XXVI.
Jesus Sets Out from JudÆa for Galilee.
Subdivision B. At Jacob's Well, and at Sychar.
D John IV. 5–42.
d 5 So he cometh to a city of Samaria, called Sychar,
near to the parcel of ground that Jacob gave to his son Joseph. 6
and Jacob's well was there. [Commentators long made the mistake of
supposing that Shechem, now called Nablous, was the town here called Sychar.
Sheckem lies a mile and a half west of Jacob's well, while the real Sychar, now
called 'Askar, lies scarcely half a mile north of the well. It was a small
town, loosely called a city, and adjoined the land which Jacob gave to Joseph
(Gen. xxxiii. 19; xlvii. 22; Josh. xxiv.
32), Joseph's tomb being about one hundred yards east of it. The
mummy of Joseph, carried out of Egypt at the time of the Exodus, was buried in
this parcel of ground, and there is but little doubt that it really rests in
the place indicated by the tomb; and though the name Sychar may be derived from
the words “liar” or “drunkard,” it is more likely that
it means “town of the sepulchre,” referring to this tomb. The Old
Testament is silent as to when or why Jacob dug this well. It lies on the
southern side of the valley of Shechem, where it opens upon
142the
plain of Moreh (now called el-Mukhnah), about a hundred yards south of the foot
of Mt. Gerizim. It is one of the few Biblical sites about which there is no
dispute, and probably the only place on earth where one can draw a circle of a
few feet, and say confidently that the feet of Christ have stood within the
circumference. Maundrell, who visited it in 1697, said that it was 105 feet
deep, and had in it fifteen feet of water. But travelers have thrown stones
into it to sound its depth, until at present it is only sixty-six feet deep,
and has no water in it except in very wet winters. It is seven and half feet in
diameter, and is walled with masonry to a depth of about ten feet, below which
it is cut through the solid rock. It lies 400 nearly due south from Joseph's
tomb. As the neighborhood abounds in springs, the well would hardly have been
dug save by one who wished to be independent of his neighbors—as Jacob
did.] Jesus therefore, being wearied with his journey, sat thus by the
well. [John gives us important items as to the humanity of Jesus. He tells
us how he sat as a wayworn traveler, hungry and thirsty, at Jacob's well; and
he alone records the words, “I thirst,” spoken on the cross
(John xix. 28). The top of the well is
arched over like a cistern, and a round opening is left about twenty inches in
diameter. On this arch or curbing Jesus sat. We should note the perpetuity of
blessings which springs from a good deed. Gutenberg did not foresee the
newspaper when he invented printing; Columbus did not anticipate the land of
the free when he led discoverers to our shore, nor is it likely that the
prophetic eye of Jacob ever saw the wearied Christ resting upon the well-curb
which he was building.] It was about the sixth hour. [That is, twelve
o'clock, if we reckon by Jewish time, or six o'clock in the evening, if we
reckon by the Roman method. We prefer the latter method.] 7 There cometh a
woman of Samaria to draw water [She was not of the city of Samaria (which
was then called Sebaste—the Greek word for Augustus—in honor of
Augustus Cæsar, who had given it to Herod the Great), but a woman of the
province of Samaria, which
143lay between Judæa and Galilee,
and reached from the Jordan on the east to the Mediterranean on the west,
comprising the country formerly occupied by the tribe of Ephraim and the half
tribe of Manasseh]: Jesus saith unto her, Give me to drink.
8 For his disciples were gone away into the city to buy food. [Had the
disciples been present they would have bargained with the woman for the use of
her rope and pitcher; but in their absence Jesus himself asked her for a drink.
He met her on the ground of a common humanity, and conceded to her the power of
conferring a favor. Women have been immemorially the water-carriers in the East
(Gen. xxiv. 13, 14; Ex. ii. 16).
Palestine is in summer a parched land, inducing intense thirst, and the people
usually comply cheerfully with the request for water; it was probably so in
Jesus' day (Matt. x. 42). Mohammed
commanded that water should never be refused.] 9 The Samaritan woman
therefore saith unto him, How is it that thou, being a Jew [as his language
and dress declared], askest drink of me, whom am a Samaritan woman?
(For Jews have no dealings with Samaritans.) [It is not likely that she
meant to refuse his request, but she yielded to the temptation to banter one
who she thought despised her, and whose necessities now caused him for a moment
to forget his pride. The ancestors of the Samaritans were introduced into the
land of Israel by the king of Assyria, after he led the ten tribes into
captivity (II. Kings xvii.
24–41). When the Jews returned from their captivity in Babylon
and began to rebuild their temple, the Samaritans asked permission to build
with them, and when this was refused, an enmity arose between the two people
which never died out (Ez. iv. 1–5; Neh. ii.
10, 19; iv. 1–3). We must, however, restrict the word
“dealings” to social intercourse. Race antipathy did not ordinarily
interfere with trade or other matters involving money, as is shown by verse 8 above. According to later tradition, a Jew accepted no hospitality from a Samaritan, and to eat his bread
as a guest was as polluting as to eat swine's flesh, but such social courtesy
was the very thing
144which Jesus here asked. There are to-day
between one and two hundred Samaritans dwelling in Shechem at the foot of Mt.
Gerizim, and Dr. Robinson says of them that they “neither eat, nor drink,
nor marry with the Jews, but only trade with them.”] 10 Jesus answered
and said unto her, If thou knewest the gift of God, and who it is that saith to
thee, Give me to drink; thou wouldest have asked of him, and he would have
given thee living water. [Jesus is himself the Gift of God (John iii. 16; II. Cor. ix. 15). But she knew not
that God had bestowed a special Gift, and much less that the one to whom she
spoke was that Gift. Had she known she would have understood that though
physically Jesus was the object of her charity, spiritually their cases were
reversed, and she was the needy one, as Jesus intimates. Living water would
mean literally “running” or “spring water,” as
contrasted with still or cistern water (Gen. xxvi.
19; Lev. xiv. 5). Jesus here uses it in the spiritual sense. He
fills us with his grace and truth (John i.
14) and grants unto us continual, untold refreshing (Rev. vii. 17). The reviving and regenerating
effects of the Holy Spirit are likewise called living water (John vii. 37–39).] 11 The woman saith
unto him, Sir [the word “Sir” is elsewhere translated
“Lord”], thou hast nothing to draw with, and the well is
deep: whence then hast thou that living water? [She understood his words
literally, and was puzzled by them; but, won by the courtesy which suggested an
exchange of gifts, she answered respectfully, though incredulously.] 12 Art
thou greater than our father Jacob, who gave us the well, and drank thereof
himself, and his sons, and his cattle? [We should note three points in this
verse: 1. The greatness of Jesus. The woman had just called him
“Lord.” The man at Bethesda, though he knew not Jesus, afterwards
did the same (John v. 7). People felt
the majesty and dignity of Jesus. When he offered to give a greater blessing
than that given by Jacob, the woman at once contrasted him with
Jacob—Jacob with sons and cattle and wealth—and wondered if this
lonely
145stranger could really imagine himself greater than the
illustrious patriarch. 2. She claimed descent from Jacob; it was a false claim.
Jesus classed the Samaritans with Gentiles (Matt.
x. 5), and spoke of them as strangers or aliens (Luke xvii. 18). 3. She spoke of the well as given
by Jacob. She meant that it had been given to Joseph (Gen. xlviii. 22), and that her people had inherited it as
descendants of Joseph.] 13 Jesus answered and said unto her, Every one that
drinketh of this water shall thirst again: 14 but whosoever
drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst [Jesus here
draws a contrast between earthly and heavenly blessings. No worldly joy gives
lasting satisfaction, but Jesus is the bread and water of life to his disciples
(John vi. 35) their unfailing
satisfaction]; but the water that I shall give him shall become in
him a well of water springing up unto eternal life. [A beautiful figure of
the joy in Christ. In heat, in cold; in drought, in shower; in prosperity, in
adversity; it still springs up, cheering and refreshing the soul, and this unto
all eternity—Rev. vii. 17; xxi. 6
.] 15 The woman saith unto him, Sir, give me this water, that I thirst not,
neither come all the way hither to draw. [She but dimly comprehended the
nature of Christ's offer, but was persuaded of two things: 1. The wonderful
water was to be desired. 2. Jesus was able and willing to give it. When she
spoke of coming “to draw” her words suggested the household to
which it was her duty to minister, and prepared the way for the command of
Jesus to bring the head of the household.] 16 Jesus saith unto her, Go, call
thy husband, and come hither. [She had asked Jesus for the water of God's
grace, but she needed to be made conscious of how much she needed
it—conscious (if we follow the figure) of her dormant thirst. Jesus,
therefore, gave command to call her husband, that by so doing he might reveal
her life and waken her to repentance.] 17 The woman answered and said unto
him, I have no husband. Jesus saith unto her, Thou saidst well, I have no
husband: 18 for
146thou hast had five husbands;
and he whom thou now has is not thy husband: this hast thou said truly.
[The divine wisdom of Jesus brought to light a sad state of affairs. During the
period of five marriages the woman's life had at least some outward show of
respectability, but now it was professedly unclean. The number of marriages
reflects somewhat upon the character of the woman, and hints that some of them
may have been dissolved by her own fault, though the loose divorce law of that
age permitted a man to dissolve the marriage ties on very slight provocation.
Among the Jews the great Hillel is reported to have said that a man might
properly divorce his wife if she burnt his dinner while cooking. It is not
likely that any higher ideals of matrimony obtained among the Samaritans.]
19 The woman saith unto him, Sir, I perceive that thou art a prophet. [She
had heard of the miraculous knowledge of the Jewish prophets, and this evidence
given her by Jesus persuaded her that he was one of them, as a like evidence
had persuaded Nathanael (John i. 48, 49
). By thus calling him a prophet she virtually confessed the truth as to all
the things concerning which he had accused her.] 20 Our fathers worshipped
in this mountain [i. e., Mt. Gerizim]; and ye [ye
Jews] say, that in Jerusalem is the place where men ought to worship.
[Though a desire to divert the conversation from her own sins may have, in some
slight measure, prompted the woman to bring up this question about places of
worship, yet her main motive must have been far higher. If we ourselves stood
in the presence of one whom we felt assured to be fully inspired of God, how
hastily would we propound to him some of the vexed questions which befog the
religion of our time! Prompted by such a feeling, this woman sought to have the
great dispute between Jew and Samaritan decided. Solomon's temple in Jerusalem
was soon after its erection confronted by those who denied its claims to be
exclusively the place set apart for divine worship. Jeroboam, the rebellious
servant of Solomon, taught the people that Bethel and Dan were as acceptable
for worship as Jerusalem. But
147Jerusalem, as the site of the first
great temple, held precedence above all rivals until its claims were
discredited in popular estimation by the fact that it was destroyed by
Nebuchadnezzar. When, after many years, the returning captives rebuilt its
walls, it lacked the sanction of age, and it had lost many of the features of
divine recognition, which contributed to the sacredness and grandeur of the
first structure. Soon after its erection in the days of Nehemiah, Manasseh, son
of the high priest Joiada, and brother of the high priest Jonathan (Neh. xii. 10, 11; xiii. 28), married to the
daughter of Sanballat, Persian governor of Samaria. Refusing to dissolve this
marriage at the decree of the governor of Jerusalem, Manasseh was chased by
Nehemiah from Jerusalem, and his father-in-law made him high priest of the
Samaritans, and undertook to build for him the temple which afterwards crowned
the summit of Mt. Gerizim. Manasseh left Jerusalem about b.c. 332. The temple built for him was
destroyed by John Hyrcanus about
b.c. 129, but the place where it stood was still the sacred center of
Samaritan worship, as it is to this day. Mt. Gerizim, and its supporting city
of Shechem, had many grounds on which to base their claims to be a sacred
locality: 1, Here God appeared to Abraham for the first time after his entering
Canaan (Gen. xii. 6, 7); 2, here Jacob
first dwelt (Gen. xxxiii. 18); 3, here
Joseph came seeking his brethren (Gen. xxxvii. 12,
13); 4, here was a city of refuge (
Josh. xx. 7–9); 5, here Joshua read the blessings and cursings
(Josh. viii. 33); 6, here also he gave
his last address (Josh. xxiv. 1); 7,
here were buried the bones of Joseph (Josh. xxiv.
32), and the neighborhood was prominent at the time of the division
of the ten tribes (I. Kings xii. 1, 25
). If we may consider Samaritan traditions of that day as similar to those of
the present, they had added greatly to the real importance of the neighborhood,
for they now contend that 1, Paradise was on the summit of Gerizim; 2, Adam was
formed of the dust of Gerizim; 3, on Gerizim Adam reared his first altar; 4,
Seth here reared his first altar; 5, Gerizim was the Ararat on which the Ark
rested, and the only spot which the flood did
148not overflow; and
therefore the only place which escaped the defilement of dead bodies; 6, on it
Noah reared his altar; 7, here Abraham attempted to offer Isaac; 8, here he met
Melchizedek; 9, here was the real Bethel, where Jacob slept and saw his ladder
vision. Backed by such high claims, the woman deemed it possible that this
prophet might decide in favor of Samaria's holy place. We should note that the
Samaritans worshiped in Mt. Gerizim because they could say, “Our fathers
did so.” Thus many errors are perpetuated to-day because our fathers
practiced them; but our fathers had no more authority to alter or amend God's
word than we have. The Jews worshiped in Jerusalem because it had been
prophesied that God would select a spot as the peculiar place for his worship
(Deut. xii. 5–11), and because
according to this prophecy God had selected Mt. Moriah in
Jerusalem—I. Kings ix. 3; II. Chron. iii. 1,
2.] 21 Jesus saith unto her, Woman, believe me, the hour cometh,
when neither in this mountain, nor in Jerusalem, shall ye worship the
Father. [Jesus uses the word “hour” to indicate that the time
was near at hand when all religious distinctions as to places would be
abolished, and when every spot might be used for purposes of
worship—I. Tim. ii. 8.] 22 Ye
worship that which ye know not: we worship that which we know. For salvation is
from the Jews. [Jesus here speaks as a Jew, and draws a comparison between
the intelligent worship of his people and the ignorant worship of the
Samaritans. Though the Samaritans possessed the Pentateuch, they were without
the revelation of God which the prophets of Israel had developed, and their
worship was neither authorized nor accredited by God. Moreover, it led toward
nothing; for salvation was evolved from the Jewish religion, and not from that
of Samaria. Salvation proceeded from the Jews. From them, according to the
flesh, Christ came, and from them came also the prophets, apostles, and
inspired writers who have given us that full knowledge of salvation which we
possess to-day. We must take the words of Jesus as referring rather to the two
religions than to the
149two peoples. Though as a body the
Jews did not know whom they worshiped, and though their teachers were blind
leaders of the blind, yet the fault was in their unbelief, and not in the
revelation or religion in which they refused to believe. On the contrary, if
the Samaritans had believed his religion to the full, it would hardly have been
sufficient to have enabled him to know what he worshiped. Samaria was, in the
days of idolatry of Israel, a chief seat of Baal worship, and in later days it
was the home of magicians and sorcerers.] 23 But the hour cometh, and now
is [the hour is really here, but the knowledge of it is not yet
comprehended], When the true worshippers shall worship the Father in
spirit and truth: for such doth the Father seek to be his worshippers.
[Jesus draws the mind of the woman from the place of worship to the Person or
Being worshiped, and from the form to the spirit of worship. God seeks for
genuine and not formal worshipers, and for those who worship him in truth;
i. e., those who render him the obedience of faith with a filial spirit,
and not those who render him the empty service of types and shadows, ceremonies
and rites, which, through disbelief, have lost their meaning.] 24 God is a
Spirit [These words contain one of the most simple, yet most profound,
truths which ever fell upon mortal ear. Their truth is one of the great glories
of revelation, and corrects the mistaken conclusion of human reason. They show
that 1, God is absolutely free from all limitations of space and time, and is
therefore not to be localized in temples (Acts vii.
48); 2, that God is not material, as idolaters contend; 3, that he
is not an abstract force, as scientists think, but a Being; 4, that he is
lifted above all need of temples, sacrifices, etc., which are a benefit to man,
but not to God (Acts xvii. 25).
Spiritual excellence raises man above the beast, and spiritual excellence in
turn raises God above man—Isa. xxxi.
3]: and they that worship him must worship in spirit and
truth. [That is, men must offer a worship corresponding with the nature and
attributes of God.] 25 The woman saith unto him, I know that Messiah cometh
(he
150that is called Christ): when he is come, he will
declare unto us all things. [The breadth and largeness of Jesus' teaching
suggested to her the great Teacher who was to come, and caused her to yearn for
him who could tell, as she thought, perhaps even larger things. The Samaritans
justified their idea of a coming Benefactor by passages found in the
Pentateuch, and got their name for him from the Jews. Relying on the prophecy
found at Deut. xviii. 18, modern
Samaritans regard the Messiah as a returning Moses, calling him El-Mudy
—the Guide. They contend that his name will begin with M, and that he
will live to be 120 years old. This woman's idea of the Messiah was probably
also very crude, but it was in part an improvement on the general Jewish
conception, for it regarded him as a teacher rather than a world-conquering,
earthly prince.] 26 Jesus saith unto her, I that speak to thee am
he. [This is the first recorded
declaration of his Messiahship made by Jesus. He was not confessed to be
Messiah by Simon Peter (Matt. xvi. 16)
till the last year of his ministry. Jesus spoke more freely as to his office in
Samaria than in Judæa or Galilee; for, 1, the Samaritans would make no
effort to take him by force and make him a king (
John vi. 15); 2, his short stay in Samaria justified an explicit and
brief revelation.] 27 And upon this came his disciples; and they marvelled
that he was speaking with a woman. [The spirit of the Rabbis is shown by
their later precept; viz.: “Let no one talk with a woman in the street,
no, not with his own wife.” The estate of woman was then, and had been
for a long time previous, very low. Socrates thanked the gods daily that he was
born neither a slave nor a woman. Roman law gave the husband absolute authority
over the wife, even to put her to death; and Jewish contempt for women is made
apparent by the readiness with which the Jews divorced them]; yet no
man said, What seekest thou? or, Why speakest thou with her? [So deep was
their reverence and respect that they did not question, though they did not
understand.] 28 So the woman left her waterpot [in the forgetfulness
151of great joy, and as the unconscious pledge of her return],
and went away into the city [Sychar], and saith to the people,
29 Come, see a man, who told me all things that ever I did [To publish Christ is one of
the first impulses of those who feel Christ's gracious power. Her invitation is
like that given by Philip (John i. 46).
On second thought her statement is not so much of an exaggeration as it at
first appears. Her five marriages and present state covered the whole period of
her maturer life, and the way in which Jesus had disclosed it all convinced her
that every detail of it was spread out before him]: can this be the
Christ? [Her question does not imply that she herself had any doubts about
the matter. She uses the interrogative form because she does not wish to be
dogmatic, but prefers to let the people judge for themselves. Observe the
woman's change of mind concerning Jesus. She first called him “Jew”
(ver. 9), then “Sir”
(ver. 11), then “prophet”
(ver. 19), and now she invites her city
to come forth and see “the Christ.”] 30 They went out of the
city, and were coming to him. 31 In the meanwhile [the time
between the departure of the woman and the arrival of her fellow-townsmen]
the disciples prayed him, saying, Rabbi, eat. 32 But he said unto
them, I have meat to eat that ye know not of. 33 The disciples
therefore said one to another, Hath any man brought him aught to eat? [They understood his words
literally, as a declaration that he had dined.] 34 Jesus saith unto them, My
meat is to do the will of him that sent me, and to accomplish his work.
[His delight at the woman's conversion, as a part of the work which his Father
had given him to do, overcame for a time his desire for food. Food has several
characteristics: 1. enjoyment; 2. satisfaction of desire; 3. refreshment and
strength. God's work had these characteristics to Jesus, whose life fulfilled
the principle that man shall not live by bread alone.] 35 Say not ye, There
are yet four months, and then
cometh the harvest? behold, I say unto you, Lift up your eyes, and look on the
fields, that they are white
152already unto harvest.
[Jacob's well overlooked the luxuriant grainfields of the plain of Moreh. As
the disciples looked abroad over its patches of varying green, they would say
that it would yet be four months before these patches could be harvested. The
harvests in the natural world are slow. But turning their eyes toward Sychar,
the disciples could see the citizens of the town in their white garments
pouring forth to see Jesus, and to be gathered by him as a harvest of disciples
which had sprung up and ripened from the seeds of truth sown by the woman but a
few moments before. Spiritual sowing brings speedy harvests. Some commentators
look upon the words of Jesus as proverbial, but there is no proverb extant
which places only four months between sowing and reaping. In Palestine this
period covers six months. We must, therefore, take the words of Jesus as a
plain statement as to the length of time between the date of his speaking and
the date of harvest. Harvest begins about the middle of April, and counting
back four months from that date we find that this visit to Sychar occurred
somewhere about the middle of December.] 36 He that reapeth receiveth wages,
and gathereth fruit unto life eternal: that he that soweth and he that reapeth
may rejoice together. [Harvest times were seasons of great joy (Deut. xvi. 13–15; Ps. cxxvi. 6; Isa. ix.
3). But the joy of joys shall come when God gathers his redeemed
into the heavenly garner. In this present the humble teacher sows and the
evangelist, or more gifted brother, reaps; but in that glad hour it shall
matter little whether we have been a sower or a reaper, for we shall all
rejoice together. Sower and reaper alike shall receive wages, a part of which
shall be the “fruit” gathered—the souls saved. Jesus regarded
gaining a brother as a large compensation, a great gain—Matt. xviii. 15.] 37 For herein is the saying
true [see Isa. lxv. 21, 22; Lev. xxvi. 16;
Job xxxi. 8; Mic. vi. 15], One soweth, and another
reapeth. 38 I sent you to reap [Christ, as Lord of the
harvest, sent both sowers and reapers] that whereon ye have not labored:
others have labored, and ye are entered into
153their
labor. [In earlier days many prophets and holy men had labored to prepare
the people of Palestine, that they might be gathered of Christ as disciples.
Later John the Baptist had wrought a mighty work toward this same end. Into a
field thus sown and cultivated Jesus was now leading his apostles, that they
might reap for him the ripened harvest. He bids them observe the speedy and
easy reaping on this occasion as an encouraging example to them, that they may
go forth with strong assurance and confidence. Even the minds of the Samaritans
were prepared to receive him, and a quick harvest could be gathered among
them.] 39 And from that city many of the Samaritans believed on him because
of the word of the woman, who testified, He told me all things that ever I did. [The Jews rejected the
testimony of the prophets and holy men of God as recorded in the Scripture
(John v. 46, 47), but the Samaritans
accepted the testimony of this woman, and she was a sinner.] 40 So when the
Samaritans came unto him, they besought him to abide with them: and he abode
there two days. [“His own” received him not, but these
“strangers” welcomed him. The stay was brief, but long enough to
prepare the way for a future church among the Samaritans in the neighboring
city of Samaria (Acts viii. 5–8).
From the nearer town of Shechem came Justin Martyr, one of the greatest
Christian writers of the second century.] 41 And many more believed because
of his word: 42 and they said to the woman, Now we believe, not
because of thy speaking: for we have heard for ourselves, and know that this is
indeed the Saviour of the world. [Only such ready hearers could arrive at
so great a truth in so short a time. Wealth of revelation and blessing had made
the Jews selfish, and their conception of the Messiah was so perverted by this
selfishness that they could not conceive of him as being a world
Saviour. Thus wealth often dwarfs where it should rather enlarge the heart. The
incident comprised in this section presents the expansiveness of Christianity
in a threefold aspect; viz.: 1, we see it
154breaking down the walls
of racial prejudice; 2, we observe it elevating woman, and certifying her
fitness to receive the very highest spiritual instruction; 3, we behold it
lifting up the degraded and sinful, and supplying them from the fountains of
grace. Such is real Christianity—the Christianity of Christ.]