We are in the third week of our Lenten journey now, and I am thinking about the ways in which journeys to new places may change us. In my morning devotions last week I encountered some questions pertaining to this. How does what you encounter today affect your actions today, and tomorrow? How do the experiences you have now change the way you will be later?
Questions such as these seem to get at the bigger question of whether, and how, you will be open to a new thing when it is presented to you.
To the extent that we can afford to, many of us attempt to travel in a way that will be as unchallenging as possible. In many ways, we try to take home with us when we go away, to keep it as familiar and comfortable as we can. But then are we able to experience something new, break out of our expectations, our mental constructs?
These are important questions for the season of Lent. Are we available to hear a word from God? Are we able to receive a new thing?
These are questions raised in the story we hear from John’s gospel today.
John begins by telling us that Jesus left Judea, probably Jerusalem, and went back to Galilee, and that he had to go through Samaria.
But this statement – that he had to go through Samaria – raises some questions. That was not the normal route for a Jew to travel.
There were actually several routes one could travel to get from Jerusalem to Galilee, and only one of them involved going through Samaria. You could go to the west, and travel alongside the Mediterranean Sea. Or you could go east and travel along the Jordan river to the Sea of Galilee. Neither of these routes involved going through Samaria, which would be regarded as the least desirable choice.
The Jews and the Samaritans were not friendly, you may recall. There was a lot of history between these two peoples, a lot of bad blood. So for a Jew to travel through Samaria was to walk through enemy territory. It would have been a no-brainer, I think, for most to choose one of the other routes.
You could take the eastern route, or the western route, or the Samaria route. Jesus chose the third option, to go straight through Samaria. John tells us he had to, for some reason.
If he had told anyone that this was what he would be doing, I wonder what kind of reactions he would have received. I imagine his disciples tried to discourage him from going this way, it was not necessary. I am sure they would have been concerned about his decision to wait alone at this Samaritan well while they went in search of provisions. But, then again, maybe they thought there was little risk for him. Because going to the well for water was women’s work. How could a woman, even a Samaritan woman, harm him?
In fact, it is unlikely that anyone will be at the well while he is there. It is high noon in the desert. Most women would go in the early morning and the evening, when the heat of the sun is not bearing down on them. Some would say you would be unusually brave or foolish to venture out at midday.
But, against the odds, a woman approaches the well to draw water.
She behaves as a woman in possession of herself, a woman who is at home in her skin. A woman who is ready to encounter something new.
She is not afraid of Jesus. She recognizes him immediately as a Jew. And she knows all the prohibitions that would warn her against interacting with this man. Even so, she asks him a pointed question: “How is it that you, a Jew, ask a drink of me, a woman of Samaria?”
How is it that you, a man, are speaking to me, a strange woman?
How is it that you, a Jew, are speaking to me, a Samaritan?
How is it that you, a religiously observant son of Israel, are speaking to me, someone who is considered by your people to be unclean?
What are you doing here in Samaria? What are you doing at my well?
This woman has some questions.
Jesus is not at all put off, however, by her blunt question. He doesn’t miss a step. It is almost like he was waiting for it. It is almost as if he were waiting for her – this 5-time married and divorced Samaritan woman.
Jesus has taken this unconventional route through Samaria apparently because there was a conversation in Samaria he needed to have.
So he says to this woman: Let’s talk about the water that I could give to you. The living water.
And they’re off. And you know what? She is a marvel.
She is a worthy conversation partner for Jesus. She doesn’t back down. She responds to every strange thing he says – at first not understanding him but staying with him nonetheless. Perhaps one of the best things that can be said about her is this: She is not afraid of what she doesn’t understand but is willing and able to continue the conversation through the ambiguity, the uncertainty.
One can’t help but compare this conversation with the last one he had – with the Pharisee Nicodemus back in chapter 3. Nicodemus sought Jesus out because he sensed that there was something Jesus had that he, Nicodemus needed. But he struggled to comprehend, he simply couldn’t make the leap with Jesus toward a new understanding of things. Yes, it is possible he did that later. But on this night, he walked away more perplexed than when he began.
The Samaritan woman, however, did not come looking for Jesus. She had no idea he would be at the well. But finding him there she was fully present with him. In the bright light of day, they speak and listen to each other in truth. She has questions: Why do you ask me for water? How would you possibly get this water you are referring to? How can I get this living water that will forever satisfy my thirst?
Eventually, the point they arrive at is remarkable. The woman mentions the Messiah, and Jesus responds, “I am he.”
And the immense power of this is lost in the translation, because what he actually says is “I am.” Jesus is the great I Am.
The name by which God identified Godself to Moses at the burning bush. I Am. When Moses asks God what name he should give when he speaks to the Israelites, and the Lord says, “Tell them I Am has sent you.”
And in this moment at the well, Jesus tells the Samaritan woman, I Am.
Somehow this is all she needs. She drops her water jar and heads directly back to her village to tell everyone, “Come and see!”
All because Jesus took the way around the normal route. And this Samaritan woman, in her conversation with Jesus, was willing to go all the way around with him, journeying into territory she had never before been. She becomes the first person in the gospel to proclaim Jesus as God.
So – what about you and I? Where might we be in this story?
You and I come to this place on a Sunday morning, very likely because it is our practice to do so. I travel the same route always; my car knows the way to go. My smartwatch tells me, “you’ll arrive in four minutes,” because my watch knows where I am going, too, the moment I back out of the driveway.
We come here with an expectation of what we will encounter, of how things will be. But do we expect to encounter the living God?
Do we truly expect to meet Jesus?
And even if we don’t have a particular expectation, are we in any way open to such an encounter? Can we come to this place we have been to many times before and experience something we have never experienced before?
We know that Nicodemus was not quite ready for it when he came looking for Jesus. But the Samaritan woman, even though she was not expecting it, welcomed this encounter.
And she was forever changed by it. As we might be too.
Robert Frost wrote a poem that speaks to this notion: The Road Not Taken, a poem about a journey that takes a person to a place where the roads diverge, a point where the traveler must choose which way to go. The last lines of the poem are:
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
May you take the road less traveled – eyes open, heart open, ready to be changed. May you be ready to meet Jesus.






