to us there. Let
us drink deeply of Jesus, who offers himself to us fully and completely there,
on Good Friday, there on Easter morning, and here on this altar this morning. And in that Water, we will find all that we
desire. Our insecurities will be washed away. Our wounds will be cleaned and
healed. Everything we have done or
failed to do will be made right. Our
brokenness will be made whole. That thirst that drives us and nags at us and
gnaws at us, that drives us to drink from places where we should not be
drinking, will finally—once and for all—be quenched. And in that Living Water we will find
Life—that Life that Jesus brings us on that Easter morning—a Life without death
or suffering or wanting—a life which Jesus breaks wide open for us and shows us
as more incredible than anything we fully appreciate or understand.
Jesus is there, offering himself for
all. All we have to do is say, “Give me some of that water.” And it will be given to us. And those of us who drink of that water will
never again be thirsty.
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