Fasting during Lent (Third Sunday of Lent)

by Mar 19, 2017Blog, Liturgy0 comments

In today’s Gospel we see Jesus meeting with the Samaritan Woman at the well of Sichar.

“This is the fasting that I wish: releasing those bound unjustly, setting free the oppressed, breaking every yoke, sharing your bread with the hungry, sheltering the oppressed and the homeless; clothing the naked when you see them, and not turning your back on your own. Then your light shall break forth like the dawn, and your wound shall quickly be healed; your vindication shall go before you, and the glory of the Lord shall be your rear guard. Then you shall call and the Lord will answer, you shall cry for help, and he will say: Here I am!” (Isaiah 58:1-9a)

In today’s Gospel, we see Jesus meeting with the Samaritan Woman at the well of Sichar.

“Give me a drink,” he says to her. “How can you a Jew ask me a Samaritan for a drink-for Jews use nothing in common with Samaritans”, she replied.”

“If you knew the gift of God and who is saying to you,’Give me a drink’ you would have asked him and he would have given you living water,” Jesus said in reply. “Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again; but whoever drinks the water that I shall give will never thirst; The water that I shall give will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life,” adds Jesus.

“Sir, give me this water,” says the woman, “so that I may not be thirsty or have to keep coming here to draw water.”

Changing the subject, Jesus leads the woman away from self-focus and comfort toward her inner journey. Going deeper, he says: “Go, call your husband and come back.”

Confessing that she had no husband, Jesus helps her focus on her reality of having had five husbands. At this point, the realization of Jesus’ identity becomes clear to her and she says: “I see you are a prophet” and as he further proclaimed his Father wish to be worshipped in Spirit and in Truth, and not necessarily on this mountain or in Jerusalem, she concluded that he must be the ‘forerunner’ of the Messiah.

At this point, Jesus revealed: “I am he, the one speaking with you.”

Abandoning her ‘water jar’, the woman headed for town to tell THE GOOD NEWS to everyone “Come, see a man who told me everything I have done. Could he possibly be the Christ?”

From a life of immorality to a life of Gospel proclamation, the Samaritan woman teaches us how “to hear the Word of God” and keep it. She was open to the “gift of God” in her conversion experience and began her inner journey drinking in the Water of Life-“The water that I will give will become a spring of eternal life.” (John 4: 5-42)

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