George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
July 27
The Woman of Samaria
Jesus answered and said unto her, If
thou knewest the gift of God, and who it is that saith to thee, Give me to
drink; thou wouldest have asked of him, and he would have given thee living
water--Joh. 4:10
Scenes by Wells
It is remarkable how many of the choicest
scenes of Scripture should be associated with wells. It was by a well that
Abraham's servant met with the destined bride of Isaac in that loveliest story
of the Book of Genesis. It was by the well that Jacob first cast his eyes on
Rachel. It was at a well that one of the crises in the life of Moses came, when
he stood up and rescued the daughters of Reuel from the shepherds. And all the
memories and meetings of these Oriental wells are crowned by this story of the
woman of Samaria. It was the hour of sultry noon, and the whole land was weary,
and Jesus shared in the weariness of noonday. And then a woman of Samaria came
to draw, thinking, remembering, dreaming as she came, and all so busy with her
woman's heart that she hardly spied the dusty traveler till He spoke. So do we
stumble on life's greatest moments. So coming to the well a thousand times
unaltered, we come one day and everything is changed. Life's crises often come
unheralded. God is not pledged to warn of their approach. They wear the
garments of the common hours and come in the multitude of common duties, when
lo! we are at the parting of the ways, and all things shall be different
forever.
Christ Disregards Prevailing Prejudices
Now what struck the writer of this story
first was the disregard that Jesus showed for the most cherished prejudices of
His day. Christ was a Jew after the flesh, and the woman with the pitcher was
Samaritan, and for long centuries, and notably since the rebuilding of the
Temple, Jew and Samaritan had been so ripening in mutual spite that now they
would not speak to one another. But Jesus sweeps these prejudices off. He bids
defiance to conventionality. Behind the sinner and back of the Samaritan, He
hears the cry of a soul that can be saved. Everything else becomes as threads
of gossamer before His burning passion to redeem her. Now there are some men
who scorn conventionalities just because they want to seem original. But there
are other men so filled with a burning purpose that in the heat of it common
prejudices die. That is a right noble disregard; it is the disregard of Jesus
by the well.
Christ First Asks for a Favor
It is remarkable that the first words of
Christ are an appeal. "Give me to drink," He said. It was the first
time in all her life that she had ever been asked a favor by a Jew, and to be
asked a favor by those whom we are certain would despise us, produces a strange
revulsion in the heart. I do not know if even on the cross the humility of
Christ is more apparent than in these humble pleadings that fell on this
Samaritan's ears and still are calling to our hearts today. We, too, may feel
certain that Jesus will despise us. We may think ourselves very loathsome in
His sight. Yet He is pleading with us as a brother pleads and calling to us as
a brother calls, and He is holding out His death to us and offering us His
pardon and His power. Nay, more, whenever we give a cup of water to a little
one in Jesus' name, then like the woman of Samaria we are giving Christ to
drink. And in every kindly deed we ever did, we are responding to this pleading
of the Master. In every face of pain, every distorted limb, every moan and
sigh, and all the sobbing of the helpless children, Christ still is saying,
"Give me to drink." And we had better cease to worship Him as Lord
than fail to respond to such a pleading.
Christ Was Impressed by the Samaritan
Woman's Ignorance
I note, too, that what roused the
compassion of Jesus for this woman was her ignorance. "Ah! woman, if you
only knew the gift of God: if you only knew who was speaking to you!" In
Sychar the honest neighbors rather shunned this woman, not because she was
ignorant, but because she knew too much. They hated her. They tattled of her. She
was a bold and an unprincipled woman. Only Jesus in the whole wide world pitied
her from the bottom of His heart. She was so ignorant for all she knew. She had
so missed the prize for all her unhallowed grasping! O heart of Christ, so
infinite in pity, teach us again the ignorance of passion, and make us pitiful
to the men and women who have missed the mark, because they have not known
God's gift of love!
Christ Offers Something Superior and of
Permanent Value to the Inner Man
So Jesus gently deals with the Samaritan, reading
her heart and showing her what she was and leading her upward from the well of
Jacob to the wellsprings that are found in Jacob's God. "Whosoever
drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst; but the water
that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up into
everlasting life." Two features of this promised gift arrest us. (a) The first
is that he that drinketh of the living stream shall never thirst again. But do
we not find the Psalmist saying, "My soul thirsteth for God, for the
living God"? Is every longing of the soul satisfied forever when we have
tasted of the wells of God? Nay, God forbid. The more we drink of holiness, the
more we thirst for it. The more we drink of purity, the more we crave it. The
more we taste of God, the more we long for Him. But under the power of this new
affection, sinful affections gradually die; and baser cravings that dominated
once sink slowly in this newborn life in God until at last the very craving is
forgotten, and having tasted God, we thirst no more. (b) And then this fountain
is within our heart. This poor Samaritan had to take her pitcher and run the
gauntlet of the village street whenever she wanted a draught of Jacob's well. But
the gladness and the peace are within us when we have truly met with Jesus
Christ. There is a sense in which a Christian is dependent. There is another
sense in which a Christian is the most independent man alive. He can go singing
under the dullest skies; he can have royal fellowship in crowded streets, for
he carries his heaven in his heart, and heaven in the heart is heaven on earth.
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