Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of John 4:11
The woman saith unto him, Sir, thou hast nothing to draw with, and the well is deep: from whence then hast thou that living water?
11. Sir ] A decided change from the pert ‘How is it?’ in Joh 4:9. His words and manner already begin to impress her.
the well is deep ] Not the same word for ‘well’ as in Joh 4:6. There the spring in the well is the chief feature: here it is rather the deep hole in which the spring was. Earlier travellers have called it over a 100 feet deep: at the present time it is about 75 feet deep.
that living water ] Better, the living water, of which Thou speakest. She thinks He means spring-water as distinct from cistern-water. Comp. Jer 2:13, where the two are strongly contrasted. In Gen 26:19, as the margin shews, ‘springing water’ is literally ‘living water,’ viva aqua. What did Christ mean by the ‘living water?’ Among the various answers we may at once set aside any reference to baptism. Faith, God’s grace and truth, Christ Himself, are other answers. The difference between them is at bottom not so great as appears on the surface. Christ here uses the figure of water, as elsewhere of bread (6) and light (Joh 8:12), the three most necessary things for life. But He does not here identify Himself with the living water, as He does with the Bread, and the Light: therefore it seems better to understand the living water as the ‘grace and truth’ of which He is full (Joh 1:14). Comp. Sir 15:3 ; Bar 3:12 .
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Hast nothing to draw with – It seems that there were no means of drawing water affixed to the well, as with us. Probably each one took a pail or pitcher and a cord for the purpose. In traveling this was indispensable. The woman, seeing that Jesus had no means of drawing water, and not yet understanding his design, naturally inquired whence he could obtain the water.
The well is deep – If the same one that is there now, it was about 100 feet deep.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Joh 4:11-12
Thou hast nothing to draw with, and the Well is deep
The womans first rejoinder
I.
It is the property of natural men to take up spiritual things in a carnal way, and they are not able to discern grace till they have it; for, so doth this woman understand Christ, as if He were speaking of elementary water.
II. We are naturally enemies to our own good, for she reasons against this living water, as, in her judgment, impossible to be had or given.
III. We are also naturally so addicted to our own carnal sense, that we will believe nothing revealed by Christ further than we can see a reason or outward appearance for it; for she judged it impossible He could have living water, seeing He could not draw it out of that well, nor show a better.
IV. A chief deceiving principle, making men careless of truth and grace, is their pretence of antiquity and succession unto it, and their descent from religious progenitors; for she boasted Jacob was their father, who gave the well, and therefore slighted the offer of a better, as being well enough in her own conceit.
V. None are so ready to boast of antiquity and of interest in pious progenitors as those who have least cause so to do; for they were but heathens who had come in the room of Jacobs children, who had forfeited their right; and they were far from Jacobs spirit, who would satisfy their soul with that which only supplied his bodily necessity, and served his cattle as well as him.
VI. It is a notable injury done unto Christ to plead any antiquity or succession to it, in prejudice of Him or His truth, or to cry up any above Him; for it was her fault to cry up Jacob, and her interest in him, that she might slight Him and His offer: Art thou greater than our father Jacob? etc.
VII. Sobriety and a simple way of living. It is a notable ornament to grace in the godly; when nature, which is content with little, is not overcharged with creatures, to the dishonour of God, abuse of the creatures, and prejudice of mens better state; and when men by their carriage declare that their bodies and flesh is not their best part, which they care most for, so much doth Jacobs practice teach us. (G. Hutcheson.)
The source
Our Lords object was to bring the woman to seek salvation of Him. Our desire is the immediate conversion of all now present. The Samaritan woman accepted the Saviour upon the first asking. Many of you have been invited to Jesus many times–will you not at last comply? Our Lord aimed at her heart by plain teaching and home dealing–we will take the same course with our hearers. When His interestingemblem failed to reach her, He fell to downright literalism, and unveiled her life. Anything is better than allowing a soul to perish.
I. WE WILL EXPOUND THE PRECEDING TEACHING. The figure was that of living water in contrast to the water collected in Jacobs well, which was merely the gatherings of the surrounding hills–land-water, not spring-water.
1. Christ meant that His grace is like water from a springing well.
(1) Of the best and most refreshing kind.
(2) Living, and ministers life.
(3) Powerful, and finds its own way.
(4) Abiding, and is never dried up.
(5) Abounding, and free to all comers.
2. Furthermore, He intimated to the woman that
(1) He had it. There was no need of a bucket to draw with.
(2) He had it to give.
(3) He would have given it for the asking.
(4) He alone could give it. It would be found in no earthly well.
II. WE WILL ANSWER THE QUESTION OF THE TEXT. In ignorance the woman,-inquired, Whence then hast Thou that living water? We can at this time give a fuller reply than could have been given when our Lord sat on the well. He has now a boundless power to save, and that power arises
1. From His Divine nature, allied with His perfect humanity.
2. From the purpose and appointment of God.
3. From the anointing of the Holy Ghost.
4. From His redeeming work, which operated for good even before its actual accomplishment, and which is in full operation now.
5. From the power of His intercession at the Fathers right hand.
6. From His representative life in glory. Now all power is delivered into His hand (Mat 28:18).
III. WE WILL DRAW CERTAIN INFERENCES FROM THE ANSWER.
1. Then He is still able to bless. Since He has this living water only from His unchanging self, He therefore has it now as fully as ever.
2. Then He needs nothing from us. He is Himself the one sole Fountain, full and all-sufficient for ever.
3. Then we need not fear exhausting His fulness.
4. Then at all times we may come to Him, and we need never fear that He will deny us. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
verse 11 may be affirmed
I. With regard to THE INSUFFICIENCY OF REASON APART FROM REVELATION IN FATHOMING THE DEEP THINGS OF GOD. The name of Jehovah is secret or wonderful, and so are all the problems which concern the human spirit and its relationship to God. The world, for 4,000 years deifying reason, strove to work out the solution. But the world by wisdom knew not God or man. But when reason fails, revelation, like rope and pitcher, fulcrum and lever, comes to our aid. In the Bible we have something to draw with, deep though the well may be.
II. WITH REGARD TO THE MYSTERY OF GODS PROVIDENTIAL DEALINGS. Many a sorrowing one has wailed out, Thy judgments are a great deep, and there is nothing to gauge them in this imperfect world. But the hour will come when you shall have the needed appliance In Thy light we shall see light.
III. With regard to THE UNVEILING OF THE FUTURE. With all the pain of its mystery is it not a mercy that the well is deep, and that we have nothing to draw with? But our greatest comfort is that it is not too deep for Him, and He is drawing up what will work together for good to those who love Him. (J. R.Macduff, D. D.)
Nothing?
I. DO NOT ALL THE STREAMS OF LIFE FLOW FROM HIM?
II. WHO FILLED THE OCEANS FROM THE HOLLOW OF HIS HAND?
III. WHO CAUSES THE CLOUDS AND MAKES THEM TREASURIES OF HIS RAIN?
IV. WHO FOR THOUSANDS OF YEARS HAS OPENED FOUNTAINS OF JOY IN MYRIADS OF HEARTS? (Van Doren.)
Art Thou greater than our father Jacob?
Hero-worship
I. THIS IDOLATRY OF HEROES HAS BEEN MANS INFIRMITY FOR AGES.
II. THE INUTILITY OF THE RELICS OF ALL THE SAINTED MARTYRS WHEN TREASURED BY SUPERSTITION.
III. SAMARIA, THE DWELLING OF JACOB AND THE TOMB OF JOSEPH, WAS A LAND OF DARKNESS. (Van Doren.)
The bucket
The , here bucket of most of our early versions, must not be confounded with the , or water-pot (Joh 4:28). It is the situla, generally made of skin, with three cross sticks tied round the mouth to keep it open. It is let down by a rope of goats hair, and may be seen lying on the curb-stones of almost every well in the land. We may suppose the woman to have held this in her hand while she talked with the Lord, and reminded Him that He had nothing of the kind. (Abp. Trench.)
Conduits for the water of life
This well of the water of life is very deep, and we have nothing to draw with; therefore we must have our pipes and conduits to convey the same unto us; which are the Word of God preached, and the administration of the sacraments (Joh 5:25; Joh 6:63). (W. Perkins.)
Deep wells
1. The well was so deep that it had already lasted a thousand and a half years. It was so deep that after as many more centuries have passed away it still exists. The neighbouring Sychar is no longer;but this spring rises as at the beginning as if to
(1) Show the perpetuity of Natures simplest and purest gifts.
(2) To teach how much longer lived is a single word of benevolent utility than conquests and empires.
(3) How much more deserving to live is the good deed that hides itself, as it were, underground, and connects itself with an eternal source, than all the monuments of pride that are piled up to perish.
2. More enduring than that ancient fountain, and ever fresh as its drops, and deep as the wants of man, Christs gospel gushed up among the fainting nations. And profound as it was, that was no reason why all should not come empty-handed; no need of anything to draw with but a sincere and earnest wish to be supplied. What had the world done to deserve it? What had it brought to secure it? It had done evil and brought nothing but its emptiness and insufficiency. This train of reflection may be carried further.
I. THE NATURE THAT WE SHARE IS DEEP. It would seem, if we were acquainted with anything it would be with this. We are perpetually observing it and acting it. And yet it is scarcely less beyond our perfect penetration than its Maker Himself. Whence we? What? Whither? Some navigator once struck the bottom of the Atlantic midway between its opposite shores; but who shall sound the soul of man?–so mean, so noble; so weak and mighty; so good and evil. What shall we draw with? With fellow-feeling and good-will. Enter with a generous sympathy into the joy and sorrow of others, and you shall know what spirit you are of.
II. HUMAN LIFE IS DEEP. Its successive ages as they move along from infancy to decrepitude, its common concerns, sudden changes, inscrutable appointments, various fortunes, unavoidable accidents, bewilder us. What shall we draw with? We must bring a spirit of submission, a religious spirit. We may hang for ever over the abysses of our being, and only grow giddy. We shall survey it best when we look above it to that Almighty One by whom its whole mystic relations arc combined–Our life is hidden in God. Through Him it must receive its interpretations.
III. RELIGIOUS TRUTH IS DEEP. Some have said that it is impossible to understand in the least so immeasurable a subject. I do not say how much we can absolutely know of God. But there is a capacity in us to be fully satisfied. Faith removes the worst difficulties by taking away every disposition of mistrust and resistance out of the heart. (N. L.Frothringham.)
The difficulty of arriving at truth
I. WHENCE IT COMES TO PASS THAT TRUTH WHICH SEEMS SO NECESSARY FOR EVERY MAN TO KNOW, SHOULD YET GENERALLY BE SO DIFFICULT FOR ANY MAN TO COME AT.
1. It has been an ancient complaint among philosophers that truth hath lain in so deep a pit that they have never been able to discover the bottom of it. The like complaint we meet with in Scripture (Job 28:1-28.; Ecc 3:11; Ecc 11:5; Ecc 8:16).
2. This is true
(1) Of the knowledge of the works of God in the power of nature.
(2) Of the works of God in the moral world (Psa 72:2; Psa 72:15; Jer 12:1; Ecc 4:1).
(3) Of practical duty itself.
3. This arises from the following facts:
(1) There is necessarily in the nature of things themselves some difficulty, and in our understandings much imperfection. Some things are entirely above our capacities, and others we can only attain to by labour and study. Some things we can only know as probable at best. And those things which are most level to our understandings have at the bottom some subtle intricacies which limit the degree of our knowledge. In the clearest prospect there is a distance no eye can reach, and in the most intelligent parts of the works of God there is a depth which no finite eye can penetrate. But then these secrets are no part of that truth which it is necessary for us to know, and with care sufficient may be known of truth as is necessary to salvation.
(2) Men perplex themselves by aiming at things not necessary to be known in regard to Christian practice, or at such degrees of knowledge as are not possible to be arrived at. Those persons are at a great distance who, while they have lost themselves in the labyrinth of an imaginary secret will of God, have neglected to obey His positive commands. Under this category come the Jewish doctors and the speculative philosophers and divines.
(3) Prejudice and prepossession arising from custom of education and from mens depending on the opinion and authority of particular persons without examination.
(4) The wickedness and perverseness of men, who for their own interests sometimes conceal it on purpose.
II. BY WHAT MEANS EVERY SERIOUS AND SINCERE PERSON MAY YET CERTAINLY OBTAIN TO SUCH A DEGREE OF TRUTH AS IS NECESSARY FOR SALVATION.
1. He must take care that he in the first place resolves to do the will of God, then he shall know of the doctrine (Psa 25:14).
2. He must be firmly resolved never to be deluded into the persuasion of anything contrary to plain and evident reason, which is the truth of Gods creation; contrary to the attributes of God, which are the truth of the Divine nature; or contrary to the eternal differences of good and evil, which are the truth and foundation of all religion in general. Had men kept to this candle of the Lord, men even of the meanest capacities could never have believed
(1) Impossibilities such as transubstantiation, or contrary and unintelligible explications of true doctrines such as the subtle and empty speculations of the schoolmen, which are contrary to the truth of Gods creation.
(2) Nor that God absolutely decreed men to everlasting misery, which is contrary to the primary truth of the Divine nature.
(3) Nor that cruelty and persecution should be set up for His sake, who came not to destroy but to save. Nor that any other wickedness should be made part of religion, which are contrary to the very foundation of religion.
3. He must diligently study Holy Scripture as the only authoritative guide in religion, so as to obey its plain precepts and believe its plain doctrines, and not be contentious or uncharitable about those he does not understand. (S. Clarke, M. A.)
What may be seen in the well
There is a tradition regarding one of the other sacred wells of Palestine–the Well of the Wise Men between Jerusalem and Bethlehem–that when the Eastern Magi had at one time lost the guidance of the mystic star, while stooping over this fountain they saw it once more reflected in its waters; forthwith it guided them to the place where the young child was–When they saw the star, they rejoiced with exceeding great joy. True, at all events, is this beautiful tradition regarding Gods providential dispensations. At times we lose the guiding star; it is swept from our firmament; we travel on in darkness, in our unpiloted way, led in our sorrowful musing to exclaim, Where is now my God? But when on our bended knees we stoop over the well–ay, often in our very darkest night of mystery and sadness–lo! the heavenly light reappears; we see the lost star of Providence mirrored in the fountain of salvation. The work and the love of Christ explain what is otherwise often inexplicable. God our Maker–God our Redeemer–giveth songs in the night. (J. R. Macduff, D. D.)
Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst again.
The contrast
I. IN EVERY BREAST THERE IS A CRAVING AFTER HAPPINESS. Who will show us any good? There are many streams of human enjoyment; some lawful and having the favour of God upon them; some mean and unworthy. But even the best, apart from the infinite excellence, can give no permanent satisfaction. The finite–philosophy, rank, conquest, gold–can never satisfy that which was born for the infinite.
II. WHAT IS TO TAKE THE PLACE OF THIS WORLDS BROKEN CISTERNS? You cannot dislodge one object of earthly affection without the substitution of something better. Nature abhors a vacuum.
III. CHRIST DOES NOT CONDEMN MANY EARTHLY STREAMS OR FORBID THEM. The wants of our physical and social natures are co- ordinate with our spiritual. Jesus recognizes both, but says, If you restrict your journeyings to the wells of human happiness you will not be satisfied. But I have a well of living waters.
IV. THE BELIEVER HAS AN INNER WELL IN HIS SOUL which makes him independent of earthly good. This source of lasting joy is ever full, and having access to it he may say, Having nothing, yet possessing all things. Christ in us the hope of glory. (J. R. Macduff, D. D.)
True religion
I. IS THE GIFT OF CHRIST. This fact is confirmed
1. By reason. The evidences supplied by
(1) Nature,
(2) the Bible, show that their origin is Divine. So does
(3) A holy life.
2. By the Bible.
3. By the song of the redeemed in heaven. This fact shows that
(1) Christs excellence is immense.
(2) Christs compassion is great.
(3) Christ is worthy of all praise.
II. HAS ITS RESIDENCE IN MANS INNER NATURE. Therefore
1. It cannot be destroyed by outward circumstances. In the cases of Job and Paul.
2. It will ever maintain its hold in man. Circumstances may take away every other gift, but not this.
III. TRANSCENDS IN VALUE THE BEST THINGS IN NATURE.
1. It gives permanent satisfaction to the soul in this life–unlike the best other things.
2. It raises its possessor to perfect happiness in the future.
IV. IS TO BE SECURED BY MANS OWN EXERTIONS. Whosoever drinketh.
1. This is natural. God gives food, but we must eat: so God works in us what we have to work out.
2. This is reasonable.
V. PRODUCES THE SAME EFFECT IN EVERY HEART. Whoever he may be religion will give him satisfaction. This shows
1. That it demands the reception of man universally.
(1) It is adapted to the world.
(2) It is what the world wants.
2. That it will one day secure universal order. (W. Griffiths.)
The blessings of the gospel
I. IN THEIR PHYSICAL TYPE. Water.
1. The flow of water represents the spread of the gospel (Isa 35:6-7; Isa 43:19-20).
2. The influence of water on vegetation illustrates the power of religion on human life (Psa 1:3; Jer 17:8).
3. The pleasant quietude of water represents the repose of soul which God affords (Psa 23:2).
4. The quickening energy of water typifies the vivifying power of Gods Spirit (Eze 36:25).
(1) No physical life without water, no moral life without religion.
(a) Vegetable and animal life are absolutely dependent on water.
(b) Water as an obstacle to terrestrial radiation saves our world daily from death.
(c) So in every way the life of the soul depends on Christ.
(2) No physical cleanliness without water; no moral purity apart from Christ.
II. IS THEIR CONDITION OF PROFIT. Drinketh. They are
1. For all.
2. For all on one condition.
3. For all on the same condition–personal appropriation.
III. IN THE MEDIUM OF THEIR COMMUNICATION. I shall give him. We are indebted to the sun for all water fit for use. The sun lifts the water of the sea in the form of vapour, and by its unequal heat in different sections of the air causes the vapour to descend in rain and dew. All our fresh water owes its origin to this. The impure compound of the sea passes through heavens laboratory and descends fit for use. All the energies of the Spirits life are passed beneath Christs magic touch.
IV. IN THEIR PRACTICAL INFLUENCE. In Him, etc. As the mountain is to water, so is a heart full of Christian sympathies to spiritual energies.
1. The water in dew and rain falls on the mountain; living things are refreshed, the land made fertile and beautiful; life made joyous.
2. The hills absorb the excess of moisture, the water percolating through the rock to inner caverns.
3. Thus when there is no rain or dew, and the heat is great, the mountain pours forth the stream it has treasured up to satisfy the wants of thirsty comers. So the child of God
1. Receives.
2. Is blessed.
3. Gives and blesses others. (Evan Lewis, B. A.)
Lifes ever springing well
You have been busy all the week with external things, let us now turn to the inner life. We make even our religion too much external–let us turn from ecclesiastical ceremonies and questions to the life of the soul. Spiritual life is
I. A DIVINE GIFT.
1. It is not a principle dwelling in man naturally, to be brought out of obscurity. Man is dead in trespasses and sins.
2. It is not produced in men by their own efforts, through the imitation of good examples, early instruction or gradual reform.
3. It is the gift
(1) Of the Father, for He hath begotten us again into a lively hope.
(2) Of the Son, through whose atoning sacrifice we receive it.
(3) Of the Holy Ghost who dwelleth in us.
4. What is the practical lesson but that we must make our solemn appeal to the mercy of God for it? Justice awards death; grace alone can bring life.
II. INWARD AND PERSONAL.
1. In Him. Unconverted men find it too much trouble to look after the inward life, but take an easier method and imitate its outward manifestation. In the churches are many Christians like the stuffed animals in a museum: there is no difference between them and the living except in the vital point. The invisible, but most real, indwelling of the Holy Spirit makes the difference between the sinner and the saint.
2. In Him. It is a personal matter. The presence of life in fifty relatives is of no service to the fifty-first if he is dead. All religion that is not personal is void. All the virtue that adorned your ancestors will not save you. The water which Jesus gives must be in every one of us if we would be saved.
3. How fares it with thee? Suppose there were no chapels or churches or means of grace, wouldst thou still be a Christian?
III. A VIGOROUS AND ACTIVE PRINCIPLE. Not a stagnant pool, nor a stream gently gliding on, but a spring forcing itself upwards. Springs are in perpetual motion, and no known power can stop them.
1. If heaps of rubbish are piled upon them they will force a course for themselves. So grace can well up
(1) Through a mass of ignorance–as in very uninstructed but very beautiful Christians.
(2) Through a mass of error–as in devout Roman Catholics.
2. Surrounding circumstances do not operate upon them as might be supposed. In frosty weather when the river is all ice the spring-head flows as ever. So a Christian may be placed in the worst circumstances, in an ungodly family, without the means of grace, but the inner life will not freeze.
3. This life passes through the severest ordeals and survives them–poverty, suffering, slander; over these the Christian triumphs.
4. Temptations threaten to destroy it; but let a man cast what rubbish he may into a living spring, the spring will purify itself and eject the filth, and so will the true Christian.
IV. A CONTINUAL AND EVERLASTING THING. Jesus might well have reminded the woman how many had gathered round that well and passed away, but there was the old well unchanged. So all the world may change, but the inward principle in the Christian does not decay. Some wells are drained dry by drought, or because some deeper well has taken away the supplies. But the Christians spring never fails, because he has struck the main fountain. His life is hid with Christ in God.
V. PRE-EMINENTLY AND CONSTANTLY SATISFACTORY. He who has Christ in him, the hope of glory, is perfectly satisfied. He could not have been content with the whole world beside.
1. Learning would only have revealed his ignorance.
2. Fame would only have made him more ambitious.
3. Wealth would have bowed him down with avarice. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
The spring of living water
Suggests
I. THE CONTINUAL FRESHNESS OF LIFE IN CHRISTS DISCIPLES. The idea of a running brook is that of freshness, a cheerfulness that never grows dull, an unwearied energy.
1. We have not to go far before we see weary faces that tell us that life has lost its freshness and has become a dreary thing, like a stream whose course has been obstructed, when the water stagnates and cannot carry off the foul and decaying things which have accumulated.
2. This has not been because of evil intent, but because life has become so dull and wearisome that they have not cared to keep it fresh and pure.
3. Once these lives were pure and gladsome, but something has come down into them that has put a stop to it all.
4. What is the cure? Not by removing the log or boulder, but by increasing the flow so that the stream can pass over or by it, or sweep it away. So God deals not with our circumstances, but with ourselves. He augments our spiritual life that in the rush of the mighty torrent the obstruction is removed.
II. ALL THE MUSIC AND BRIGHTNESS OF THE BROOK ARISE FROM THINGS THAT WOULD PROVE OBSTACLES WERE IT WEAKER. The pebbles or boulders would alike stop the music and flow of the stream that was not large enough to pass them. So it is with us. If we have within us that spring that leapeth up into eternal life it will make music out of the very things that would otherwise have stopped our prayers. Out of the cares of life,the sudden shocks of misfortune, there shall be nothing but joyous song. (A. Poulton.)
The springing fountain
There are two kinds of wells, one a simple reservoir, another containing the waters of a spring. It is the latter kind which is spoken about here, as is clear not only from the meaning of the word in the Greek, but also from the description of it as springing up. That suggests at once the activity of a fountain. A fountain is the emblem of motion, not of rest. Its motion is derived from itself, not imparted to it from without. Its silver column rises ever heavenward, though gravitation is too strong for it, and drags it back again. So Christ promises to this ignorant, sinful Samaritan woman that if she chose He would plant in her soul a gift which would thus well up, by its own inherent energy, and fill her spirit with music, and refreshment, and satisfaction.
I. First, CHRISTS GIFT IS REPRESENTED HERE AS A FOUNTAIN WITHIN. Most men draw their supplies from without; they are rich, happy, strong, only when externals minister to them strength, happiness, riches. For the most of us, what we have is that which determines our felicity. Take the lowest type of life, for instance, the men of whom, alas! the majority, I suppose, every time is composed, who live altogether on the low plane of the world, and for the world alone, whether their worldliness take the form of sensuous appetite, or of desire to acquire wealth and outward possessions. The thirst of the body is the type of the experience of all such people. It is satisfied and slaked for a moment, and then back comes the tyrannous appetite again. And, alas! the things that you drink to satisfy the thirst of your souls are too often like a publicans adulterated beer, which has got salt in it, and chemicals, and all sorts of things to stir up, instead of slaking and quenching the thirst. And even if we rise up in a higher region and look at the experience of the men who have in some measure learned that a mans life consisteth not in the abundance of the things that he possesses, nor in the abundance of the gratification that his animal nature gets, but that there must be an inward spring of satisfaction, if there is to be any satisfaction at all; if we take men who live for thought, and truth, and mental culture, and yield themselves up to the enthusiasm for some great cause, and are proud of saying, My mind to me a kingdom is, though that is a far higher style of life than the former, yet even that higher type of man has so many of his roots in the external world that he is at the mercy of chances and changes, and he, too, has deep in his heart a thirst that nothing, no truth, no wisdom, no culture, nothing that addresses itself to one part of his nature, though it be the noblest and the loftiest, can ever satisfy and slake. If you have Christ in your heart then life is possible, peace is possible, joy is possible, under all circumstances and in all places. Every- thing which the soul can desire, it possesses. You will be like men that live in a beleaguered castle, and in the courtyard a sparkling spring, fed from some source high up in the mountains, and finding its way in there by underground channels which no besiegers can ever touch. The world may be all wintry and white with snow, but there will be a bright little fire burning on your own hearthstone. You will carry within yourselves all the essentials to blessedness. If you have Christ in the vessel you can smile at the storm.
II. Christs gift is a springing fountain. The emblem, of course, suggests motion by its own inherent impulse. Water may be stagnant, or it may yield to the force of gravity and slide down a descending river-bed, or may be pumped up and lifted by external force applied to it, or it may roll as it does in the sea, drawn by the moon, driven by the winds, borne along by currents that owe their origin to outward heat or cold. But a fountain rises by an energy implanted within itself, and is the very emblem of joyous, free, self- dependent and self-regulated activity. And so, says Christ, The water that I shall give him shall be in him a springing fountain; it shall not lie there stagnant, but leap like a living thing, up into the sunshine, and flash there, turned into diamonds, when the bright rays smile upon it. So here is the promise of two things; the promise of activity, and the thought of activity, which is its own law.
1. The promise of activity. Some of us are fretting ourselves to pieces, or are sick of a vague disease, and are morbid and miserable because the highest and noblest parts of our nature have never been brought into exercise. Surely this promise of Christs should come as a true gospel to such, offering as it does, if we will trust ourselves to Him, a springing fountain of activity into our hearts that shall fill our whole being with joyous energy, and make it a delight to live and to work. It will bring to us new powers, new motives; it will set all the wheels of life going at double speed.
2. And there is not only a promise of activity here, but of activity which is its own law and impulse. There is a blessed promise in two ways. In the first place, law will be changed into delight. We shall not be driven by a commandment standing over us with whip and lash, or coming behind us with spur and goad, but that which we ought to do we shall rejoice to do; and inclination and duty will coincide in all our lives when our life is Christs life in us. And then, in the second place, that same thought of an activity which is its own impulse and its own law suggests another aspect of the blessedness, namely, that it sets us free from the tyranny of external circumstances which absolutely shape the lives of so many of us.
III. The last point here is THAT CHRISTS GIFT IS A FOUNTAIN, SPRINGING UP INTO EVERLASTING LIFE. The water of a fountain rises by its own impulse, but howsoever its silver column may climb it always falls back into its marble basin. But this fountain rises higher, and at each successive jet higher, tending towards, and finally touching, its goal, which is at the same time its course. The water seeks its own level, and the fountain climbs until it reaches Him from whom it comes, and the eternal life in which He lives. We might put that thought in two ways.
1. The gift is eternal in its duration. The Christian character is identical in both worlds, and however the forms and details of pursuits may vary, the essential principle remains one. So that the life of a Christian man on earth and his life in heaven are but one stream, as it were, which may indeed, like sonic of those American rivers, run for a time through a deep, dark canon, or in an underground passage, but conies out at the further end into broader, brighter plains and summer lands; where it flows with a quieter current and with the sunshine reflected on its untroubled surface into the calm ocean, He has one gift and one life for earth and heaven–Christ and His Spirit, and the life that is consequent upon both.
2. And then the other side of this great thought is that the gift tends to, is directed towards, or aims at and reaches, everlasting life. The whole of the Christian experience on earth is a prophecy and an anticipation of heaven. Christs gift mocks no man, it sets in motion no hopes that it does not fulfil; it stimulates to no work that it does not crown with success. If you want a life that reaches its goal, a life in which all your desires are satisfied, a life that is full of joyous energy, that of a free man emancipated from circumstances and from the tyranny of unwelcomed law, and victorious over externals, open your hearts to the gift that Christ offers you; the gift of Himself, of His death and passion, of His sacrifice and atonement, of His indwelling and sanctifying Spirit. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Human expedients and Divine provision
I. HUMAN EXPEDIENTS of happiness. Whosoever thirst again.
1. Gross and dissipated pleasure brings disappointment and remorse.
2. In refined and intellectual pursuits is much grief, and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.
3. Business brings gain, but they that will be rich fall into a snare, etc.
4. Leisure makes the hours hang heavily, is attended with satiety, and becomes a burden.
5. The conscience-stricken seeks a palliative in drowsy reflection or in resolutions and duties, but finds that he is compassing himself about with sparks that yield no warmth. All broken cisterns and vanity and vexation of spirit.
II. DIVINE PROVISION. Whosoever shall never thirst, etc. This water, the saving grace of Christ, is
1. Excellent in its nature. The property of water is to cool, cleanse, fertilize, and refresh; no element is so indispensable. The rich grace of Christ produces, maintains, increases, completes life and makes it immortal.
2. Divine in its origin. Seek it not in ordinances; they are only channels. Use them, but do not rest in them. Look to Jesus, the author and fountain of life.
3. Free in its communication. Give. Nothing is more free than a gift. Why is the grace of Christ so free? Because
(1) It is too precious to be bought.
(2) It is already procured by Christ.
(3) He must have all the glory.
4. Satisfying in its effects. Shall never thirst
(1) Offer any other water, but he will ever thirst for this, and the more he receives the more he will crave.
(2) He shall be satisfied with the kind of food he finds, though not with the degree.
(3) These effects are not produced by hearing, but by receiving.
5. Constant in its supplies
(1) Not only near, but in him. A good man is satisfied from himself.
(2) A well, not a shallow draught, a scanty stream, or stagnant pool–denoting the plentiful effusion, the large abundance, thecontinued freshness, the glorious sufficiency of the grace of the Saviour.
6. Active in its operations. It is not given to be dormant, but to operate.
7. Eternally glorious in its results.
III. BY WAY OF IMPROVEMENT INQUIRE WHAT YOU THINK OF THIS.
1. Some are ignorant and careless.
2. In some there is beginning of thirst.
3. Some have drunk. Then
(1) Be thankful.
(2) Remember your constant need of Christ.
(3) Seek the salvation of others. (T. Kidd.)
Holy water
I. THE WAY OF OBTAINING TRUE RELIGION.
1. It must come to us as a gift. There is no suggestion
(1) Of digging; it is freely handed to us.
(2) Of purchasing; it is presented without price.
(3) Of fitness. The woman was a sinner.
The Divine life is not in us by nature, cannot be produced by culture, nor infused by ceremonies, nor propagated. Wisdom cannot impart it, nor power fashion it, nor money buy it, nor merit procure it; grace alone can give it.
2. It is a gift from Jesus. All its details are connected with Him: redemption, forgiveness, deliverance from the power of sin, instruction, example. He is our all in all.
3. It is a gift that must be received. When we drink water it enters into us and becomes part of us: even so must we receive Christ into our innermost self; not professing to believe in Him or admiring Him; but so trusting Him, loving Him, living in Him that He becomes one with us.
II. THE SATISFYING POWER OF TRUE RELIGION.
1. Grace relieves our soul thirst as soon as received. A man once startled from sinful indifference finds an aching void within him. He tries riches, but money cannot satisfy him; he seeks after knowledge, but study is a meanness; he dazzles his fancy with fame, charms his eye with beauty and his ear with music, but all is vanity. But he who has received Christ has received at-one-ment with God, and God delights in him.
2. Grace continues to quench our thirst–though it strives to return it is always met by the well within.
3. This is a matchless blessing and averts a thousand ills. What should we have been without it?
III. THE ABIDING CHARACTER OF TRUE RELIGION.
1. It is in Him. Here is a man trying to write poetry, but it is not in him, and it cannot come out of him, so he rhymes his nonsense, but a poet he never becomes; but if a man has it in him who can take it away? So with art and education. Much more with religion.
2. It is in him a well of living water, always there as an operative force as permanent as Jacobs well which was there in the patriarchs day, and is there now. True religion is like a well, because it is independent of surroundings and circumstances. In summer and winter does it flow. The pond overflows because there has been a shower of rain, but the deep well is full in the drought. So the believer is not exalted by wealth nor crushed by poverty.
3. It is a well that is springing and never ceases to flow. The great motives which set a believer working at first are as forcible in old age.
4. It springs up into everlasting life. Grace blossoms into glory.
IV. THE PRACTICAL OUTCOME OF ALL THIS.
1. Where did you get your religion? From your Father, or is it of your own manufacture?
2. What has your religion done for you? Has it quenched your thirst?
3. Does your religion abide with you or do you remove it with your Sunday hat?
4. Does your religion spring up within you by the energy of the Holy Spirit? (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Living water
The incident shows
1. The equal right of womankind to spiritual privileges.
2. The intellectual capacity of woman. The topics discussed were no less abstract than those talked over with Nicodemus.
3. Our Lords mode of inculcating religious truth.
(1) From homely facts.
(2) Facts of which the hearers minds were full at the time.
I. RELIGION TYPIFIED BY WATER. Water has three main uses.
1. Fertilizing. There is an inspiring power in the truths, motives, and enjoyments of religion, and tends to transform the man.
2. Purifying. Religion cleanses the character, sanctifies the life, destroys sinful habits, fosters pure thoughts, kindles holy feelings, and stimulates to holy conduct.
3. Thirst quenching. Religion meets the souls aspiration for life by the promise of life everlasting; quenches its thirstings for happiness by giving it fellowship with God; meets its dissatisfaction with the world by opening before it heavens joy.
II. THE CHARACTERISTICS OF RELIGION AS TYPIFIED BY THE WELL-WATER.
1. Its activity is implied in its being a spring well, not a pool. Religion is a never-ceasing stream of influence. When it is still it stagnates and becomes foul, promotive of the worst qualities of human nature.
2. This activity is elevating and progressive in its effects. Water springs up into life in all it nourishes. In the tree it Supplies the roots with sap, which is water springing up into fruit and flower. The results of religion are growth in those moral qualities which live for ever in happiness.
III. THE ADVANTAGES OF RELIGION AS TYPIFIED BY THE WELL IN THE MAN.
1. Where it is within the man it exercises its power over his life apart from external influences and in spite of them. Mens moral characters must be moulded from within. External motives demoralize.
2. The comforts of religion, seeing they are within the man, are ever sure and uninterrupted. In ancient times when cities were liable to be besieged and all outside sources cut off, it was a matter of no small moment to have wells within the walls. This rendered the inhabitants more defiant of the enemy, seeing they were thus scarce of the necessaries of life. (A. J. Parry.)
Living water
1. It is characteristic of John that this metaphor omitted in the other Gospels should be preserved by him.
2. This emblem of spiritual vitality was not new (Isa 12:3; Isa 41:17; Isa 14:18;Jer 2:13).
3. The prophetic Scriptures, however, were unknown to the woman, for the Samaritans only received the Pentateuch, and had she known them it is not likely that she would have caught their inner sense.
4. Christ is the true well of life. In Him all fulness dwells. What a claim to be made by the carpenter of Nazareth; either an unpardonable exaggeration or a witness to His Divinity.
5. The water drawn from Christ as the well is the Spirit of life He imparts.
6. The points of analogy are obvious.
(1) As the well was free to all comers, so is Christ free and accessible to all (Isa 55:1).
(2) As water is a necessary of life and has power to enliven the faint and refresh the weary, so the Holy Spirit is necessary to the interior life and able to restore the discouraged and revive the languid.
7. The point of contrast was that water from Jacobs well would give but temporary relief, because water imbibed is soon worked off or consumed in the waste of the system. But the living water is not spent or exhausted in the operation of the spiritual life. The Holy Ghost abides.
8. See how we have to do with the Christ without and the Christ within. As the woman had to go beyond the town to reach the well, so every one must go beyond himself and his whole social environment and come to Jesus. Then Christ enters the heart that has asked of Him and dwells there.
9. There ought to be increase of spiritual life. The inward well may be deepened and the stream have a more copious flow. Alas! how often is it choked and all but dried up with worldliness!
10. The career of Jesus is an example of life in the Spirit. How strong its current was is shown by His forgetfulness of His physical want when the opportunity came of opening spiritual things. (Donald Fraser, D. D.)
Living water
I. THE NATURE OF THE GIFT. Spring water, i.e., Christ Himself the Life is His own gift.
II. ITS CHARACTERISTICS.
1. Always fresh.
(1) History is a storehouse of buried memories, some of which are galvanized into momentary life by antiquarians, but which soon die away since they belong to a past age and do not answer to our wants or correspond to our sympathies. But Christs words spoken 1800 years ago have the same force and attraction as though they were novelties of yesterday. His actions, His life as a whole speak to the nineteenth century as to the first, provoking the same hostility, winning the same empire.
(2) As He is in history, so He is in the soul. In that treasure house of the dead, amid all that is stagnant, all that belongs to the irrevocable past, all that bears the mark of change and corruption, there is for Christians one thought that is for ever fresh, one memory for ever invigorating, one tide of pure passion–Jesus.
2. A spring of water is in perpetual motion; so
(1) Christ, in history and in the soul, is ever different and yet the same. The sky presents the same outline of clouds on no two days; the sea, visit it when we may, never looks quite as it looked before. Yet they are the same. So Christ is to us what He was to our forefathers, and yet displays to each successive generation new aspects of His power and perfection: at the same time stability and progress.
(2) He is the source of movement in the soul. He has set it moving, and keeps it moving–even the very intelligence that would drive Him from
His throne; for His truths have moved the depths of our being, so that whether a man accepts them or not he cannot rest as though he had never heard them. Faculties dormant for years are stirred to meet Him, and He keeps them in motion by fresh aspects of His power and beauty.
(3) In Christian theology. The Christian creed is said to be the stagnation of active thought. Undoubtedly it gives a fixed form to our ideas, so as to render superfluous the discussion of matters on which the light of Divine certainty has been thrown. But fixed thought is no more the antagonist of active thought than the rim of the well was hostile to the springing water.
3. Springing water fertilizes.
(1) Christ is the great fertilizer of the soul of man–of
(a) The intellect; for He made it capable of the productions of genius.
(b) The affections. Family life in Europe is His work. His authority reflected in the Christian father, His tenderness in the Christian mother, His obedience in the Christian child.
(c) The will; making it capable of new measures of sacrifice and heroism.
(2) Christ is the fertilizer of nations, and without Him the civilization of Europe would be exchanged for the civilization of China or Japan.
III. THE SCENE OR SEAT OF THE GIFT. In Him.
1. Others have done great works
(1) Effecting vast changes on the surface of human life in founding empires, changing customs, laws, and languages.
(2) Some have gone deeper–founding empires of ideas.
2. Christ has done more–more than the founding of a kingdom or of a philosophy; for a government may be hated while obeyed, a philosophy accepted without love. But Christ reigns and teaches in human hearts as a friend.
3. Hence Christians know the secret of mans dignity. Before Christ came the dignity of man as man was unknown. When He came He placed within the reach of emperor and slave the only ennobling gift–His presence and power within.
4. This gift is also the secret of the Christians spiritual independence. If Christians were dependent on the things of sense, the world might crush it out. The world prescribed Christian worship, destroyed the Scriptures, but was powerless against the presence of the Divine Redeemer.
IV. ITS EFFECT. Everlasting life. Without it man would not be happy in heaven. (Canon Liddon.)
Living water, or vital religion
I. In its SOURCE.
1. It is a gift. Human nature is an arid desert, unproductive of a single drop of water.
2. It is a free gift. Water is one of the freest gifts of nature. You charge for milk, you give water. Christ gives liberally, and upbraids not. He is too rich to sell, we too poor to buy.
3. It is a free gift, which only Himself can give–not His apostles or their successors.
4. A free gift to whomsoever desires it. He has enough to quench the thirst of all mankind.
II. In its NATURE.
1. It is personal. Christian nations do not make Christian individuals, but vice versa The former one a great blessing, the latter a greater.
2. It is inward.
(1) Our life is hid with Christ in God; that is, our objective or justification life.
(2) Gods life is hid with Christ in us; that is, our subjective or regenerate life.
3. It is Divine–the same in kind as in God. All my springs are in Thee.
III. In its OPERATION.
1. It is active. It varies in feeling; but let us not forget that it is first principle–a well of water, not necessarily hot water. You may adopt means to make it hot, but hot or cold it is water all the same.
2. It is cleansing.
(1) Hercules turned a river through the filthy Augean stables; Christ turns the river of Divine grace into the sinners heart. Springs in soft soils carry up particles of sand in order to carry them away. So grace, as it bubbles up in the heart, disturbs the sands of defilement.
(2) It cleanses society, and has washed away unnameable sins, and will go on with the work of refinement till the face of the earth is made like the face of heaven.
3. It is satisfying (Psa 36:8).
IV. In its DESTINATION.
1. It is aspiring. Christianity is aspiring, but not satiating, not inconsistent with hope and effort. The believer wants nothing but God, but more of Him.
2. It will at last reach everlasting life. The life implanted in regeneration will continue for ever. (J. Cynddylan Jones, D. D.)
The water of life
I. ITS DONOR. Yonder poor man who asks for refresh-ment
1. Professes to have this water.
2. Is able to supply it.
3. Was appointed to give it.
4. Has the disposition to do so.
5. Has never denied it.
II. ITS RESIDENCE. In Him.
1. The internal principle of religion is not to be opposed to external practice: works must evidence experience.
2. Yet Divine things must be known and felt before they can govern us. God begins with the heart.
3. The religion of some people is all external.
(1) That of some depends on external occurrences, like a stream produced by a storm instead of being supplied by a spring. Sickness, poverty, etc., make some men religious for a time.
(2) That of others consists in external performances. Obedience is not enjoyed as their meat, but as their medicine.
(3) The religion of a third is found in their connections. They leave it to their ministers or parents to think for them.
(4) The religion of a fourth is all in Christ. They ridicule the very notion of a work of grace in us.
III. ITS ACTIVITY.
1. Real Christians are everywhere represented as active–husband-men, reapers, warriors, racers.
2. The design of the gospel is to produce a people zealous for good works.
3. The graces of the Holy Spirit are not dormant, but active.
4. All the images of the gospel imply the same thing–leaven, fire, force of vegetation.
IV. ITS TENDENCY.
1. It weans us from the world.
2. It sets our affections on things above.
3. It promotes the heavenly life below. (W. Jay.)
The longing for unknown happiness
We have an idea of happiness, says a great French writer, who has bequeathed, as a legacy, the stray but profound imaginings of his mind about God–we have an idea of happiness, and yet we cannot grasp it; we are conscious of an image of the true, yet we possess only the false. There is an ignorance; yet not absolute. There is a knowledge; yet not certainty. Yes. We are always haunted by a memory or stimulated by a hope. We are always looking after something; we hardly know what it is. (Knox Little.)
Riches unsatisfying
Very few men acquire wealth in such a manner as to receive pleasure from it. Just as long as there is the enthusiasm of the chase they enjoy it; but when they begin to look around, and think of settling down, they find that that part by which joy enters is dead in them.
They have spent their lives in heaping up colossal piles of treasure, which stand, at the end, like the pyramids in the desert sands, holding only the dust of kings. (H. W. Beecher.)
The unsatisfying nature of worldly things
As a cup of pleasant wine offered to a condemned man on the way to his execution; as the feast of him who sat under a naked sword hanging perpendicularly over his head by a slender thread; as Adams forbidden fruit, seconded by a flaming sword; as Belshazzars dainties overlooked by a handwriting against the wall: such are all the empty delights of the world–in their matter and expectation, earthly; in their acquisition, painful; in their fruition, nauseous and cloying; in their duration, dying and perishing; in their operation, hardening, effeminating, leavening, puffing up, estranging the heart from God; in their consequences seconded with anxiety, solitude, fear, sorrow, despair, disappointment. (J. Spencer.)
Worldly things unsatisfying
He that seeks to satisfy his lusts goes about an endless business. Give, give! is the horse-leechs language. The worldling hath enough to sink him but not to satisfy him. (J. Trapp.)
Worldly things unsatisfying
I have read a story of a man whom Chrysostom did feign to be in prison. Oh, saith he, if I had but liberty, I would desire no more! He had it; and then cried, If I had enough for necessity, I would desire no more. He had it; and then cried, Had I a little for variety, I would desire no more. He had it; and then cried, Had I any office, were it the meanest, I would desire no more. He had it; and cried again, Had I but a magistracy, though over one town only, I would desire no more. He had it; and then sighed, Were I but a prince, I would desire no more. He had it; and then sighed, Were I but a king, I would desire no more. He had it; and then cried, Were I but an emperor, I would desire no more. He had it; and then exclaimed, Were I but emperor of the whole world, I would then desire no more. He had it; and then he sat down with Alexander, and wept that there were no more worlds for him to possess. Now, did any man come to enjoy what he is said to desire, it would be but a very mean portion compared with God. (Thomas Brooks.)
The worth of the water of life
I. WHAT IS MEANT BY THIS WATER CHRIST GIVETH. The gifts and graces of the Spirit (Joh 7:38-39).
1. The gift of regeneration to become Gods child.
2. The gift of faith to believe Gods promises.
3. The gift of obedience to do Gods will.
4. The gift of prayer to seek Gods presence.
5. The gift of comfort to endure Gods trials.
6. The gift of strength to hold out and continue Gods servant.
II. CHRIST IS ABLE AND WILLING TO GIVE THIS WATER.
1. Able (Psa 36:9; Zec 13:1; Col 1:19; Col 2:3).
2. Willing (Mat 11:28; Joh 7:37; Rev Isa 55:1).
III. HOW CHRIST BESTOWS THIS WATER.
1. By the preaching of the Word.
2. By the sacraments.
3. By prayer.
IV. THE PARTIES TO WHOM CHRIST WILL GIVE THIS WATER. Those wire thirst (Isa 4:1; Mat 5:6; Joh 7:27; Rev 22:18). If there be no thirsting, there shall be no refreshing.
V. THE BENEFIT OF ENJOINING THE WATER. Never thirst, because the fountain is never dry.
VI. THE SIGNS OF HAVING THIS WATER.
1. A clear sight of thine own souls estate.
2. Purity of heart.
3. Satisfaction in Christ. (S. Hieron.)
The deceptive character of this worlds good
Many years ago, when the Egyptian troops conquered Nubia, a regiment was destroyed by thirst in crossing this desert. The men, being upon a limited supply of water, suffered from extreme thirst, and deceived by the appearance of a mirage that exactly resembled a beautiful lake, they insisted on being taken to its banks by the Arab guide. It was in vain that the guide assured them that the lake was unreal, and he refused to lose the precious time by wandering from his course. Words led to blows, and he was killed by the soldiers whose lives depended on his guidance. The whole regiment turned from the track and rushed towards the welcome waters. Thirsty and faint, over the burning sands they hurried; heavier and heavier their footsteps became, hotter and hotter their breath, as deeper they pushed into the desert, farther and farther from the lost track where the pilot lay in his blood; and still the mocking spirits of the desert, the affects of the mirage, led them on, and the lake, glistening in the sunshine, tempted them to bathe in its cool waters, close to their eyes, but never at their lips. At length the delusion vanished; the fatal lake had turned to burning sand. Raging thirst and horrible despair! the pathless desert and the murdered guide! lost! lost! all lost! Not a man ever left the desert, but they were subsequently discovered, parched and withered corpses, by the Arabs sent in search. (Sir S. Baker.)
Unsatisfactory nature of this worlds good
A striking proof we have of this is the example of Solomon, who, with every advantage, made the experiment what earth and earthly things could do to satisfy the soul of man. Whichever way he turned, and in whatever quarter he inquired, he found that all is vanity and vexation of spirit. If he thought to prove his heart with mirth, and to enjoy pleasure, this also was vanity; so that he was forced to say of laughter, It is mad, and of mirth, What doeth it? If he increased his goods, and gathered silver and gold, he found what the experience of all ages has confirmed, that he who loveth silver shall not be satisfied with silver, nor he that loveth abundance with increase–this also was vanity. (J. Fawcett, M. A.)
The most renowned of earthly conquerors seated himself by that well. He brought the monarchs of the world to be his drawers of water; each with his massive goblet going down for the draught, and laying the tribute at the victors feet. But the tears of the proud recipient have passed into a proverb; and if we could ask him to translate these dumb tears into words, his reply would be, Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst again. (J. R.Macduff, D. D.)
Perinal supplies
There is an Eastern legend which says that there was a fair fountain by which an angel once rested, and in a favoured hour he infused into it a mysterious power, so that if only some drops of its water were scattered in a barren plain a fountain would spring up; and thenceforth any traveller who came to the spring might, after refreshing himself, take some water from it, and carry with him on his journey the secret of unfailing springs, and might suffer no fear of thirst. And is not the water which Christ gives like that, only it is given by the Lord of angels? (Donald Fraser, D. D.)
Life-streams
The Son of God gives living water–first, by giving Himself to redeem the world which was pining away in death; and secondly, by making the life which is in Him for the redeemed, to be, through the Holy Ghost (Rom 8:2), a happy, blessed life in them. In the beginning life was in Him (Joh 1:4); and this life-stream of the eternal Word, which forth from Paradise flowed through this worlds dark valley of death, until its whole fulness was collected in the flesh of the Son of Man–this life-stream will never dry up, but will ever become deeper and broader (Eze 47:1-23.); in the kingdom of grace, imparting grace for grace to all who drink thereof for their healing from sin and death, and in the paradise of the new, glorified earth, refreshing the perfected saints with rapture for ever and ever (Rev 22:1-17). (R. Berser.)
The freeness of salvation and the cost of the means
Dr. Adam Clarke once preached on the words, Let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take of the water of life freely. At the conclusion of the discourse he announced a collection. How can you, Doctor, asked a lady afterwards, reconcile the freeness of the water of life with the collection at the close? Oh, madame, answered the learned and venerable divine, God gives the water without money and without price; but you must pay for the water-works, for the pipes, and the pitchers which convey the water to your neighbourhood. Remember, you pay nothing to God; you are charged nothing for the water; but you cannot have convenient chapels to sit in without paying for them, nor a regular ministry to urge the water on your acceptance, without making a suitable provision for its support. (J. C. Jones, D. D.)
The satisfaction within
I visited two lakes not far apart in a mountainous district of North Wales, namely, Bala and Arenig. Having noticed that one was somewhat muddy and discoloured whilst the other was beautiful and clear, quite transparent down to its bed, where the eye could distinctly see the fishes flitting to and fro, I asked my companion what might be the reason for this difference. He replied, Bala Lake, whose waters are discoloured, is replenished by streams which flow into it, and which bring with them the soft and debris they gather up in their course down the hill-side and through the alluvial earth. But the Arenig, whose water is so beautifully transparent and placid, is supplied by springs bubbling up within its own bosom; hence they bring with them no defiling elements. Herein I found a parable. The motives which are supplied by the world–its pride, its wealth, its fashion, and fame–are corrupt, and as they enter the mind they pollute it. But those supplied by religion, which is a well-spring within, are pure in themselves and purify the whole man. (A. J. Parry.)
The best happiness within
Here the fountain is within, the streams of happiness have their source in the heart itself, they do not flow to a man from without, but spring up in his own happy breast. A good man, it is written, shall be satisfied from himself; he is not happy because his corn and wine and oil are increased; but because God lifts up upon him the light of His countenance, and fills him with joy and peace in believing, so that he abounds in hope through the power of the Holy Ghost. He despises not the earthly comforts which God gives him, nor does he turn austerely from them. Nay, he enjoys them with double relish as the gifts of a reconciled Father, and eats his meat with gladness and singleness of heart, praising God. The joys of friendship and social intercourse, and the charities of domestic life, he can taste too as well as others, and has them of a purer and more exalted kind. But still his best happiness is from within, a peaceful conscience, a pure heart, a firm trust in God, a freedom from anxious care and covetous desire, love of the brethren, the delight of doing good, patience in adversity, and the hope of eternal glory. (J. Fawcett, M. A.)
Mans longings satisfied by Christ
If you look over the dreamy aspirations of the Ancient and Middle Ages, you will find that they resolve themselves into two–a thirst for the elixir of immortality, and a longing for the philosophers stone. The elixir was believed to possess the power to impart immortality to man, and the stone to possess the power to convert all baser metals into pure gold. The elixir was to set me right, the stone to set my circumstances right. But I need not remind you that the alchemists could neither concoct the one nor discover the other. Notwithstanding all their efforts, man remained both mortal and indigent. But these, like all other deep longings of our nature, are met and satisfied in Christianity. Christ gives to man the white stone with the new name–this is the real Philosophers Stone, and it will set our circumstances right by and by. He also gives us the Water of Life, which is the genuine Elixir of Immortality, and will render our persons really and truly immortal. (J. C. Jones, D. D.)
Swinging up into everlasting life
Water, by a well-known law of hydrostatics, never rises above its own level; and so the best of earthly joys and rills of pleasure can rise no higher than earth: they begin and terminate here. But the living water with which Christ fills the soul, springing from heaven, conducts to heaven again. Flowing from the Infinite–flowing from the throne of God and of the Lamb, from the city of the crystal sea–it elevates to the Infinite. It finds its level in the river of the water of life which flows in the midst of the celestial Paradise. And just as on earth, so long as our mighty lake-reservoirs are full of water and the channel unimpeded, the marble fountain in street or garden, sends up, on the gravitation principle, its crystal jets in unfailing constancy; so (with reverence we say it) never shall these fountains of peace and joy and reconciliation and hope cease in the heart of the believer until the mighty reservoirs of Deity are exhausted; in other words, until God Himself ceases to be God. Everlasting life is their source, and everlasting life is their magnificent duration. We have witnessed the memorable and interesting spot at the roots of Mount Hermon, familiarly known as the sources of the Jordan. There, the river of Palestine is seen bubbling out of a dark cave, and thence hastens on through its long tortuous course to lose its waters in the Sea of Death. That is the picture and illustration of every stream of earthly happiness. They terminate with the grave. But this inner fountain in the hidden man of the believers heart flows onward to the Sea of Life; and the hour which terminates the worldlings happiness only truly begins his. (J. R. Macduff, D. D.)
Jesus a spring
A little girl who had been instructed in a Sunday School in the country was very fond of her Bible. There was a spring at a small distance from her cottage, from which the family supplied themselves with water. Her father had noticed that she was sometimes longer than necessary in going to the spring. One day he followed her unperceived, and observed her set down the pitcher and kneel to pray. He waited till she arose, and then, coming forward, said, Well, my dear, was the water sweet? Yes, father, said she; and if you were but to taste one drop of the water I have been tasting, you would never drink of the waters of this world any more. Whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him, says Jesus, shall never thirst.
Religion a spring
When you were children, as you went along through the park, has your eye been attracted by a tiny jet of water springing up among the green grass? You said, It is a spring! And then, because you had nothing to do in those happy days, you said, I will cover it up, and keep the spring down. You have gathered leaves and earth and stones, and built a compact house, and said, No more water from that poor spring will ever get out of that prison. By and by the earth loosened and fell and crumbled away before the irresistible stream of gentle water. (J. Watson, M. A.)
Salvation to be received as a free gift
A great many people are looking at their feelings; a great many people are looking at themselves. Do not be looking at your feelings, but look at heaven. Suppose a man who had been in the habit of meeting in the street one whom he had known for years as a beggar, and were to see him to-night with a nice suit of clothes on, and were to accost him with, Hullo, beggar, and he were to answer, Dont call me a beggar; I am no beggar. But are you not a beggar? No, sir, I am not a beggar. What is the reason you are not a beggar? Why, I was sitting there to-day, and I put out my hand and asked a man to give me something. A gentleman came along, and put five thousand dollars right into my hand. How do you know it is good money? I took it to the bank. How did you get it? I put my hand out, and he just put it in my hand. How do you know it is the right kind of a hand? Oh, pooh, what do I care what kind of a hand it was? (D. L. Moody.)
Christian character forceful
A gentleman relates that he was one morning riding along a new road, where he saw the road-makers hard at work blocking up a little spring which kept gushing out in the road they were making. They put in earth and stones, and beat them down, to choke the fountain, and then rolled the roller up and down to make the road solid. So they worked and worked away, and contrived to keep the spring under during the day. But at night, when the traveller returned, the little spring, which had been hindered, but not destroyed, was at work again, dislodging the stones, throwing out the dirt, and scooping for itself a channel. So it is often with Gods children. (G. Litting, LL. B.)
Earthly and spiritual blessings
His lips water not after homely provision that hath lately tasted of delicate sustenance. (Trapp.)
The activity of grace
I tell you the living spring cannot be stayed in its action. If you have a cistern-full of water it will be quiet enough, but if it be a spring it is for ever seething, bubbling, gushing. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The inward spring
The Christian has a fens perennis within him. He is satisfied from himself. The men of the world borrow all their joy from without, and, like gathered flowers, though fair and sweet for a season, it must soon wither and become offensive. Joy from within is like smelling the rose on the tree–it is more sweet and fair, and, I must add, it is immortal. (G. H. Salter.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 11. Thou hast nothing to draw with] , Thou hast no bucket. Good water is not plentiful in the east; and travellers are often obliged to carry leathern bottles or buckets with them, and a line also, to let them down into the deep wells, in order to draw up water. If the well was in our Lord’s time, as it was found by Mr. Maundrell, thirty-five yards deep, it would require a considerable line to reach it; and with such it is not likely that even the disciples of our Lord were provided. The woman might well say, The well is deep, and thou hast nothing to draw with; whence then hast thou that living water?
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Ver. 11 What our Saviour spake metaphorically, comparing his grace, or his Spirit, or the doctrine of his gospel, to living water, this poor woman understandeth literally; and knowing that the well was very deep, (some say forty cubits), and seeing him, as a traveller, not provided with any thing to draw with, or into, she asks him whence he had that living water? A question much like that of Nicodemus, Joh 3:4. So ignorant are persons of spiritual things, till they are enlightened by the Holy Spirit of God.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
9-12. How is it that thounotaltogether refusing, yet wondering at so unusual a request from aJew, as His dress and dialect would at once discover Him to be, to aSamaritan.
for, c.It is thisnational antipathy that gives point to the parable of the goodSamaritan (Lu 10:30-37),and the thankfulness of the Samaritan leper (Luk 17:16Luk 17:18).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
The woman saith unto him, Sir,…. Which was an usual, way in those countries, of addressing men, and especially strangers; and expresses no uncommon respect to Christ, of whose dignity and greatness she was, entirely ignorant; and at whom she was now scoffing; for so the following words are to be understood:
thou hast nothing to draw with; no pail, or bucket, or rope, to let it down with, as Nonnus adds; for it seems, there was no bucket, or vessel, fastened at the well for the common use, but everyone brought one with them, when they came to draw: though it is strange there was not one; since, according to common usage, and even of the Jews u,
“a public well had, , “a bucket”, or pitcher; but a private well had no bucket:”
and the well is deep; that which is now called Jacob’s well, is by some said to be forty cubits deep, and by others thirty five yards:
from whence then hast thou that living water? this she said in a sneering, scoffing manner: she reasoned with him, either that he must have it out of this well; but that could not be, since he had no vessel to draw with, and the well was so deep, that he could not come at the water without one; or he must have it from some neighbouring spring; upon which she scoffs at him in the following manner.
u T. Hieros. Erubin, fol. 20. 2.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Sir (). So it has to mean here in the mouth of the Samaritan woman, not Lord.
Thou hast nothing to draw with and the well is deep ( ). This broken construction of – (neither–and) occurs in N.T. elsewhere only in 3Jo 1:10. (from , to draw) is a late word for that which is drawn, then (Plutarch) for the act of drawing, and then for the rope as here to draw with. This well () is 100 feet deep and Jesus had no rope. The bucket of skin (“with three cross sticks at the mouth to keep it open,” Vincent) was kept at the well to be let down by a goat’s hair rope.
That living water ( ). “The water the living,” with the article referring to the language of Jesus in verse 10. She is still thinking only of literal water.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
To draw with [] . The noun means what is drawn, the act of drawing, and the thing to draw with. Here the bucket, of skin, with three cross sticks at the mouth to keep it open, and let down by a goat ‘s – hair rope. Not to be confounded with the water – pot [] of ver. 28. The word is found only here in the New Testament.
Well [] . See on ver. 6. It may have been fed by living springs [] .
That living water [ ] . Literally, the water the living.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “The woman saith unto him, Sir,” (legei auto kurie) “She responded to him, Sir, master, or Lord,” respectfully, earnestly, honestly she spoke, the best she knew how, Joh 7:17.
2) “Thou hast nothing to draw with, and the well is deep:(oute antlema echeis kai to phrean estin bathu) The well is 76 feet deep and 9 feet in diameter today. Though she was correct regarding that natural well of Jacob, she was yet blind, unseeing, struggling to know the implications of the claims of Jesus to give her some cool water that would be the best, most peaceful and lasting she had ever had, Joh 4:10.
3) “From whence has thou that living water?” (pothen oun echeis to hudor to zon) “Whence or from what source do you have, hold, or possess the living water?” And how can you draw out from so deep to give me such good, living water? Everyone that asks receives and each who seeks finds, if he seeks and asks with all his heart, earnest, honest, full of affections, Jer 29:13; Isa 55:6-7; Psa 145:18-19.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
11. Sir, thou hast nothing to draw with. As the Samaritans were despised by the Jews, so the Samaritans, on the other hand, held the Jews in contempt. Accordingly, this woman at first not only disdains Christ but even mocks at him. She understands quite well that Christ is speaking figuratively, but she throws out a jibe by a different figure, intending to say, that he promises more than he can accomplish.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(11) The woman saith unto him, Sir . . .Her tone changes to one of respect. Something in His voice and manner, it may be, has touched her. She does not understand His words, but she is conscious of their latent force. She feels the presence of One who teaches with authority, and the Thou, being a Jew, passes to the reverential Sir. Still, she does not see how He can give her living water. Where will He get it? He has no means for drawing it, and the water in the well is far below His reach. His word, too, strikes her, and she dwells on it;that living water. She thinks of spring water, as in Gen. 26:19, and Lev. 14:5, where the Hebrew is living water. He cannot draw from that well. Does He mean to say that He knows of another, with better water? The word used here for well is different from that in Joh. 4:6, where the surface only was thought of. Here, and in the next verse, the depth is prominent, and we have the same word, which is rendered pit, in Luk. 14:5.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
11. Woman saith She perceives the double meaning, and queries which is the true sense. If it be the material water of this present well he means, he must make a deep draught with neither rope nor bucket. If it be some kind of transcendental, mystical, or immortalizing water he means, he must be greater than the father of the tribes himself who dug this wonderful well!
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘The woman says to him, “Sir, you have nothing to draw with and the well is deep. From where then have you that living water?” ‘
The well was one hundred feet deep, and this man had no vessel to draw with. What on earth could He mean? From where could He obtain living water? Her mind was still fixed on the idea of the physical water in the well.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
The explanation of the living water:
v. 11. The woman saith unto Him, Sir, Thou hast nothing to draw with, and the well is deep; from whence, then, hast Thou that living water?
v. 12. Art Thou greater than our father Jacob, which gave us the well, and drank thereof himself, and his children, and his cattle?
v. 13. Jesus answered and said unto her, Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst again;
v. 14. but 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.
v. 15. The woman saith unto Him, Sir, give me this water, that I thirst not, neither come hither to draw. The Lord had gained His first object; He had awakened the curiosity of the woman; He could now expect to draw her out. The dignity of His speech and bearing caused her to address Him as Lord, but her answer showed that she was very skeptical about His ability to perform what He had promised. He had no vessel to draw water with, and the cistern or well was too deep for Him to get water without the aid of such a vessel; how could He, then, produce water, and living water, that is, water from a spring, at that? In this way, the woman understood His words as referring to physical, earthly water only. If Jesus could give her living water at this place, that is her argument, then He must be greater and mightier than Jacob, whom the Samaritans also, having Israelitish blood in them, regarded as their forefather. Jacob had done much for them in providing this well, out of which he himself had drunk, and his children, and his cattle. If Jesus could give the Samaritans better water than that of this well, then He must be a greater, mightier man. The understanding of the woman was altogether carnal. Jesus therefore tries to open her understanding by an explanation. Every person that drank of the water of that well would become thirsty again. The physical thirst of a person may be quenched for a little while by a drink of water. But the water to which He is referring is not that which is drunk with the mouth. It is of a nature that it quenches one peculiar thirst forever. In all eternity such a person will never be bothered by thirst again; for the water which He proposes to give will become in him that drinks of it a fountain of water bubbling up into eternal life. His gift is living water with the power to produce life and to keep bubbling with life and strength, and thus daily producing new power, enabling the possessor to gain eternal life. All the thirst, all desire and longing of people, is satisfied forever by this water; for that is His salvation, which He has brought and proclaimed. That alone can fully satisfy the heart. The salvation which Christ gives works a new, a spiritual life, and this life is fully realized and completed in eternity. The Lord’s purpose to arouse interest, to stimulate desire for this wonderful water, was successful, though the woman did not yet understand what He was referring to. Her one concern is that she may be saved the trouble of coming out here every day to draw water and then to carry it home the long distance. The two qualities of the Lord’s water have attracted her: the fact that it quenches thirst forever; the fact that it bubbles up ever anew and needs no drawing.
Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann
Joh 4:11. Thou hast nothing to draw with, &c. Literally, Thou hast no bucket. See Joh 4:28 and on Joh 4:6. In the dry countries of the East, the inhabitants find themselves obliged to carry with them great leathern bottles of water, which they fill from time to time as they have opportunity; but what is very extraordinary, in order to be able to do this, they, in many places, are obliged to carry lines and buckets with them. So Thevenot, in giving an account of what he provided for his journey from Egypt to Jerusalem, tells us, “He did not forget leathern buckets to draw water with.” Rauwolff goes farther; for he gives usto understand, that the wells of inhabited countries there, as well as in the desarts, have no implements for drawing of water, but what those bring with them who come thither; for, speaking of the well or cistern of Bethlehem, he says, “It is a good rich cistern, deep and wide; for which reason, the people that go to dip for water, are provided with small leathern buckets and a line, as is usual in those countries; and so the merchants, who go in caravans through great desarts in far countries, provide themselves also with these, because in these countries you find more cisterns or wells, than springs that lie high.” In how easy a light, says the author of the Observations, doth this place the Samaritan woman’s talking of the depth of Jacob’s well, and her remarking, that she did not observe our Lord had any thing to draw with, though he had spoken of presenting her with water.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Joh 4:11-12 . “Thou canst not mean the spring-water here in this well; you could not give this to me, for thou hast no bucket, [187] which is needed on account of the depth of the well; whence hast thou, therefore, the spring-water you speak of? ”
] The , etc., Joh 4:10 , has given the woman a momentary feeling of respect , not unmixed with irony.
followed by is rare, 3Jn 1:10 ; see Winer, p. 460 [E. T. p. 619]; Baeumlein, Partik . p. 222; Klotz, ad Devar . 714.
, . . .] Notice the emphatic coming first: “ thou surely art not greater,” etc.; “ thou dost not look like that!” Comp. Joh 8:53 .
] i.e. more able , in a position to give what is better. By him was the well given us, and for him it was good enough for him and his to drink from; yet thou speakest as if thou hadst another and a better spring of water! The woman dwells upon the enigmatical word of Christ at first, just as Nicodemus did, Joh 3:4 , but with more cleverness and vivacity, at the same time more pertly, and with feminine loquacity.
] for the Samaritans traced their descent back to Joseph . Josephus, Antt . vii. 7. 3, viii. 14. 3, xi. 8. 6. They certainly were not of purely heathen origin (Hengstenberg); see Keil on 2Ki 17:24 ; Petermann in Herzog’s Encykl . XIII. 367.
, . . .] a Samaritan tradition, not derived from the O. T.
, . . . ] is simply and , neither for , nor and indeed . The are the cattle (Plato, Polit . p. 261 A; Xen. Oec . xx. 23; Ages . ix. 6; Herodian. iii. 9. 17; Josephus, Antt . vii. 7. 3), not servants (Majus, Kypke), [188] whom there was no need specially to name; the mention of the herds completes the picture of their nomadic progenitor.
] which thou hast to give; Joh 4:10 .
[187] , elsewhere the drawing of water , is used in the sense of haustrum . Nonnus explains it ( a bucket to draw water ). The woman had with her a , ver. 28 (comp. Joh 2:6 ), but she must also have had an , provided with a long handle or rope to draw the water up , or at least some contrivance for letting down the itself.
[188] The word, the general meaning of which is quicquid enutritur , is found on inscriptions as applied to slaves ; it is used of children likewise in the classics (Valck. Diatr . p. 249), as in Soph. Phil . 243; comp; Oed. Rex , 1143. It does not occur in the LXX. or Apocrypha.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
11 The woman saith unto him, Sir, thou hast nothing to draw with, and the well is deep: from whence then hast thou that living water?
Ver. 11. Sir, thou hast no bucket ] See how witty we are naturally, with our armed dilemmas, to reject grace offered, and with both hands as it were, to thrust away from us eternal life, , Act 13:46 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
11, 12. ] Though is not to be pressed as emphatic, it is not without import; it surely betokens a different regard of the stranger than did; , . Euthym [61] The course of her thoughts appears to be: ‘ Thou canst not mean living water ( , Euthym [62] ), from this well, because thou hast no vessel to draw with, and it is deep; whence then hast thou (knowest thou of, drawest thou) the living water of which thou speakest? Our father Jacob was contented with this , used it, and bequeathed it to us: if thou hast better water, and canst give it (notice the in both verses), thou must be greater than Jacob .’ There is something also of Samaritan nationality speaking here. Claiming Jacob as her father ( , , , , , Jos. Antt. ix. 14. 3), she expresses by this question an appropriation of descent from him, such as almost to exclude, or at all events set at a greater distance, the Jews, to one of whom she believed herself to be speaking.
[61] Euthymius Zigabenus, 1116
[62] Euthymius Zigabenus, 1116
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Sir. App-98.
well = a well dug out. Not the same word as in verses: Joh 4:6, Joh 4:14. deep. In 1869 it was 105 feet, and had 15 feet of water.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
11, 12.] Though is not to be pressed as emphatic, it is not without import; it surely betokens a different regard of the stranger than did;- , . Euthym[61] The course of her thoughts appears to be:-Thou canst not mean living water ( , Euthym[62]), from this well, because thou hast no vessel to draw with, and it is deep; whence then hast thou (knowest thou of, drawest thou) the living water of which thou speakest? Our father Jacob was contented with this, used it, and bequeathed it to us: if thou hast better water, and canst give it (notice the in both verses), thou must be greater than Jacob. There is something also of Samaritan nationality speaking here. Claiming Jacob as her father ( , , , , , Jos. Antt. ix. 14. 3), she expresses by this question an appropriation of descent from him, such as almost to exclude, or at all events set at a greater distance, the Jews, to one of whom she believed herself to be speaking.
[61] Euthymius Zigabenus, 1116
[62] Euthymius Zigabenus, 1116
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Joh 4:11. , Lord) Previously she had not called Him Lord: now she so calls Him, inasmuch as speaking piously about God, though as yet unknown to her, Joh 4:15, Lord, give me this water: [Engl. Ver. of is Sir] 19 Lord, I perceive that thou art a prophet. So ch. Joh 5:7 [The impotent man], a man, who knew not Jesus, calls Him Lord. They had a feeling in some way or other of His dignity.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Joh 4:11
Joh 4:11
The woman saith unto him, Sir, thou hast nothing to draw with, and the well is deep: whence then hast thou that living water?-The woman failed to understand his meaning and suggested the difficulties of his getting water out of the well. Her mind was fleshly, sensual, and material. She could think of nothing but literal water, and knew of none better than that in Jacobs well. [See comments, verse 6.]
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
thou hast: Joh 3:4, 1Co 2:14
Reciprocal: Gen 26:19 – springing water Num 19:17 – running water shall be put thereto Psa 57:4 – whose Pro 12:10 – righteous Joh 6:51 – living Joh 6:52 – How Joh 14:22 – how Rom 11:2 – how he maketh Rev 7:17 – shall lead Rev 22:1 – water
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
1
The woman is still thinking of literal drinking water. It was evidently the practice for people to bring their own cord with which to draw water from the well. Seeing that Jesus did not have such, she could not understand how he would perform the act of courtesy for her.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
The woman saith unto him, Sir, thou hast nothing to draw with, and the well is deep: from whence then hast thou that living water?
[From whence then hast thou that living water?] Living water; the woman mistakes our Saviour’s meaning, as if he intended only what was usually expressed by bubbling; or springing waters. So that when our Saviour talks to her of a water that he had to give, which whosoever should drink of should thirst no more, the woman [laughs in her sleeve indeed, and] with all the scorn that could be, saith, “Sir, pray give me of this water, that I may never have any thirst, or give myself the trouble of coming hither to draw”; for so we ought to conceive of her answer to be rather by way of scoff, not supplication.
Fuente: Lightfoot Commentary Gospels
Joh 4:11. She saith unto him, Sir, thou hast nothing to draw with, and the well is deep: from whence then hast thou that living water? In the answer of Jesus there was much to cause surprise, especially in the emphatic reference to Himself; but there was nothing in the actual terms used that compelled the hearer to seek for a figurative meaning. Living water was a phrase in ordinary use in speaking of the fresh bubbling spring or the flowing brook. Isaacs servants digged in the valley and found there a spring of living water (Gen 26:19, margin). Wherever running water is spoken of in the ceremonial law, the same expression is used. Hence nothing more than the fresh spring that supplied the well might at first be presented to the womans mind, and that this precious gift came of the Divine bounty would be no unfamiliar thought. Though, as a Samaritan, she might know little or nothing of Gods promise of His Spirit under this very emblem, or of Jeremiahs comparison of God Himself to a fountain of living waters (Jer 2:13), yet reflection would suggest some such meaning. At present, however, she answers without reflection, and perceives no higher promise than that of the Creators bounty, attained without the use of ordinary means.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Observe here, 1. How ignorant persons are of spiritual things, till enlightened by the Holy Spirit of God. This poor woman’s question, Whence hast thou that living water? looks much like that of Nicodemus, How can these things be? Joh 3:9 A natural person cannot perceive the mind of Christ when speaking to him about spiritual things. Spiritual objects must have a spiritual eye to discern and behold them, The natural man perceiveth not the things of the Spirit. 1Co 2:14
Observe, 2. With what great humility and condescension our holy Lord treats this poor woman, pitying her ignorance, and pardoning her infidelity; he tells her, That the water of that well which she was about to draw, could not give an abiding satisfaction; but the thirst quenched for the present, would certainly return again: but he that should drink of the water which he had to give, that is, be made partakers of the graces of the Spirit, shall find such refreshing satisfaction there from, that all inordinate desires after earthly things will be quenched and extinguished, and will be like a well of water springing up, till he come to eternal glory.
Learn hence, 1. That as the body of man is subject to a natural, so is the soul of man subject to a spiritual, kind of thirst.
2. That no creature comfort, or earthly enjoyment, can quench this thirst which the soul of man is subject unto.
3. That the Spirit of grace (which our Saviour here calls the water of life) is able fully and perfectly to quench the thirst of the soul: and where it is once savingly received, shall never be totally or finally lost. It shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life; that is, the graces of the Spirit shall be in believers as permanent habits, as fixed principles that shall not decay.
Hence St. Peter calls it incorruptible seed, which liveth and abideth for ever, 1Pe 1:23
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Vv. 11, 12. The woman says to him: Sir, thou hast nothing to draw with, and the well is deep; from whence, then, hast thou that living water? 12. Art thou greater than our father Jacob, who gave us the well, and who drank of it himself, as well as his sons and his cattle?
The Samaritan woman takes the expression living water in its literal sense. She means: Thou canst neither () draw from the well the living water which thou offerest to mefor thou hast no vessel to draw with nor (), because of its depth, canst thou reach by any other means the spring which feeds it. Unable to suppose that He is speaking spiritually, she cannot understand that He offers her what He has Himself asked from her (Westcott). The term , Sir, expresses, however, profound respect. She calls Jacob our father, because the Samaritans claimed descent from Ephraim and Manasseh (Joseph. Antiqq.9.14, 3). : servants and cattle, everything requiring to be supported. It is the complete picture of patriarchal nomad life which appears here.
Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)
The woman responded by trying to find out how Jesus could give her living water and who He was. She said "living water" probably to avoid the embarrassment of asking what "living water" was. Obviously she thought Jesus was a cheap charlatan. Her question expected a negative answer. She could not see how he could be greater than the patriarch Jacob.
Even today this is one of the deepest wells in Palestine being over 75 feet deep, as local guides delight to point out. [Note: Zondervan Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible, s.v. "Jacob’s Well," by R. L. Alden, 3:388.] Her reference to "our father Jacob" was probably another barb designed to remind this Jew that Jacob was the Samaritans’ ancestor as well as the Jews’.