Third Sunday of Lent-First Scrutiny
I like to have the right answers, and there is something good about knowing the truth. But having the right answers isn’t all there is, as we see in the Gospel today, this long Gospel that we use each year that we have an elect, a catechumen chosen by the Bishop for baptism at Easter. The Samaritan woman has the right answers, at least most of them. She knows that Jews do not drink from the same containers as Samaritan women, because the samaritans were pagans and it could render the Jew unclean. She knows that to have water, you have to have a bucket to draw it out. She gives a technically right answer when she says that she doesn’t have a husband. And she says that Jews and Samaritans don’t agree on how and where to worship.
But the Lord isn’t only looking for right answers. He is looking for a relationship with her. Now, Jesus also identifies Himself as the Truth. So I’m not trying to say that the truth doesn’t matter. It does. But the truth comes in the context of a relationship with Truth Incarnate. Jesus is trying to give the Samaritan woman eternal life, and all she can focus on is trying to give correct answers and trip Jesus up in theological debates.
The Samaritan woman, upon entering into relationship with Jesus, recognizes that He knows her. She says, “‘Come see a man who told me everything I have done.’” Jesus knows her, more deeply than anyone else, though He just met her at the well. The Samaritan woman heard Him say that He is the Christ, the Messiah, who will let everyone know what they are to believe and how they are to worship.
Dylan, as an elect, God already knows you. But over these past months He has drawn you in to know Him better. He knows everything you have done: the good, the bad, and the ugly. But He wants to be in a relationship with you. You have learned many important things over the past months about what it means to be Catholic and how we Catholics are called to follow Christ in our daily lives. Being a friend of Jesus, and even more than a friend, a sibling with Jesus, means doing things that will strengthen your relationship with Him and avoiding anything that would harm that relationship with Him.
Through Holy Baptism, Confirmation, and reception of the Eucharist, the love of God will be poured into your heart, as St. Paul said in our second reading, “through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.” You will become an adopted son of God the Father, and God will dwell within you as in a temple.
As God prepares you for this, He draws you closer and closer to Himself. The Samaritan woman changes the way she addresses Jesus as the conversation develops: she starts by calling Him “a Jew”; then, “Sir”; then “the Messiah.” You, too, have come to know Jesus more deeply in the passing weeks and months, to be at a place where you are almost ready to profess Him as God and Savior.
And sometimes, like with the Samaritan woman, some of what Jesus the Savior has revealed has been painful. I’m sure the Samaritan woman wasn’t too pleased when Christ said, “‘You are right in saying, “I do not have a husband.” For you have had five husbands, and the one you have now is not your husband.’” But Christ reveals our brokenness because He can heal us, and wants to heal us.
But this process of growing in relationship with Christ won’t end with your reception of the Sacraments of Initiation. All of us here hopefully try to grow in our relationship with Christ each day. Yes, we try to know the right answers, but we also try to be a good brother or sister of Christ and son or daughter of the Father. Sometimes we miss the point, like the Samaritan woman. Sometimes the Lord needs to convict us of sin, or sinful habits. But everything the Lord does gives us the opportunity to grow closer to Him. May we not squander the opportunities the Lord gives us to deepen our relationship with Him, especially this Lent, but drink from the living water which flows from the wounded side of Christ.