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							I needed worship on Sunday. My spirit’s well had run 
							dry. My heart’s joy had been depleted.
 But Sunday restored my hope. There was such a hum 
							rushing through the pews the way water seeps through 
							cracks. We, as a family of faith, had gathered to 
							worship, to share life, and to break bread. We, as a 
							family of faith, lived into what I think is our best 
							gift that we can offer to Lincoln and one of the 
							most important in our missional identity: 
							hospitality.
 
 As y’all know we hosted the choir from Lincoln 
							College. Yet I think many of you would agree that in 
							the end, they hosted us. Their singing possessed a 
							peacefulness that penetrated the solemnity that Lent 
							can sometimes posses. They gave us a break from our 
							‘normal routine’ and they took us down to the river 
							where we were able to drink deep from God’s goodness 
							and mercy.
 
 On Sunday, I believed a part of us was healed. Did 
							you know the church can do that? Did you know that 
							the church can heal? Did you know that the church is 
							actually called to bring healing to the world? Did 
							you know that you cannot only participate in this 
							healing but also receive it?
 
 Did you know that God wants to heal you? From 
							whatever is troubling. From whatever burden you are 
							carrying. From that broken heart. From the bad news 
							you received. From the doubt that you aren’t as good 
							as your siblings. From the busy life you have taken 
							on without knowing. From burn out. You get the 
							point.
 
 All of this reminds me of an interaction Jesus had 
							at a well with a Samaritan woman. Perhaps you 
							remember it. It is high noon and Jesus stops to get 
							a drink of water while the disciples go ahead into 
							the city to do what disciples do. At the well Jesus 
							meets a woman and asks her for a drink.
 
 From there the interactions go something like this:
 Woman: You are asking me, a Samaritan, to get you, a 
							Jew, a drink? No way.
 Jesus: If you knew who I was, you would. You’d never 
							have to drink again, actually.
 Woman: Ha! You don’t even have a bucket. So please, 
							give me this living water. (Giant eye roll!)
 
 The interaction gets a little strange. Jesus 
							invites/tells her to go get her husband. She can’t 
							and Jesus reveals that he knows her history. Most 
							sermons will depict this woman as a prostitute of 
							sorts. But this isn’t necessarily the case. She is 
							more likely widowed or abandoned, because men often 
							did that in 1st century culture.
 
 What happens next is a healing. The woman was made 
							to be ashamed about who she was: not only a 
							Samaritan woman, who was viewed as an equal to a 
							man’s donkey, but also a divorced woman. Jesus 
							shouldn’t be talking to her. She wasn’t worthy of 
							such acknowledgment.
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							Jesus has no interest in shaming her. Instead 
							Jesus gazes upon her with sympathetic eyes and 
							extends a word of hope, a word of healing. Jesus is 
							not chastising her or calling her to account; rather 
							he sees her; compassionately naming and 
							understanding her circumstances.
 
 I like what one Lutheran pastor says about this 
							interaction:
 
 While she came to the well to get water, now that 
							she has met Jesus, "who told me everything I have 
							ever done," she leaves her jar -- the token of her 
							present difficult and dependent life -- behind to go 
							tell others. She has, indeed, encountered living 
							water, has been freed by her encounter with Jesus, 
							and wants to share this living water with others.
 
 Sunday I was the woman at the well. I was thirsty 
							and needed my cup filled up. And it was at church, 
							among you, brothers and sisters, that my thirst was 
							quenched. Worship was refreshing and my spirit was 
							renewed. That's what refreshment does for us; it 
							renews our spirits like a cool glass of water, and 
							moves us from scarcity to abundance in all aspects 
							of our lives.
 
 Friends, God wants to heal us. God sits at the well 
							waiting for us to come. God welcomes us.
 
 God welcomes you with open, healing arms.
 
 My question to you is, what are you holding onto 
							that is prevent you from being healed by God?
 
 
 Name it. Then, leave it at the well.
 
 [Adam Quine, pastor at First Presbyterian Church 
							of Lincoln]
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