Reading John 4:5-42
Today is International Women’s Day and it is serendipitous that today was a day that Cynthia offered to assist lead worship. It is also serendipitous that today we have the story of the meeting of Jesus with a Samaritan woman at the well. Today is also a day that I chose to connect with the concept of our congregation value of innovating. I hope and pray that some of the things that we have included today in the service and sermon might be taking us all to new insights.
I also want to express my deep gratitude that I am part of a Church movement that has recognised the role of women in ordained ministry. I was blessed to be ordained alongside a woman and good friend Rev Dr Wendi Sergeant, over 27 years ago.
The theme of International Women’s Day is “Give to Gain” and is accompanied by the Give to Gain pose. You will notice the contrast in this pose with what I see as a symbol of praying with closed and clasped hands. The Give to gain pose has cupped hands out front, in this we universally we signify the act of giving and receiving. Throughout history, the open palm has been associated with truth, honesty, and openness.It is my practice to pray at the beginning of preaching. Today I want to invite you to strike this Give to Gain pose as we pray for the ability to discern what God might be saying to us today.
Let us pray
Loving God we come into your presence prayerfully giving our attention to your voice and receiving wisdom that leads to transformation. We come with a commitment to be seeking truth, honesty, and openness about who you are and who we are called to be. In Christ we pray. Amen.
In the spirit of gaining from the voice of women I want to begin by referencing the speech by the President of Slovenia Nataša Pirc Musar made at the United Nations on the 23rd of September 2025. In the opening of her speech Musar points to the hopefulness following the end of World War 2 in 1945. The hope that a new era of peace and cooperation would emerge “embodied by the creation of the United Nations.” There was a parallel movement during the same era that established the World Council of Churches as well.
In 2025 her assessment was that the vision of peace, security and co-operation “has not materialised. In fact, the situation has worsened.” She outlines issues within the security council, the lagging of the sustainable development goals, issues around the seeming irrelevance of international laws, a retreat from both the convention on genocide and the commitment countries had made to address climate change. In her speech she asks, “how are we to explain these trends … to our children?”
I wonder what the President of Slovenia might say about the events of the last week. We lament and mourn that yet another round of human conflict and war is underway and lives are being lost.
Her speech is a compelling call to action. It also contains a direct challenge to us about empowering women and girls. She says, “True equity requires systemic change, and so women’s empowerment must remain at the heart of our global agenda. International organisations must weave a gender perspective into every strand of policymaking. And that should be a result of effective participation of women and girls themselves.”
This speech by Nataša Pirc Musar may seem a distant thing from a dusty well in Samaria over 2000 years ago but as people of faith the question which always lies before us is how the stories of the scriptures transcend the moment of their telling and coincide with our reality. Let me say that again, “as people of faith the question which always lies before us is how the stories of the scriptures transcend the moment of their telling and coincide with our reality”.
Let me share a vision of the interaction between Jesus and the Samaritan woman. It is written in the form of a poem and was inspired by the commentary on this passage written by another woman, Reverend Professor Dorothy Lee.
By Peter Lockhart
He sits
By a well
He thirsts
We all thirst
Maslow understood
Water is life and
Without water
There is
No life
And he steps
And steps again
And steps once more
And steps yet again
Crossing boundaries
Of culture
Of race
Of religion
Of gender, and
He says,
“Give me a drink”
“I thirst”
His humanity
His mortality laid bare
“I thirst”
Words that echo
In our minds
Of another day
Of nails and hard wood
And sour wine
On a sponge
“I thirst”
One of all of us
He is human
Yet …
Word made flesh
Living Water
She is
She is all of us
If he was
Able to
Slake his thirst
But there is
Reciprocity
In the request
An offering made
From a
Human to
The divine, and
From the divine
To the human
Living water
Her soul
Our souls,
Longing, longing
For God
As a deer
Longs for
Of being known
Of being accepted
Of being understood
Of being acknowledged
Of belonging
Poured out
Into the dry lands
Of her existence
For he knew the
Trials and tribulations
That may have led to
Five husbands
And yet another man
But with
No judgement
Just invitation
To worship
In Spirit
And in Truth?
Who is he
Who comes
As the Way
And the Life
To meet us
To meet us
In our needs
With living water
From beside a well
In Samaria, and from
A wound in his side
We find hope
For this is
Living water
In which
We are known
You and I
And you
And you
And you and I
And this Truth
He sits
By a well
And says
“All are welcome”
All are welcome
To sit with him here
Who is both human
And yet …
Fully divine
As he steps
And steps again
And steps once more
And steps yet again
To welcome us
Into his life
and they said she was shy
she led from the front
and they hated her pride
and then questioned her guidance
they branded her loud
then were shocked by her silence
they said it was sad
so she told them her dreams
and they said she was mad
then covered their ears
and gave her a hug
whilst they laughed at her fears
thinking she should
be the girl they told her to be
best as she could
what was best for herself
instead of trying
to please everyone else
and stood with the trees
she heard the wind whisper
and dance with the leaves
the elm and the pine
and she told them what
she'd been told time after time
felt nearly enough
she was either too little
or far, far too much
too fierce or too weak
too wise or too foolish
too bold or too meek
surrounded by firs
and she stopped and she heard
what the trees said to her
not wanting to leave
for the forest said nothing...
it just let her breathe
Talking to the Wild: The bedtime stories we never knew we
needed.
Song I heard the voice of Jesus say
The interaction between Jesus and the woman is interrupted. The interlopers are the disciples returning with food. Food and water, essential for human life, form the base of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. Jesus is the bread of life as much as he is living water.
The disciples’ return signals the woman should go, and she returns to the village to share about her encounter with Jesus, the living water. It is the unspoken words of the disciples that are telling in this moment.
They were astonished that he was speaking with a woman, but no one said, “What do you want?” or “Why are you speaking with her?”
To help us glimpse into the psyche of the disciples I have written a reflection which might have been a part of the longer internal discourse of one of the disciples. Imagine in your minds eye one of the disciples as he approaches Jesus speaking with the woman and hear his internal dialogue.
The disciple
By Peter Lockhart
Oh no, he's at it again.
Why are you speaking with her? What is it that you want? You are going to get us all in trouble. Oh, my goodness she is a Samaritan as well.
A Samaritan as well. at a well. It is just inviting more trouble. You will make us all unclean, gathering up all these outcasts that you do.
We should not be seen with her, let alone be seen talking to her. Why are you speaking with her? What business of yours is it to engage with her? We left you alone for just a little while. Couldn’t you just keep to yourself.
We should have made you stay with us. Kept you out of trouble. Kept us out of trouble. Kept you to ourselves. Don't the traditions and the rules apply to us all.
One of these days you're going to get me killed. One of these days you're going to get yourself killed.
We are following you. I want to trust you. I want to believe in you. You are our teacher, our Rabbi, but you are ours alone and we are yours.
Why are you speaking with her? What is it that you want? You are going to get us all in trouble.
Oh, thank goodness … she is leaving.
(pause)
Within the response of the disciple, we see the rigidity of the religious thinker. A thinker who says who is in and who is out at who fails to see the common humanity that we all share in. We all thirst. We all need water for life, and we need living water to really live.
Here beside this well, essential questions of our existence are being explored and reverberate through time and space to help us make connection with God and with the meaning of our lives and with the words of the Slovenia President
In the words of Nataša Pirc Musar we hear a plea for peace and cooperation which requires a deeper recognition of our common humanity. We all thirst for life. But for shared life in the world, we all need to be able step across the boundaries and barriers of race, and religion, and culture, and gender to share this beautiful world in which we live.
When Jesus asks the woman at the well for water he is being a subversive. He understands that “True equity requires systemic change” and change involves the bravery to break down the barriers. He lives this. He embodies it. He is redesigning relationships and asserting the universality of God’s love. A loving God not bound by gender or any other category or box that we might want to put people in.
Share with me this pose again. Give to gain. How has God been seeking truth, and honesty, and openness in you as you have listened? How has the innovative and creative God been at work in you as you have listened? What have you been discerning and learning today?
After a few moments of silence, I have asked Julie to read the opening of Rahcel Mann’s book which invites us to think of God differently as we continue to break down barriers and create a space for welcome and inclusion.
by Rachel Mann
They leap and twirl and spin.
They hold our hands gently
as they follow our first tentative steps,
then grip our waist firmly
as they lead us
in a daring twist and bend.
God, you see,
is neither leader nor follower,
but both leader and follower,
neither male nor female,
but both male and female.
God is gender-full and gender-less –
an ambiguous flesh-less being
who leaps into fleshy delight
to join in our dance.
God is under our skin,
in our skin,
gently breathing on our skin.
Our God cannot be separated from us
or contained within us
even as we feel God's embrace,
we cannot define or confine them.
God will not be caged.
Amen
(Transformations: Grounding Theology is trans and non-binary lives)