
Emphasis: Quiet
Times
"Who, Me, A Witness?
You've Gotta Be Kidding!"
John 4:1-42
Introduction
I am sure that most of you
who've played some kind of sports are familiar with the
sports drink Gatorade. How many of you have ever drunk Gatorade?
There are many sports drinks on store shelves today, but
Gatorade is the one that started it all. It claims to satisfy
your thirst better than anything in the world -- even better
than water.
One of their ads reads, "All
kinds of athletes reach for Gatorade. Nothing fuels them
better - not water, not juice, not other sports drinks.
Professional athletes get going and keep going, with Gatorade.
You can, too."
Wow, that's convincing. But
one thing I have noticed, in all of the claims made by Gatorade,
not once have they ever claimed that if you drank their
product, you'd never be thirsty again. If someone could
pull that off, they'd really have something, wouldn't they?
Well, Jesus claimed to have that very thing! And it was
that that He was sharing with the woman at the well.
Today, I want you to think
with me about our urgent need to share Jesus with others.
Though getting them into church is of great importance,
church attendance is a bit tricky these days because so
much can go wrong.
It's like the man who was stranded
alone on the deserted island; when he was rescued, they
asked him what the three structures were that he had built
on the island. Three buildings seemed perplexing for just
one man. He said one was his house, one was his church,
and one was where he used to go to church before he got
his feelings hurt!
But church is important,
especially to God. Most everything He does on this earth,
He does through the local church. Jesus died and rose again
to offer us forgiveness and to establish the church. Church
attendance is a great way to measure the spiritual condition
of a nation, and of our families.
Statistics reveal that more
than 40% of the unchurched say they'd go to church if someone
would just invite them. "Would you like to come to
church with me?" is a great way to begin a discussion
with your family, friends, or neighbors. It's very similar,
in fact, to what the woman at the well sought to accomplish
when she said, "He told me everything I ever did."
It's a way to introduce others to the Savior. The results
of her testimony were astounding. Let's break down vs. 39
to understand why.
I. A Look
at the Book - Vs. 39 - Many
of the Samaritans from that town believed in him because
of the woman's testimony, "He told me everything I
ever did."
Many - knowing what we know
about Pentecost and the vast numbers who believed in Jesus
then, it's not hard for us to believe and comprehend that
many means a "large or considerable number."
We don't know the number of Samaritans who lived in Sychar,
but there is every reason to believe it was a significant
number, especially since Jacob's well was there. Desert
communities were often built around wells since there were
so few of them.
of the
Samaritans - this phrase implies that there were
many others who lived there who weren't Samaritans, but
she'd gone to her own people and many of them had believed
from that
town - the town in which she lived was Sychar, or
Shechem, as it was called in Joshua & Judges. This town
has an incredible amount of history. We would do well to
recall the historical relationship between Israel and Samaria.
Under Rehoboam, the son of
Solomon, the United Kingdom of Israel split into two fragments
(1 Kings 12): the northern kingdom of Israel, led by the
rebel Jeroboam, and the southern kingdom of Judah, under
Rehoboam.
Because Jeroboam feared that
the two kingdoms might reunite, he established a counterfeit
religion, with its own place of worship -- Bethel (1 Kings
12:25-33). Later, a wicked northern king named Omri built
the city of Samaria, which he made his capital, the capital
of the Northern Kingdom. He also built a temple and an altar
to Baal, a heathen deity (1 Kings 16:24-34). Eventually,
the name of this city became synonymous for the entire Northern
Kingdom; thus its name, Samaria.
After repeated warnings from
God's prophets, divine judgment finally came at the hand
of the Assyrians, who defeated Israel and scattered the
middle and upper classes throughout the other nations they
had conquered.
They replaced the dispersed
Israelites with heathen from other lands (2 Kings 17:23ff.).
These heathen intermarried with the remaining Israelites
resulting in a nation of half-breeds, a most distasteful
and evil thing for a devout Jew (see Ezra 9 and 10; Nehemiah
13). Worse yet, the true religion of Israel became intermingled
with heathen idolatry.
When the Jews of the Southern
Kingdom of Judah were later taken captive by the Babylonians,
they were allowed to maintain their racial and religious
identity. After their 70 years of captivity were completed
and they were granted permission to return to their own
land, a number did so. When these returning exiles set out
to rebuild the temple and Jerusalem, the Samaritans offered
to help them and were summarily refused (Ezra 4:2ff.). In
about 400 B.C., the Samaritans constructed their own rival
temple on Mount Gerizim. At the end of the second century
B.C., this temple was destroyed by John Hyrcanus, the Hasmonean
ruler of Judea. This greatly increased hostilities between
the Jews and the Samaritans.
The Samaritans professed to
believe in the God of Israel and awaited the coming of Messiah
(see John 4:25). They accepted only the first five books
of the Law, but rejected the rest of the Old Testament Scriptures.
Wherever they found it necessary to justify their religion
and their place of worship, they modified the Law. The relationship
between the Jews and the Samaritans was definitely strained.1
Some might think it a miracle
that Jesus would even go there, but He loved everyone the
same and was committed to providing salvation to Jews as
well as Gentiles.
believed
in him - "believe" means to have a conviction
that leads to a specific action; they placed their faith
in Jesus, they accepted Him as Messiah, they followed the
Lord as Savior; the One about whom she told them.
because
of - on account of, for the reason of,
the woman's
- not just any woman, but rather the one who had encountered
Jesus. The circumstances surrounding this encounter were
odd. The fact that she came out to get water at this time
of day, and that she came alone, suggested that she was
an outcast. Typically the women came together and stayed
together for protection; but not the Samaritan woman. Because
of her many relationships, few wanted to be seen with her,
and, here, no one was.
But Jesus didn't mind. He loves
the outcasts just as much as those in good standing with
society. He loves us all equally, no matter what we've done.
He took time for her just as He takes time for us. And even
though she was so insignificant to others that she wasn't
even given a name here, we can be sure Jesus knew her name
and cared as deeply for her as He did for each disciple
who gawked in disbelief that Jesus would minister to a woman
like that.
testimony, "He told
me everything I ever did."
- He knew things about her no one could know. He knows our
deepest, darkest secrets, too, and He still loves us. Though
I'm sure she was glad to have come to the well alone when
He started telling her everything she ever did, there is
no indication that she felt judged or belittled by the Messiah…just
accepted and cared for.
Next time we'll consider
why her sharing her testimony with the towns people was
so incredible.
_______________
1 (http://bible.org/seriespage/woman-well-john-41-42)
Copyright
© 2010. Faith Matters by Dr. Ken Lovelace. All
rights reserved.
KDT082310