A Samaritan Women’s Day..!

Today is Women’s Day. Across the world speeches are made, flowers are distributed, and social media becomes a garden of inspirational quotes written by men who still cannot locate the kitchen sink.

It is a beautiful day.

But as I thought about Women’s Day, my mind did not travel to the famous women of the Bible. Not Deborah who judged Israel. Not Esther who saved her people and must have had nerves of steel while doing so.

No.

Today, my mind wanders to a far more controversial lady.

The Samaritan woman at the well.

Now this woman had what polite society calls a complicated life. She had gone through husbands the way some of us go through mobile phones. Upgrades had clearly been happening.

And if the town gossip network of Samaria had existed in the age of WhatsApp, her name would have been permanently trending.

But here she was, walking to the well in the middle of the day. Not in the cool of the morning like respectable women who travel in groups, exchange recipes and discuss whose goat had eaten whose vegetables.

No.

She came alone.

Which tells you something about her courage. Or her reputation. Or both.

And there she met Jesus.

Now there were two very good reasons why that conversation should not have happened. First, she was a Samaritan, and Jews and Samaritans avoided each other with great enthusiasm. Second, she was a woman and respectable rabbis did not sit around wells chatting with women who had complicated marital histories.

But Jesus had never been particularly impressed with social barriers.

Nor is He now.

So, the conversation began.

And the remarkable thing was that this woman was not timid. Bold women are not. She questioned him. Challenged him. Debated theology right there between two buckets.

She obviously was not the quiet obedient type who said yes to everything. She had opinions. Strong ones.

Which is probably why Jesus trusted her with something extraordinary: Living water.

Now watch what happens next.

She arrives quietly with a water pot. She leaves loudly with a message.

The woman who had probably been avoided by half the village suddenly becomes the town’s most enthusiastic public relations officer. She runs back announcing that she may have just met the Messiah.

And the same villagers who had spent years discussing her past now follow her to meet Jesus.

Which tells us something very interesting. People might call them loose, blemished, used.

But know they are honest and truthful.

Look around you, and you will realise there’s truth in what I say.

So today on Women’s Day, let the ‘respectable’ speeches continue.

But somewhere out there, there are Samaritan women. Women who have been judged, misunderstood, labelled radical, rebellious, or worse.

But when such Samaritan women, labelled unfairly, find Living Water, they do not merely change their own lives, they change a whole village..!

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12 thoughts on “A Samaritan Women’s Day..!”

  1. The story of the Samaritan woman never fails to captivate me.

    Your piece on one of my favourite interactions between the Lord and an ‘ordinary’ person is beautifully written.

  2. This is the story of conversion which is not easy. The woman after encountering Jesus, runs to her town to tell her story. Thus she became a witness. The punchline of her story is: She left her water jar behind. She found what she needed. She became a witness, she shared what she experienced with others. She had the courage to leave behind the old jars, those things once she clunged to and accept the Living Water. A True conversion story.

    1. My thoughts precisely whether it is Women’s Day, mothers and fathers day, teachers day, children’s day or whatever. If the appreciation is not incorporated in our day to day lives, all these celebratory days just become attempts to assuage guilt or present a non existent facade whilst lining corporate pockets

  3. For the first time the story of the Samaritan woman coincided with Womens day. It was a ‘kairos’ moment, that sadly escaped many preachers. Thanks Bob for saying it like it is. Christ discussed Theology with women!

  4. Very nicely presented! Yes the Samaritan woman was controversial but she was committed to the Lord! Thank you! Please add me to your mailing list. I’m from Bangalore India

  5. Thank you for a new perception and also the advice on how to meet each individuals on equal terms, giving them them the dignity they deserve.

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