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The Samaritan woman stays with Jesus through a dense theological conversation in the Gospel today. Christians often don’t recognise the references the two are making to the Old Testament and to Jewish and Samaritan history in their dialogue. The woman proves herself to be very intelligent and knowledgeable here, especially when Jesus notes that she has been married five times already. She immediately recognises him as a prophet at that moment.
In the Old Testament, prophets accused the people of marital infidelity when they worshiped other gods. Interestingly, the Samaritans had been ruled by five foreign nations who worshiped other gods. So Jesus isn’t calling this woman out as a sexual sinner. He is calling her people out for unfaithfulness to the one true God, and she understands what he means by this.
Unlike Nicodemus, who questioned Jesus the night before and left still confused about who Jesus was, the Samaritan woman goes from seeing Jesus as “just” a Jew, to a prophet, to the Messiah- all in the course of one conversation. Then she does what all of the apostles do in John’s gospel: she leaves behind the symbol of her livelihood (her water jar) and urges others to come and spend time with Jesus so that they can get to know him themselves.
Questions of the week
• In what ways have you been unfaithful to God? Have you “hedged your bets” by trusting in your money, your career, your home, etc. as other sources of security besides God? In other words, what other gods have you worshipped?
• In what area(s) of your life might Jesus be calling you to greater trust and faithfulness?