icon__search

Committed to Worship

John 4:16-26

March 5, 2023 • Shane Sikkema • John 4:16–26

Audio Transcript:


This media has been made available by Mosaic Boston

Church. If you'd like to check out more resources, learn about Mosaic Boston or

donate to this ministry, please visit mosaic boston.com.

 

Today, we are continuing in our sermon series Essential. We've been talking about the essential habits, or sorry, sermon series committed talking about the essential habits of an abundant life. We've been focusing on just the super practical commitments that every Christian that needs to make in order to grow in their faith, persevere in their faith, and experience the abundant life that Jesus Christ came to give.

 

Last week we talked about the topic of prayer. This week, we're talking about the topic of worship. If you're here last week as we were talking about prayer, I asked everyone at the beginning, before we start, everyone just take a moment and do an evaluation of your prayer life and rate yourself like on a scale of 1 to 10. Not going to do that here this morning. If we were to rate ourselves on our ability to worship, I already know we would all be a perfect 10. We are very skilled at worshiping.

 

It just comes natural to us and we're going to be talking a little bit more about that. Remember, there's the old Chris Tomlin song, you and I were made for worship, love that song. It's true, he's right, we were designed for worship and we are naturally very good at it. Just look at any like sporting event, look at any rock concert, think about this, think about there's crowds of people, the lights, the loud music, the energy, the excitement, the lasers, the fog, it sounds just like something out of the book of Revelation.

 

If you look at and think, read the descriptions of God's throne in the Book of Revelation, and there's crowds of people, great multitudes of people surrounding his throne, cheering, singing his praise, and there's smoke and there's thunder, and there's lightning. It's this multisensory experience. I do not think that this is a coincidence. We humans are going to find a way to worship one way or another, one thing or another.

 

The problem is not that we don't worship. The problem that we see is that we all too often, we worship the wrong things or we worship in the wrong way. We try to replicate or fabricate the transcendent. Our concern today is not so much with committing to worship generally. Our concern today is with committing to worship properly, to worship the one true God in the way that he commands us to worship.

 

How does that make you feel that God commands you to worship him? For a lot of us that it doesn't, we don't really like to hear that. We don't like to think about a God who commands people to worship him. It makes us uncomfortable to think that God is committed to his own glory, that he is devoted to his worship, but he is. Remember the 10 Commandments, Exodus 20, the first 4 out of the 10 are all about worship. Now, this is what it says, Exodus 20:1.

 

"God spoke all these words saying, I am the Lord your God who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery. You shall have no other gods before me. You shall not make for yourself a carved image or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above or on the earth beneath or that is in the water under the earth. You shall not bow down to them or serve them for I the Lord your God, am a jealous God."

 

"Visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me, but showing steadfast love to thousands of those who love me and keep my commandments." God is jealous for us. He commands us to worship him alone. If this feels odd to us, if this irks us, if we bristle at this, well it's because if God were anything like us, such a commandment would seem pretty arrogant and it would be evil.

 

What if God were as scripture tells us not like us? What if he was completely other? What if he was holy? What if God were truly perfect in holiness, justice, mercy, love and power? What if he truly had no rival, no equal for his glory? Well, if this were true and it is true, well then it would not be evil for God to command people to worship him. Actually, it would be evil for God to do anything less than to seek his own glory because he truly is the only one worthy of praise.

 

A truly loving God would insist on this because a truly loving God would be devastated to see the objects of his love and creation settle for worshiping anything less. Jonathan Edwards famous New England theologian pastor, he wrote this, he said, "God, in seeking His glory seeks the good of His creatures because the emanation of his glory, which He seeks and delights in as He delights in Himself and His own eternal glory, implies the communicated excellency and happiness of His creatures."

 

"In communicating His fullness for them, He does it for Himself because of their good, which He seeks their good, which he seeks is so much in union and communion with himself. God is their good, their excellence and happiness is nothing but the emanation and expression of God's glory. God in seeking their glory and happiness seeks Himself and in seeking himself as diffused and expressed, which he delights in as he delights in His own beauty and fullness, He seeks their glory and happiness."

 

You know what I think of when I read something like that? I think I'm so thankful that people don't write like that anymore. What on earth is Jonathan Edwards talking about? Well, I sat down, I chewed on this, I thought about it for a week for a little bit, had a migraine for like three days, but I got through it. This is what I think he's saying. Think of it like this, imagine that there's two men desiring the same woman's hand in marriage pursuing her.

 

Now, the first man is strong, he's handsome, he's intelligent, he's successful, wealthy, compassionate, brave. He is everything that a woman could ever desire in a man. More than that, he loves her with all of his heart. He cherishes her, he treasures her. He would do anything for her, even lay down his own life if she were ever in danger. That's bachelor number one.

 

Bachelor number two is a criminal. He's a predator looking for someone to use an abuse. He's a violent, unscrupulous, selfish, deadbeat, ugly loser living in his mom's basement, trolling people on the internet all day. He's got food stuck in his beard. He's got Cheetos dust on his fingers just 24/7. Would it be wrong for the honorable man to defend his honor in this situation?

 

Would it be wrong for him to insist that this woman that he loves value his virtues and even despise the vice of this other man to, in a sense, seek his own glory even to the point of demanding that she stay away from this dangerous predator. That would not be wrong. In seeking his own glory, the honorable man is actually seeking his beloveds good. Now, this is not a perfect illustration because we cannot imagine a perfect man.

 

There are no perfect men except of course for Jesus Christ, and that's the point. We take the premise of this illustration, times it by an infinitely glorious and perfect God. Then, you begin to understand what Edwards means. God is love, and the most loving thing God can therefore do is pursue his glory because the glory of the creator is the good of the creation. In commanding us to worship God, he is commanding our joy.

 

He is commanding our greatest good that to command us to worship him is like commanding a bird to fly free in the sky. To command us not to worshiping anything else is like commanding a fish to stay away from the desert. He he's doing what is best for us in seeking his own glory. If you have your Bibles open up to John 4, we're going to be looking at a story today that is really a case study in what we've just talked about that shows us how and why this is so true.

 

How important it is that we worship and that we worship the right God in the right way. John 4 is the story of the woman at the well. In this story, Jesus gives us what is arguably the most important teaching on worship that we have in all of holy scripture. If you have your Bibles, you can follow along. The words are also going to be up here on the screen. This is John 4, beginning in verse one.

 

"Now, when Jesus learned that the Pharisees had heard that Jesus was making and baptizing more disciples than John, although he himself did not baptize but only his disciples, he left Judea and departed again for Galilee, and he had to pass through Samaria. He came to a town of Samaria called Sychar near the field that Jacob had given to his son Joseph. Jacob's well was there, so Jesus wearied as he was from his journey was sitting beside the well.

 

It was about the sixth hour, a woman from Samaria came to draw water and Jesus said to her, "Give me a drink. For his disciples had gone away into the city to buy food." The Samaritan woman said to him, "How is it that you, a Jew, ask for a drink from me a woman of Samaria for Jews have no dealings with Samaritans." 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've asked him and he would've given you living water."

 

The women said to him, "Sir, you have nothing to draw water with. The well is deep, where are you going to get the living water? Are you greater than our father Jacob? He gave us the well and drink from it himself as it sons in his livestock. Jesus said to her again, "Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks of the water that I will give him, he'll never be thirsty again."

 

"The water that I give him will become in him a spring of water welling of to eternal life. The woman said to him, "Sir, give me this water so that I will not be thirst or have to come here to draw water." Jesus said to her, "Go call your husband and come here." The woman answered him, "I have no husband."

Jesus said to her, "You are right in saying I have no husband, for you have had five husbands. The one you now have is not your husband. What you have said it's true."

 

The woman said to him, "Sir, I perceive that you are a prophet. Our father's worshiped on this mountain, but you say that in Jerusalem is the place where people ought to worship." Jesus said to her, woman, "Believe me, the hour is coming when neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem will you worship the Father, you worship what you do not know."

 

"We worship what we know for salvation is from the Jews, but the hour is coming and is now here when the true worshipers will worship the father and spirit and truth. For the Father is seeking such people to worship him. God is spirit and those who worship him must worship and spirit and truth." The women said to him, "I know that the Messiah is coming. He is called the Christ. When he comes, he will tell us all things." Jesus said to her, "I who speak to you am He."

 

This is the reading of God's word for us this morning. Would you please join me in prayer for our sermon today? Father, help us to become to be the worshipers that you are seeking. Teach us to worship in spirit and in truth, God, give us a glimpse of your glory that stirs our hearts and affections with all and wonders so that we cannot help but to declare your praise. That we cannot help but to offer our lives as a living sacrifice and worship to you, to give you glory in all that we say and do.

 

Lord, speak to us now we pray through your holy word. In Jesus' name, amen. Well, it's been a while since we've done a traditional three-point sermon and we're going to do one of those this morning. The three points of our sermon today are this, that point number one that the father is seeking worshipers, 0.2, who will worship in spirit in the truth, and 0.3 is both in Word and in deed.

 

Jesus tells us that the father is seeking worshipers, John 4:23, he says, "The hour is coming and is now here when the true worshipers will worship the father in spirit and truth for the Father is seeking such people to worship him." We already talked about how this is not wrong or selfish for God to do, to seek worshipers to pursue his own glory. This story is really a case study and why that's true, to help us to see all of the ramifications that come along with this.

 

Jesus tells the woman, he says, "You worship what you do not know." As you read the context, it becomes clear that Jesus, he is not just talking about this theological feud that was going on between the Jews and Samaritans. That was certainly part of what Jesus was talking about, but he's pressing into something far deeper, far more personal for this woman at the well. The first thing he says is, "Hey, go call your husband."

 

Well, he knows full well that she has no husband. As she says, "I've had five, the person I'm now with is not my husband." This is where Jesus goes because he knows that this is the temple that they're arguing about. This is the temple where she had been worshiping. This is the idol that has a hold of her heart that for so many years this woman has been searching for a Messiah among mortals.

 

Bouncing from man to man to man, hoping to find satisfaction for her soul, through intimacy, through sex, and it's destroying her life. This is the irony of idolatry that our idols, they promise to satisfy the deepest longings of our heart. Then, the more we draw from those wells, the more we drink of that water, the thirstier we become. Instead of satisfaction, she finds a life of sin and shame.

 

She finds a life of heartache, humiliation, a life of regret. Jesus, he preemptively addressed this in verse 13, this is what he is talking about when he says, "Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again." He's not talking about water, he's talking about her. He's talking about her life. He's talking about the futility of her idolatry, trying to find her hope or peace or satisfaction in something lesser than God.

 

One of the reasons that we may be cringed at the idea of God's seeking worshipers, of being devoted to his glory is because we simply, we fail to understand how good God is on the one hand, but then we also fail to really fully understand how futile and how deadly idolatry and sin are on the other. This woman's idols, they were destroying her life.

 

The prophet Jeremiah in Jeremiah 2:12, it says, "Be appalled, O heavens at this. Be shocked and utterly desolate declares the Lord. For my people have committed two evils, they have forsaken me. The fountain of living waters and hewed out cisterns for themselves, broken cisterns that can hold no water." There's so much more going on in this story than just conversation about a well and it's water.

 

Jesus is talking about the idols in her heart. This is why when we look at scripture and we look at the topic of idolatry, we also see accompanied with that the topic of God's wrath, that God has wrath. His wrath burns against our idolatry. He hates it with a passion because he loves us with a passion because he sees what it does to us, that our idols come and they offer us the world, but then they kill, they steal, they destroy.

 

They take away everything. Our dignity, the glory that we were created for as image bearers of God. One of the most just brutally clear teachings of this in all of scripture comes from Romans chapter one, Romans 1:18, Paul writes this. He says, "The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who by their unrighteousness, suppress the truth. For what can be known about God is plain to them because God has shown it to them."

 

For His invisible attributes, namely, His eternal power and His divine nature have been clearly perceived ever since the creation of the world and the things that have been made, so they're without excuse." For although they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking and their foolish hearts were darkened, claiming to be wise, they became fools and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals, and creeping things.

 

"Therefore, God gave them up and the lusts of their hearts to impurity and to the dishonoring of their bodies among themselves because they exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served creature, the creature rather than the creator who was blessed forever. You see what Paul's getting at? You see what's going on here. It's this idea that in giving our glory to anything other than God, we're not robbing God of His glory.

 

God is infinitely perfect in His glory. We cannot add to or subtract from God's glory, from His splendor, but when we give our glory to anything lesser than God, we are robbing ourselves. We are in a sense giving away our dignity, giving away our humanity. We exchange wells of living water for broken, empty cisterns. We exchange living in the truth for living a life of lies. We exchange wisdom for folly, honor for shame, dignity for a debased life.

 

We exchange the glory of the creator for created things. The big idea is that in this exchange, we ourselves are being changed. That we are becoming like whatever it is that we behold in worship. Now, as image bearers of God, we were created to behold God in worship and to grow in more glory of his likeness. The 2 Corinthians 3:17 Paul talks about this says that, "The Lord is the spirit and where the spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom.

 

We all with unveiled faces beholding the glory of the Lord are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another. That this is what happens when we worship the right God in the right way, we're growing increasing degrees of glory. When we fail to do that, the opposite is true as well. We become less like him and more like creation. We begin to behave like animals, like the creeping things that we worship.

 

We begin to become controlled by our fleshly impulses. We become increasingly inhumane. We become increasingly consumed by dishonorable passions. This is exactly what Paul says as he continues in verse 26. He says, "For this reason, God gave them up to dishonorable passions. For their women exchange natural relations for those that are contrary to nature. The men likewise, gave up natural relations with women and were consumed with passion for one another."

 

"Men committing shameless acts with men in receiving in themselves to do penalty for their error. Since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a debased mind to do what ought not to be done. They were filled with alt manner of unrighteousness, evil, covetousness, malice. They're full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, maliciousness, their gossips, slanders, haters of God, insolent, haughty, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, foolish, faithless, heartless, ruthless."

 

"Though they know that God's righteous decree that those who practice such things deserve to die, they not only do them, but they give approval to those who practice them." It's chilling how much it feels like this is just becoming more and more the state of our world every day. We shouldn't be surprised because this is the natural end of idolatry. This is the horrifying end of misdirected worship. By rejecting the God of heaven, we are inviting hell on earth.

 

This is the reason that a good and loving God is jealous for us, and even angry when we do not give him the glory that He deserves because he knows idolatry always leads to death, it always invites hell. Right now, this hell on earth is temporary and it is escapable by the power of the gospel, by the blood of Jesus Christ there can be redemption and forgiveness of sins.

 

What we see is that a day is coming when those who refuse to repent and refuse to worship God as they are, will find themselves not just experiencing a hell on earth but existing in a hell for all of eternity. This should break our hearts, the scripture describes hell as a place of unbearable conscience, eternal selfishness, and suffering. Where people are forever cut off from the presence of God's glory.

 

This is 1 Thessalonians 2:9, it says, "They will suffer the punishment of eternal destruction away from away from the presence of the Lord and the glory of his might when he comes on that day to be glorified in his saints, to be marveled, that among all who have believed Jesus is coming." This is true, and we may bristle at this. We may not want to talk about it, but it's true.

 

We know that it's true because we see the warning signs of it all around us in our world right now. This is why Jesus runs into this woman at the well. He doesn't talk about the weather. He's not there to shoot the breeze just to carry on a casual conversation. He goes straight to the most off limit, sensitive, dark part of her life and says, "I want to talk about that." Why would he do that?

 

He did that because he loved her because this was the idol that was destroying her life. The only way for her to live was for it to die. He goes there and that this couldn't have been fun, it couldn't have been easy to do, but he could see the eternal destruction of her idolatry was already having effect in her present life and he wanted to pull her from those flames before it was too late.

 

He goes there, love compels him to talk about this. He couldn't stand to see her any longer returning day after day to the well of her sin, of her shame, of her sin, of her idolatry, hopelessly drawing water that was never going to quench. The application for us right now, this story it's not just about her, it's about us. What is that well that broken cistern in your life, are you holding on to any idols? Maybe you go to them occasionally, maybe you go to them habitually.

 

Are you looking to created things to find your comfort, your hope, your peace, your joy and happiness and life? Jesus tells us in verse 13 says, listen, "Everyone who drinks of this water, they're going to be thirsty again. It's never going to satisfy you, but whoever drinks of the water that I will give him will never be thirsty again. The water that I give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life."

 

Verse 10, he says, "If you knew the gift of God and who it is that saying to you, "Give me a drink, you'd have asked him and he would've given you this living water." The woman responds on verse 15, he says, "Sir, give it to me. Give me this water so that I will not be thirsty or have to come here to draw water. It's a beautiful glorious thing to know that the father is seeking worshipers.

 

He's seeking people who will draw water from the well of Christ and extinguish the flames of their idols and find their satisfaction, everything that their hearts have longed for are satisfied in him. Jesus first tells us that the father is seeking worshipers. He also tells us that the kind of worshipers that the father is seeking, and verse 23 says that the hour is coming and it is now here when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and in truth.

 

For the Father is seeking such people to worship him. God is spirit and those who worship him must worship in spirit and in truth. This is point number two today that we worship in spirit and truth. Romans 1, John 4, Exodus 20, they all tell us how important it is that we worship the right God. They also tell us how important it's that we worship him in the right way. The right way, and that Jesus tells us is to worship him in spirit and truth.

 

What does that mean to worship God in spirit and truth? I think the truth part comes a little bit easier. That part's not too difficult to understand that to worship in truth means that we must worship God for who He truly is. We do not worship God as we imagine Him to be. We do not worship Him for who we hope or we desire Him to be. We worship Him for who He has revealed himself to be, that He has revealed himself through His word.

 

He's told us what He's like and how He ought to be worshiped through the living word that's Jesus Christ, the Son of God, and through the written word, holy scripture, that's how we know God. Today, Hebrews 1 says, "Long ago and many times, and in many ways God spoke to our fathers by the prophets. In these last days, he has spoken to us by His son whom He appointed the heir of all things through whom He also created the world.

 

He, Jesus, the Son, is the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of His nature. He upholds the universe by the word of his power. John began his gospel, John chapter 1, he says, "In the beginning was the word and the word was with God, and the word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through Him and without Him was not anything made that has been made and Him was life and that life was the light of men.

 

Then in verse 14, and he says, "This word became flesh and he dwells among us. We have seen His glory, the glory as the only son from the Father who is full of grace and truth." This is what it means to worship in truth that our understanding of God and how we worship him, it's not something we find by looking inwardly into ourselves. It is something that we can only find and discover by looking to the truth that God has revealed to us through his word, through the living word, Jesus Christ and through his written word of holy scripture.

 

We must worship in truth, but we also must worship in spirit. What does it mean to worship in spirit? Well, if you're familiar with John's gospel, when John talks about the spirit, he's almost always talking about the Holy Spirit and the gift or the indwelling Holy Spirit that is going to come upon Jesus of followers, that to worship in spirit, it does not require us to go to a holy temple, it requires us to have the Holy Spirit.

 

Jesus talked about this in chapter three with Nicodemus, how you need to be born again by the Spirit. This is why Jesus tells the Samaritan woman, "Listen, the time is coming in. It's here right now. It's not going to matter whether you worship God here or there at this mountain or that temple, what's going to matter is that you have the Holy Spirit of God within you."

 

Last week, when we talked about prayer, we talked about how prayer is this Trinitarian experience of Father, Son, and the Holy Spirit. The same is true of worship, that we worship in the power of the Holy Spirit and in the truth of Jesus Christ and spirit and in truth. That is part of it that we must worship with the Spirit in the Spirit as those who have been born again by the Holy Spirit.

 

Now, in addition to this, I think Jesus just to make it practical, when we talk about worshiping in his spirit and truth, the idea here is that it goes beyond just our understanding and our mind, and it produces a proper posture in our hearts. It produces a right attitude and a right affection for God in our hearts when we have the right understanding and when we have the right spirit within us, that these two things together then result in a proper response to God in praise.

 

Throughout scripture, the way people respond to God, we express this. It's through love, it's through our obedience, it's through sacrifice, and it is through praise. It's through the words that we say, and we're going to talk a little bit here in a little bit about how therefore worship really in includes every aspect of our life. One of the most natural ways for us to express this to God all at once is through singing to him with Psalm, with music.

 

Psalm 108:1 says, "I will sing and make melody to God with my lips? No, he says, "With all of my being. Awake, O, harp and lyre. I will wake the dawn, I will give thanks to you, oh Lord, among the peoples, and I'll sing your praises to you among the nations for your stud fast love is great above the heavens. Your faithfulness reaches to the clouds that when we sing, we sing with our whole being.

 

Have you ever stopped to think about why we sing in church? It is just normal, but when you think about it's strange. People usually don't just sing. I said in the newsletter, people pretty much they sing when they're drunk or they sing when they're in love. That's the reason we sing. Hopefully, you're not drunk, but we sing because we love. We sing because we can't contain the feeling, the affection that we have for God our Father as we think about who he is and as we think about what he has done for us.

 

There is a unique and at times transcendent wholeness that is produced when words and music come together. When we sing, we have a message of truth that we are engaging with our minds. The words that we sing matter, but then how we sing them matters as well. This message in our minds that stirs up evokes emotions in our heart. Then, we engage our whole body, we sing out loud, we move, we clap our hands, we raise our arms.

 

Whatever we do that we sing in sync, we sing in rhythm, we sing with dynamics and harmony. The music moves because it is meant to move us. It is meant to be this whole body multisensory experience. The point that I'm trying to make is that our praise should not be rote. It should not be half-hearted, apathetic, indifferent. It should not seem boring or stale. Our praise should be the passionate response of hearts that have been set on fire by the glory of God.

 

It's the response of hearts that have properly understood just how beautiful and glorious and worthy of praise God really is. Psalm 33 says, "Shout for joy in the Lord. O, you righteous. Praise benefits the upright. Give thanks to the Lord with the lyre. Make melody to him with the harp of 10 strings. Sing to him a new song, play skillfully on the strings with loud shouts. For the word of the Lord is upright, and all of his work is done in faithfulness. He loves righteousness and justice, and the earth is full of the steadfast love of the Lord."

 

Psalm 47:1 says, "Clap your hands, all people. Shout to God with loud songs of joy. For the Lord, the Most High is to be feared, a great king over all the earth. Psalm 150 says, "Praise the Lord. Praise God in his sanctuary. Praise him in his mighty heavens. Praise him for his mighty deeds. Praise him according to his excellent greatness. Praise him with the trumpet sound, praise him with the lute and harp.

 

Praise him with tambourine and dance and praise him with strings and pipe. Praise him with sounding cymbals. Praise him with the loud crashing cymbals." That's Caleb's new life verse as he's learning to play the drums. Let everything that has breath, praise the Lord. Praise the Lord. Then, Ephesians 5:14 says, "Therefore awake, wake up, O, sleeper and arise from the dead and Christ will shine on you.

 

Look carefully then how you live, not as unwise, but as wise, making the most best use of the time because the days are evil."Not be foolish, but understand what the will of the Lord is, and do not get drunk with wine for that is debauchery, but be filled with the spirit addressing one another in Psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody to the Lord with your heart.

 

Giving thanks always and for everything to God, the Father, and the name of our Lord Jesus Christ." If a father is seeking worshipers, who will worship him in spirit and in truth, not sluggishly, not with apathy, not half asleep, but fully wide awake to his glory, responding just with passionate, affectionate, transcendent expressions of thanksgiving and praise. We are to worship the Father in spirit and in truth.

 

Then, point number three today is that we must also worship him both in word and deed. Worship is not anything less than what we give God as we sing his praise together, but it is obviously a whole lot more than that. Worship is a lifestyle of obedience and love to God. The Father is seeking worshipers who will worship in spirit and in truth, and therefore worship him both in word and deed. We have a great example of this in our story today.

 

We have a great example in both in Jesus Christ and in the woman at the well as she responds to him. I didn't read this part earlier, but we're going to read a little bit more of the story right now because after Jesus reveals himself to her as the Messiah, the next thing we're told is we're told what's happened next. In verse 27. It says, "Then, his disciples came back and they marveled that he was talking with a woman and no one said, what do you seek or why are you talking with her?

 

The woman left your water jar and went away into the town and said to the people, "Come and see a man who told me everything that I ever did. Can this be the Christ?" Now, I want to just stop and back up there for a moment because this didn't even hit me until I was looking over my notes and reading meditating of the text this morning. It tells us that the disciples show up and the woman takes off and she leaves and she leaves her what?

 

She leaves her water jar. She leaves that thing that symbolizes the idol that had a hole on her life for so long. The thing that they were talking about that, but they weren't really talking about. She leaves it there and she runs into that town because she has to tell everyone, "Come and see the man who told me everything I ever did. Can this be to Christ?" They went out of the town and they were coming to him.

 

Now, meanwhile, the disciples were urging him saying, "Rabbi, eat." He said to them, "I have food to eat that you do not know about." The disciples said to one another, "Has anyone brought him something to eat?" Jesus said to them, "My food is to do the will of Him who sent me and to accomplish his work. Do you not say there are yet four months, and then comes the harvest. Look, I tell you, lift up your eyes and see that the fields are white for harvest.

 

Already the one who reaps is receiving wages and gathering fruit for eternal life so that the sower and reaper may rejoice together. For here the saying holds true, one sows another reaps I sent you to reap for that for which you did not labor others have labored and you have entered into their labor. He's referring to all the people of the town that are now coming out to see him, to hear and to receive the gospel.

 

It says that as they did verse 39, many of the Samaritans from that town believed in him because of the woman's testimony. She told them, "He told me all that I ever did." When the Samaritans came to him, they asked him to stay with them. He stayed there for two days and many more believed because of his word. They said to the woman, "It's no longer because of what you said that we believe, for we have heard for ourselves."

 

We know that this indeed is the savior of the world. That true worship, as we see here, it cannot be confined to a time, a place, a song, a service. True worship is a lifestyle of obedience, of praise, of testifying to the grace of Jesus Christ in our life. This is what Jesus did, this is what the woman does. Romans 12:1 says, "I appeal to you, therefore brothers, by the mercies of God to present your bodies as living sacrifices holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship."

 

That true worship. It is the entirety of our lives given as a living sacrifice to the glory of God. Verse 34, Jesus says, this is why he says, "My food, I don't need the bread that you went into town to give me because my food is to do the will of Him who sent me and to accomplish His work." That Jesus' purpose in life was to glorify the Father, not just in the songs that he sang as they traveled around or they attended a synagogue or temple together, that was certainly a part of it.

 

Jesus' purpose was to glorify the Father in all that He said, all that He did, because for him, this was more satisfying to Jesus than even bread for an empty stomach. That's true of Jesus, and it also proved true of the woman at the well. She now, as Jesus says, "I have bread that you don't even know about. She has water that they don't even know about. She's goes to go tell everyone about it because her drink is now to do the will of the one who has sent her.

 

She runs into the town and she begins to tell everybody that she had come to the well that day, thirsty, and she had left satisfied. She had come there in shame and she had left in honor. She had come there with all of her regrets about the past, and she left with a vision and a purpose for her future. She arrived in disgrace and she left in God's grace. She arrived at her broken cistern, but she leaves her water jar there.

 

She runs into the village to tell everyone that she had found the living water that her soul had been looking for, that this woman who had lived a life of shame about everything that she ever did, was now willing to go and face those people and say, "Come and see the man who told me everything I ever did. That her reputation, her story had not become her testimony."

 

You have to think about this, the reason that she was out there at, well, in the middle of the day, in the heat of the day, the reason she bumped into Jesus in the first place, well, it's because she wasn't there when she was supposed to be there. She wasn't there when all the other women of the village would've been there drawing their water in the cool of the day. The reason she wasn't there, because she was intentionally didn't want to be there, she was avoiding them.

 

She was ashamed to show her face among the other women of the village because she had a reputation. She didn't want to go and see the sideways glances and hear the whispering gossip or the snide passive-aggressive remarks. She had a shameful reputation. But Jesus had redeemed this, he turned it into her testimony, and now she boldly, she excitedly goes, and she runs into the village.

 

She finds every man, woman, child who will listen to her and she begins to tell them about Jesus, about the living water that she had found, and they all go out to meet him together. This had to have been hard, to go and to face the people that had really probably mistreated and rejected her, treated her as a bit of an outside. She had to forgive them, she had to love them, and she had to go, and she was willing to go.

 

It was the only proper response to the mercy that she had just found in Jesus Christ to go and to face her fears, to face those people and to just boldly tell them the good news about what she had discovered. For the first time in her life, she felt secure. She felt peace, she felt joy. She felt loved that for the first time in her life there in the presence of Jesus, everything began to make sense. She was safe with her savior.

 

She was no longer the woman of five husbands who was now living with her deadbeat boyfriend. That was not her identity anymore. She had been saved by the Christ, the Messiah, she was now a daughter of the king. She was now a child of God, beloved, cherished, redeemed, and her restless heart had finally found its home there in the presence of Jesus Christ, and she was never the same.

 

Saint Augustine wrote in his confessions, "Great art, Thou, O Lord, and greatly to be praised, great is thy power and of Thy wisdom, there is no end. Thou movest us to delight in praising Thee. For Thou has formed us for Thyself and our hearts are restless until they rest in thee. Oh, how shall I find rest in Thee. Who will send Thee into my heart to inebriate it so that I may forget my woes and embrace Thee as my only good?

 

What art Thou to me have compassion on me that I may speak? What am I to Thee that thou demandest my love, and unless I give it Thee art angry and even threatenest me with great sorrows. Is it then a light sorrow not to love Thee? Alas! Alas! Tell me of Thy compassion, O Lord, my God, what are Thou art to me? Say unto my soul, "I am thy salvation."

 

Speak that I may hear. Behold Lord, the ears of my heart are before the open them Thou them and say, under my soul, "I am thy salvation." When I hear, may I run and lay hold of Thee hide not Thy face for me. Let me die, lest I die if only I may see Thy face." This is a picture of what it looks like to be a living sacrifice. Let me die lest I die. Let me die to myself, let me die to my pride.

 

Let me die to living life for my own glory so that I can find myself fully satisfied in living my life for the glory of God. It's the only thing that's going to satisfy my soul. It's a sacrifice, it's a living sacrifice because we have to give up. We have to give ourselves away, but it's a living sacrifice because we know that as we do in Christ, the well that we are drawing from is a well of living water that will never run dry.

 

We're going to have an opportunity to respond and praise and worship here in a moment. Today, we're doing something special as a church, we are celebrating communion together. Today, we're coming to the Lord's table and communion this is a sacred symbol really, of everything that we have been talking about today, that the true food is the body of Christ. The true drink is the living water that he offers us.

 

In John 6, a few chapters later in verse 53, Jesus said to them, "Truly, truly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life." Now, obviously, he's not talking about literal flesh and blood here. We know what he's talking about. Whoever feeds on my flesh and drinks, my blood has eternal life and I will raise him up on the last day. For my flesh is true food and my body is true drink."

 

"Whoever feeds on my flesh and drinks my blood abides in me and I in him as the living Father sent me, and I live because of the Father. Whoever feeds on me, he also will live because of me. This is the bread that came down from heaven, not like the bread of the father's ate and died, but whoever feeds on this bread will live forever." The way that we celebrate communion, hopefully, you got one of these as you came in. If not, just raise your hand right now. The ushers would happy to bring you one wherever you're seated.

 

There's a bread in here in the cup here. The bread represents the body of Christ that was broken for us. The cup represents his blood that was poured out to make a new covenant in His blood for the forgiveness of our sins. We will all take this together here in a moment. I'll pray for us and then we will take communion together. If you are here today and you're a Christian, we would welcome you to celebrate communion with us. If you're here today and you're not a Christian, we would ask you to refrain.

 

There's nothing magical about this, it's not going to do anything for you apart from repentance and faith in Jesus Christ. If you're here today and you're a Christian, but you've been living in unrepentant sin while scripture also warns us to not partake of communion in an unworthy manner, that you either refrain or you spend this time right now to confess and to repent of your sin before the Lord and to remember the sacrifice that Jesus made to make that possible.

 

If you do that or if you've committed your life to Christ for the first time today, you've repented and you put your faith in Him, we'd welcome you to join us as we celebrate communion together. Let's pray and then we will take communion together. Father, we come and we confess our sin. We confess our idolatry. We confess that our hearts are not as on fire for you as they should be, but too often that fire is quenched by desires, passions, competing idols for our hearts, so we repent.

 

Help us to see your beauty, your goodness, your glory, and that by the power of the living water of Jesus Christ, that you would just extinguish the flames of these idols that are constantly vying for our attention to live our lives purely devoted to being living sacrifices given for you, knowing that Jesus Christ came to be a dying sacrifice for us, that he truly did go to the death, that his body was given up, his blood was poured out.

 

The full wrath of God for arson fell upon him so that we could be forgiven, we could be reconciled, we could be loved, adopted into your family, and to be called the children of God. We thank you, Jesus for this tremendous sacrifice that you have made. If it's not real to us, Lord, make it real to us right now, that you truly did come in a body of flesh, that you truly did suffer and die.

 

More than that, you experienced the moment as the Father forsook you pouring his wrath out upon you to pay the eternal debt that we could have never paid on our own. Jesus, we thank you, we praise you for that. Not only for that, but for the good news that you did not stay there, but that you rose in victory and triumph over Satan's sin and death, and that you've given us this time now to take this bread in.

 

Take this cup as a way of proclaiming your death until you come again and we look forward to that day when you do. To judge the world in righteousness and to make all things new, to wipe away every tear so we can be there in your presence and your joy forever. Jesus, we thank you. We praise you, we love you. We pray all this in Jesus' name. Amen.

 

Lord Jesus, on the night that he was betrayed, he took bread after giving thanks, he broke it and gave it to his disciples. He said, "This is my body given for you. Take, eat, and do this and remembrance of me. He then took the cup said, "This is the cup of the new covenant in my blood. Take drink, do this in remembrance of me." Jesus, we just thank you again for your sacrifice.

 

Father, we thank you for sending your son, the Holy Spirit. We thank you for entering our lives to be that wellspring of living water, cleansing us, sanctifying us, and convicting us, and helping us to grow an ever-increasing glory from one degree to another, more and more like our Savior, Jesus Christ.

 

God, I pray that the reality of who you are and all that you have done, the gravity of that would fall on us now in our minds, but that understanding of the truth would stir our hearts and affections to truly praise you and sing of your glory as we ought, as you deserve to be praised. We love you. We praise you together right now in Jesus' name. Amen.

More from Committed