Monday, March 13, 2023

My Favorite

 

Sermon from Grace and St Stephen’s 3/12/23 John 4:5-42

          During ordinary time in the church year, or “green” seasons, I wear a stole that was custom made for me at my ordination. It was a gift from my friends and family and was made by a woman who takes various parts of your story and incorporates them into a stole. One of the more prominent figures on mine is the woman at the well, who we get to know in the Gospel reading today. She is on my stole because this story is my favorite passage of scripture.

 

When I was growing up, sometimes my Baptist friend would invite me to a church event and everyone was invited to go around and say their favorite scripture, I never had any idea what to say. I went to church every Sunday at The United Methodist Church and always went to Sunday School but I didn’t memorize scripture passages and random one-liners didn’t hold much appeal to me. So I often just reached for something I could remember like Noah or the Good Samaritan. That was before I met the Samaritan woman going to the well to get water. I can’t remember the last time someone asked me my favorite scripture but I wouldn’t hesitate now, it’s this one … it’s her … and him and this conversation.

          It’s hard for me to put into words why I love it so much and how it speaks so deeply to my soul. Somehow I just feel very seen in this passage. I don’t know exactly why but their conversation and back and forth brings up excitement and deep feelings for me. One of my favorite weeks in my Gospel of John class in seminary is when we did a deep dive into this passage. We read commentaries from all different perspectives and even some really interesting literature that attempts to build on this story and create a made up narrative beyond it. So I guess other people have felt inspired by it too.

          Maybe I also like it so much because it reminds me of deep conversations that I have experienced myself. The kind of conversations that feel very real, genuine and like a deep connection is made.

 

          For example, about 20 years ago I remember driving late at night through a series of bridges and tunnels between New Jersey and Manhattan. I was in seminary, living in New Jersey and watching Saturday Night Live with friends when one of my friends realized he missed the last train to his apartment in Manhattan. Having just moved from Ohio and never having driven to New York City before, I said I would give him a ride if someone came with me. Another friend agreed. After we dropped him off and made it through the city traffic I began to have a conversation with this other friend. We were attending a United Methodist seminary and so many of us were preparing to be United Methodist pastors, but this particular friend and his roommate had recently converted to the Episcopal Church and they really loved it. They were always talking about it and their new found love of traditional liturgy and things like chanting and incense and saints. They seemed to always find a way to bring their excitement of being Episcopalian into every conversation. I visited their Episcopal Church and it was lovely but without full text bulletins I was a bit distracted by all the book-juggling as a newcomer. So late at night, as the city skyline faded in the rearview mirror I asked him, “Do you think you are better than everyone because you are an Episcopalian?” I think the question surprised him, but it turned out to be a great conversation and all these years later I think we can all feel pretty confident that the answer to that is “yes, yes he does think he is better than everyone because he is an Episcopalian.” Is that right Father Jeremiah?

          So when the Samaritan woman is at the well to get a drink and Jesus tells her to get him a drink and she fires back with some direct questions, including, “Are you greater than our ancestor Jacob, who gave us this well?” I hear it as “do you think you are better than Jacob?” and I like her. She is direct, she is bold and she is honest and Jesus seems to like her too because he continues to engage with her and offers her “living water.”

 

          I think sometimes when people talk about this passage they talk about this woman as an outcast, as someone to be pitied, as someone who has lived what others may call a “sinful life.” But what I encounter in this passage is someone who is confident, and not afraid to be direct with a Jewish man talking to her alone in the middle of the day. Samaritans and Jewish people were not supposed to get along and had a long history of issues. And a man and a woman who were strangers weren’t supposed to be talking to each other alone. In fact, we read that when the disciples found him they were “astonished that he was speaking with a woman.” The text goes on to say, “but no one said, what do you want or, why are you speaking with her.” I wish they would have; I would love to hear Jesus’ answer. Perhaps if they too would have been honest then they too could have understood better what Jesus was saying about who he is. But they didn’t.

 

          I think people often pity this woman because of what we learn about her. Jesus says that she has had five husbands and that the guy she is currently with is not her husband. Because of this she is often cast as sad or shameful or desperate.  But what I find interesting is that the text doesn’t say that. Jesus describes her situation matter-of-factly and never pairs it with any judgment. He is MUCH nicer to her than he is to the Pharisees and Sadducees he gets so mad at. Her past and her situation are what they are, and she doesn’t miss a beat over it. He tells her he knows these things, notes that she was being honest and then she gets right back into the back and forth. In fact, she goes into tricky territory by bringing up long-standing theological differences between her people and his people. And he continues to explain to her who he is and what he means and through her questions she gets there … she gets him … she sees him for who he is and she can’t wait to tell everyone else. And, what the text tells us is that people believed her. Even though we are often told that she is an outcast and full of shame and judged- what the text tells us is that she tells people about Jesus and they believe her- they drop what they are doing and go to see him because of what she says. They also ask Jesus to stay and he does.

 

          Jesus, God incarnate, engaged in a deep conversation with a bold Samaritan woman and so many lives were changed because of it. And she, the Samaritan woman, wasted no time in engaging this Jewish man sitting at the well, telling her to give him a drink and so many lives were changed because of it.

          In her book, Abuelita Faith, Kat Armas says, “Jesus doesn’t just talk to an otherwise despised woman- as many theologians have pointed out to be radical- but he assumes her agency and engages her in mutuality. Jesus welcomes the Samaritan woman’s challenge, participating with her in teologia en conjunto, the act of theologizing together in collaboration. And through their back-and-forth exchange, the mujer at the well encounters the Living Water- our sacred water who himself heals, gives life, and restores.”

          She sees him and he sees her and the result is beautiful. Maybe that’s what I like so much about this passage. I know what it feels like to be seen and I know how it feels to let someone else know they are seen. Not with judgment, not with shame, not with surface politeness, but truly seen and accepted. Jesus sees the Samaritan woman and a well of life giving water is opened inside of her. The kind of water that seeps deep into your bones, the kind of water that never runs dry, the kind of water that gives you courage to go and share it with others.

 

          When have you felt seen? Trauma psychiatrist Bessel Van Der Kolk says, “Social support is the most powerful protection against becoming overwhelmed by stress and trauma.  The critical issue is reciprocity, being truly heard and seen by the people around us, feeling that we are held in someone else's mind and heart.” Jesus and the Samaritan woman truly saw and heard each other and that was more powerful than their backgrounds, differences, genders or social norms.

 

          At the winter youth group retreat in January the teens and I got into a conversation about God’s grace. I was telling them about how God loves us just as we are, even when we don’t deserve it and that is grace. They started asking questions- which the Samaritan woman would appreciate. They asked “what about this or this” and I said God still loves them. One asked about Jeffrey Dahmer which got everyone saying, “well, surely he is too evil for God’s love.” But I told them, I’m sticking with grace. God’s grace is bigger and more than we can ever imagine.

 

          Behind their questions about famous criminals or people who did horrible things I heard the deeper question … what about me? What if you really knew me, my mistakes, my bad thoughts, my failings, my dark thoughts- would you still say God loves me? What if God sees me, really sees me … beyond the front I put up, beyond politeness, beyond good behaviors … would God still love me, would I still receive the living waters that eternally quench thirst?

 

          Maybe that’s why I love this passage so much … because sometimes I ask too many questions, I can be too direct, too honest, too curious, and feel too judged by the world around me … but Jesus sticks around. It’s real, the living waters, God’s radical acceptance, God’s grace, Jesus’s invitation to a deeper relationship- it was real 2,000 years ago and it’s real today so … yeah … I really like this story.