|
1-4. When
therefore the Lord knew how the
Pharisees had heard that Jesus was
making and baptizing more disciples
than John, (though Jesus Himself was
not baptizing, but His disciples,)
He left Judea, and departed again
into Galilee. And it was necessary
that He go through Samaria.
When God, the Lover of man, became
flesh for our sake, the purpose of
His every action was to bring
benefit to us. So it is here: when
He perceived that the Pharisees had
heard of His fame and knew that this
would incite them to envy, He
departed into Galilee, thereby
teaching us two things. First, that
we should spare our enemies and try
every means not to give cause for
offense or envy; and second, that we
should not throw ourselves into
temptation foolishly and needlessly,
but instead withdraw for a while
until the anger of our enemies has
abated. Although He had the power to
withstand those who hated Him, even
if they had rushed to attack, yet He
withdrew from them so that His human
nature and flesh would not seem to
be an illusion. If He had
continuously escaped from their
midst, how much scope would this
have given to the Docetists, the
Manichees, Valentine, and the
accursed Eutyches [heretics who
denied the fulness of Christ's human
nature]? The Evangelist alludes to
the slander induced by envy when he
says, "Though
Jesus Himself was not baptizing,
He was falsely accused of baptizing
by envious men who wished to stir up
the Pharisees against Him."
It was
necessary that He go through
Samaria. The Evangelist
describes Samaria as place to pass
through, not a destination. Note
that he did not say, "It was
necessary that He go to Samaria." He
wished to forestall any accusation
by the Jews that Christ left them in
order to go to the Gentiles, whom
the Jews abhorred. It was only when
the Jews drove Him away that the
Lord approached the Gentiles; and
even then, He did not go to them on
purpose, but only in passing.
5-6. Then cometh
He to a city of Samaria, which is
called Sychar, near to the parcel of
ground that Jacob gave to his son
Joseph. Now Jacob's well was there.
It would be worthwhile to explain
the origins of the Samaritans and
how they got their name. There was a
mountain, Somor, named after the man
who owned it, as Isaiah also says,
And the head
of Ephraim is Somoron.[Is.
7:9] Those who lived by this
mountain were not at first called
Samaritans, but Israelites. When
they sinned against God, they were
given into the hands of the
Assyrians on various occasions.[See
IV King 17:6-7} At last the Assyrian
king [Tiglath-pileser III] set upon
them as they were plotting a
rebellion, took them captive, and
fearing continuous revolt, no longer
permitted them to remain there. He
exiled them among the Babylonians
and Medes, and from there brought
back Gentiles from various places
and settled them in Samaria. After
this was done, God demonstrated to
the barbarians that He had given the
Jews into their hands because the
Jews had sinned, and not because He
was weak. Therefore He caused lions
to set upon the barbarians in
Samaria and devour them. When this
was reported to the king, he sent
for certain elders of the Jews in
captivity, and asked them what could
be done to prevent the lions from
again assailing the occupants of
Samaria. The elders explained that
the God of Israel watched over that
place and would not allow any one
ignorant of His laws to dwell there.
Therefore, if he felt sorrow for
those barbarians, he should send
Jewish priests to teach them the
laws of God, and in this manner God
would be appeased. The king did as
they had said, and sent a certain
priest to teach the law of God to
the barbarians in Samaria. However,
they did not accept all the divine
books, but only the five books of
Moses: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus,
Numbers, and Deuteronomy. Neither
did they completely abandon their
impiety; but in later years they
gave up their idols and worshiped
God. When the Jews finally returned
from captivity, they always were
suspicious of the Samaritans,
considering them to be Assyrian by
race, and calling them "Samaritans"
after the name of the mountain. But
the Samaritans called themselves the
descendants of Abraham and Jacob.
For Abraham was a Chaldean like
themselves, and Jacob they
considered to be their own because
of his well which they possessed. To
the Jews, then, the Samaritans were
an abomination, together with all
Gentiles. This is why they reviled
the Lord by saying,
Thou art a
Samaritan, [Jn. 8:48] and
even the Lord Himself said to His
disciples,
and into any city of the Samaritans
enter ye not. [Mt. 10:5] Why
does the Evangelist give such
details about Jacob's ground and
well? First of all, so that you
would not be surprised to hear the
words of the woman,
Our father,
Jacob . . . gave us this well.
For that place was Sykima [Shechem],
where Simeon and Levi, the sons of
Jacob, committed their savage
slaughter to avenge the ravishing of
their sister, Dinah, by the son of
the ruler of the Sykimites. [Gen.
34] We also learn from the
Evangelist's mention of the ground
and the well that the rejection of
the Jews began long ago on account
of their sins--having sinned against
God, the Gentiles took possession of
their land, and what the patriarchs
had acquired through their faith in
Christ, their descendants, the Jews,
lost through their impiety. So it is
nothing new if now the Gentiles have
entered into the kingdom of heaven
instead of the Jews. The ground
which Jacob gave to Joseph was
called Sykima. For it was there that
the sons of Jacob slew the Sykimites
and left desolate their city, which
Jacob gave as an inheritance to his
son, Joseph.
6-8. Jesus
therefore, being wearied with His
journey, sat thus on the well: and
it was about the sixth hour. There
cometh a woman of Samaria to draw
water. Jesus saith unto her, Give Me
to drink. For His disciples were
gone away unto the city to buy food.
By saying that the Lord was weary
from the journey, the Evangelist
shows us His humility and simplicity,
for He rode not even a donkey on His
journey, but walked on foot,
teaching us also to need less, not
more. The Evangelist also
demonstrates that the Lord did not
journey leisurely, but with
intensity, from which we too may
learn to do God's work with zeal and
attention. The words,
He sat thus,
indicate that He sat simply, as He
was, not on a chair, and without
pretension rested His body on the
ground and refreshed it by the well.
Then the Evangelist gives another
reason why He sat by the well: it
was high noon,
about the sixth hour, and the
Lord needed rest and refreshment
from the oppressive heat. Lest
anyone accuse the Lord of a double
standard in forbidding His disciples
to go near the Gentiles while He
Himself went to the Samaritans, the
Evangelist says that He sat in that
place because He was tired, showing
that his thirst justified His
conversation with the woman. In
accordance with His human nature, He
became thirsty and needed to drink.
To the One asking for drink, the
woman speaks with words which show
her eagerness to learn. What should
He have done? Shun this woman so
eager to learn, who thirsted to
learn the answer to her perplexity?
Of course not! That is not the way
of God, the Lover of man. We also
see here the utter simplicity of the
Lord. He is left all alone on the
road, while His disciples have gone
into the city to buy food. They gave
so little attention to the demand of
the stomach that at the very time
when most people are nearly asleep
after dinner they were out buying
food, that is, loaves of bread only,
from which we may also learn to
limit the variety of what we eat.
Notice the exactitude of the
Evangelist. He did not assert, "It
was the sixth hour," but instead,
It was about
the sixth hour, so careful
was he to preserve the truthfulness
of every word of his Gospel.
9-11. Then saith
the woman of Samaria unto Him, How
is it that Thou, being a Jew, asketh
drink of me, who am a woman of
Samaria? For the Jews have no
dealings with the Samaritans. Jesus
answered and said unto her, If thou
knewest the gift of God, and Who it
is that saith to thee, Give me to
drink, thou wouldest have asked of
Him, and He would have given thee
living water. The woman saith unto
Him, Sir, Thou hast nothing to draw
with, and the well is deep: from
whence then hast Thou that living
water? Perhaps by His
appearance, dress, manner, and
speech, the Samaritan woman judged
the Lord to be a Jew, which is why
she says to Him,
How is it
that Thou, being a Jew . . . ?
See how circumspect she is. If there
were need of caution, the Lord
needed it, not her. For it was not
that the Samaritans had no dealings
with the Jews, but, as she says,
that the Jews
have no dealings with the Samaritans.
None the less, the woman did not
keep silent, but out of her concern
that the Lord was doing something
unlawful for Him to do, she
attempted to correct Him. The Lord
does not show Who He is until the
woman's virtue, prudence, and
conscientiousness have first been
revealed. Then He begins to speak to
her of more profound things.
If thou
knewest, He says,
the gift of
God, which means, if you knew
what eternal and incorruptible
things God gives, and if you also
knew that I am God, Who is able to
give you these things, you would
have asked for and received living
water. The Lord calls the gift of
the Holy Spirit
water
because it cleanses and refreshes
those who receive it. It is not
stagnant, fetid water like that in
ponds and wells, but
living
water, ceaselessly bubbling and
gushing upwards. For the grace of
the Holy Spirit makes the soul
constantly active in doing good, and
always ready for spiritual ascents.
Of such living and ever active water
did the Apostle Paul drink, causing
him to forget
those things which are behind, and
reaching forth unto those which are
before. [Phil. 3:13] Then
the woman
sayeth unto Him, Sir. Do you
see how at once she abandons her
perception of Him as a man of low
rank, and instead adopts great
reverence, calling Him "Sir"?
However, she has not yet perceived
the depth of Christ's words; while
He means one thing by the word
water,
she understands something quite
different.
12-15. Surely
Thou art not greater than our father
Jacob, who gave us the well, and
drank thereof himself, and his sons,
and his cattle? Jesus answered and
said unto her, Whosoever drinketh of
this water shall thirst again: but
whosoever drinketh of the water that
I shall give him shall never thirst;
but the water that I shall give him
shall be in him a well of water
springing up into everlasting life.
The woman saith unto him, Sir, give
me this water, that I thirst not,
neither come hither to draw.
She claims Jacob as her father,
inserting herself into the noble
lineage of the Jews. Do you see the
intelligence of the woman? From the
difference between the two kinds of
water, she at once infers the
difference between the two who give
these waters. "If," she says, "You
can give such water of which you
speak, certainly You would be
greater than Jacob who gave us this
water." Her words,
and drank
thereof himself, are in
praise of the sweetness of the water
in Jacob's well. The patriarch was
so pleased by the water in this
spring that both he and his sons
drank of it. Her words,
and his
cattle, indicate the
abundance of the water. Not only was
the water so sweet that Jacob
himself drank of it, the supply was
so plentiful that it watered his
multitude of cattle. When the woman
said, Surely
Thou art not greater than our father
Jacob, the Lord does not
reply openly, "Yes, I am greater!"
lest He appear to boast, not yet
haven given any sign of His own
power. But by His answer this is
exactly what He implies. "He who
drinks of this water will thirst
again, but he who drinks of My water
will never thirst. If you marvel at
Jacob who gave you this water, much
more should you be amazed at Me. For
I give you a far superior water,
which becomes a spring of water
continuously multiplied." The saints
do not receive a portion from God
and preserve that same quantity
until the end, but instead accept
their portion as the seeds and the
beginnings of good, which they
themselves use up entirely, making
it multiply. The Lord teaches this
very thing in His parables of the
talents and of the innkeeper. The
man who had been given two talents
earned another two by laboring and
putting them to work; and to the
innkeeper who received the man
wounded by thieves the Lord promised,
"Whatever more you have spent of
your own, I will give back to you."
[See Mt. 25:20-30 and Lk. 10:35]
Therefore, this is what the Lord
implies here: "I too give water to
the thirsty, but what I give does
not remain the same quantity that
was given, but overflows and becomes
a spring." The Lord gave Paul a
small amount of water, that is, the
catechesis imparted to him by
Ananias, but Paul showed this small
gift of instruction to be a fountain
pouring out torrents of preaching
that reached from Jerusalem to
Illyria. How then did the woman
react to these words? Still in a
lowly manner, for she thought that
His words were about actual water,
yet she also shows signs of
spiritual advance. Before, when she
could not understand, she had asked
dubiously,
Whence then hast Thou that living
water? Now she accepts His
words without doubt and says,
Give me this
water. She appears wiser than
Nicodemus, who received a much
lengthier explanation from the Lord
and still responded,
How can these
things be? [Jn. 3:9] But she
already begins to look down on
Jacob's well. For she says, "If You
have such water, give it to me, and
I will no longer come here to draw."
Do you see that she now holds the
Lord in higher esteem than she does
Jacob?
16-22. Jesus
saith unto her, Go, call thy
husband, and come hither. The woman
answered and said, I have no
husband. Jesus said unto her, Thou
hast well said, I have no husband:
for thou hast had five husbands; and
he whom thou now hast is not thy
husband; in that saidst thou truly.
The woman saith unto Him, Sir, I
perceive that Thou art a prophet.
Our fathers worshipped in this
mountain; and ye say, that in
Jerusalem is the place where men
ought to worship. Jesus saith unto
her, Woman, believe Me, the hour
cometh, when ye shall neither in
this mountain, nor yet at Jerusalem,
worship the Father. Ye worship ye
know not what: we know what we
worship; for salvation is of the
Jews.Go,
call thy husband. Seeing her
eager to receive what He offered and
insistent that He give it, He says,
Call thy
husband, as if to point out,
"You should share My gift with him
as well." She answered,
I have no
husband, striving at once to
hide her sin and receive the gift
without delay. The Lord now reveals
through prophesy His own power--He
enumerates her former husbands and
rebukes the man with whom she is now
living secretly. Did the woman
become vexed at His rebuke? Did she
flee from Him in shame? No, she
marveled and cleaved to Him all the
more, saying
Sir, I perceive that Thou art a
prophet, and questioned Him
about divine doctrines and not such
worldly things as bodily health and
money, so inclined was her soul to
the love of wisdom and virtue. What
does she ask?
Our fathers worshipped in this
mountain. Here she refers to
Abraham and those with him. For it
was on this mountain, they say, that
Isaac was led up to be sacrificed.
[Gen.22] And how is it, she says,
ye say that
in Jerusalem is the place where men
ought to worship? Do you see
how much more lofty her thoughts
have become? Only moments earlier
her concern was how to avoid the
daily labor of satisfying one's
thirst; now she asks questions
concerning dogmas. Christ sees her
capacity to understand spiritual
thing, yet does not answer her
question (for it was not an
important matter), but instead
reveals a greater teaching, greater
than what He had disclosed to
Nicomdemus or to Nathaniel. The time
is coming, He says, when God will be
worshiped neither here nor in
Jerusalem. You are striving, He
says, to show that the worship of
the Samaritans is superior to that
of the Jews. But I say to you, that
neither here nor there has the first
place of honor: there will be
another way, superior to both. Yet I
also declare to you that the worship
of the Jews is more holy than that
of the Samaritans.
For ye
worship ye know not what: we,
the Jews,
know what we worship. Christ
counts Himself as one of the Jews,
speaking in terms of the woman's
understanding. She thinks of Him as
a Jewish prophet, and so He says,
We worship.
In what way did the Samaritans not
know what they worshiped? They
thought that God was limited to one
location [their holy mountain]. This
is why, when the lions were
devouring them as was related above,
they sent word to the king of the
Assyrians that the God
of that place
did not accept them. This is also
why they continued for a long time
to worship idols, and not God
Himself. But the Jews were free of
this misconception and knew God to
be the God of all, although not all
the Jews understood this.
For salvation
is of the Jews. This has two
meanings for us. First, that the
good things that are in the world
came from the Jews. The knowledge of
God and the rejection of idols took
its beginning from the Jews; and all
other teachings, and even your own
Samaritan worship (though it is not
correct), began with the Jews.
Secondly, the Lord names His own
Advent, which was
from the Jews,
"salvation." For the Lord, Who came
from the Jews according to the
flesh, is Himself Salvation.
23-24. But the
hour cometh, and now is, when the
true worshippers shall worship the
Father in spirit and in truth: for
the Father seeketh such to worship
Him. God is Spirit: and they that
worship Him must worship Him in
spirit and in truth. We Jews
have more than you Samaritans
regarding the manner of worship;
nevertheless, the worship of the
Jews will also come to an end. It is
not only the places of worship that
will change, but the manner of
worship itself. This change is at
the very doors, and
now is,
and the practices taught by the
prophets will not last much longer.
By true
worshippers the Lord means
those who live according to His own
law, who do not confine God to one
place, as do the Samaritans, and who
do not serve Him with a material,
bodily worship, as do the Jews, but
who worship Him in spirit and in
truth, that is, with their soul and
with purity of mind [nous].
Because God is spirit, that is,
bodiless, He must be worshipped in a
bodiless manner which is in
accordance with the soul. This is
what it means to worship
in spirit,
for the soul is both spirit and
bodiless. But because there are many
who appear to worship Him in
accordance with the soul, but do not
hold to the Orthodox doctrine
concerning Him, such as the
heretics, He also added the words,
and in truth.
For one must both worship God with
the mind [nous],
and hold to the true doctrine
concerning Him. Perhaps someone will
say that by these two things, spirit
and truth, are implied the two parts
of our Christian philosophy, action
[praxis]
and contemplation [theria].
In spirit
means "by action." For as the divine
Apostle says,
As many as are led by the Spirit of
God . . . mortify the deeds [tas
praxeis] of the body. [See
Ro. 8:13-14] And again,
The desires
of the flesh are against the spirit,
and the desires of the spirit are
against the flesh. [Gal.
5:17] Therefore, to worship the
Father in spirit implies the active
practice of the virtues [subduing
the flesh,] while worshiping Him in
truth implies the contemplation of
the divine. This is what Paul means
when he writes,
Therefore let
us keep the feast . . . with the
unleavened bread of sincerity and
truth. [I Cor. 5:8]
Sincerity
refers to purity of life, which is
active virtue;
truth
refers to divine contemplation,
which concerns itself with the truth
of the word of doctrine.
Spirit
and truth
may also be understood as follows.
It was characteristic of the
Samaritans to think of God as
enclosed in a certain place, and to
say that He must be worshipped "in
this place." On the other hand, it
was characteristic of the Jews that
every aspect of their worship was
performed as a type and
foreshadowing of things to come.
In spirit
was said in reference to the
Samaritans, so that what He means is
this: you Samaritans offer to God a
kind of local veneration. True
worshippers will not be limited by
locality; they will worship in
spirit, which means, in mind and
soul. Neither will they worship as
do the Jews with types and
foreshadowings, but in truth,
because the Jewish customs and
observances are about to come to an
end. Since the Judaic law,
understood according to the letter,
was a type and shadow, perhaps the
words, in
spirit, are in contrast to
the letter of the law. (For the law
of the letter no longer prevails
among us, but the law of the spirit,
for the
letter killeth, but the spirit
giveth life.) [II Cor. 3:6]
And the words,
in truth,
are in contrast to the types and
prefigurings. Therefore, He says,
the hour
cometh, and indeed
now is,
meaning, the time of My Advent in
the flesh, when true worshippers
will not worship in one place only,
like the Samaritans, but in every
place offering bodiless worship
according to the Spirit, as Paul
also says,
Whom I worship with my spirit.
[Ro. 1:9] Nor will they, like the
Jews, offer service to God that is a
type, a shadow, and a prefiguring of
things to come, but instead a
worship that is true, containing
nothing obscure. Such are the
worshippers whom God seeks:
spiritual, because He is Spirit, and
true, because He is Truth.
25-27. The woman
saith unto him, I know that the
Messiah cometh, Who is called
Christ: when He is come, He will
tell us all things. Jesus saith unto
her, I that speak unto thee am He.
And upon this came His disciples,
and marveled that He talked with a
woman: yet no man said, What seekest
Thou? Or, Why talkest Thou with her?
How did the woman know that
the Messiah was coming, Who is
called Christ? From the writings of
Moses, since, as we have already
said, the Samaritans accepted the
five books of Moses. From these they
knew the prophecies about Christ,
and that He is the Son of God. For
the words,
Let us make man, [Gen. 1:26]
indicate that the Father was
speaking to the Son; it was the Son
Who spoke with Abraham in his tent;
and Jacob spoke these prophetic
words concerning the Son,
A ruler shall
not fail from Judah . . . until
there come the things stored up for
Him, and He is the Expectation of
the Nations. [Gen. 49:10]
Moses himself said,
The Lord thy
God shall raise up to thee a prophet
of thy brethren, like me; Him shall
ye hear. [Dt. 18:15] And many
other things were proclaimed
concerning the coming of the Christ.
This is how the woman can say,
I know that the Messiah cometh.
The Lord then reveals Himself to
her, as demanded by the sequence of
their conversation. If He had said
right from the start, "I am the
Christ," He would not have persuaded
the woman, and would have appeared
overbearing and arrogant. But now
that He has brought her step by step
to remember the expectation of the
Messiah, suddenly He reveals
Himself. Why did He not reveal
Himself to those Jews who
continuously asked Him, "Tell us if
Thou art the Christ," but did so to
this woman? He said nothing to those
others because they did not inquire
for the purpose of learning, but
with the intent to slander Him all
the more. Because this woman is
honest He openly reveals Himself.
She questioned Him with all
sincerity of thought and purpose,
simply desiring to know the truth.
This is made clear by what followed.
When she heard His words, not only
did she herself believe, but she led
others into the net of faith as
well, always showing her mind to be
both probing and believing. At just
the right moment, when the Lord's
teaching and conversation with the
woman was completed, the disciples
returned. They were astounded at His
humility when they saw Him, a Man
renowned and acclaimed by all,
condescending with meekness and
compassion to speak with a woman,
and moreover, one who was a pauper
and a Samaritan. They were
astounded, but not so bold as to ask
what He had been discussing with
her, for they were always respectful
to Him, as is proper for disciples
towards their teacher. On other
occasions they did act more boldly,
for instance, when John leaned on
His breast, or when they approached
Him to ask which of them was the
greatest, or when the sons of
Zebedee asked Him if one of them
could sit at His right hand and the
other at His left. They did so
because they inquired about
seemingly urgent matters that
pertained to themselves. But in this
case, because there was no need to
ask about something that did not
concern them, such boldness was out
of place.
28-30. The woman
left her waterpot, and went her way
into the city, and saith to the men,
Come, see a man, who told me all
things that I ever did: is not this
the Christ? Then they went out of
the city, and came unto Him.
The words just spoken to her kindled
such zeal in her heart that she left
her water pot, in an instant
preferring Christ's water over that
of Jacob's well. Now she becomes no
less than an apostle, ordained to
this rank by the faith that has
taken hold of her heart, teaching an
entire city and drawing it to
Christ. Come,
she says, see
a man, who told me all things that I
ever did. Once her soul was
inflamed with divine fire, she gave
no thought to anything earthly, not
even shame or dishonor. See how she
is not ashamed to parade her sins,
when she says,
see a man who
told me all things that ever I did.
She could have spoken more
guardedly, by saying for instance,
"Behold a prophet Who knew my
thoughts." Instead, she scorns her
own reputation and thinks only to
proclaim the truth. She does not
state categorically, "This is the
Christ," but rather,
Is not this
[perhaps] the Christ?
encouraging them to reach the same
conclusion themselves and making her
words easier for them to accept. If
she had insisted, "This is the
Christ," they may have scoffed at
her and rejected out of hand the
opinion of this woman of such ill
repute. Some have understood the
five husbands of the Samaritan woman
to represent the five books of
Moses, which the Samaritan woman
alone accepted. Christ's words,
He whom thou
now hast, they say means, "My
word which you have now received
from Me is
not thy husband, that is,
"You have not yet been yoked to My
teaching." One could also say that
the Samaritan is a type and symbol
of human nature. Our human nature
formerly dwelt on a mountain, that
is, in a mind full of divine grace.
Before he sinned Adam was adorned
with every divine gift and was even
a prophet. When he was raised from
sleep he spoke prophetically of the
fashioning of the woman and the
relationship of the husband to her.
He said, This
now is bone of my bones, and,
Therefore
shall a man leave his father and his
mother . . . [Gen. 2:23 and
3:1] Our nature, then, was in this
mountain, that is, the lofty mind;
but when it offended [and rebelled
against] God, it was led away
captive, and the devil, who had
taken us prisoner, also took our
nature's holy seed, by which I mean
all divine thoughts, and led them
away to Babylon, that is, into the
confusion of this world. In their
place the devil planted barbarous
thoughts. But these were devoured by
lions, namely, the good thoughts
which govern us as kings, until they
were persuaded to accept the words
of God. But they did not accept them
entirely, for the evil which had
once settled in our mountain, that
is, in our mind, while accepting the
law of Moses, did not become
altogether good and remained under
the curse. Therefore Jesus journeyed
to us, that is, He undertook many
paths and stratagems to bring us
salvation, sometimes using threats
and warnings, sometimes the blows of
calamities, sometimes benefactions,
and at other times promises of good
things. When He had grown weary from
His journey and all the methods
undertaken for our correction, He
found at last another means for our
salvation, at which He sat down and
rested, and was pleased with it.
What was it? The font of baptism, by
which He brought benefit to our
nature, as to the Samaritan woman.
This spring may rightly be called
the well of Jacob, that is, the well
of him who tripped by the heel and
supplanted his brother Esau. [See
endnote ()
.] For in the
font of baptism a man can trip up
and vanquish the devil, because
there the Lord has crushed the head
of the dragon and given him as food
to the Ethiopian people. [See Ps.
73:15] For no others have been
nourished and gladdened by this
dragon except those who are darkened
and black in soul and have no share
in the divine light. Five husbands
have been yoked to our nature,
namely, the various laws which God
has given to her: first in Paradise,
then to Noah, then to Abraham, then
to Moses, and lastly, through the
prophets. For Noah received a
commandment after the Flood, and
Abraham received the law of
circumcision. [See Gen. 9:1-17 and
17:1-14] After our nature had been
wedded to these five laws, she took
to herself a sixth, who was not her
husband and whom she had not yet
wedded, the law of the New
Testament. One might also understand
this sixth, which was not our
nature's husband, to be the law of
idolatry. For indeed God had not
given her this law for a husband;
instead, she had joined herself to
it as an adulteress. Therefore the
prophet says,
She [Judah]
hath
committed adultery with wood,
and, They
[Israel] have
fornicated under every tree,
[Jer. 3:9,6] referring to the pagan
carvings and trees which they
worshipped. Our nature has fallen
headlong to such depths of
senselessness as to worship, simply
because they are lovely, such
beautiful trees as the cypress, the
plane tree, and the like. Therefore,
when man had loved this sixth, an
adulterer, and had fallen into
idolatry, then the Lord came and
delivered us. This is why He says,
he whom thou
now hast, for at the time of
Christ's appearing even the wisest
of the Jews had fallen into
Hellenism, of whom the clearest
example is the sect of the
Pharisees, who believed in fate and
practiced astrology. The Samaritan
woman also represents every soul
which is yoked irrationally to the
five senses and then errs grievously
in doctrine, like one who takes a
sixth man in adultery. To such a
soul Jesus gives good things, either
through baptism or through the font
of tears. Tears may indeed be called
Jacob's well,
springing from a repentant mind
which has supplanted wickedness.
From this water the mind drinks,
and his
children, namely, his
thoughts, and
his cattle, those parts of
the soul not endowed with reason,
such as anger and desire. For tears
bring refreshment to the soul, its
thoughts, and its faculties.
31-34. In the
mean while, His disciples asked Him,
saying, Master, eat. But He said
unto them, I have food to eat that
ye know not of. Therefore said the
disciples one to another, Hath any
man brought Him aught to eat? Jesus
saith unto them, My food is to do
the will of Him that sent Me, and to
finish His work. The
disciples
asked the Lord to eat,
meaning, they begged Him, not in a
presumptuous manner, but out of love
for their Master, for they saw that
He was weary from the journey and
the oppressive heat. But knowing
that the Samaritan woman was about
to bring to Him nearly all the
inhabitants of the city, and that
the Samaritans would believe in Him,
the Lord replies, "I
have food to eat, which is,
the salvation of men. And I have a
greater desire for this food than
any one of you has for material
food. But you, My disciples, do not
know this food which I have to eat.
Because you are still dull in
understanding and unable to fathom
my enigmatic words, you do not know
that I call the salvation of men my
food." In another sense, "You do not
know this food," means, "You do not
know that the Samaritans will
believe and will be saved." What do
the disciples do? They are still
bewildered and ask among themselves,
Hath any man
brought Him aught to eat?
Being as always in awe of Him, they
do not dare to question Him further.
But although they did not ask Him,
He reveals the meaning of His
mysterious words, saying, "My
food is to do the will of Him that
sent Me ( the will of God is
the salvation of men),
and to finish
His work." The prophets and
the law were not able to complete
the work of God because they
themselves were imperfect and
incomplete, able to reveal only
types and foreshadowings of the good
things to come. But the Lord
completed God's work, which is, our
salvation and our renewal. It seems
to me that God's
work
also means man himself, whom the Son
of God alone completed. He did so by
revealing our nature to be sinless
in Him, once He had shown it to be
complete and perfect in every good
work through His divine life in
human flesh, overcoming the world
[at every point] until the end. The
law, too, is the work of God, in
that it was written by God's finger,
[See Ex. 31:18 and Deut. 9:10] and
the Lord completed the law.
For the end
of the law is Christ, [Ro.
10:4] Who, when every requirement of
the law had been fulfilled, made it
to cease, transforming bodily
worship into spiritual. The Lord
often speaks in riddles to make His
listeners more attentive and to stir
them up to ask and learn the meaning
of His veiled words. By calling
man's salvation
food,
He teaches His disciples that, once
they have been ordained as the
teachers of the world, they too
should pay less attention to food
for the body, and redirect their
hunger to the saving of men. Take
note that the Lord did accept food
offered Him by others, for the
disciples said,
Hath any man
brought Him aught to eat? He
did this, not because He needed
others to minister to Him (how could
this be true of Him
that giveth
food to all flesh?) [Ps.
135:25], but so that those who
brought food to Him might have their
reward and become accustomed to
feeding others. At the same time, He
gave an example to all men not to be
ashamed of poverty and not to be
embarrassed when given food by
others. It is especially necessary
in the case of teachers that others
provide them with food, that they
might be undistracted in the
constant ministry of the word. This
is the very thing He taught His
disciples, that they should be fed
by those whom they teach. [See Mt.
10]
35-37. Say not
ye, There are yet four months, and
then cometh harvest? Behold, I say
unto you, Lift up your eyes, and
look on the fields; for they are
white already to harvest. And he
that reapeth receiveth wages, and
gathereth fruit unto life eternal:
that both he that soweth and he that
reapeth may rejoice together. And
herein is that saying true, One
soweth, and another reapeth. I sent
you to reap that whereon ye bestowed
no labour: other men laboured, and
ye are entered into their labours.
Now he begins to reveal clearly to
His disciples the meaning of what He
had said before in riddles. "You
say," meaning, you think, "that the
harvest," namely, the material
harvest, "is coming in four months.
But I say to you, the noetic harvest
is here already." He said this in
reference to the Samaritans who were
just then approaching Him.
"Therefore
lift up your eyes, both
noetic and physical,
and behold
the multitude of approaching
Samaritans and the souls eager and
ready to believe, which are like
fields white for the harvest." Just
as whitened ears of wheat are ready
for harvest, so have these men been
prepared for harvest.
And he that
reapeth receiveth wages, and
gathereth fruit unto life eternal:
that both he that soweth and he that
reapeth may rejoice together.
What He means is this: the prophets
sowed but did not reap. Yet they
have by no means been deprived of
the pleasure of the reward, but
rejoice with you who do the reaping.
It is not so with [farmers']
harvests, where, if it should happen
that one man sows and another reaps,
there is only sorrow for the man who
does not reap. But in the spiritual
harvest, the prophets who preached
long ago, cultivating and preparing
the minds of men, rejoice together
with you who now draw men to
salvation. The Lord says,
I sent you to
reap that whereon ye bestowed no
labour, so that when He
should send the disciples out to
preach, they would not be
overwhelmed by the difficulty of the
task. The prophets undertook the
harder work, He says, while you are
sent out merely to complete what has
already been prepared. He speaks
truly, mentioning that well-known
proverb, One
soweth, and another reapeth.
See how He speaks always with
authority as Master,
It is I Who
sent you to reap [Eg
ymas apesteila therizein].
Let the followers of the accursed
Marcion, Manes, and the like, who
would sever the Old Testament from
the New, take note, for here they
are rebuked. If the Old had indeed
been separated from the New, how
could the Apostles have reaped what
the prophets had sown? But the
Apostles have reaped the harvest of
the Old Testament, which therefore
is not estranged from the New--they
are one and the same. And let the
followers of Arius hear that it is
as Lord and Master that He sends out
His disciples. He sends them out to
cut down and reap Jews and Greeks
alike, who had stood planted in the
earth and in corruptible things, and
to carry them into the threshing
floor, that is, into the Church,
where they are threshed by the oxen,
who signify the teachers, and made
subject to them. There they are
crushed and broken [signifying
repentance and contrition], and when
they have discarded all that is
chaff, fleshly, and fuel for the
fire, they are stored up as pure
ears of wheat in heavenly granaries,
becoming food for God Who takes
delight in their salvation. In this
same manner Paul reaped souls and
cut them away from the earth,
teaching us that
our
citizenship is in heaven.
[Philip. 3:20] The words,
look on the
fields; for they are white already
to harvest, some have
elegantly applied to old men,
referring to their white beards and
the harvest of death.
39-42. And many
of the Samaritans of that city
believed on Him for the saying of
the woman, who testified, He told me
all that ever I did. So when the
Samaritans were come unto Him, they
besought Him that He would tarry
with them: and He abode there two
days. And many more believed because
of His own word, and said unto the
woman, Now we believe, not because
of thy saying: for we have heard Him
ourselves, and know that this is
indeed the Christ, the Saviour of
the world. The Samaritans
believed because of the woman's own
words, wisely determining among
themselves that she would not have
exposed the secrets of her life in
order to please another, unless the
Man Whom she proclaimed were truly
great and extraordinary. Therefore,
showing their faith by their works,
they asked Him to live with them
always. For the word
tarry
[meinai]
means "to make one's home" among
them. But they did not persuade Him,
and He stayed there only two days,
during which time
many more
believed because of His
teaching. The Evangelist does not
need to tell us the particular words
of His marvelous teaching: merely
stating the end result allows us to
sense their divine power. Often the
Evangelists omit many of His great
deeds and words, because they do not
write in order to make a grandiose
display of His life, but simply to
declare the truth. By His mere
presence among the Samaritans, the
Lord is also teaching something more
profound--without any sign or
miracle, they believed and begged
Him to live with them. But the Jews,
when given ten thousand signs and
miracles, drove Him away, for
those in his
house shall be all a man's enemies.
[Micah 7:6] See how quickly the
multitude outdid the woman who
taught them. They do not call Him
"prophet," or "Saviour of Israel,"
but, the
Saviour of the world, using
the definite article which
indicates, "This is the Saviour,"
Who essentially and in actuality
saves all mankind. There have been
many who came to save--lawgivers,
prophets, angels--but this One is
the true Saviour. |