Mar 8 Sun
What is the "living water" Jesus promised?
Jesus asked the Samaritan woman to give him a drink. She was amazed by this. How can He, a Jew, ask a Samaritan woman for anything? For centuries, Jews and Samaritans had lived in implacable enmity. But Jesus showed himself superior to this prejudice. For Him, the distinctions of nation and race do not count, nor does the distinction between man and woman.
"But tired though His body is, Jesus' thirst for souls is even greater. So, when the Samaritan woman -the sinner- arrives, Christ, with His priestly heart, turns eagerly to save the lost sheep, forgetting His tiredness, hunger, and thirst."
From natural water, Jesus elevated the conversation to the higher plane of revelation, the truly living water.
The woman said to Him, "Give me this water, so that I will no longer thirst, nor will I have to come here to draw it."
Then Jesus revealed to the woman that He is, in fact, the very source of living water. This shows that the journey of faith in Him begins with the recognition of His divine mission, sent by God.
Our Lord knows that human beings are thirsting for God, and that the waters of this earth cannot quench that thirst. The things of the earth can only provide temporary satisfaction, and they leave a bitter aftertaste.
Jesus Christ has come to bring us the water of life, grace, happiness, and joy. Thus, He promised her living water.
Water signifies the Holy Spirit's action in Baptism. Our birth into the divine life is granted to us through the Holy Spirit. Therefore, the Spirit is also personally the living water welling up from Christ crucified as its source and rising in us to eternal life.
The woman bursts into an emotional act of faith: "Lord, I see that you are a prophet." She then went and told the inhabitants of her city that she had found the Messiah and invited them to "come unto Jesus."
After the words, "Give me that water," Jesus does not hesitate to indicate the way of conversion and good works. "Go, call your husband." This is an invitation to examine one's conscience, to search the depths of one's heart.
Jesus helped this woman discover her need for salvation and prompted her to ask about the path that leads to it. This is a true and proper "examination of conscience." He helped her name the sins of her life. That is why the Lord urged her: "You are right; you have no husband. You have already had five, and the one whom you have now is not your husband."
The five husbands symbolize the five senses; material or scientific knowledge alone does not lead us to faith. The present husband represents our reason; faith is above reason, but not in contradiction.
Believing in God (faith) means receiving His revelation with full obedience, accepting the plan of God, and allowing ourselves to be guided by His Wisdom.











