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Thursday, March 19, 2026

404 404 Error Code

   (Note: This blog entry is based on the text for “404 Error Code”, originally shared on March 18, 2026. It was the 404th  video for our YouTube Channel, Streams of Living Water (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7KnYS1bpHKaL2OseQWCnw), co-produced with my wife, Rev. Sally Welch.)

   The Emergency Food Pantry in the church that I served in Compton had a bumper sticker stuck to the inside of its door. It said, “If you feel far from God, guess who moved?” Today, we’re going to find out what that means.

   When the pandemic got to the point where we were pretty much confined to our homes in 2020, Sally and I asked ourselves what we could do.

   We decided to produce YouTube videos with messages for connection and encouragement that would provide a means to reflect on what it meant to be a Christian in the LA area and beyond.

   We called them “Streams of Living Water”, because we were never alone in the Holy Spirit and, well, the videos were being streamed, get it? 😊

   Those developed into a blog, “Words of Living Water”, and into a podcast, “Living Water Radio.”

   This week, we are producing the 404th episode of each.

   Last week, I received the “404 error” message when I was searching for a website on my computer. That’s not a good thing.

   The 404 error code appears, according to Google, when your browser is connected to the server but the specific webpage, file, or resource requested could not be found. Also known as the “not found” code, it usually means that the URL you’re using is misspelled, or the page was deleted, or the link is broken.

   It’s a variation of the ancient computer principle, “Garbage in. Garbage out.”

   And, it’s frustrating. Like our weather.

   We were getting torrential rain a few weeks ago.

   This week, we are having record heat, and most of the rest of the country is having record snow.

   It seems like a disconnect.

   It seems like the way Mary and Martha must have felt when their brother, Lazarus, died.

   They were faithful people. They were probably Jesus’ best friends on earth, and Jesus didn’t seem to be caring that Lazarus was dying, at all!

   That is, they had a connection to the server, but the answer they sought was not found. They were experiencing a 404 Error Code! 😊

   The three siblings Mary, and Martha, and Lazarus lived with one another in the village of Bethany, just over the Mount of Olives, and about two miles east of Jerusalem. It appears to have been Jesus’ favorite place on earth.

   They were his close friends who were not among his close disciples. We have no record of him teaching publicly there. He just went there to relax and hang out with people who loved him and whom he loved.

   Then, one day, Lazarus was very sick and the sisters sent a message to Jesus to let him know.

   Jesus said to his disciples, in John 11:4b,

4b“This illness does not lead to death; rather it is for God’s glory, so that the Son of God may be glorified through it.”

   Phase One: “Oh, he’s just sick.” Lazarus is sick, but Jesus starts by doing nothing. Though he loves Lazarus and Mary and Martha, he stays put for two days. There’s some kind of plan. But what’s going on?

   Then this happens in verse 7,

7Then after this he said to the disciples, “Let us go to Judea again.”

   Which, the disciples say, is kind of crazy since he was just there and some of the people were trying to kill him. Jesus brushes-off their concern and explains that they just don’t understand who he is.

   He describes Lazarus’ situation in Phase Two, in John 11:11b, “Our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep, but I am going there to awaken him.”

   What?! The disciples want to know why Jesus is going to risk his life, and maybe theirs, to wake Lazarus up from a nap? This makes no sense to them.

   Phase Three: Jesus explains the situation, in John 11:14,

14Then Jesus told them plainly, “Lazarus is dead. 

   Jesus is then ready to go.

   [Sidebar: What do you think of when you think of the disciple named Thomas? Doubting Thomas, right? Look at his behavior here, in verse 16,

16Thomas, who was called the Twin, said to his fellow disciples, “Let us also go, that we may die with him.”

   Bold, huh? Thomas is a stand-up guy!]

   The story continues with verse 17,

17When Jesus arrived, he found that Lazarus had already been in the tomb four days. 

   People were already coming to console Mary and Martha. Martha hears that Jesus is coming and goes out to meet him and says, in John 11: 21b,

21b “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died. 22But even now I know that God will give you whatever you ask of him.”

   That had to hurt like a punch to the gut, even as Martha speaks to Jesus with humility and faith.

   Then comes the central message of this passage, in John 11:23-27,

 23Jesus said to her, “Your brother will rise again.” 24Martha said to him, “I know that he will rise again in the resurrection on the last day.” 25Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, 26and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?” 27She said to him, “Yes, Lord, I believe that you are the Messiah, the Son of God, the one coming into the world.”

   Martha goes and tells Mary that Jesus is near and is calling for her. Mary finds Jesus, kneels, and greets him with the same stinging words as her sister, in verse 32b,

 32b “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.”

   Now, I’m not normally much of a crier. Maybe more so now that I’m older and the estrogen is kicking in. But the floodgates open up if I see   people crying. That’s it!

   I remember sitting in the front row at my mother’s funeral. She had died of complications of breast cancer at age 53. I was trying to keep it together. That’s kind of the Norwegian way. Stoic. And I did, until I looked to my left and saw one of my best friends since childhood sitting with his wife, looking at me. His father had died when we were in our early 20’s. And he looked stricken, and his face was pale and wet. That was it for me.

   That’s why I’ve usually looked over the heads of people at the funerals I have led. I need to stay focused on the needs of others, not my own.

   Jesus wept. I don’t know if Jesus cried often. He lamented over Jerusalem. He was fully God, and he was fully human. Look what happens here, in John 11:33-35,

33When Jesus saw her weeping, and the Jews who came with her also weeping, he was greatly disturbed in spirit and deeply moved. 34He said, “Where have you laid him?” They said to him, “Lord, come and see.” 35Jesus began to weep.

   There is it. John 11:35, “Jesus began to weep.” In some translations it’s, “Jesus wept.”, the shortest verse in the Bible.

   Do you ever picture Jesus crying? I don’t. He seems to be above that kind of thing. He’s God. Doesn’t he see death all the time every day?

   Why would Jesus weep over anything? He knows how it will all turn out.

   Is death so unfamiliar to him? So unexpected?

   Queen Elizabeth II once said, in a statement of condolence to the families of the British who were casualties on 9-11, “Grief is the price we pay for love.”

   Grief is the price we pay for love.

   Was that it? Were Jesus’ tears the expression of the living relationship with the one true living God for which we were all created and which now Jesus appears to have lost with Lazarus? At least in this world?

   The next verse tells us, in verse 36,

 36So the Jews said, “See how he loved him!” 

   Others, though, were not so empathetic. Some questioned how Jesus healed the man born blind but didn’t heal his friend, Lazarus. Jesus was again in grief and went to the cave-tomb. A stone was lying against it. Sound familiar? Like another death and burial that we know is coming?

   Some protested when Jesus said, “Take away the stone”, pointing out that after four days there would be a stench. The King James Version of the Bible translates this passage, “Lord, by this time he stinketh”! Much of Christian art of this event shows people holding their noses.

   Jesus brushed all of that off and says, in John 11:40b-41a,

40b “Did I not tell you that if you believed, you would see the glory of God?” 41So they took away the stone.

   Jesus prays with thanksgiving, and then this happens, in verses 43-44,

43When he had said this, he cried with a loud voice, “Lazarus, come out!” 44The dead man came out, his hands and feet bound with strips of cloth, and his face wrapped in a cloth. Jesus said to them, “Unbind him, and let him go.”

   Wow! What a moment! What must it have been like to be there at that moment? Did all Creation hold its breath? I wonder what the people who were there took away from this?

   Well, we find out in the last verse of this passage, John 11:45,

45Many of the Jews therefore, who had come with Mary and had seen what Jesus did, believed in him.

   That’s easy to understand. But what can we take away from this? Four things.

   First, that there’s a reason that the verses at the center of this event are so often heard at Christian funerals, John 11:25-26,

25Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, 26and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?” 

   It is the very foundation for our hope in the new life in this world and the new heaven and the new earth in the life to come in Jesus Christ.

   Second, the answer to the question, “Who killed Jesus?”

   The award-winning and Oscar-nominated film “The Fabelmans” is based on the life of director Steven Spielberg. It contains a scene from when he was in high school being attacked for being a Jew, “because the Jews killed Jesus”. The actor responds, in part, by saying that he wasn’t around 2,000 years ago. 😊

   It is true that some Jews are shown in the Bible calling for Jesus’ crucifixion, but not one of them is alive today. And I’ve always wondered why there isn’t more anti-Italian prejudice directed at the descendants of the Romans who actually conduced the trial and did the crucifixion. “Jews” didn’t kill Jesus any more than “Italians” did.  

   Others say that the answer to the question “Who killed Jesus?” is “You did.” and “I did.” Jesus died to be the only acceptable sacrifice for our sin, to restore the created relationship with God that our sin had broken. He would not need to have been killed if it wasn’t for the fact that humanity had messed things up.

   But the fact is, and it is the record of scriptures, that, ultimately, nobody took Jesus’ life. He gave it.

   In John 10:17-18, where Jesus speaks about being the good shepherd and how the good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep, Jesus says,

17For this reason the Father loves me, because I lay down my life in order to take it up again. 18No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it up again.

   We see God’s power over life and death in Jesus’ raising of Lazarus from the dead. We see it in the gift of God in Jesus Christ, that Jesus gives his life on the cross as fully God and fully human being, and that he then he takes it up again in the Resurrection.

   Third, that we have good news to share: that Jesus is the Resurrection and the life. Our lives are transformed, they are made new, through a living relationship with the one true living God that we call “faith”. Lazarus was raised from the dead by Jesus, but he is given new life, eternal life, in Jesus, and that is much more important.

   Lazarus would die again, eventually. His eternal life is assured in Jesus. “Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, 26and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die.” The question that follows is, “Do you believe this?”

   A colleague, a predecessor at a congregation I served, told me about the night he had a Church Council meeting, and he knew it would be a late evening. He called his wife and told her not to make a dinner for him. He would just stop by MacDonald’s on the way home, which he did. But, as he got out of his car to order inside, someone jumped out at him, pointed a gun at him and told him to give him all his money or he’d kill him.

   He told me, “I wish I could say that I was brave, but the truth is that I was just tired, and I said, ‘You can’t kill me. I’ve already died in Jesus Christ.’”

   All the color drained from the other person’s face, and he turned and ran away!

   That brings us to the Fourth lesson, that we have already died. We died in our baptism. Death is a past-tense experience for us. Does that mean we are the “Living Dead?”

   In a sense, it does.

   Paul writes, in Romans 6:3-5,

3 Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? 4 Therefore we have been buried with him by baptism into death, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, so we too might walk in newness of life. 5 For if we have been united with him in a death like his, we will certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his.

   And Fifth, that God suffers with us in our suffering.

   Jesus wept. He was greatly distressed. He was “disturbed in spirit and deeply moved.” That in itself is a sign to us pointing to the nature of God.

   I remember very clearly when my father was dying. My brothers and sister and I were at the hospital. Our dad was in and out of consciousness. His organs were shutting down. We took turns sitting with our dad while the others sat in the hallway.

   I’ve been in that space countless times as the pastor. I’ve struggled with the right things to say in that moment.

   I remember when the pastor from our hometown church, our dad’s pastor, came to visit. He didn’t say anything. He didn’t have to. The look on his face said everything. We so appreciated his visit, his empathy and his concern. He just had to be there to express all of that.

   People say weird things when people have died. Even Christians. Things like, “I guess God needed another angel”, or “Everything happens for a reason.” or “Don’t cry, they’re with the Lord now.” or “God won’t give you any more than you can handle.” But none of these reach us at the point of our pain. But I don’t criticize people for saying them. People just don’t know what to say in their grief, in the face of death, and they’re afraid of saying the wrong thing.

   The best we can do is to be present in the hallways of people’s hearts. To sit with them. To share their grief even in the midst of our hope.

   This is what God does. God loves us at the point of our pain. God weeps at the point of our loss and reminds us of His eternal promises in our suffering: love everlasting.

   We have no need to fear death. It’s just a transition to another way of living. But we feel that pain in the pain of others even as we rejoice in the promise of eternal life given to us by Jesus Christ on the cross.

   The question is, do you believe it? Do you believe that the key to life and death is Jesus Christ? That true life is not something we achieve, but something we receive as the gift of God in Jesus Christ?

   That he gave his life and then took it back again? That Jesus has set everyone free from the effects of sin, death and the power of the devil who believes and is baptized?

   Sometimes we may feel that we have experienced a “404 Error Code:, that we are disconnected from the server, that we are far from God. But that’s not on God.

   Jesus has restored us to our true selves!

   Jesus has unbound us, and let us go!

   “Do  you  believe  this?” Share the good news. 


Thursday, March 12, 2026

403 Formerly Known As

   (Note: This blog entry is based on the text for “Formerly Known As”, originally shared on March 11, 2026. It was the 403rd  video for our YouTube Channel, Streams of Living Water (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7KnYS1bpHKaL2OseQWCnw), co-produced with my wife, Rev. Sally Welch.)

   California has been known as the place where people from all over can go to reinvent themselves. Jesus has another idea. Today, we’re going to find out what it is.

   Have you ever wondered how great it would be if you could just go back in time and see Jesus walking the earth, hear him speak, maybe see him do a miracle? Have you ever thought that seeing just one miracle would lock-in your faith and remove all your doubt?

   You’d be wrong. Seeing a miracle is not your problem. Being a miracle is.

   We’ve seen spectacular weather recently. Aside from some recent winds, our weather seems miraculous to people living almost anywhere else in our country.

   We occasionally get some heavy rain, scorching heat, or strong winds in our area. And, as a pastor, I’m sometimes get the wink and elbow from someone asking something like, “Hey, ‘padre’, can’t you do something about this weather?”

   Of course, I can’t. That would be a miracle. So, I say, “I’m sorry. I’m in sales, not management.” 😊

   The main Bible reading that we’re looking at today, the one that will be read in the vast majority of churches throughout the world this coming Sunday, John 9:1-41, raises a similar question.

   Jesus did miracles. He healed a man born blind. Why don’t we see those kinds of miracles today?

   Good question!

   The passage begins with a sight that is all but unheard of today but which was not so uncommon back then, and is not so uncommon in many other parts of the world even today, in John 9:1,

1As he walked along, he saw a man blind from birth. 

   “Blind from birth.”

   In our country today, babies are given an antibiotic eye ointment shortly after birth to prevent blindness. But being blind from birth didn’t mean the same thing to people in Jesus’ day.   

   We might say that being born blind meant that an infection, or some congenital cause was the reason. People in Jesus’ day believed that things like blindness happened to people as punishment for sin. The only question was whose sin it was. The person’s or their ancestors’.

   The disciples ask the question, in John 9:2,

His disciples asked him, “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?”

   Which is weird because the answer is one that changes over time in what we call “the Old Testament” and what people in that day called “the scriptures.”

   The Bible says that God punishes people for the sins of their ancestors near the beginning of the Old Testament, and it says that God does not punish them for the sins of their ancestors near the end of the Old Testament.

   Jesus takes the later view and so he shows a better grasp of the scriptures than his disciples.

   Jesus answers the disciples’ question, in John 9:3-5,

3Jesus answered, “Neither this man nor his parents sinned; he was born blind so that God’s works might be revealed in him. 4We must work the works of him who sent me while it is day; night is coming when no one can work. 5As long as I am in the world, I am the light of the world.”

   Jesus is about to take his disciples to school. God’s works are about to be revealed. Jesus is God, and the works that are about to revealed are the gifts of God from the Creation of all things.

   That’s what a miracle is. It’s not a suspension of the laws of physics. It’s not something unexpected that just happens. A miracle is the restoration of what God intended the world to be in the beginning of Creation and a sign of what it will be when Christ returns and there is a new heaven and a new earth.

   The world was created to be perfect. Human rebellion brought evil into the world, and we can’t always connect the sin with what happens afterwards, like when a factory owner has toxic waste to dump and dumps it in the river behind the factory. He saves money, his business is more profitable, his investors are happy and he sleeps well at night. Meanwhile, people drink the water and, eventually, they get cancer. They don’t know why.

   A miracle is a sign that points to God’s Creation as it was intended to be, and what it will be once again. Clean. Perfect. And, in this case, no blindness.

   Jesus, “the light of the world”, comes into the darkness of this man born blind and the man sees Jesus. His sight is restored.

   But first, it gets weird, in John 9:6-7.

6When he had said this, he spat on the ground and made mud with the saliva and spread the mud on the man’s eyes, 7saying to him, “Go, wash in the pool of Siloam” (which means Sent). Then he went and washed and came back able to see.

   Did anyone, when you were a kid, usually an older female relative, ever see dirt on your face and take out their hankie, dip it in their mouth, and use their saliva to clean off the spot? Gross right? You probably make that “Ick!” face, but you were clean.  😊

   Have you ever heard someone make a toast by saying “Here’s mud in your eye”? That expression started in England around 1930 and is either a reference to life in the trenches during WW1 or a reference to this text, which kind of makes sense, because it is a toast to one’s good health. In this text, it’s about healing.

   People back in Jesus’ day believed that saliva had actual healing properties.

   Jesus used it as a signal that a healing was about to take place.

   The man’s neighbors, who have only known him as a blind beggar, have questions.

   And Jesus is not around. So, they bring the healed man to the Pharisees, who also have questions, in John 9:13-15,

13They brought to the Pharisees the man who had formerly been blind. 14Now it was a sabbath day when Jesus made the mud and opened his eyes. 15Then the Pharisees also began to ask him how he had received his sight. He said to them, “He put mud on my eyes. Then I washed, and now I see.” 

   Do you see where we’re going here?

   If you know one verse of the Bible by heart, it’s probably John 3:16. If you know one hymn by heart, it’s probably “Amazing Grace”, and the first verse in particular:

“Amazing grace!- how sweet the sound-

That saved a wretch like me!

I once was lost, but now am found;

Was blind, but now I see.”

   That hymn was composed by John Newton, an English slave ship captain who came to Christ and repented of what he had done, left that work, and lived the rest of his life campaigning against slavery. He lived a transformed life in the grace of God.

   That’s also what the Bible calls a miracle! A miracle is a sign that God’s intention for creation is being restored.

   But there’s a bigger issue.

   At least the Pharisees think there is.

   Jesus has broken one of the 10 Commandments, they said, by healing, that is, doing work on the sabbath, the day of rest. And Jesus told the guy who was healed to go and bathe in the pool of Siloam, which they also considered to be working on the sabbath. Those things, they said, could not be works of God.

   They quizzed the man’s parents, and his folks don’t want to get caught up in all the drama and risk being labeled as sinners by the Pharisees.

   So, the Pharisees ask the guy who was healed about this “sinner”, Jesus, the one who worked on the Sabbath when he had healed him, and he answers, in verse 25.

25He answered, “I do not know whether he is a sinner. One thing I do know, that though I was blind, now I see.” 

   That’s a good answer, and the Pharisees argue with the man born blind, now healed, about his healing, but the man holds his ground and they drive him out.

   Jesus hears about what happened and finds the man, in verses 35-38,

35Jesus heard that they had driven him out, and when he found him, he said, “Do you believe in the Son of Man?” 36He answered, “And who is he, sir? Tell me, so that I may believe in him.” 37Jesus said to him, “You have seen him, and the one speaking with you is he.” 38He said, “Lord, I believe.” And he worshiped him.

   There’s the miracle! Again! It’s the miracle that is happening every day all over the world, including right here, right now, in your life, right in front of you!

   You can see a miracle today! Share your faith. Ask someone, “Have you heard about Jesus? Really heard about him?” Share the good news of forgiveness and salvation for them and invite them to open their heart to receive the transformational gift of Jesus Christ, the savior of the world, to become a new Creation, to become a Christian.

   Invite them to turn away from their old lives, to start over, to receive a new life, seen in 2 Corinthians 5:17,

17 So if anyone is in Christ, there is a new creation: everything old has passed away; see, everything has become new!

   We are not the light of the world. Jesus is.

   But we can be reflectors of the light.

   Robert Fulghum, in his book, It Was On Fire When I Lay Down On It, told the story of a modern Greek philosopher giving a lecture who answered Fulghum’s question on the meaning of life with his story about living on a Greek island during the Nazi occupation.

   One day, he said, he came upon a wrecked German motorcycle. He picked up the broken pieces of the rearview mirror and, unable to put them together, kept the largest piece, which he filed down to a circle with a stone. He played a game with that mirror, seeing what deep pocket of darkness he could illuminate by reflecting light into it.

   He said that he still had that mirror in his wallet and believed that it was the key to the meaning of life: that he was not the light or the source of the light, but that he could be a reflector, bringing light into the dark places of life, and that though he didn’t have the whole mirror, he had a part of it, and could do what he could with what he had.

   How do we help people see this, to see the Light, with what we have? The story of the healing of the man born blind concludes with its lesson, in John 9:39-41,

39Jesus said, “I came into this world for judgment so that those who do not see may see, and those who do see may become blind.” 40Some of the Pharisees near him heard this and said to him, “Surely we are not blind, are we?” 41Jesus said to them, “If you were blind, you would not have sin. But now that you say, ‘We see,’ your sin remains.

   Tricky. Sin produces our separation from God, our lack of the relationship with the one true living God for which we were created. Jesus says to the Pharisees that if they were blind, it would not be because of their sin. But by saying “We see” while not “seeing” the presence of God at work right in front of them, they reveal that they are still in their sin. They don’t see God, which is worse than any physical blindness.

   And they’re not alone.

   Think about all the people who physically saw Jesus do a miracle. Thousands! How many of them stuck with Jesus to the end? Zero. I think it was because they didn’t “see” Jesus.

   Martin Luther, the 16th Century Church reformer, said, “I have covenanted with my Lord that He should not send me visions or dreams or even angels. I am content with this gift of the Scriptures, which teaches and supplies all that is necessary, both for this life and that which is to come.”

   The Bible is our source for everything that is good in this world and the next. It is the primary means by which God speaks to us. The Bible reveals to us the power of the cross to restore that for which we were created: a living relationship with the one true living God.

   The Bible both describes miracles and enables us to see them. It enables us to see ourselves as we really are and to see our Savior for what He has really done.

   We cannot reinvent ourselves. We are sinners. But, at the cross, we are sinners who have been reinvented by God.

   We are participants in God’s greatest miracles. We tell our stories. We point people to God’s intention for human beings when he created them, and to the power and agency of God to give them a new life, to make them into a new creation. We point to Jesus as the agent by which a living relationship with the one true living God for which we were created was made possible through faith alone, by grace alone.

   Maybe you’ve heard of the popular musician who changed his name to a symbol and became known as “the artist formerly known as Prince”?

   The man formerly known as blind from birth became the man known as the one whose eyes were healed by Jesus. He told others what Jesus had done for him.

   He who was formerly known as blind became the one who could say, “I was blind but now I see.” He told others what Jesus had done for him.

   We who were formerly known as no people are now God’s people.

   We who were formerly known as cut off from God by our sin are now restored to God by God’s amazing grace, forever.

   We can tell others what Jesus has done for us and show by our love for one another and for the world that the new life that God gives to all who will receive it is God’s greatest miracle.

   And that, ultimately, everything and everyone who believes and is baptized will be healed! 



Thursday, March 5, 2026

402 How to Tell If It's A Scam

   (Note: This blog entry is based on the text for “How to Tell If It’s A Scam”, originally shared on March 4, 2026. It was the 402nd  video for our YouTube Channel, Streams of Living Water (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7KnYS1bpHKaL2OseQWCnw), co-produced with my wife, Rev. Sally Welch.)

   There are lots of ways that you can get scammed these days. How can you tell when an offer is real and when it is a scam? Today, we’re going to find out.

   People say that you can’t cheat a cheater. They already know all the tricks.

   People also say that you can only cheat a cheater. Because scammers are blinded by arrogance, while honest people know that they can’t get something for nothing.

   People say that they have learned from experience. “Once bitten twice shy.” Or, “fool me once shame on you, fool me twice shame on me.”

   People say lots of things.

   H. L. Menken once said, “For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong.”

   People get scammed for lots of reasons, simple and complex. They are desperate. They think that they are smarter than everyone else. The possibility of good fortune blinds them to everything else.

   Or, maybe they were raised to believe that everyone is out to cheat them, so they can’t tell a grifter from a go-getter. Maybe they have had bad experiences in life that lead them to think that everyone is out to take advantage of them, so they cheat themselves out of good experiences.

   It’s not easy for anyone to tell if they are being scammed.

   So, a reasonable person couldn’t be blamed for thinking that the woman in the Gospel reading that will be shared in the vast majority of churches in the world this coming Sunday, John 4:5-42, would have thought that she was being scammed. By Jesus.

   What if someone offered to give you a kind of water that would make it so that you would never be thirsty again? Would you accept it? Would you think it was a scam? It sounds like the guy offering magic beans to Jack for the family cow, doesn’t it? How would you respond to the offer of that “living water”?

   We’ve had two significant rainstorms this season. Both brought floods to the burn areas and snow to the mountains. The melting snow brought more floods, following the pull of gravity and flowing down in streams. It cascaded into culverts, control channels, and fields and catch-basins, percolating into aquifers. And some flowed into the ocean.

   That’s what people in Bible times called “living water”.

   “Living water” means water that is moving, like rapids, like fast-moving rivers. “Living water” is found in both the Old and New testaments of the Bible as a metaphor for the Holy Spirit in places like the Bible’s book of Jeremiah, where God speaks through the prophet Jeremiah to the southern kingdom of Judah, just before it falls to the Babylonians, in Jeremiah 2:12-13,

12 Be appalled, O heavens, at this,
    be shocked, be utterly desolate,
says the Lord,
13 for my people have committed two evils:
    they have forsaken me,
the fountain of living water,
    and dug out cisterns for themselves,
cracked cisterns
    that can hold no water.

   Jesus speaks to the people gathered in Jerusalem for a religious festival at the Temple and we see, in John 7:37-39, Jesus’ use of “living water” as a metaphor,

37 On the last day of the festival, the great day, while Jesus was standing there, he cried out, “Let anyone who is thirsty come to me, 38 and let the one who believes in me drink. As the scripture has said, ‘Out of the believer’s heart shall flow rivers of living water.’” 39 Now he said this about the Spirit, which believers in him were to receive; for as yet there was no Spirit, because Jesus was not yet glorified.

   We can still see a little snow in the foothills, waiting to melt and become living water. “Living water” is untamed, not bound by our expectations, like the winter wind, like the melting snow.

   It’s like the third person of the Trinity, the personal presence of the one God transforming, challenging, calling, equipping, and sending us through turbulent times on the course that leads to receiving eternal life.

   When the pandemic got to the point where we were pretty much confined to our homes in 2020, Sally and I decided to produce videos of encouragement that would provide a means to reflect on what it meant to be a Christian in the LA area and beyond. We called them “Streams of Living Water”, because we were never alone in the Holy Spirit and, well, the videos were being streamed, get it? 😊 Those developed into a blog, “Words of Living Water”, and a podcast, “Living Water Radio.” Do we see the common theme there? We are doing our 402nd episode of each this week.

   In today’s main Gospel reading, John 4:5-42, Jesus speaks to a Samaritan woman, a follower of the Samaritan religion, at a water well, about the nature of the Christian faith, and specifically about living water.                          

   Samaria was a foreign nation in the middle of Israel. It had been formed, mostly, by the Assyrian Empire when the Assyrians conquered the northern Kingdom of Israel in 722 B.C.

   The war that is going on in the middle east right now has been going on in one form or another for several thousand years. Our war with Iran has been going on, in one form or another, for 47 years.

   Conquest and colonization have been going on for a long time everywhere, sometimes self-destructively, as with Assyria’s conquest of the Northern Kingdom of Israel more than 700 years before Christ.

   Assyria had mixed the populations from throughout its conquered territories to prevent unity and rebellion, but many were no longer Assyrian. The result in Israel was “Samaria”.

   The Samaritans had retained enough of their Judaism to look a little bit familiar to the Jews, but they were not Jews. They were Samaritans. They were a hodgepodge of religions. They were a temptation to the Jews to be something else.

   Observant Jews were not supposed to even set foot in Samaritan territory. Jews traveling from Galilee, where Jesus was based, to Jerusalem, where the Temple was, were expected to walk to the other side of the Jordan River and then walk around, the long way.

   Observant male Jews were also not supposed to speak with a woman in public, not even with their wives.

   So, what is Jesus doing in Samaria, talking to a woman who we find out later has a questionable reputation, in a public place, with no one else around?

   Let’s take a look at the beginning of the passage, in John 4:5-8,

5 So he came to a Samaritan city called Sychar, near the plot of ground that Jacob had given to his son Joseph. 6 Jacob’s well was there, and Jesus, tired out by his journey, was sitting by the well. It was about noon. 7 A Samaritan woman came to draw water, and Jesus said to her, “Give me a drink.” 8 (His disciples had gone to the city to buy food.)

   We know that our current rainy season, such as it is, will be followed by a dry season, and that all these green hills will soon be brown. Oops, sorry, I meant “golden”. That’s what we say in California, right? 😊

   Israel has a climate much like that of Southern California, though it didn’t have irrigation back then. People had to draw water from cisterns in which they had stored water under their homes during the rainy season and from wells during the really dry season.

   Women usually went out to the local well to draw and carry water to their homes early in the morning, while it was still cool. This was a time when they could be with other adult women and exchange information and the news of the village.

   We find later in this reading that the Samaritan woman who Jesus has been speaking with at the well has been married five times, and that the man she was with is not her husband. Now, we don’t know the circumstances behind these marriages. She may have been divorced by each of her 5 husbands or widowed 5 times. But, given that she’s out at the well by herself in the middle of the day, there may be something to say for her not being very popular among the other women in the city.

   So, this particular Samaritan woman came to the well and unexpectedly found Jesus there alone as his disciples had gone into the city to buy food. He was tired, and Jesus spoke to her and asked her for a drink of water. What was he thinking?!

   The drama continues with John 4:9-14,

9 The Samaritan woman said to him, “How is it that you, a Jew, ask a drink of me, a woman of Samaria?” (Jews do not share things in common with Samaritans.) 10 Jesus answered her, “If you knew the gift of God, and who it is that is saying to you, ‘Give me a drink,’ you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water.” 11 The woman said to him, “Sir, you have no bucket, and the well is deep. Where do you get that living water? 12 Are you greater than our ancestor Jacob, who gave us the well, and with his sons and his flocks drank from it?” 13 Jesus said to her, “Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again, 14 but those who drink of the water that I will give them will never be thirsty. The water that I will give will become in them a spring of water gushing up to eternal life.”

   The woman wanted that water. I’m guessing that she did not like going to the well at noon by herself, and that she was starting to realize that Jesus was offering more to her than avoiding shame and inconvenience. Much more.

   That well, Jacob’s well, is still producing water. I drank from that well when I studied in Israel. Back then there was just a bucket and a ladle that everyone who wanted could drink from. I’m sure it’s different now, but it does give us a strong image for what’s happening with Jesus’ revelation to the Samaritan woman.

   Jesus is in Samaria to show that God’s living water, the Holy Spirit, is for everyone. Everyone. Not just the Jewish people, but for gentiles, even for Samaritans and people like us.

   In the course of their conversation, Jesus asks the woman to go and get her husband, and when the woman says that she has no husband, Jesus tells her that he already knows about her marital history.

   Was that awkward for her? Yes.

   Have you ever lived in a place where you were a religious minority. Well, I suppose that we all have if we are living today, as Christians, in an increasingly non-Christian, even hostile, world. To cope, we often seek to be blindly inclusive and accepting, even to the point of being reluctant to share the good news of the living water that gushes up to eternal life for fear of appearing “unwelcoming”. We go along to get along.

   That’s why I think that this exchange between the Samaritan woman and Jesus is so shocking to our 21st century ears as well as to the Samaritan woman. The woman deflects attention from herself and changes the subject. She calls Jesus a prophet. She points to their religious differences  and Jesus does nothing to accommodate them.

   Jesus replies, in John 4:21-26,

   21 Jesus said to her, “Woman, believe me, the hour is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem. 22 You worship what you do not know; we worship what we know, for salvation is from the Jews. 23 But the hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father seeks such as these to worship him. 24 God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.” 25 The woman said to him, “I know that Messiah is coming” (who is called Christ). “When he comes, he will proclaim all things to us.” 26 Jesus said to her, “I am he, the one who is speaking to you.”

   We sometimes hear from people with a vague sense that they need to be more than they are, but don’t want to change, that they are “spiritual but not religious”.

   Jesus doesn’t give us that option. In fact, Jesus doesn’t give us either option.  Christian faith is not about us.

   Gas is selling at around $5.00 a gallon here. At the same time, you can buy a gallon of diet coke for between $4.00 and $7.00. Of course, you can’t run your car on diet coke, but I’ve known people with serious diet coke needs, even addictions. 😊

   What we are willing to pay for something depends upon our needs, and on what’s going on around us. Some people think that they are poor if they don’t own what were considered luxuries a generation or two ago. Many people’s expectations for a minimally acceptable material life has grown to owning things like a cell phone, a home computer, and a big screen TV with lots of streaming services, things that people didn’t know that they needed for thousands of years.

   Others are just hustling for a dollar. They know the cost of everything and the value of nothing. They seek more things for no other purpose than to fill the emptiness within them that they cannot name. But that we can. And that Jesus paid to fill when he paid for our sins on the cross.

   The Samaritan woman had been defined by her failed relationships. Some of us are ruled by our failures. We have not been the people we want to be, both in what we have done and in what we have left undone.

   And when we have messed up the devil says, “You failed! What a hypocrite! You aren’t a Christian. Why pretend? Give up!”

   But that’s not the Word of God, that’s the word of the devil. That’s the word of the forces that defy God.

   God’s answer to us and to the Samaritan woman is that we have been given a Savior, the Messiah, Christ the Lord.

   The Good News, the Gospel, the Word of God says, “Jesus died for you. Jesus overcame temptation, sin, death, and the power of the devil, for you.”

   Some others are ruled by their fears

   Why don’t they turn to God’s perfect love that casts out fear, to the living, eternal relationship with the one true living God for which they were created? I think that the reason is “sin”, what Martin Luther called being “curved in upon ourselves.”

   Most people in this world are focused on themselves, on their pleasures, on their material security. They are worried about the economy, that our country seems to be coming apart at the seams, that we are devolving into conflicting tribes, that we can’t talk with each other anymore, that A. I. will take away their jobs and their dignity as human beings, that their health or their health insurance coverage will fail, that the zombie apocalypse is inching closer and that they are powerless against what they fear is coming. And now we are facing the possibility of another world war!

   They might remember the bumper sticker that said, “Even paranoids have real enemies.”  And they look at the world and they realize, “Yes. We have real enemies.”

   Like the Samaritan woman, we are now at a crossroads. We are in the season of Lent. Lent is a time to reconsider the necessity of the things we can’t buy.

   Instead, some of us are being ruled by false beliefs about God, like the Samaritan woman. Jesus doesn’t talk to her about inclusion here. Jesus offers her an alternative in the truth. Jesus himself. Jesus is the truth.

   Our salvation has been paid in full at the cross! There is nothing more valuable than that, and it’s free. It casts out our failures, our fears, and our false beliefs forever and puts Jesus Christ in their place. It is revealed by the Holy Spirit, the living water at work within us!

   How do we convey that message to people who walk in the darkness of false belief every day and don’t know it? Jesus is pretty direct with the Samaritan women, even offensive to our ears. Why?

   We say that Christianity is not a religion, it’s a transformational relationship. It is personal and it is particular.

   It doesn’t come to people and nations from the West, or from the East, or from the North or from the South. Christianity comes to all people from above.

   Jesus does not mince words about what truth is. It isn’t a proposition; it is a person.

   But suddenly the disciples return from their shopping trip, and their first reaction is that they are astonished that Jesus was speaking with a woman.

   The woman, an outcast among outcasts, living a separate existence within Israel, and a seemingly separate existence within Samaria, pays no attention to them and returns to her village and fearlessly shares what she has encountered in Jesus, and that he might be the Messiah.

   Jesus’ disciples seem to be concerned only with Jesus’ immediate physical needs.

   Jesus refocuses their attention toward Jesus’ mission, and that of his disciples (and ours), and what was happening right in front of them.

   The Samaritan woman is telling her community about Jesus! She is evangelizing!

   Our Gospel reading concludes in John 4:39-42,

39 Many Samaritans from that city believed in him because of the woman’s testimony, “He told me everything I have ever done.” 40 So when the Samaritans came to him, they asked him to stay with them; and he stayed there two days. 41 And many more believed because of his word. 42 They said to the woman, “It is no longer because of what you said that we believe, for we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this is truly the Savior of the world.”

   I saw on the news once that 6” of moving water can knock a person over, and that 12” of moving water can sweep away a motor vehicle.

   Living water is powerful, and the streams of living water within us, that is the Holy Spirit, is powerful. It transforms lives. It endures forever.

   It’s how we know when the devil, the world, and our sinful selves are scamming us. When they tell us that we are not enough, that we need more stuff, that we should fear what, in fact, has no ultimate control over us. None.

   God has always known everything we have ever done, and yet he has died on the cross for us. The Holy Spirit opens the hearts of all who will receive the living presence of God, the living water, and makes us a new creation by the water of baptism and the Word of God.

   This Lent, seek this water, this living water, gushing up to eternal life, the power of the Holy Spirit within you that opens your heart to receive the gifts of faith and the water of baptism and tell people you know, people who trust you, about what Jesus has done for you. He is truly the Savior of the world.