In John 4-6 Jesus is identified as the living bread and as the water of life that men must access if they are going to be right with God. The whole purpose of the Book of John is to prove that Jesus is God in the flesh, John 20:30-31.
John 4-6 supports this theme by showing that Jesus is the only way that people can have spiritual sustenance. By looking at the signs Jesus performed in these chapters, we can rest assured that Jesus is God in the flesh and that He is the only way we can serve God and please Him through obedience to His will.
Samaria was an area of land stretching from just north of Jerusalem to a line from Caesarea in the west to the Jordan in the east. It ran from the Mediterranean to the Jordan, sandwiched between Judea in the south and Galilee in the north. It follows similar lines to the old Northern Kingdom.
The Samaritans were the inhabitants of Samaria and they were people of mixed origin, due to the mingling of the remnant left behind when Samaria. The Northern tribes fell into the hands of the Assyrians in 722 BC, 2 Kings 17:5-6. Assyria resettled the land with pagans from other nations, who brought their gods with them.
As far as the Southern tribes of the Babylonian captivity were concerned, they had become tainted with the idolatry of the nation they were captives to, and therefore were unclean, 2 Kings 17:28-41.
The religion that the pagan settlers brought meant that those who were left began to be syncretic in their faith, they became a mixture of Judaism and paganism. They built their own temple on Mount Gerizim in 400 BC, which was destroyed by a Jewish army led by Hyrcanus in 128 BC, but they still held to the Pentateuch as their scriptures.
When the Jews, the Southern tribes, were returning after the Babylonian exile, the Samaritans did their best to interfere with the rebuilding of the temple, Ezra 4:1-3. The Jews and the Samaritans, therefore, developed a long-term hate-based relationship. The Jews referred to them as cursed dogs, flea-ridden and filthy.
By the time, Jesus came along, this relationship was so bad that many Jews passing from Judea to Galilee would prefer to travel east of the Jordan, thus avoiding Samaria and any chance of bumping into a Samaritan, this trip was a long way around. However, such was the distaste of the Jews for the Samaritans, they thought the trip well worthwhile.
The rift was widened by the erection of a rival temple on Mount Gerizim. In the Rabbinical literature, specific prohibitions exclude virtually all contact between the two parties. When the Jews wanted to be offensive to Jesus they called Him ‘a Samaritan’ in John 8:48.
Jesus on the contrary made a Samaritan the hero of one of His parables, Luke 10:25-37, and this encounter with the Samaritan woman was one of the most significant incidents in His earthly ministry.
With this in mind, the true picture can be painted in John 4 and the complete consequences can be understood. The full impact of the parable of the good Samaritan can also be felt and properly understood, Luke 10:25-37.
It’s also significant that this event occurs after the meeting with Nicodemus, John 3:1-15. Jesus speaks to a devout Jew, steeped in the Law and tradition, and then speaks to a Samaritan woman and tells them both the same message and treats them both in the same way.
In the last two verses of chapter three, John 3:35-36, we saw the authority given to Jesus and His absolute power to save those who believe in Him and reject all others.
Here in John 4, marks the end of Jesus’ short Judean ministry and the journey to Galilee, John 4:1, to avoid further confrontation with the Pharisees at this time and to begin His Galilean ministry.
The Pharisees have heard that Jesus was making and baptising more disciples than John, John 4:1 / Matthew 4:12, which implies an intensive ministry, John 3:22.
The clause in John 4:2 is included to put down any rumour or argument regarding Jesus and the relevance of being baptised by Him.
The title ‘Lord’, John 4:1, KJV, is rarely used synonymously with Jesus, so it is strange to see John, the author, use it here, but it could be a reflection of high esteem.
The Pharisees had just about been able to put up with John and his teaching, but they may have seen Jesus as just too much. Jesus was unwilling to have a premature confrontation with them. He is prepared to die at a particular time and place for a particular people, so He leaves the area.
The word, ‘left’ or ‘abandoned’, John 4:3, is a military term and means withdrawal, which tells us that confrontation doesn’t always achieve God’s purpose.
Notice the phrase, ‘had to go’ which tells us that the necessity was in His mission not referring to the geography. He was motivated by love, He had to be about His Father’s business, Luke 2:49. He knew that there were people who would listen to Him in this place and we should never judge by outward appearances, 1 Samuel 16:7.
There were three normal trade routes, along the Seacoast, through Perea, which is alongside the Jordan or the direct north through Samaria. The Samaritan route was only three miles whereas the others were six miles, but if you took the short route you would be seen as ceremonially unclean.
Normally the Jews would travel North along the East side to avoid Samaria, but it seems Jesus knew what was ahead and as usual He breaks down traditional barriers, the Jews were supposed to have no dealings with the Samaritans, John 4:9.
In the city of Sychar, John 4:5, there are two possible sites today, both near Mount Gerizim. The land and the well mentioned were given by Jacob to his son Joseph, it isn’t mentioned elsewhere in Scripture.
Samaritan tradition said that this was dug and used by Jacob and to this day there is a well there which is 135 ft deep. The Old Testament mentions ‘The field’ but not ‘the well’, Genesis 33:19 / Genesis 48:21-22.
The word, ‘tired’ or ‘weary’, John 4:6, means like a wet rag rung out, drained, which speaks of the humanity of Jesus, Luke 5:5. The same expression is used, toiled all night. ‘The sixth hour’ or ‘noon’ would mean either midday, in which case it would be very hot, or early evening.
Usually, the women came in a group to help each other either in the cool of the morning or the evening. Possibly she came at this time, and by herself, because she was seen as an immoral woman and therefore an outcast, John 4:6.
Jesus doesn’t allow the fact that she is a woman or that she is an outcast of her society to prevent Him from speaking to her. For He isn’t bound by the normal racist, sexist, social barriers. To Him the woman is important because she is a soul in need of salvation, Luke 19:10 .
This was quite unheard of in that society, Jewish men wouldn’t speak to an unknown woman, and Jews of either sex wouldn’t speak to Samaritans. They would not even travel in Samaria if it could be at all avoided.
They certainly would not want to share eating or drinking utensils with one another, yet here was Jesus asking to share from a Samaritan bucket, John 4:7.
Jesus speaking to her sees the collapse of ideas of sexism and particularly racism that had been common for generations and this influence is extended to us today. Jesus gives us an example to follow on how to break down barriers, Ephesians 2:14-16.
Jesus saw this woman as one who needed spiritual guidance and her sex or race didn’t prevent Him from giving guidance to her. We perhaps would not class her as a good contact but we often judge by human criteria, Jesus judges the heart of the person, 1 Samuel 16:7.
In either case, it is quite conceivable that the disciples had gone for food and shows that despite being Jews they didn’t allow their dislike to stop them from getting food from a Samaritan town when they were hungry, John 4:8.
Usually, travellers would carry some rope and a folded skin bucket to enable them to draw water from wells that had no equipment. It’s possible that the disciples had probably taken the bucket with them.
The woman’s surprise at this unexpected intrusion, is reflected in her reply, ‘YOU’ are a JEW, I am a SAMARITAN WOMAN. How can YOU ask ME for a drink?’ John 4:9.
This isn’t just talking about the lack of trade between the two groups of people, but He is asking to share her drinking vessel, the idea of eating from a common plate.
The disciples had many ideas to re-think in their day just as we have in ours. But note, she doesn’t ignore Him but enters into conversation with him, thus showing her lack of racial prejudice, she asks Him for an explanation.
The gift of God Jesus speaks of in John 7:38-39 and here, John 4:10, is seen to be the Spirit. The living water is a reference to life in the Spirit, but also a connection with the law, divine activity giving life to men, Jeremiah 2:13 / Ezra 47:9. Jesus has now got her full attention. Some see here that the gift is referring to eternal life as in John 4:14.
The woman totally misunderstands Jesus and she challenges Him on physical grounds, ‘the well is deep’, John 4:11, not even comprehending the possibility of a spiritual element being included as well.
I guess respect for the past prevents her from seeing the opportunity of the future. In response, Jesus launches into a discourse explaining all the joy and sparkle of a good, full spiritual life, the nearer we are to God, the higher the bubbling becomes.
She asks Jesus in John 4:12, ‘are you greater than Jacob?’ the answer that follows implies, yes. So, Jesus uses the situation and brings on the subject of the Gospel. Whoever drinks from Jacob’s well will thirst again, John 4:13-14.
Yes, we have eternal life, Jesus and Christianity become increasingly important to us and our joy increases correspondingly, John 10:10. We have life and we have it in abundance, enjoy it, live it, share it. Man doesn’t control the spring, it’s from God, never-ending abundance for all simply to take.
John 4:15 tells us again that the woman doesn’t understand, but it sounds good and she responds with a somewhat cheeky answer, note, ‘sir, ‘kurios’ give me this water’.
The word, ‘sir’ was a mark of respect but she’s still thinking in the physical realm of what a relief it would be not to have to come down here every day. And so, Jesus reaches into the heart of this woman’s needs, she lives an immoral lifestyle. He tells her to call her husband, knowing that she has none, John 4:16.
The word, ‘aner’ can mean husband or man depending on the context. Notice how Jesus used the same approach with Nicodemus, John 3:1-15, the first statement is misunderstood so tries again more vividly.
Next, Jesus tries to awaken her conscience, she must then confess her standards, John 4:17. Perhaps this immorality was why she was at the well at this time instead of coming down with the other women of the village in the cool of the morning or the evening. Jesus seems abrupt in asking this question, and her answer is very honest, she could easily have lied, John 4:17.
And so, Jesus as ever gets straight to the point, the five husbands could’ve been the result of a tragic row of deaths, John 4:17. She must either have been very polygamous or in a multiple divorce situation, but the discussion has little point.
She is now living with a man in an unmarried situation, John 4:17-18, which is a demonstration of Jesus all-knowingness, Matthew 9:4 / John 2:24 / Acts 1:24. This was always indefensible, and the Rabbis of the day didn’t allow more than three marriages.
This is where most people would have made a mess of the opportunity. Most people would have argued and pursued her marital status and a result the opportunity to share spiritual truths with her would have disappeared.
Jesus didn’t get into all of that because there were more important spiritual truths this woman needed to know and learn.
In John 4:19 we see that the woman is now very attentive and so, she attempts to change the subject to one of religious worship, a theological question, and Jesus allows her to do this gracefully.
Note, this was a reaction to Jesus’ attack on her morals. He is getting too close, she acknowledges Him as a prophet and then changes the subject to take the spotlight off herself.
This is common with people today when you highlight their lives in the light of the Gospel they respond with, ‘what about the suffering in the world’ etc. We need to remind them, ‘they are either part of the problem or part of the cure’.
She declares Him a prophet, as the Samaritans didn’t accept any prophet after Moses, she must have had in mind THE PROPHET, the Messiah, which both the Jews and the Samaritans were waiting for, Deuteronomy 18:15-19.
When she mentions, ‘our fathers’, or ‘ancestors’, John 4:20, she was claiming descendants from Abraham and Jacob, both of whom erected altars in this area, Genesis 12:7 / Genesis 33:20.
The Samaritans believed that the mountain Gerizim was sacred because Abraham offered Isaac at the foot of Mount Gerizim on Mount Moriah, Genesis 22:2, and they worshipped there, John 4:20. The ruins of their temple were there and this was where they held their Passover annually.
She says, ‘you Jews say’, John 4:10, the Jews of course didn’t agree, believing that Mount Zion, where the temple was, was the sacred place.
As we see in John 4:21, her question is soon to be irrelevant because the time will come when men will not worship in any particular place, but rather worship will be acceptable wherever men and woman have their hearts and minds attuned to the obedience of God’s will.
Jews today have a problem because the Old Testament law demands sacrifices for forgiveness, then without sacrifices, they cannot be acceptable to God, how do they view Jesus?
The word, ‘worship’, ‘proskiuneo’, John 4:21, means to make obeisance to, to do reverence to, it refers exclusively to that which is given to God, not man. False worship means misguided, misled, ‘you worship that which you know nothing about’, John 4:22.
The Samaritans didn’t accept the writings of the Prophets or Psalms, or historical books, theirs was false worship.
When Jesus says, ‘salvation is from the Jews’, John 4:22, Jesus is referring to Himself here, the bloodline of Jesus is simple proof that salvation is from the Jews and it is found in Jesus, the only true, law-abiding Jew, Luke 1:67-69 / Acts 13:26-27.
The word ‘true’, ‘alethenos’, John 4:23, means genuine, John 1:9 / John 6:32. The woman’s concern was for a place of worship, Jesus says that true worship isn’t dependent on physical location.
The words, ‘in Spirit’ means the real thing is dependent on the attitude and condition and intention of the heart.
The words, ‘and in truth’ means in harmony with the revealed will of God, 1 Kings 8:27 / Isaiah 66:1-2 / Micah 6:6-8 / Acts 17:24-25. This is God’s will not man’s idea.
Notice how the emphasis has moved from the formal type of temple worship to the new type, ‘His worshippers must now worship in spirit and in truth’, John 4:24.
We have to not only have the right attitude but the right information, worship must be from our hearts and our understanding. This is what we as individual worshippers today need to continually strive for. It’s sad that some churches focus on spirit and not truth, and others focus on the truth but have no spirit.
The nature of God is found in the words, ‘God is Spirit’, John 4:24, and it means that He is not a physical being, this is consistent with His omnipresence, Psalm 113:4-6 / Psalm 139:7-10 / Proverbs 15:3 / Isaiah 57:15 / Jeremiah 23:23-24 / Hebrews 4:13.
And so, the woman stops trying to evade the truth and almost nudges Jesus, into declaring His Messiahship, John 4:25, which He acknowledges in John 4:26.
The word, ‘Messiah’ ‘Christos’, means anointed one. This Hebrew term is only found here in John 4:25, and in John 1:41. The Samaritans were looking for the Messiah, which was a common term used, ‘Taheb’, He who returns or restores that which is pleasing to God.
Jesus says in John 4:26, ‘I WHO SPEAK AM HE’ this is the first time in John where Jesus indicates His divinity by using the ‘I AM’ phrase that was later to anger the Jews, ‘I AM EGO EIMI’, John 8:37 / Matthew 26:63-66, when the Jews accused Him of blasphemy.
It can be seen from the surprise of the disciples how strange it was for a Jew to talk to a Samaritan. However, they do not challenge Him or her on this matter, John 4:27. They have almost come to expect the unexpected from Jesus.
The woman has been truly impressed and convinced about Jesus and the things He has said. So much so that she leaves her water jar and goes into town where she is probably looked on as an outcast, and bravely tells them about Jesus, note she speaks to the ‘men’, KJV, John 4:28-29.
Look at the effect that Jesus had on this woman, she had come to draw water. She leaves her water jar, why? She had possibly forgotten it or it would hinder her from hurrying to the city.
Maybe she left it for Jesus to have a drink or she left it as a guarantee that she would return. Whatever reason the result is that she goes and tells others about Jesus, John 4:30. People telling others about Jesus should be a natural result of contact.
It is possible as with many immoral people, that her sin was simply an attempt to fill the need in her life that only God can fill. Many immoral people have a deep sense of religion.
Sin is often a vain attempt to find satisfaction or fulfilment in actions, situations or a relationship because of the void in one’s life which is a result of our need for God.
She has been transformed and she shares what she has found causing the townspeople to leave what they are doing and come and see this wonderful man, John 4:30.
She is seriously considering the possibility that this man is Christ. The theme of John’s Gospel is ‘come and see a man’. Jesus wasn’t just a child of His age, He was Deity.
In John 4:30 we see that the people begin to go to see Jesus, but the disciples were begging Him to eat, John 30:31. In the meantime, Jesus tells the disciples a story similar to that which He told the woman, John 4:13-14. This time He relates food to the completing task laid out before Him by the Father, John 4:32.
John 4:34 gives an idea of the importance of the Atoning work of the Father. He stresses it as one would stress the need for food for physical life. He needs to do the task as much as we need food to eat. Jesus’ obedience to the Father was total and perfect but the disciples still do not understand, John 4:33.
A similarity is drawn between farming and the Gospel which was common because it was something all the people could relate to, it made understanding easier, John 4:35-38.
The words, ‘lift up your eyes’ or ‘open your eyes’, John 4:35, tells us that probably the disciples were looking down the road towards Sychar and they could see the hordes of people coming down the road with the sun glinting off their white robes like the reflection of the sun on a cornfield.
Jesus is speaking of the Heavenly harvest of souls, not the physical grain crop. If this had been left to a committee of men, they would say yes, they are needy but they are not ready.
The seed had been sown by Jesus in the mind of the woman, John 4:1-16, and now He and His disciples would reap the harvest together, John 4:37-39. Jesus is laying the groundwork for that which Philip is to proclaim later in Acts 8:4-25.
The ‘harvest is now’ John 4:35, today is the day of salvation, 2 Corinthians 6:2. A call is made for workers to get to the task of harvesting the souls of people in whom the seed had previously been planted, Matthew 9:37-38.
Today you can see some people being the sowers of seed, some tenders as growth to understanding appears, and others the harvest takers, those who complete the task, 1 Corinthians 3:6-7.
Should we wait until these Samaritans live as we do before we tell them the Gospel? Should we wait until their religion is the same, their morals are the same? Should we wait till they are just like us before we tell them about Jesus?
No, tell them now, the changes can come later. It will take time, as they say, Rome wasn’t built in a day, but we cannot wait forever to get started.
John 4:39-42 tells us the Samaritan woman is a herald of the Gospel. People hear what she has to say and believe which indicates how Jesus can use all people, not just a ‘good’ select group. they believed because of the woman’s testimony, her witness, which is the word ‘marturia’, in Greek.
The Samaritans quickly accept the Gospel of the Messiah’s coming and the need for repentance. Jesus stays two days, John 4:40, and preaches, resulting in many converts, John 4:41. No mention is made of any miracles, it seems the people accepted the message without the need for any further confirmation.
In John 4:42, the woman exaggerates how much Jesus has told her, but she must have been very enthusiastic to get such a good response. She had little knowledge of the Gospel but seemed to display much love.
It is important when the Gospel is spread that the result is belief in Jesus not in the preacher who preached a good sermon. Faith is to be in Christ, not in man.
As a result of their own meeting Jesus, many more believe, they had now heard for themselves, John 4:41.
The Samaritans call Jesus, ‘The Saviour of the world’, John 4:42. They would be familiar with this title because it was also applied to the Caesars, Augustine, Julius, Claudius, Vespasian, Titus, Trajan, and others. This is accurate reporting on John’s behalf, John 19:35 / John 20:30-31 / John 21:24.
Jesus has turned a conversation about water, into a soul-winning opportunity, with the result of a harvest of souls, 1 Corinthians 3:6-7.
What does this picture in Galilee contribute to John’s picture of Jesus? This has been called the ‘Great Galilean Ministry’. Jesus completes His journey to Galilee after a two-day stopover teaching the Samaritans, John 4:1-42/ John 4:43, and He is now heading for Capernaum, Matthew 1:12-13 / Mark 1:14-15 / Luke 4:14.
A large group of people living in the same house was not unusual and we often see the same today with Indian and Pakistani families in Britain, there may be as many as 16-20 relatives all living under the same roof.
The statement of the proverb ‘A prophet has no honour in his own country’, John 4:44, could well be referring to Bethlehem in Judea as opposed to Galilee, Matthew 3:57 / Mark 6:4 / Luke 4:24.
All are aware that Galilee is in fact his home, but He was now leaving Judea in favour of a Galilean ministry, John 4:45. In Judea, the Pharisees were causing too much trouble for Jesus and He didn’t want to provoke a premature confrontation, John 4:1.
Perhaps John is implying that the non-Jews were in general more responsive to the Messiah. Despite this fact, Jesus goes to Galilee because He came to die for the salvation of all. John 4:45 tells us that it started good, His welcome in Galilee seems to support this idea.
Jesus must have made a lasting impression on the Jews at the time when He drove the money changers, traders out of the temple, John 2:13-16, and because of other signs they may have seen or heard Him do, such as turning the water into wine at Cana, John 2:1-11 / John 4:46.
But their popularity is based on Him being a miracle worker who could amaze Him and not on the reality of His being the Messiah who could save them, John 4:48.
Jesus is later to rebuke them for their hollow faith when they realise that He is not going to feed them and clothe them, John 6:26-29, but rather that He is going to ask them for commitment and even perhaps to give their lives for Him, Matthew 8:18-22.
When He begins to talk of discipleship being difficult, they leave and reject Him, John 6:15-66 / Matthew 13:57 / Mark 6:4 / Luke 4:24.
The royal official mentioned in John 4:46 / John 4:49, could have been a nobleman in his own right, or he could have been an official ‘basilikos,’ of royal connection or a civil or military officer in service at the court of Herod Antipas, Tetrarch, ruler of four sections, of Galilee and Perea, son of Herod the Great, Matthew 14:19 / Mark 6:14.
The man travelled from Capernaum to Cana 16 miles to where Jesus was, without bringing the boy, John 4:47. He seemed to know Jesus as a miracle worker, perhaps he had been in Jerusalem for the Passover, John 2:23-35.
He begs Jesus to return with him, the word ‘begged’ is in the continuous tense, he kept on begging, John 4:47. The man’s faith is evident, even though it was brought on by necessity, as is often the case with us.
The word, ‘son’, John 4:47, in Greek is ‘padion’ and it means a little child, John 16:21 / 1 John 2:13. He clearly thought that Jesus had to be present, and if He didn’t go the child would die.
Jesus expresses disappointment at the official’s need to see a healing. He says, ‘unless you see signs and wonders,’ John 4:48. The word, ‘you’ is plural, and so, Jesus is describing the attitude of the group represented by the official’s attitude.
The word, signs in Greek is, ‘symion’ and it means with purpose, to point the way. The word, wonders, in Greek is ‘teras’ and it describes the effect of a sign, an amazing thing.
The phrase ‘will never believe’, John 4:48, is a conviction about Jesus based on signs alone is not enough, John 2:23-25. Perhaps Jesus was testing the man’s faith, Mark 7:24 / Matthew 8:1-4.
While walking, the boy is ill, at the point of death and so he asked Jesus to ‘come down’, John 4:49. Cana was a hillside country as opposed to Capernaum on the other side of Galilee, all the geographical details mentioned in the Bible are accurate.
John 4:49 tells us that the man isn’t deterred, he persists in his plea but changes his attitude, the official responds in a more controlled and respectful manner, ‘Sir, come down before my child dies.’
Notice the growing faith of man. He believed in Jesus’ power to heal, John 4:47, shown by his request. He believed the word that Jesus spoke to him, John 4:50.
The official shows great faith, his son’s life is in danger yet the official leaves without pressing Jesus any further, John 4:51, returning to his son’s bedside. He finds that his son is recovering and that the turn in his son’s health came at the seventh hour, the time when Jesus said, ‘your son will live’, John 4:52.
In John 4:52 we read about the cure, ‘Your son will live’. Jesus healed immediately and without seeing the boy, not, he begins to mend as in a slow process, but immediate.
He finally believes that Jesus is all He claimed to be. Not only he but all his household, when they hear and understand, John 4:53. Family and servants, ‘oikia’, all heard, all believed, all rejoiced, like the households of Lydia in Acts 16:13-16, and the jailer in Acts 16:25-34.
John says this is the second sign which Jesus performed, John 4:54. Both the first, John 2:1-11, and second miracles recorded, John 4:43-53, and detailed by John occurred in the Cana of Galilee. The purpose of the signs were to bring about faith in Christ, John 20:30-31.
A comparison between today’s modern healings and that of Jesus will show today’s versions sadly lacking as pointed out earlier.
1. In the miracles of Jesus, the result was immediate, Matthew 8:3 / Matthew 8:15.
2. Faith was not always required on the part of the one involved, John 11:39.
3. Everyone was allowed to come, Matthew 4:24.
4. Jesus healed organic diseases, not just functional ones, Matthew 15:30.
5. The miracles were always public, not private, Matthew 12:9.
6. The person being healed was always made complete, made whole, Matthew 12:13.
7. Miracles were always acknowledged by his enemies, Matthew 12:13.
8. They were not used to make money, Matthew 10:8.
9. The miracles gave God the glory, Acts 3:2.
10. The miracles were always used to support the truth, Hebrews 2:3.
11. They were not used to establish a denomination or promote any sect.
12. The person healed didn’t always have to be present, Matthew 8:5.
13. Sometimes they were performed at the protest of the one being healed, Matthew 8:28.
14. Sometimes they were performed because of the faith of others, Matthew 8:8.
15. He didn’t heal others while having an illness Himself.
16. There was no prior investigation to weed out the wicked.
17. Jesus never tried and failed. Never blame the recipient for lack of faith.
18. Jesus didn’t fail to perform a miracle and then blame the presence of an unbeliever.
19. Jesus didn’t fail and then say it was God’s will.
20. The miracles always proved the power of God, Matthew 9:6.