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freedom, God's love, Jesus Christ, living water, spiritual power, The Holy Spirit, worship in spirit and truth

Woman at the Well (Picture taken from http://catholicalcoholic.files.wordpress.com/2014/03/woman-at-the-well-5001.jpg)
Susanne (aka me 😉 ) wrote,“I was just pondering on the fact why we as human beings are not always the same. I mean, there are people with whom we dare to be more open than with others. People of whom we know that they love us and that they will forgive us whatever we might say or do. But there are other people we do not know that intimately and therefore we are a still bit cautious of how to deal with them.” (https://enteringthepromisedland.wordpress.com/2014/12/08/be-who-you-are-since-there-is-no-other-you/)
There is something that the Samaritan woman at Jacob’s well felt about Jesus that made her dare to be totally open with Him. When we hear the story about her preached, many like to say that Jesus confronted her with her sins. Susanne and I hold that this was not the case, but rather she was confronted with how much Jesus loved and respected her in spite of knowing what her past history was. She was shocked that He was even talking with her and asked her for a drink, knowing that Jews did not have anything to do with Samaritans, much less a Jewish man with a Samaritan woman! She was the dog of dogs in the mind of an orthodox Jewish Rabbi.
Yet, Jesus personally shared the gospel with her, “If you knew the gift of God, and who it is that is saying to you, ‘Give me a drink,’ you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water” (John 4:10 RSVA). Jesus told her that He was the Gift of God and that as such He could give her the water of life that flows freely. “Whoever drinks of the water that I shall give him will never thirst; the water that I shall give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life” (John 4:14 RSVA). What is amazing is that she did not for one moment doubt His offer that He could give her living water and eternal life! She responded, “Sir, give me this water, that I may not thirst, nor come here to draw.” (John 4:15 RSVA). She wanted all that He had for her because she realized that she had met the lover of her soul, the first man in her life who was not interested in what she had to offer him, but who wanted to give her what she really needed. We know that this man was God, too. A human being can never fill the void in our hearts which were created by God to only be filled with His Spirit. His love is the only love that can make us whole again.
Jesus, after offering her eternal life and she wanting it, pointed out to her that she was living with a man who was not her husband. Yet, where was the condemnation? It was not there! Rather He commended her for telling the truth, “I have no husband.” This woman felt no shame or condemnation from Him, only love and respect. And what was her response to this divine encounter? She said to Him, “I know that Messiah is coming (he who is called Christ); when he comes, he will show us all things.” Jesus said to her, “I who speak to you am he. ” …So the woman left her water jar, and went away into the city, and said to the people, ‘Come, see a man who told me all that I ever did. Can this be the Christ?’” (John 4:25-29 RSVA). Jesus had shown her in a few words the very inner thoughts and longings of her heart. Messiah had come and showed her all things including that men would no longer worship God in special buildings or in special places, but that true worship would be done by God’s Spirit within them from lives filled with and demonstrating His truth.
“Come, see a man who told me all that I ever did!” I don’t know about you, but we believe that if this woman had been shamed by what Jesus said to her, would she be telling everyone she knows that there is a man down by the well that knows every sin she ever committed? No, she would be hiding out in her house, hoping He would go away and keep silent! But she ran into her village and rejoiced for having met the Christ. THAT IS THE GOSPEL. She met LOVE personified. He showed her compassion and understood WHY she had sought love in men and had been married five times before. But He did not condemn her in the slightest, but rather told her about where to find eternal life and what real worship of our heavenly Father is all about; therefore she trusted in Him.
All too often the gospel today is presented to people in one of two extremes. On the one hand people get the idea that they have to “clean up their act” before they can come to Christ. The other extreme is that we can be a Christian without ever having to change a thing, we can just go on living in sin with impunity. Neither is true. But we finally see that the love our Father has for us is not contingent on our performance, for He makes the sun to shine and the rain to fall of both the bad and the good. We love Him because He first loves us. What follows from that love relationship is a longing to please the One who loves us so much. We are given the Spirit of God who speaks in our hearts when He wants us to change and what it is that pleases Him and it is because of our love relationship with our Father that we are empowered to change. Love is the most powerful motivator known to man and GOD IS LOVE.
Oh, that sentence hit me, Michael. You wrote,
If we are truly IN Christ, we are no longer naked, but have “put on Christ.”
Very insightful! Thank you, I could hear His voice through these few words of yours. Made my day! 🙂
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Hi Susanne – here’s what stands out to me: in the Old Testament EVERY name means something (towns, people, countries, bodies of water). Possibly it has something to do with the Hebrew culture and mindset; but probably because real stories about entire lives of real people make up the content of the OT. God, however is the main character throughout,even though He is not a human person living on the earth. In the New Testament the Lord Jesus Christ is more than the main the character — He is the center, the point, the ONE. We don’t read the life stories of NT people — we only get highlights or bits about the people. Jesus is the focus — no need to give details that turn our attention away from Him. That’s kind of what it looks like to me — now you have given me something to think about as I go along in my studies! My antennae are up!
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WOWEE!!! ⭐
That was awesome, dear Lori! ❤ Am speechless now…
🙂
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Oh boy, such a long list your study of names would be! No wonder that you gave up on it.
It does make sense to me that it’s more about God’s different names than about man’s. Even the names God’s servants got mainly referred to the source, the Giver of all good things, as far as I can see it.
What just hit me was this:
“I HAVE REDEEMED YOU! I HAVE CALLED YOU BY NAME”…
Yes! He calls everyone of us personally by our names. That is more than seeing our names written down anywhere in a book. The Living God calls us to come unto Him and to become partakers of His divine nature. That is amazing, isn’t it..? 🙂
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YESSS! Specific names were written down with regard to their historical verifiability, that is what I thought, too, Lori! 🙂
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Yes, Lori! That is exactly what God was telling me.. The Old Covenant was about people, prophets, priests, people in Christ’s blood line, etc. and law keeping, But the New Covenant is all about Christ and His body and a NEW Creation IN Him!
“In many and various ways God spoke of old to our fathers by the prophets; but in these last days he has spoken to us by a Son, whom he appointed the heir of all things, through whom also he created the world. He reflects the glory of God and bears the very stamp of his nature, upholding the universe by his word of power. When he had made purification for sins, he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high.” (Hebrews 1:1-3 RSVA)
Love you all! ❤
Michael
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Another WOW to you too, Michael! 🙂
Very, very well said! ⭐
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I am just happy that he knows my name and I am glad he knows you alls too–lets rejoice–what ya think? then we will all look as pretty as that girl in the picture!
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What I think? You made me grin once again, Ken. Thanks so much for your humorous contribution on here. 😀
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Michael, I think one reason I keep going back to Genesis is because it is before the law. The law and the nation of Israel don’t exist until after they get into the wilderness on their way to the land God promised to Abraham’s descendants. In Genesis God reveals Himself in so many ways through His interaction with those people. I tend to go back and forth a lot between Paul’s letters and Genesis — oh, and the gospel of John (with forays into other areas as well). As a new Christian, I was exposed too much to the law in subtle and not-so-subtle ways. Although I have learned how to approach those law books — I don’t seem to be drawn to them! I’m sure you get my meaning!!
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Thank you, Susanne! You really bless me. What a blessing, also, to read in this passage how Christ has inherited ALL things and holds ALL things in the universe together by the power of His might. But most of all, what a blessing it is that by His mighty power we are washed clean of our sins and that we are also now being conformed into the very image of the Son of God (See Romans ch. 8). As Paul put it,
“So let no one boast of men. For all things are yours, whether Paul or Apol’los or Cephas or the world or life or death or the present or the future, all are yours; and you are Christ’s; and Christ is God’s.” (1 Corinthians 3:21-23 RSVA).
The O.T. was all about the law keeping (and the law breaking) of men and thus is about men and women in their weaknesses and only indirectly about Christ, speaking often in shadows and types of what was to come. BUT the New Covenant is all about Christ and His obedience to the Father and His ascent to the right hand of God where HE makes intercession for us by the power of His might. All things are ours IN Him. We belong to HIM, our lives are IN His life and He belongs to the Father from who comes all good things. Nothing has been left to us and nothing is left out. All we can do is rest in His marvelous grace and love. To strive to be righteous on our own is a direct insult to God and an over-estimation of who and what we think we are. Without Him we are but dust. Seeing His great power working for and in us is why the following verses give me great joy and hope…
“May the God of peace himself sanctify you wholly; and may your spirit and soul and body be kept sound and blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. He who calls you is faithful, and he will do it.” (1 Thessalonians 5:23-24 RSVA)
It is a joy to know you, Susanne, and a greater joy to watch Him working so mightily in you day by day. Amen! Wouldn’t it be great for us all to have the closeness that they had in the early church and see His working in each of our lives day by day?
“Now the company of those who believed were of one heart and soul, and no one said that any of the things which he possessed was his own, but they had everything in common. And with great power the apostles gave their testimony to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and great grace was upon them all.” (Acts 4:32-33 RSVA)
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You’re most welcome, Michael! 🙂
It is interesting that you see Him working, even mightily, in me since I see NOTHING, still. 😛 But it seems to be true that we only see Him working in others because I perceive amazing changes you have gone through during the last (almost 20) months.
“Great grace was upon them all …..yes, that would be wonderful to experience, I believe. One ❤ and one soul are something only God can give, it is a miracle which strengthens our faith in God when we have come to know this, right? 😉
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Yes, Lori, I DO get your meaning! In Genesis we read about the individual lives of men and women who lived life by having personal encounters with God and whom He guided and often saved out of terrible situations miraculously in a very personal way. I was able to find great solace during a hard time in my life when I was being stripped of everything by reading the lives of Abraham, Jacob, Joseph and Moses. With God it is all about us throwing ourselves on His mercy and grace and not about our efforts at law keeping, for it is “NOT by might or by power, but by MY SPIRIT says the Lord.”
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Your biblical knowledge and your interpretation of what you have read there is indeed amazing, dear Lori! Hats off!!
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YES, Susanne, it is truly amazing when God builds His house and fitly shapens and joins all the pieces together and adheres them with His love!
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Amen, my brother. Artfully expressed! 🙂
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Susanne – thank you for making this very important point! I have such a hunger for the Lord like you do. There are so many things that require discernment in our Christian walk; so many things that appeal to the fleshly nature in us — the law on one side and emotional experiences on the other. I remember when “hell fire and brimstone” was the tone of evangelistic preaching. And then things changed to that “God has a wonderful plan for your life” dribble (during the time I got saved in the late ’60’s); even recently there is a group that teaches Christians to use the 10 commandments to guilt people into coming to Christ. Discernment and knowing what the Word of God teaches would save us from these mistakes.
Today I read this: “What God desires for us is to bring us into the enjoyment of all that which He Himself enjoys.” Isn’t that an awesome statement!? Makes me really stop and think. I see that that is what He wanted to do for His people Israel — and that is why He was constantly calling them back to Him when they strayed into idolatry. And that is what Jesus was wanting to do with the people He met when He walked the earth (like the woman at the well!). That is why He went to the cross and sent the Spirit to indwell us. Sounds so simple doesn’t it — just allowing Him to bring us into His own enjoyment? I sure am looking forward to the day when that pesky old sin nature is gone forever!! We are really going to ENJOY eternity with Him — and He plans to enjoy us as well. I can’t even imagine it.
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Michael – thank you for your very powerful testimony here. It’s so unnerving hearing about ‘revivals’ and then have to sort them all out. I think you made a very clear distinction. I was saved in 1968 and was influenced by the Jesus movement. I didn’t understand it all back then, but looking back I can see how sweet it was. I wasn’t enamored with hippies at all but the Jesus People were wonderful examples of Christ to me. (I lived very near to San Francisco and Berkeley, CA — the drug culture was terrifying to me, so I was cautious).
I have lived long enough to learn how easy it is for a solid movement of the Spirit to, after not so long a time, morph into man’s great big idea! My heart is broken nowadays by how Christians in our country are sidelined by “Christian politics” and what that has done to weaken and obscure Christ and His gospel. I have my eye on a woman who is trying to get our government to make Iran release her husband (imprisoned for his faith) — she started out well with her eyes fully on Christ, but now only mentions Him at the end of speeches where she grovels to government leaders to use their power (!?) to get him released. I know how hard It is to persevere, but we must keep His ways in mind.
This morning the Lord gave me a much needed reminder that our faith is not by sight — but by faith. Yesterday I was actually saying to the Lord “What’s the point?” since I have been praying for unsaved family, and other people in various circumstances for so long. This morning He gave me a good dose of reassurance (and a bit of chastisement) from His Word.
You have also reminded me that “All things pertaining to God are ours IN Christ..” Good reminder for me as well.
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Thank you, Lori! I have a good friend, Greg Beumer, who came to Spokane from the Bay area in 1970 and joined up with the group of Jesus People we were part of at that time. (This is a short write up about him- https://www.uniongospelmission.org/chapel-provider-greg-beumer/ ). We just saw him and his wife, Debbie, last Sunday when about 10 of us old Jesus People got together at their house. He was one of the original “Jesus Freaks,” as the Hippies called them. You two probably know many of the same people from back then. Greg was influenced by Kent Philpott down there back then.( http://www.amazon.com/Memoirs-Jesus-Freak-Allan-Philpott/dp/0989804119 ) Philpott wrote about Greg in this book
Yes, it is sad to see how many Christians are getting sucked into political activism and do not know what kingdom they are really of and the gospel and witness of Christ suffers as a result. Thank you for your encouraging response to my comment. After writing it (poor Susanne having to put up with my article length postings on here!), I touched it up and made a blog article out of it on my blog as well.
“May we continue to grow IN Christ and no longer be of this world system and all the seductive ways that Satan draws us away into His realm. Amen.”
God bless you, dear sister.
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Movements come and go, but denominations last FOREVER! And they do perfectly fine without the Holy Spirit, which is amazing to me!
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Oh boy, Michael!! 😛
Tsk tsk tsk… 😉
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As a point of clarification, many of the denominations carry on without the Spirit’s guidance. Once men build a well oiled machine, and policy is dictated by the home office, it can go on for years without them noticing that God has gone a different direction and they have gone on without Him. Today, Europe is filled with empty cathedrals with almost nobody attending church in them and the churches are supported by the individual countries taxing the people to keep their doors open. America is heading the same direction, for there is a mass exodus of people leaving institutional churches and seeking something more small, responsive and intimate with fellow believers. George Barna documents this trend in his book, “Revolution.”
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Thanks for the clarification, Michael. Although I know what and how you believe, I think your additional comment was helpful to see where you are coming from. It is so easy to misunderstand and to be misunderstood, isn’t it? 🙄
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I am happy to see that your great comment above turned into another blog post of yours and that you answered so many questions through your own testimony, Michael! Thank you very much for doing so. I am also acquainted with the Toronto blessing and with the Pensacola movement, and the names of the leaders are mostly familiar to me. As you know, I had got severe mental problems (paranoia, nightmares etc. pp.) after some men had laid their hands on my head. Alas, those strange manifestations you mentioned above, I do know very well, too. 😛
And now here’s the link to Michael’s new blog post about the distortions of the true Gospel https://awildernessvoice.wordpress.com/2015/08/04/what-is-spiritual-adultery/.
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Susanne, I don’t know whether I feel more sad or mad about what they did to you with those evil spirits that these false shepherds operated in while you were in that Christian cult. The nine years of hell you went through after that is enough to make my blood boil.
I had already experience two Christian cults before I got involved in that Toronto mess and it was easier for me to see where it was going as a result and get out of it. I got some wonderful advise from an old saint before I went to my first Toronto type meeting. He said, “Seek God’s face, not His hands.” It was then that I heard God say, “If you seek my face, my hands will not be far away.” Soooo, I went to those meetings always seeking His face and not signs and wonders, thus I avoided falling into spiritual adultery and the evils of all those false manifestations that were not of His Spirit. I am so glad to see how you have been healed and are once again walking in the freedom we have in Christ and can hear His Spirit so well.
Thanks for the link to my blog. ❤
Michael
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You’re welcome as to the link to AWV, Michael. 🙂
Well, in contrast to you, I had no experiences but the RCC before. I was a real greenhorn as to “spirituality” on the whole, no idea what that was at all. I was 29 and I trusted that those who take God’s name into their mouths cannot have bad intentions. In a certain sense, they had no bad intentions; they were only blind to what they did because they were intrigued by THE POWER of the HOLY SPIRIT. That is a great danger, isn’t it?
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Yes, Susanne, seeking power is an open door for the devil to come in. Paul knew this and thus he said,
“And to keep me from being too elated by the abundance of revelations, a thorn was given me in the flesh, a messenger of Satan, to harass me, to keep me from being too elated. Three times I besought the Lord about this, that it should leave me; but he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’ I will all the more gladly boast of my weaknesses, that the power of Christ may rest upon me.” (2 Corinthians 12:7-9 RSVA)
Our flesh cannot handle His power without coming under the influence of Satan. This is why we need the cross to deal with it. Only Christ can do the works of Christ in us. But our Father desires Him to do so, so that HE might have many sons unto HIS glory. Amen!
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Amen, Michael. Thank you for your wise words! ❤
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Okay, but it IS a lot, still. 😉
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I have also always liked the quote by Stephen Covey you posted above, Lloyd, since it is true!
Actually, that is something that bothers me too, seeing so many trying hard to share the gospel without having been called to do so. It can get even strenuous for them, feeling an “urge” to obey the Great Commission (Mt 28), for example, no matter what.
YES! It is indeed necessary that they really see something in us that attracts them like tiny iron filings to an electromagnet, which is Christ in us, the hope of glory.
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You’re very welcome, Michael. 🙂
Great scriptural reference and explanation!
Love,
Susanne
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Good discussion! I love the accounts where Jesus talks to men and women who have been prepared to hear the gospel. He approached each one in such a different way. He spoke exactly to the need of their situation and their heart. I have asked myself many times, where in the world all those ‘systems’ of evangelism came from? As a new believer I saw the disconnect, but had no idea what to do about it. One has to deal with that kind of confusion at some point – early on I was totally burned about sharing my faith with anyone. For one thing our church sent people out to ‘witness’ without regard to whether or not they even understood their own ‘faith.’
I really love the story of the woman at the well. These kinds of Biblical accounts show us God’s heart for people. I think maybe the first thing a person needs to acquire is God’s heart for lost people. That takes some time – the Holy Spirit must bring it, and a person needs to learn who the Spirit is and what His role is in the life of a believer before that can happen. Right – did someone come along side you to make sure you knew that before they shoved you out the door to witness? Probably not.
Our Jesus was so amazing in His approach to this poor, misled woman. He exposes (to her alone, not to the neighbors OR the disciples) her sinful lifestyle; He took steps to lead her away from her earthly cares, and confronts her earthly religion. She got clarity about her true need! He won’t allow her to stay on her path of wrong thinking and excusing herself, but He wraps everything He says in grace so that she doesn’t bristle at what He says. She figures out who He is and believes that He has something she needs — and He encourages her to take it. And then He teaches her about true worship!! What a Savior! What a heart!
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Great exposition on the woman at the well, my sister! ⭐
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How funny is that, Lloyd!? I posted my rant and then saw your post. I guess there are lots of us out there who share the same experiences!
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😉
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So true, Lloyd. I like “…awkwardly reading a tract to someone isn’t likely to be fruitful”. Great picture! 😀
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Amen. You’re right, Lloyd.
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“Witnessing” as it is called in the churches… are we sure that Jesus did it this way? We tell everyone that Jesus is our PERSONAL Savior and then we set out to portray Him as a “one size fits all” Savior that is about as personal as a pair of flip-flops! We polish a “canned wrap” and memorize our “four spiritual laws” and use our methodology whether we call it “Evangelism Explosion” or whatever on everyone that comes along and call it “witnessing.”
But is this what Jesus did? Is it what the apostles did? I don’t think so. Jesus only used “John 3:15-17” on ONE MAN! He only used what He said to the woman at the well once. He only to told one tax collector that He would come home with him and eat and the man was saved as a result! He only healed one man that was born blind from birth and he ended up believing in Him.
What I am saying is that if we are to be effective we need to only do what our Father is doing and only say what we hear HIM saying just as Jesus did with each person. And THAT takes the death of all our preconceived ideas of who that person is and what they need! We need to let Jesus be PERSONAL with each person through us as HE sees fit. BUT that takes a personal relationship with HIM, one in which we can hear and obey His voice instead of memorizing a script and assaulting people with it in an impersonal way. If we can not impart the life and love of Christ for each person in a personal way, we have nothing to say and to do that we must be One with the Father and the Son!
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Amen Michael! So much damage has been done to the church at large and to individuals in particular (saved and unsaved) because of human ideas and systems throughout the history of Christianity (christendom). It’s hard to know why God has allowed it, but allowed it He has. We’re coming to its end — not soon enough!
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