By Johann Peter Lange
Edited by Rev. Marcus Dods
THE HISTORICAL DELINEATION OF THE LIFE OF JESUS.
THE PUBLIC APPEARANCE AND ENTHUSIASTIC RECEPTION OF CHRIST
Section VIII
the conversation of jesus with
the samaritan woman
(Joh 4:1-42)
Jesus had carried on His
ministry in Judea with success
probably for more than half a
year, when suddenly the hostile
feeling of the Pharisaical party
compelled Him to quit the region
that had been so highly favoured.
The Evangelist only slightly
hints at the cause of this
interruption. The Lord had been
informed, and indeed was well
aware (ἔγνω), that ‘the
Pharisees had heard that Jesus1
made and baptized more disciples
than John.’ He had been
denounced, and the denunciation
had taken effect. But as soon as
the ill-will of the Sanhedrim
offered opposition to His
ministry in this theocratic
form, He withdrew, as we have
seen, for the sake of social
order and truth. But that He at
once left Judea, was a
consequence of His now modified
position. Not only the foresight
with which He avoided hazarding
His life till the decisive
moment, but also the holiness of
His consciousness, which
abhorred all intermingling of
the kingdom of heaven with a
corrupt hierarchy, drove him
from the public scene of action
in Judea. And there was besides
another serious motive.2 John
was just about this time cast
into prison by Herod (Mat 4:12;
Mar 1:14). This imprisonment
was, it is true, the act of the
ruler of Galilee, but it gave,
most probably, great
satisfaction to the Sanhedrim.
To that body the disturber of
their repose seemed now put out
of the way. But there appeared
immediately, as they thought, a
greater one in his place (Joh
4:1).3 Hence by the imprisonment
of John the Sanhedrim appeared
to be excited, and inclined to
remove the second hated preacher
of repentance, of whom they knew
that He did not suit their
plans.
Jesus had gone up to the feast
at Jerusalem in the month of
March. When He returned it was
about seed-time, as may be
inferred with probability from
ver. 35, and therefore in
November or December.4 He took
His way directly through
Samaria, as He often did,
without troubling Himself about
the scruples of the Jews, who
preferred making the journey
between Judea and Galilee
through Perea. But this time he
had a special reason for going
through Samaria: because He was
probably already near the
Samaritan border.5 He must
(ἔδει) therefore, under the
circumstances, take this route.
A place in Samaria, in which He
stayed a short time, claims our
attention on three accounts: for
its name; for its local and
historical relations; and for a
memorable relic of former times,
Jacob’s well. It has been
generally supposed that the city
of Sichem6 was the place where
Jesus sojourned, but it is
remarkable that the Evangelist
calls it Sychar. According to
different derivations, the place
obtained the nickname of the
town of the drunken, or the town
of falsehood.7 But a third
derivation makes the name a
title of honour, the town of the
sepulchre;8 and since this
designation has the support of
Jewish tradition,
‘The city of Nגbulus’ (the
former Sichem), says Robinson,12
‘is long and narrow, stretching
close along the north-east base
of Mount Gerizim, in this small,
deep valley, half-an-hour
distant from the great eastern
plain. The streets are narrow;
the houses high, and in general
well built, all of stone, with
domes upon the roofs as at
Jerusalem. The valley itself,
from the foot of Gerizim to that
of Ebal, is here not more than
some 500 yards wide, extending
from south-east to north-west.…
Mounts Gerizim and Ebal rise in
steep, rocky precipices
immediately from the valley on
each side, apparently some 800
feet in height. The sides of
both these mountains, as here
seen, were to our eyes equally
naked and sterile; although some
travellers have chosen to
describe Gerizim as fertile, and
confine the sterility to Ebal.
The only exception in favour of
the former, so far as we could
perceive, is a small ravine
coming down opposite the west
end of the town, which indeed is
full of fountains and trees; in
other respects, both mountains,
as here seen, are desolate,
except that a few olive-trees
are scattered upon them.’13
The same travellers found the
noted Jacob’s well, 35 minutes’
distance from the town. The well
had evident marks of antiquity,
but was now dry and forsaken.
According to Maundrell, the well
was dug in a hard rock, was
about 9 feet in diameter and 105
feet in depth. It was full of
water to the height of 15 feet.
But, according to Robinson, the
old town probably lay nearer
this well than the present. Yet
he remarks this could not have
been the proper well of the
town, since there was no public
machinery for drawing water. As
the woman came hither and drew
water, we must suppose that
either she lived near the well,
or that the inhabitants attached
a particular value to the water
of this ancient Jacob’s well,
and now and then took the
trouble to go and draw from it.
The well was held in great
veneration from the tradition
connected with it; the
Samaritans were proud of this
inheritance of the patriarch
Jacob. Jesus was weary with
travelling when He reached it,
and so sat down at the edge of
the well. It was about midday.
The disciples were gone into the
city to buy food. Jesus
therefore accustomed them to
combat and lay aside their
Jewish prejudices. There came a
Samaritan woman to draw water.
Jesus said to her, ‘Give Me to
drink!’ These few words were of
infinite significance and
efficacy. It was the beginning
of that agency of Christ’s
Spirit which broke down the
ancient partition-wall of grudge
and hatred between the Jews and
Samaritans, who afterwards were
to enter the Church of Christ.
It shows how an inoffensive,
humble request does wonders. But
not only that the Lord made his
request to a Samaritan woman,
and to a woman alone, but
lastly, and more especially, to
a sinful, erring woman, exhibits
him in the full freedom and
grandeur of His love. For, as to
the first point, it would have
been an offence to any Jew, for
the Jews avoided all intercourse
with the Samaritans; as to the
second point, every Rabbi would
have taken offence, since,
especially for Rabbis, it was
unbecoming to converse alone
with foreign women; and,
thirdly, it would have been an
offence to every Pharisee, for
it was a pharisaical maxim that
the fallen were to be treated
with severity. Thus, then, this
brief request of the Lord at one
and the same time displayed His
spiritual glory in three
directions. The woman was at
once struck with the
extraordinary character of this
address. She recognized in the
language, or in the dress and in
the whole bearing of the Man, to
what nation He belonged, and
could not forbear expressing her
astonishment: ‘How is it that
Thou, being a Jew, askest drink
of me, which am a woman of
Samaria?’
Although the woman might vaguely
be sensible of the condescension
of this wonderful Jew, yet she
seemed disposed to gratify her
national feeling at His need of
help. She lays great stress on
the circumstance that He, the
supposed proud Jew, is the
petitioner, that in His need He
is now depending on her
benevolence. Her tone leads the
Lord to bring forward the
opposite relation: that she is
the needy person, and that He is
the possessor of the true
fountain of satisfaction. Oh!
hadst thou known to value the
gift of God, this singular
opportunity, and who it is that
offers thee to drink, thou
wouldst have asked of Him, and
not in vain: He would have given
thee living water, water gushing
from the fountain. He shows that
her answer was quite beside the
mark. She made a difficulty of
granting the smallest request;
He wished from the first to be
bountiful to her in granting the
highest object of desire. Thus
the way of salvation is opened
for the heart of a poor creature
lost in vanity, but, as it
appears, impelled by a deep
ardent longing. The woman takes
the figurative language
literally: ‘Sir,’ she says,
‘Thou hast nothing to draw with,
and the well is deep; from
whence, then, hast Thou that
living water? Art Thou greater
than our father Jacob, which
gave us the well, and drank
thereof himself, and his
children, and his cattle?’ Still
she would persuade herself that
He is the needy person, although
she cannot get rid of the
impression that He is no
ordinary man. But since she
fancies that He presents Himself
to her in Jewish pride as ready
to confer a favour, her national
feeling rises still higher; she
stands before Him as a daughter
of Jacob, and will not allow Him
to depreciate her Jacob’s well.
If one on this occasion spoke to
her of superior living water or
spring-water, she first of all
assumed that he must draw it
from the depths of this well.
But since Jesus had no vessel
for drawing, He seemed disposed
to extol perhaps some fountain
in the neighbourhood, in
preference to the water of this
well. But for that He was bound
to show a higher authority than
that of their father Jacob.
Probably it belonged to the
orthodoxy of the Samaritans,
that the water of this well was
superior to that of the
neighbouring fountains, and they
fortified themselves in this
opinion by the authority of the
family of Jacob. However sinful
the woman was, she strictly
adhered to the preservation of
the tradition. But Jesus now
brought her to institute a
comparison between His fountain
and her well. ‘Whosoever
drinketh of this water shall
thirst again; but whosoever
drinketh of the water that I
shall give him, shall never
thirst; but the water that I
shall give him shall be in him a
well of water, springing up into
everlasting life.’ This is again
in the Lord’s wonted manner; it
is the decisive word, uttered
with the greatest confidence,
and rousing the soul of the
hearer from its lowest depths.
She cannot deny that the water
of Jacob’s well, however
excellent, cannot quench the
thirst for ever. But now she
requests the Lord to give her a
draught of that water which will
quench her thirst for ever. This
promise must surely have
awakened in her a misgiving
feeling of her wants—of the
wants of her eternity! Still
more the promise, that this
mysterious water would be
converted in the person who
partook of it into a fountain
from which streams would flow in
rich abundance throughout
eternity! The critics make the
remark, that in John’s Gospel
the Lord always speaks so high,
everywhere too high for the
understandings of his hearers.
It is true He everywhere speaks
equally high, down out of high
heaven itself, as the Baptist
says. And how could He speak
lower? But it is manifest that
He speaks here as clearly as
possible. Nicodemus receives the
promise of the Spirit under the
image of the blowing wind, of
the fresh vitalizing wind which
brings the fresh vernal life;
the Samaritan woman receives it
under the image of a wonderful
fountain flowing for ever
through an eternal world, and
able to quench all her thirst,
even her deep, obscure longings.
And they both hear Him with a
successful result; as all do who
hear Him with susceptibility. To
this promise the woman answered,
‘Sir, give me this water, that I
thirst not, neither come hither
to draw.’ She can now no longer
suppose that He is speaking of
earthly water, though she has no
clear perception of the heavenly
water. At all events, the
presentiment of a wonderful
satisfying of her unsatisfied
life is awakened in her. It is
indeed strange that she says,
‘Give me that water, that I come
not hither to draw!’ But perhaps
the visits of the woman to
Jacob’s well were connected with
the impression of a meritorious
sanctity in them as a kind of
religious service. At least,
according to Robinson, there
must have been wells at Sichem
which lay nearer the town. In
that case she might easily
surmise that her journeys would
come to an end as soon as she
obtained such satisfaction. At
all events, her answer is not to
be understood as said in
ridicule; it rather seems to
express the awakening of an
unlimited confidence in this
wonderful personage.
The answer of the Lord has been
thought strange. Suddenly
breaking off from what He had
been conversing upon, He
commands her, ‘Go, call thy
husband, and come hither!’ This
apparent digression in the
discourse has been thus
explained: The woman now
required to be led back to her
own life—to be conducted to
self-knowledge and repentance.
And as it was necessary for
Nicodemus to get an insight into
his entire spiritual ignorance
before he could be benefited by
higher communications,
particularly respecting the
person of Jesus, so this woman
needed to be made sensible of
her own unworthiness. But
although the Lord had this
result in view, yet He might not
have used the requirement, ‘Call
thy husband!’ as a pretext in
order to lead her to a
confession of her criminal
course of life. Rather a second
motive was combined with that
first; and caused Him to ask for
her husband. It has been
remarked, that it was a rule
laid down by the Rabbis, that no
man should converse for any
length of time with a female,
particularly with a stranger,
and that Christ had this rule in
His eye. Lcke, on the contrary,
starts the question, ‘If He had
any regard for this, why did He
not earlier break off the
conversation, or indeed why did
He enter upon it at all?’
Certainly Christ, according to
rabbinical notions, would not
have ventured to enter on such a
conversation with the woman. But
at this moment a turn occurred
in the conversation which made
the presence of the husband
imperative according to a right
superior to the rabbinical, when
the wife stood (generally
speaking) under the rightful
authority of a husband. Hitherto
the conversation had been the
free intercourse of persons
brought transiently into each
other’s company, and as such
raised above the exactions of a
punctilious casuistry or
scrupulous conventionality. But
now, since the woman had shown
herself disposed to become a
disciple of Jesus, to enter into
a nearer relation to Him, it was
proper that her husband should
now be present. According to
Jewish regulations, a wife was
not permitted to receive special
religious instruction from a
Rabbi without the sanction of
her husband; indeed, such a
condition is involved in the
very nature of the marriage
relation. The Lord therefore at
this moment required, according
to the highest, most exact
social rights, that the woman
should call her husband, though
He already knew that she was not
living in lawful wedlock.14 The
woman replied, ‘I have no
husband.’ Upon that the Lord
rejoins, and surely with a
penetrating look, ‘Thou hast
well said, I have no husband;
for thou hast had five husbands,
and he whom thou now hast is not
thy husband; in that saidst thou
(too) truly.’ Confounded, the
woman replied, ‘Sir, I perceive
that Thou art a prophet.’ She
admitted that he had hit the
mark; that He had by one stroke
depicted her life. And that she
had been conscience-struck by
the words of Jesus, is plain
from the sequel; she declared to
the people in the city, that
Christ had told her all things
that ever she did.
We pass over the trivial
remarks, by which this wonderful
insight of Christ has been
accounted for as merely
accidental, or represented as a
glance of absolute omniscience,
and impossible. For it is
obvious that we have here to do
with the insight of the
God-man’s deep knowledge of the
soul and of life. That a woman
has a husband, or is not a
virgin, or that a woman is
living in a criminal
connection-this might perhaps be
found out by any other person
well versed in the study of
human nature. But Christ could
read the whole guilty history of
the woman in her appearance. And
as the forester concludes
respecting the age of a tree
from the rings in the wood, so
Jesus found the different
impressions of the psychical
influence of the men with whom
the woman had stood transiently
in connection, again in her
appearance. For it must be
granted that every life-relation
of this kind will leave a trace
behind that is discernible by
the eye of the highest
intelligence. But especially
must the images of these men
have been strongly reflected in
the psychical life of a woman
who had been involved so deeply
in the sexual relation. Perhaps,
also, she had acquired from one
a bigoted, from another a fickle
disposition, and from another,
again, other traits of character
which were distinctly apparent.15
It was sufficient, however, that
Jesus read the history of her
life in her being, in her soul.
He expressed her guilt, but also
her misery. She had probably
passed through a succession of
divorces, of which, at all
events, she had shared the
criminality, and now lived in an
immoral relation, either because
her last marriage had not yet
been dissolved, or because she
had disengaged herself from the
obligations of social morality.
She was a great sinner, but also
unhappy; in spite of all the
confused restlessness of her
soul in which she had been
connected with so many husbands
one after another, she had no
husband. The words of Jesus had
struck her conscience. She
admitted her guilt in a
dexterous manner, by making the
admission to the Lord that He
now spoke like a prophet. ‘But
great is in her the impression
of prophetic knowledge.’ It
appears, in fact, that she comes
to the following question not
merely to ward off Christ’s
reproof, but in the earnest
spirit of religious inquiry.
She brings forward the most
decided point of controversy
between the Jews and Samaritans,
on which she wished to learn the
prophet’s judgment: ‘Our fathers
worshipped in this mountain.’ In
these words she referred to the
adjacent mountain Gerizim, on
which the Samaritans formerly,
in the time of Nehemiah, had
erected a temple, and on which
they even now offered their
prayers, though about the year
129 John Hyrcanus destroyed the
temple. ‘But ye say,’ she
continued, ‘that Jerusalem is
the place where men ought to
worship.’ That was the point in
dispute. But Jesus shows her the
reconciliation in the distance
which would consist in a decided
elevation of both parties above
the ancient antagonism: ‘Woman,
believe Me, the hour cometh,
when ye shall neither on this
mountain nor yet at Jerusalem
worship the Father.’ Then this
division will be made up in a
higher union. But in the
mean-time He declares that the
Jews were in the right in
opposition to the Samaritans.
‘Ye worship,’ He says, ‘ye know
not what;’ that is, the object
of your worship, your God, is no
longer an object of true
knowledge for you, since you
have given up the continuance of
His revelations, the constant
guidance of His Spirit until the
appearing of salvation. ‘But
we,’ He adds, ‘know what we
worship; for salvation is of the
Jews.’ The true Jews worship the
God of a continued revelation.
The proof lies in this, that
salvation comes forth from
Judaism. Therein it is shown
that their worship, in the best
part of the nation, in their
chosen, is clear, true,
knowledge. This knowledge is
matured in the life-power and
form of salvation. But now He
leads the woman beyond the
difference between the Jews and
Samaritans, after He had humbled
the proud Samaritan in her, as a
little before He had humbled the
sinner. He announces to her a
new religion, the commencement
of which already existed in the
true worshippers. Spirit and
Truth are the holy mountains of
worship for them, the temples in
which they stand to offer
prayer. And such worshippers God
seeks; His Spirit forms them;
and with them alone He enters
into an everlasting living
communion. And this in
conformity to His nature. Since
He is spirit, the infinitely
free, conscious, omnipresent
life, so the worshipper only
reaches Him when he worships God
in spirit, in the inward
self-movement of his own life in
God, in the eternity which is
exalted above space and time.
Only this worshipping in the
spirit is real worship at all,
the worshipping in truth; a
worship in which man so becomes
one with God in His
all-comprehending life, that
Gerizim and Moriah and all the
mountain heights of the world
are embraced by His prayer, as
the being of God embraces them.
And as life in the Spirit in
union with God makes praying in
truth the highest act of life,
so on their side this energy of
worship, in which man
consciously comes before God as
the eternal conscious Spirit,
leads to life in the Spirit.
The woman begins to reflect on
the profound words of the Lord,
which affect her whole Samaritan
view of the world, and dart the
first rays of spiritual life
into the murky twilight of her
bigotry. Should she give her
full confidence to the noble
stranger? The question is now
respecting the highest spiritual
surrender, which she can make
only to the Messiah, the
expectation of whom is now
become alive in her soul with
the excitement of her deepest
feelings and anticipations. The
true-hearted one turns again to
the subject with earnestness of
spirit: ‘I know,’ she says,
‘that Messiah cometh; and when
He is come, He will reveal all
things to us.’ Adalbert Maier
justly remarks, ‘If the
Messianic hope of the
Samaritans, who received only
the Pentateuch, was founded on
Deu 18:15, they must have
expected in the Messiah
principally a divine teacher who
would, like Moses, announce to
them the divine will and lead
them into truths hitherto
concealed.’ He adds, it is in
accordance with this that the
woman says, when Messiah comes,
He will tell us all things;
also, the appellation of the
Messiah which has been common
among the Samaritans, that of
the converter (
We know not what anticipations
might move the woman in the last
words. At all events, it must
have been a feeling of noble
longing with which she sighed
for the advent of the Messiah,
for the Lord surprised her with
the declaration, ‘I that speak
unto thee am He.’ He was able to
announce Himself as the Messiah,
in the outlying world of
Samaria, because their minds
were not pre-occupied with the
proud Messianic conceptions of
the Jews. The woman longed after
the Revealer of heavenly truth;
and now the Converter stood
before her!
Meanwhile the disciples returned
from the city, and marvelled
that He talked with the woman.
But they maintained a
reverential silence; no one
asked what He sought of her, or
why He talked with her. But she
left her water-pot, hastened to
the city, and eagerly said to
the people, ‘Come, see a man
which told me all things that
ever I did; is not this the
Messiah?’ She publicly proclaims
her discovery, and the people
are excited;—a multitude hasted
from the city to Jesus. But
neither the water-pot, which
stands at the well as a witness
of the mental emotion of the
woman, who had left it in such
haste, nor the elevated mood of
their Lord, can draw the
disciples’ attention to the
spiritual transaction; they urge
Him to eat. To them it seems the
time for taking their repast.
Then He says, ‘I have meat to
eat that ye know not of!’ And
now they express to one another
the conjecture, that some one
had brought Him food. By this
sensuous perplexity they
occasioned the utterance of that
beautiful saying, ‘My meat is to
do the will of Him that sent Me,
and to finish His work!’ That
was His pleasure, His life, His
food!
Thus a glorious noonday scene is
exhibited to our sight. The
disciples bring earthly food,
and wished to arrange the meal.
But their Master has forgotten
thirst, and forgotten hunger, in
order to save the soul of a poor
woman. And the woman herself has
already experienced the mighty
influence of His Spirit; she has
forgotten Jacob’s holy well and
her water-pot, and shyness
before the people, and even the
inclination to palliate her
course of life, and hastens to
the city to spread the knowledge
of Him. Jesus goes on to address
the disciples: ‘Say ye not,
There are yet four months,16 and
then cometh harvest? Behold, I
say unto you, Lift up your eyes
and look on the fields, for they
are white already to harvest.’
They saw the Samaritans coming:
that was the harvest which their
Master saw commencing, and
hailed. Then follows the general
remark, that in the spiritual
field, the sower and the reaper
rejoice together;—the reaper,
for he receives his reward, and
gains the precious fruit, the
souls of men; but also the sower, for the reaper brings the
fruit into eternal life, so that
in the world of everlasting life
the sower can celebrate with him
the common spiritual harvest
feast. And so it must be, the
Lord means to say; for in this
relation the proverb, One
soweth, and another reapeth,
first obtains its full essential
verification. The expression is
primarily used in reference to
earthly relations, to signify
the fact, that often one must
labour by way of preparation for
another, or labour vigorously
without his seeing himself the
fruit of his labours. But that
is in a higher measure true in
the spiritual field. Here, very
often the sowers go very far
before the reapers, and die
without seeing any fruit. These
are the noblest and severest
sorrows on earth; herein the
whole bitterness of that saying
is felt, ‘One soweth, another
reapeth.’ But the rich eternity,
the world of eternal life,
equalizes this disproportion.
And thus in our case the word is
true in the highest sense, He
would further say: ‘I have sent
you to reap that whereon ye
bestowed no labour; other men
have laboured, and ye are
entered into their labours.’
Taken in their connection, we
cannot consider these words as
having any reference to the
later conversions at Samaria
(Act 8:5); and perhaps some
would understand them in the
sense that the Lord was now
sowing the seed, and that they
would one day reap the harvest.
But this exposition is not
admissible, because Christ would
in that case mix two images
together—one in which He now was
reaping the harvest with His
disciples, and the other
according to which He, as the sower, preceded them, the
reapers. But it is evident, and
conformably to the Lord, that He
gathers in His harvest with the
disciples in living unity.
Evidently He is speaking of a
harvest to be gathered at the
time then present, and His
disciples must here regard
themselves as generally, after
the commission they had
received, as the reapers. For
these reapers the earlier
sources of the seed must now be
sought. A sowing certainly had
taken place in Samaria, first by
means of Moses, whose Pentateuch
was in constant use among the
people, then by the Jewish
priests who had converted the
heathen population in Samaria to
the rudiments of Judaism; but
perhaps, last of all, by John
the Baptist, who had baptized at
Enon near Salim, at all events
not far from this region. If we
assume that John the Baptist had
kindled afresh in Samaria the
expectation of the Messiah, we
must regard the expression of
Jesus as one of mournful
recollection. He who had sown
the seed would be rejoicing
among the reapers in the eternal
life of the other world. This
mournful consolation was
probable, for John had been
apprehended a short time before
in this district. But if we
refer the words of Jesus to
those oldest sowers of the
divine seed in Samaria, they
will appear to us in all their
sublimity. Jesus is struck with
amazement, that that ancient
divine seed in Samaria, of which
the sowers were hardly known,
which seemed to be lost and
buried in half-heathenish
superstition, should now spring
up suddenly for the harvest; and
it testifies to the singular
depth, we might say the exalted
gratitude, as well as the love
of His heart, that at this hour
He is mindful of those ancient
sowers, and rejoices in their
joy to eternal life. In this
state of feeling He says, ‘More
than ever in the present case is
that proverb verified.’
The Evangelist informs us that
many people of that city
believed on Jesus, in
consequence of what the woman
had communicated to them; how He
had exposed to her what she had
done; how He had laid before her
the register of her criminal
life. Hence these persons
invited Him to tarry with them,
and He abode there two days. For
the disciples, this tended
decidedly to promote their
general philanthropy; it was a
preparation for their future
universal apostolic ministry.
But now many more Samaritans
believed on Jesus, and with a
very different decisiveness, for
they heard His own word; and
they declared to the woman that
their faith no longer stood on
her report, which now seemed to
them as insignificant (as λαλιά)
compared with what they heard
from Jesus Himself. They
themselves had now heard Him,
and knew that this was in truth
the Messiah, the Saviour of the
world. A quiet blessing rested
on that harvest, which the Lord
with His disciples had reaped in
Samaria. It did not extend over
the whole country. Hatred
against the Jews formed too
great an obstacle (Luk 9:51).
Nor was it the design of Jesus
to include Samaria generally in
His ministry, since in doing so
He might have seriously injured
or ruined His ministry in Judea17
(Mat 10:5). But the harvest was
at the same time a sowing which,
after the day of Pentecost,
ripened into a fresh harvest,
and from Sichem came forth one
of the most distinguished
apologists of the ancient
Church, Justin Martyr.18
───♦───
Notes
1. Jacob’s ‘parcel of ground’ is
situated on a plain to the east
of Sichem (Robinson’s Biblical
Researches, ii. 287). In going
from Judea to Galilee this plain
is passed through from south to
north, and the valley of the
city of Sichem, which runs
between the mountains Gerizim
and Ebal in a north-western
direction, is on the left
(Robinson, ii. 274). Hence
Christ might send His disciples
in that direction to the city,
and wait for them at the well:
by so doing He would remain
meanwhile in the ordinary
travelling route. This ‘parcel
of ground’ was a constant
possession of the children of
Israel in North Palestine from
the days of Jacob. According to
Gen 33:19, the patriarch bought
it of the children of Hamor. At
a later period (Gen. 34) Simeon
and Levi took possession by
force of the valley and Sichem,
the city of Sichem the son of
Hamor. To this event probably
the expression in Gen 48:22
refers, which the Septuagint
distinctly explains of Sichem.19
But perhaps the language of the
patriarch is figurative, and
means, ‘I gained the parcel of
ground which I gave to Joseph by
my sword and bow;’ that is, by
fair purchase, not by the sword
and bow of his violent sons.
According to Jos 24:32, the
bones of Joseph were buried here
on the conquest of Canaan, and
the ground became the
inheritance of the sons of
Joseph. Abraham himself made the
first acquisition of the
theocratic race in Canaan, when
he purchased the field of
Ephron, with the cave in Hebron,
for a burial-place (Gen. 23.)
This was the first possession of
Israel in the southern part of
the land.
2. On the history of the hatred
between the Jews and Samaritans,
see Robinson, ii. 289. The
religious archives of the
Samaritans consist of a peculiar
text of the Pentateuch,20 and ‘a
sort of chronicle extending from
Moses to the time of Alexander Severus, and which, in the
period parallel to the book of
Joshua, has a strong affinity
with that book;’ besides ‘a
curious collection of hymns,
discovered by Gesenius in a
Samaritan manuscript in England’
(Robinson, ii. 299). A knowledge
of the religious opinions of the
modern Samaritans has been
derived from Samaritan letters,
which, since the year 1589, have
been received at various times
in a correspondence carried on
between the Samaritans and
European scholars. Since the
Samaritan religion was only a
stagnant form of the ancient
Mosaism in traditionary
ordinances, which wanted,
together with the living spirit
of Mosaism, the formative power,
the ability of advancing through
prophecy to the New Testament,
it is not surprising that the
expectation of the Messiah among
the Samaritans appears only as a
stunted copy of its first Mosaic
form. With this remark we may
set aside what Bruno Bauer
(Kritik der evang. Geschichte
der Johannes, p. 415) has
inferred from the Samaritan
letter against the existence of
a Messianic expectation among
the Samaritans. In the Hatthaheb, whom they designated
as their messiah, they could
only have expected the
appearance of the Deity
returning to them. But the hope
of an appearance of the Deity,
or the transient revelation of
an ‘archangel,’ must never be
confounded with the theocratical
expectation of a revelation of
the Deity transforming the
historical relations of the
people. It is in favour of the
originality of the Messianic
expectation of the Samaritans,
that they gave the Messiah a
peculiar name. Robinson’s
Samaritan guide showed him and
his fellow-travellers on Mount
Gerizim twelve stones, which he
said were brought out of Jordan
by the Israelites, and added,
‘And there they will remain
until el-Muhdy (the Guide) shall
appear. This,’ he said, ‘and not
the Messiah, is the name they
give to the expected Saviour’
(ii. 278). Baumgarten-Crusius,
in his Commentary on John (p.
162), remarks, that he could
cite it as the last word of Gesenius on this subject, that
he had explained this Messianic
name el-Muhdy, the leader, as
equivalent to the earlier name Hathaf or Tahef, which,
according to the explanation of
Gesenius, denotes the restorer
of the people in a spiritual and
moral sense. In this question,
as Von Ammon21 justly remarks,
the fact is of great importance,
that Dositheus,22 in the first
century of the Christian era,
could act the part of a false
Messiah among the Samaritans,
and likewise the influence which
in a similar manner Simon Magus
managed to gain among them when
he represented himself as the
great power of God (Act 8:9-10).
In addition to the above-named, Baumgarten-Crusius mentions also
Menander. Very important is the
fact brought forward by the
last-named theologian, that the
apostles (according to Acts 8)
found so early an entrance into
Samaria on the ground of the
Messianic faith. It was indeed
very possible that the Samaritan
woman at Jacob’s well made use
of another term for designating
the Messiah; but the term here
given may be referred to the
presumed ministry of the Baptist
in Samaria.23
3. The coincidence noticed by
Hengstenberg and others, of the
five husbands of the Samaritan
woman with the fivefold
idolatrous worship which,
according to 2 Ki 17:24, was practised by the five nations
from Assyria, and the relation
of the sixth husband, who was
not the legal husband of the
woman, to the mixed
Jehovah-worship of the
Samaritans, is an ingenious
combination of the ‘coincidence
of the history of this woman
with the political history of
the Samaritan people,’ which,
according to Baumgarten-Crusius
(Commentar z. Joh. 153), ‘is so
striking, that we might be
disposed to find in this
language a Jewish proverb
respecting the Samaritans
applied to an individual of the
nation.’ But thus much is clear
in the simple historical
construction of the Gospel, that
Jesus makes the remark to the
woman in a literal sense
respecting the husbands whom she
formerly had and the one whom
she then had. For, had He wished
to upbraid the national guilt of
the Samaritans by an allegorical
proverb, He could not have made
use of the accidental turn which
the conversation took by the
guilty consciousness of the
woman in order to appear as a
prophet; but He would have felt
Himself still more bound to have
further developed the obscure
proverb. Add to this, the
Samaritan people practised the
five modes of idolatrous worship
and the service of Jehovah
simultaneously, while this
parallel is wanting in the
history of the woman. At all
events, an allegorical
representation of the relation
must have treated quite
differently those historical
relations. According to
prophetic analogies, it must
have been said inversely, Thou
hast lived at the same time with
five paramours, and now thou
hast not returned to thy lawful
husband; thou dost not yet fully
belong to him. But allowing the
simple fact of the narrative to
remain intact, there lies in the
aforenamed reference of it
certainly no more than a
significant, striking
correspondency of the relations
of this woman to the religious
relations of her nation.
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1) That the name of Jesus is introduced here instead of the pronoun, makes the sentence appear as a report,—as the report of those who had first stated the fact to the Pharisees. 2) See Maier's Commentar, p. 327. 3) On Wieseler’s chronological view in his Chronol. Syn. p. 224, compare what has been said above, p. 4. 4) Wieseler adopts the latest terminus, since he puts off the journey to January 782. [Meyer, Lichtenstein, and Ellicott prefer December, Alford thinks that ver. 35 does not afford a safe chronological datum.—ED.] 5) Maier, Commentar, p. 328. 6) שְֹכֶם, Συχὲμ, Σίκιμὸ (Acts vii. 16), afterwards Flavia Neapolis, in honour of the Emperor Vespasian—the modern Nablûs. 7) The derivation is ‘ either from שֶֹקֶר, a lie, the lying city, alluding to the Samaritan worship on Mount Gerizim, at the foot of which Sichem lay; or from שִֹבּר, drunken, with a reference to Isa. xxviii. 1, where Samaria is called ‘the crown of pride to the drunkards of Ephraim.” In Sirach 1. 26 it is said, καὶ ὁ λαὸς μωρὸς ὀ κατοικῶν ἐν Σικίμοις.’—Lücke, i. 577. 8) So Hug in his Einleitung, iii, 218, derives the word from סוכד, remarking that it denotes the burial-place where the bones of Joseph (Josh, xxiv. 32) and according to a report common in the time of Jesus, the bodies of the twelve patriarchs of the people of Israel were deposited (Acts vii. 15, 16). 9) In the Talmud, the name of a place עין סוכר occurs, Wieseler finds in this (p. 256) a designation of the city of Sychar, since he translates the words the fountain of Sychar. Apart from this, the appellation of the fountain of the sepulchre might, conneet for the Israelites, in a very significant manner, the hallowed well of Jacob with the hallowed sepulchre, and thus the name Sychar might originate. 10) It is worthy of notice, that according to both Schubert and Robinson, the ancient Sichem was situated nearer Jacob's well than the modern town. Besides this, it is to be observed, that in the days of Eusebias, Syehar and Sichem were regarded as two places ; a view to which Eusebius himself assents (Onomast. art. Sichar, Sichem). Robinson would find in this tradition confusion and inconsistency, but does not give his reasons (ii, 262). But if Jerome treated the reading Sychar in the Gospel of John as false, this at least is important, that in his treating of the Onomasticon of Ensebias he passes over his view of it in silence. 11) Palästina, p. 159. 12) Biblical Researches, ii. 275. 13) It must not be forgotten that Robinson saw Gerizim in the middle of June. But in the hot season many tracts of the warm south lose the ornament of grass and other kinds of vegetation which they possess in another part of the year, Von Schubert saw Gerizim in April, yet he speaks only of the foot df the mountain, which he describes as fertile compared with Ebal. In the same way it may be explained that Robinson found Jacob's well dry. Schubert, on the contrary, tasted its ‘refreshing water.’ 14) [The author has been censured for this interpretation, on the ground that, in the ease of this woman, who had but a paramour and no husband, there was no ‘social right’ existing which our Lord could meet. On the other hand, it is diffident to believe that our Lord had no meaning in His order, save to convince of sin; that He did not intend that, first of all, His order should be executed, ‘Nugas sane meras hic agunt Patres, qnando ea de causa id postulatum esse putant, quod non satis honestum videretur, nupte mulieri quicquam donari inseio marito. ... Neque tamen ctiam illis adscendo, qui simulato soltun Jesum id jussisse volunt, ut scilicet tantum viam ad sequens colloquium idoneam sterneret’ (Lampe, i. 729). If, then, our Lord wished the woman to bring her husband, what was the reason of this? May it not have been that, in the presence of him with whom she had sinned, she might be shown the evil of her sin; and that, with the reality of her guilty life thus distinctly brought to view, she might receive that ‘living water’ she had asked for? Otherwise, she night have thought it a gift that bore no relation to her present guilt and future character.—ED. ] 15) [Yet if such insight as this is not to be ascribed to the divinity of Christ's person, it is difficult to select or suppose any case in which His divinity may be said to be operative. If it is not to be kept in the background throughout His life, and conceived of as a mere inoperative constituent of His person, as the necessary condition or substratum of perfect humanity, then surely this is an instance of which we may say, Divinity is here directly in exercise. We would not, as is too commonly done, separate what God has so joined that they never exist in separation ; we would not say, Up to this point humanity is in exercise, and here divinity comes into action; but we would point to such cases as that before us, and say confidently, There is something more than mere human faculty.—ED.] 16) If Jesus had not uttered this saying to the disciples nearly about the time of sowing, He must either have used it as a proverb, or probably must have said : Do not you generally say about seed-time, There are four months to harvest, &e. ? (see Wieseler, p. 216.) The seed-time in Palestine lasted altogether from the end of October to the beginning of February, ‘The harvest began on the plains generally in the middle of April (in the month of Abib), but it was formally opened on the second day of the Passover, therefore on the 16th of Nisan, and lasted till Pentecost. The first reaping was the barley, sown perhaps in November and December, or in part still later, in January, Here the proverb would apply, if they reckoned the intervening months in the gross.’—Lücke, i. 605, The proverbial expression of four months for the time from sowing to harvest is stated from the Jews by Lightfoot and Wetstein, and from Varro by Wetstein,’—Baumgurten-Crusius, p. 166, 17) Strauss (i. 537) finds a contradiction between the command excluding the Samaritans in the instructions given by Jesus to His disciples, and His own journey to the Samaritans previously to giving those instructions. But if this connection with the Samaritans be properly estimated, it will rather tend to confirm those instructions, We find that Jesus, in travelling through, only concerned Himself with the Samaritans in consequence of being in their vicinity ; that He spent only two days with them, while He devoted the whole time of His ministry to Judea, Galilee, and Perea. Heuce it follows that His plan, which His disciples were to follow literally, required the temporary exclusion of Samaria from His ministry, while His spirit contemplated them as called with the rest; and accordingly He attended to the Samaritans when an occasion offered, and in preference to the Gentiles. 18) [See Semisch’s monograph On the Life, Writings, and Opinions of Justin Martyr, translated by J. E, Ryland, 2 vols, Edinburgh, 1544: in Clark's Biblical Cubinet.] 19) I have given thee one portion (שְֹכֶם) above thy brethren’—A, V. Ἐγὼ δὲ δίδωμί σοι Σίκιμα ἐξαίρετον ὑπὲρ τοὺς ἀδελφούς σου.—LXX. 20) [On the Samaritan Pentateuch, see Hävernick’s Introd. to the Pentateuch, 431.—ED.] 21) Die Geschichte des Lebens Jesu, i. 354. 22) [Neander's Church History, ii, 123 (Bohn’s Tr.); Dr Lange, Die Apostolische Zeitulter, ii, 103, 104; Braunschweig, 1854; Gieseler, Lehrbuch der Kirchengeschichte, i. 63.—TR] 23) [On the Samaritan expectation of a Messiah, see Heugstenberg’s Christology, i. 75 (2d edit. Clark), and the references there.—ED.]
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