+ 3rd Sunday in Lent – March 8th, 2026 +
Series A: Exodus 17:1-7; Romans 5:1-8; John 4:5-26
Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church
Milton, WA

In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
In the beginning of C.S. Lewis’s book, The Magician’s Nephew, Digory and Polly discover magic rings in his uncle’s house. Being children naturally, they try them on. They’re transported to a woods between worlds: their own and countless others. The doorway to those other worlds is found in surrounding pools of water. Endless wells that bring them into new worlds.
What satisfies our imagination in this narrative world points to the truth of Christ’s incarnation in our own world.
When Jesus meets the Samaritan woman at the well in John 4 he brings to her and Samaria and Sychar – to outcasts and outsiders of all backgrounds – a well that opens up into a new world. A well of living water brimming with endless, eternal life.
“If you knew the gift of God, and who it is that is saying to you, ‘Give me a drink,’ you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water.”
When Jesus meets us in Lent he does the same. He meets us on the road: weary. Worn down. Thirsty. Parched. Empty. Skin and bones, body and soul – aching. Creeking. Dry. Dusty. Dead bones.
And then suddenly, an oasis. Jesus draws near. Jesus the well-digger, the fountain, the wellspring delivers a well that brings you and me into a new world.
And he does it all by water and word. Wood and nails. Blood and sweat. A rock solid promise that gushes forth good news in the wilderness: living water for thirsty sinners.
Jesus too was thirsty. Here at the well. Later on the cross. Thirsty, yet always satisfied in doing the Father’s will.
The Samaritan woman was thirst too. For something more, for something true, for something lasting, for something good; for what she doesn’t really seem to know…at least not till the end when Jesus opens the wellspring of salvation for her. Only then she confesses: he the Messiah. He told me everything. She gushed this good news all over town.
Where do you get that living water? 12 Are you greater than our father Jacob? Oh, he most certainly he is. Greater than Jacob. Abraham. Isaac. Moses. Noah. Adam. Eve. Jesus is the great Reservoir of Redemption. The mountain Spring of Salvation. The Well overflowing with God’s grace and goodness.
And yet, he who is the holy watering hole – Christ the rock for Israel. Christ the well for this woman and for you – is also very much like us.
Jesus was thirsty. So was the Samaritan woman. So are you.
You and I thirst, not just for water. We thirst in body and soul. St. Augustine was right, “Our hearts are restless, O Lord, until we find our rest in Thee.”
Being restless. Thirsty. We search and seek.
But the thirst isn’t really our problem. No, the problem goes deeper than the well of Sychar. Deeper than the depths of the sea. The problem is where we go with our desires and longing. Our hearts are a swamp. A cesspool. Murky and muddy waters.
Where can we find our thirst quenched, in what satiates or the one who truly satisfies? The problem is for us as it was for Israel in Exodus. In the wilderness. the wasteland. We thirst and long for satisfaction in all the wrong wells. We drink and drown our sorrows in selfish desires. We tip the glass for gulp of sin. It’s little wonder we thirst. That we find ourselves empty. Dry. Parched. Walking in the wasteland. In our eyes, ears, hearts, and minds we drink in poison expecting to be healed. We guzzle the ocean waves expecting to be satisfied. We drink from a tap that draws straight from the sewer and we expect not to get sick.
We’re the deer panting for flowing streams of water. We’re Israel grumbling in the wilderness. We’re the Samaritan woman sitting by the well with Jesus. And we wonder. Is there a well that is clean and good and holy? Lord, give us this kind of water. Open up a well to a new world. Can we find water in the wasteland?
No. But Christ can. Christ does. Christ is.
“Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again, 14 but whoever drinks of the water that I will give him will never be thirsty again.[b] The water that I will give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.”
This well is not simply metaphor. Jesus is the well. Jesus is the rock. Jesus is the spring.
In the wilderness, Jesus is the rocky fountain where water gushes forth for Israel.
In Samaria, the land of outsiders and outcasts, Jesus seeks and saves the lost in a water rescue welling up with eternal life for the Samaritan woman.
And for you. For you in the wasteland. For you parched and perishing of thirst in sin Jesus is the well. Jesus is the rock. Jesus is the living wellspring who gives living, eternal water.
You and I, like Israel and the Samaritan woman, live downstream from the cross. Downstream of God’s goodness and grace. Downstream from Jesus who is the wellspring of eternal life. Whose body was cracked open as the rock in Exodus. Only this time blood and water pour forth downstream.
Like that woman at the well, he sees us. Knows us. Sins and all. And still forgives. Always forgives. Forgiveness like an ever-flowing fountain.
Today Jesus comes to you: to open up to you by his word and water a new world: an endless world of new creation.
To quench your thirst with his righteousness.
To satisfy your longing with his steadfast love.
To fill you who are empty with his holy body and blood.
For… whoever drinks of the water that I will give him will never be thirsty again.[b] The water that I will give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.
In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
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