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What We Thirst For

“so many people in the world are thirsting for love and forgiveness”

Jesus and Woman at the Well, Edward Burne-Jones, public domain

Sometimes we do not recognize what we are really thirsting for, and seek to slake it in the wrong way. That is the path to a hardened heart that no longer hears the voice of God speaking to us.

There are so many people in the world thirsting for love and forgiveness. During this season of Lent we recall the story of the Samaritan woman at the well. The heart of the Samaritan woman had become hardened by her experience and frustration. Hers was a thirst that only God could satisfy.

We are told that it was about noon when she approached the well. Most women would have drawn their water in the cool of the morning or evening, not during the hottest part of the day. Was she trying to avoid the other women of the town? Was she regarded as an outcast, a social scandal?

Perhaps Our Lord saw in her one who was seeking meaning in her life, a meaning she had not found in a string of failed relationships. And so He puts aside His own weariness and reaches out to her as He reaches out to each one of us.
The Samaritan woman has a thirst for real love and Jesus comes to her. He comes to meet us where we are in all our loneliness and longing.

When we are filled with the love of God, we are completely satisfied, we are at peace.

There are a great many people searching for love and forgiveness but few of them realize that what they are truly thirsting for is the love of God.

Jesus touches the troubled heart of the Samaritan woman and reveals to her all that she has been searching for without understanding. She is so overcome with joy that she leaves behind her water pitcher and runs to share the Good News with the very people she had been avoiding.

All too often, the journey we are on makes us too tired to reach out to others. We feel too exhausted, too imperfect, and too wounded to be of any good to others. But Jesus invites us to rearrange our priorities.

As Christians, our first priority is the mission Christ gave us before He ascended to the Father, to baptize, to teach, and to evangelize. To evangelize means to share the Good News that Christ has saved us, to share it with everyone we meet, regardless of how tired we are. The Good News has all the love, forgiveness, hope, and joy that we could ever ask for. We should be eager to share it with the world.

We all have a natural desire to find joy and happiness in this life. But our own efforts can only take us so far. To find true meaning and purpose we must always come back to God for only through Him is our purpose revealed.

Who do we know that we can reach out to and share the Good News of Salvation?

Pax vobiscum
3rd Sunday of Lent

Lawrence Klimecki, MSA, is a deacon in the Diocese of Sacramento. He is a public speaker, writer, and artist, reflecting on the intersection of art and faith and the spiritual “hero’s journey” that is part of every person’s life. He maintains a blog at www.DeaconLawrence.org and can be reached at Lawrence@deaconlawrence.com

Saint Joseph © Lawrence Klimecki

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