Weary at the Well
Patrick Reardon considers the Samaritan woman in all of us
Among the loveliest lines ever penned for Christian prayer, I think, are
those in the tenth strophe of Thomas of Celano's Dies Irae:
Quaerens me sedisti lassus
Redemisti crucem passus
Tantus labor non sit cassus!
or
‘Seeking me, you sat down weary,
Redeeming me, you bore the cross,
Let not such labour be in vain!’
No Calvinist was Thomas of Celano. He believed, from the Scriptures, that the
Lamb of God suffered and died for everyone, atoning for the sins of the whole
world, not just the sins of the elect. Broadly flooding in libation, Jesus'
Blood was shed even for the sake of those sinners who would, by their own choice
(not God's!), be damned. And that Lamb's dear Blood would be, in the latter
case, without avail, cassus. Thus Celano prayed that the wide labour of
Christ's redemption be not wasted in his own regard.
But these second and third lines of Celano's terza rima are so rich that
one might easily miss the delicate allusion of its first line: ‘Seeking me you
sat down weary.’ Once the line is noticed, nonetheless, its allusion here is
perfectly clear. These words refer to the scene in John 4.6: ‘Jesus therefore,
being wearied from his journey, sat thus by the well.’ Just why did Jesus sit
down weary by Jacob's well? Celano answers that he was waiting for someone
special whom he had in mind to meet that day. He was seeking me. The Samaritan
woman at the well is each of us.
Nameless participants
The evangelist John surely knew that woman's name, just as he knew the names of
the paralytic at the pool and the man born blind, because he narrates all of
these one-on-one encounters with details that he could only have obtained from
the individuals themselves. So John most certainly knew their names. His
omission of those names in the stories, then, has literary significance, and
Celano is probably right to suppose that we are dealing here with anonymity for
the sake of reader-identification. That is to say, each of us, as we ponder the
text prayerfully, becomes that paralytic, that blind man, and that woman at the
well, encountering the Lord in the power of his Scriptures.
As an ‘Every Christian’ account, the story of the Samaritan woman at Jacob's
well serves to illustrate certain distinct stages in the path of conversion.
The Lord and Everyman
We observe, for instance, what might be called a growth in Christology as the
story progresses; there is a pronounced evolution in the terms by which the Lord
is regarded. Thus, when the woman first meets Jesus, he is called simply ‘a
Jew’ (4.9). This is important to the story as a whole, of course, because the
Lord himself will presently declare that ‘salvation is of the Jews’ (4.22).
On the woman's lips, nonetheless, the designation ‘Jew’ indicates two
things. First, it says that Jesus is at first assessed only within a certain
class of people. He is not yet a distinguishable person, important on his own
account. And second, the word ‘Jew’ indicates the woman's sense of
separation from Jesus, because ‘Jews have no dealings with Samaritans.’
Next, Jesus is addressed as ‘Sir’ (4.11; presumably the Aramaic Mar).
This term of respect is a great step for the woman to make, indicating her
change of attitude toward Jesus. But then, within four verses ‘Sir’ becomes
‘prophet’ (4.19), when the Lord directs the woman's attention to her own
sins. Then Jesus takes the initiative in his own identification, calling himself
the Messiah, the Christ (4.25f), and the woman immediately departs.
A question of identity
Nonetheless, she leaves the well with a question in her mind, a question about
the identity of Jesus. It is the fundamental question that would in due time be
addressed by the Ecumenical Councils: ‘Who do you say that I am?’ Just
exactly who is Jesus? ‘Come,’ she invites her friends, ‘see a man who told
me all I ever did. Could this be the Christ?’ (4.29) Everyone in John's Gospel
seems to be asking such questions: ‘"This is the Prophet." Others
said, "This is the Christ"' (7.40f).
At the end of the woman's story, the designation ‘Christ’ is embraced by her
Samaritan friends, who promptly complete it with another important
Christological title: ‘We know that this is indeed the Christ, the Saviour of
the world’ (4.42).
The lady from Samaria has now come all the way. Starting out that day, hardly
suspecting what lay ahead, she laboriously bore her sins to the well, where she
met a Jew, who asked her for a drink of water. The Jew presently became a Sir,
and then a prophet who reminded her that she was a sinner. No matter, though,
because this prophet was also the Christ who, because he was the Saviour of the
world, knew exactly what to do with sins. Seeking her he sat down weary, and to
redeem her he would, in due course, endure the cross.
Patrick Henry Reardon is a Senior Editor of Touchstone: A
Journal of Mere Christianity. www.touchstone.org