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The Lamp at our Feet

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John 4:1-4 Now when Jesus learned that the Pharisees had heard that Jesus was making and baptizing more disciples than John (although Jesus himself did not baptize, but only his disciples), he left Judea and departed again for Galilee. And he had to pass through Samaria.


As we continue to navigate emotions in The Gathering at the Well podcast, I cannot help but once again reflect on the life of the Woman at the Well. We’ve tackled weariness, grief, and most recently shame. These are not solitary emotions, but often a myriad of simultaneous feelings. How often is weariness a product of our grief and our shame? At the most wearying times of my life, grief and shame were intertwined. We don't know if this woman predominantly felt grief or shame, or a complex combination of both. What we can infer, however, is a deep sense of weariness. Five husbands, five stories of hope and eventual disappointment – that's a heavy burden for anyone to carry. Maybe, she came to the well in the heat of the day to avoid the judging eyes of others or maybe she came because she was just too weary to engage because grief tends to isolate. Shame and weariness avoid; love engages. While she was avoiding, Jesus was engaging and it is here, in her ordinary, solitary routine, that she meets the extraordinary.

A Lamp for the Path, a Light for the Feet

Jesus’ journey to Samaria wasn't a detour; it was divine appointment. There was more than one route between Judea and Galilee, but the narrative says that Jesus “had to go to Samaria”.  He "had to pass through Samaria" – not just geographically, but spiritually. The psalmist writes, "Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path" (Psalm 119:105). Jesus perfectly embodies this. He knew where He was heading. His destination, the "lit path" was Galilee. Yet, in weariness, He had to stop and rest.  He paused in the ordinary course of walking, to introduce this woman to the extraordinary. He allowed His "lit feet" to lead Him to a specific well, at a specific time, to meet a specific woman. He was not rushed by His grand purpose; He was present for her immediate need.

This is a powerful lesson for us. We too are ordained in the ordinary course of our lives. Our most significant encounters with God, our opportunities to be His hands and feet, often don't happen in grand, dramatic gestures but in the mundane, everyday rhythms. It's in the quiet moments, the unexpected conversations, the simple act of showing up and reaching out. Unlike Jesus, we often struggle to be fully present, too caught up in rushing toward the result, grasping at the extraordinary for ourselves, so focused on and eager for the destination rather than the journey. We can rest assured that the extraordinary nature of our God can move in our ordinary lives if we simply allow ourselves to be led.

The Unfolding Journey: Glimpses and Next Steps

Often, we live with a tension between purpose and practicality. We have an identity and a purpose to live out – called to love, to serve, to reflect Christ in our world. Yet, we usually don't know the destination and the steps simultaneously.

Sometimes, God gives us a glimpse of what He has in store for us, a flash of inspiration, a dream, a calling that feels too big for us. We see the "path" illuminated off in the distance, but the "steps" to get there remain murky and dim. 

Other times, we are so bogged down by life's complexities, its weariness, its grief, and its uncertainties, that we only have the capacity to simply put one foot in front of the other. We know each step we must take as we take them, perhaps not knowing God's grand purposes or direction for it. It's in these moments that faith isn't about seeing the whole picture but trusting the One who holds it. It’s about being faithful with the very next thing. In Jesus' encounter with the woman at the well, we see His patience in this ordinary walk. He didn't lecture; He engaged. He didn't condemn; He offered living water. He met her where she was, not where He expected her to be.

The Patience of Perseverance

This repetitive ordinary and display of patience isn't a one-off for Jesus. The narrative says that Jesus turned AGAIN to Galilee. The very word "again" rings through the narratives of the gospels as Jesus continuously journeys between Galilee and Jerusalem. And with each journey, He continually heals person after person, teaches the same thing, again and again. His ministry was marked by persistent, repetitive acts of love and instruction. He didn't grow weary of the questions, the doubts, or the needs.

This cyclical nature of Jesus' ministry is a profound comfort. It reminds us that God is patient with our slow understanding, our repeated stumbles, and our need for consistent grace. He meets us where we are, again and again, lighting our path when we need direction and illuminating our next step when all we can do is move forward. 

Where are you in your journey today? Are you needing a glimpse of the path ahead, or simply the light for the very next step? How does your life need to be marked by persistent, repetitive acts of love and instruction toward others, not growing weary of their questions, their doubts, or their needs?


 


 
 
 

About Me

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I am a follower of Jesus Christ, founder of our ministry, author, blog writer, and co-host of our podcast, Gathering at the Well.

With four children of my own, I have a heart to feed busy people, those in need of daily sips of the living water, in their busy stages of life.

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