| 
  Living Water 
   Send a link to a friend 
			
            
            [March 25, 2011]  
            
             --"Jesus answered her, ‘If you knew the gift of 
			God, and who it is that is saying to you, “Give me a drink”, you 
			would have asked him, and he would have given you living water.’"- 
			John 4: 10 | 
			
            | 
				
					
						
						I find it ironic that the first teaching Jesus offers 
						the Samaritan woman at the well is that it is she 
						who should be asking him for something.  Jesus 
						has just asked her for a drink of water, and she has 
						note the peculiarity of this request since he is a Jew 
						and she a Samaritan.  And now, Jesus is telling her she 
						should be asking something of him.  I find it ironic 
						because, if there is anything we modern American 
						Christians are good at, it is asking Jesus for 
						stuff.  We ask for stuff all the time; money, health, 
						wealth, jobs, relationships, political and athletic 
						victories, etc... We have no problem asking Jesus for 
						things.  If he returned, the line would form pretty 
						quickly to ask him for stuff.  No, this is not our 
						problem. 
						Our problem is we ask for the wrong 
						things.  What Jesus offers the Samaritan woman at the 
						well is not something any of us would know to seek.  He 
						offers her the living water, which, once consumed, will 
						never need to be consumed again and will bring 
						salvation.  This is a metaphor, of course, for the 
						presence of Christ in one's life.  This is what we 
						should be requesting of Jesus!  We would be wise to put 
						aside our laundry list of desires, as if Jesus were a 
						genie in a bottle, and focus on what he truly offers, an 
						elixir for our souls.  Jesus can increase our faith, 
						help us to overcome struggle and sorrow, teach us how to 
						truly love, and save us from the dark abyss of sin.  
						This is what he offers, not money, not true love, not 
						the perfect job or even an Illini victory.  I encourage 
						you, the next time you pray, to remember who it is you 
						are praying to, and what he believes you actually need.  
						Then see if maybe it has been there all along. | 
            
			 
            Prayer:  Holy God, please increase my faith and strengthen 
			my belief, that I may be a better servant of Christ.  I want to grow 
			in my faith and I want to learn how to love others.  I pray in 
			Jesus' name.  Amen. 
            [Phil Blackburn, First Presbyterian Church] 
              |