Until

The gospel for today comes from Matthew’s Sermon on the Mount. The verses following the Beatitudes and the longer portion of the Sermon in which Jesus will explain the deeper meaning of the Commandments of God. (“You have heard it said, but I say to you…). The between verses are subject to much debate as to the correct understanding:

Jesus said to his disciples: ‘Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets. I have come not to abolish but to fulfill. Amen, I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest letter or the smallest part of a letter will pass from the law, until all things have taken place.’”

The problems are centered on the use of the word “until.” Long story short, there is one view that essentially says, “Well…. Jesus perfectly fulfilled the Law and the promises of the Prophets… hence the Law and Prophets – a way to say the entire Old Testament – all of it can be ignored now.”

Then again, “Until heaven and earth pass away” is the equivalent of our modern “until hell freezes over” – a none too subtle “never” (also used in Jeremiah, Job and the Psalms). The conclusion is all the OT laws still apply and so we should keep the Sabbath (Friday sunset to Saturday sunset) and move away from Sundays.

The scholar RT France offers a great understanding: The law, down to its smallest details, is as permanent as heaven and earth, and will never lose its significance; on the contrary, all that it points forward to will in fact become a reality.  The new reality is present in Jesus, but not fully present as the kingdom of heaven. Still the law (smallest detail and all) have to be seen in a new light, but they still cannot be discarded.  Matthew will make that clear in the Sermon on the Mount.


Image credit: Cosimo Rosselli Sermone della Montagna, 1481, Sistine Chapel, Public Domain

From Dialogue to War

On November 26, Hull presented what became known as the Hull Note, demanding full Japanese withdrawal from China and Indochina and adherence to multilateral principles. Within Japan, the note was discussed in emergency meetings and ultimately rejected as unacceptable. Hull delivered what was seen within Japan as an ultimatum. It required Japan to:

  • withdraw all military forces from China and Indochina.
  • end support for any puppet regimes (i.e., dissolve Manchukuo).
  • recognize the Nationalist government (Chiang Kai-shek) as legitimate in China.
  • abandon the Tripartite Pact commitments.
  • agree to non-aggression pacts and equal commercial opportunity in the Pacific.
  • and in return, the U.S. would resume normal trade, including oil.

For leaders who had already committed themselves to war preparation, it confirmed that diplomacy could not secure Japan’s objectives. 

Japan’s leaders viewed this ultimatum as humiliating and as requiring them to give up everything they had fought for since 1931. Yet, Japan’s oil reserves were running out. The Navy warned that by late 1942 or early 1943, Japan would be unable to support its armed forces anywhere in the Pacific.

Historians have asked if Hull’s note was a rogue act and the historical record is clear that it was not. Negotiations were dragging on and MAGIC intelligence (diplomatic not military) pointed to Japanese troop movements toward Southeast Asia along with repositioning of naval assets in that general direction. Roosevelt and his Cabinet were increasingly suspicious of Japanese intentions, seeing the protracted delays in responses as “stalling” to complete their war footing.

Going to War

The Second Imperial Conference was held November 5, 1941 after weeks of Army–Navy–Cabinet debates. It was decided that Japan would give negotiations until early December. If no settlement was reached, Japan would launch war against the U.S., Britain, and the Netherlands. The military finalized operational plans — the Navy would strike Pearl Harbor while also moving into Malaya and the Dutch East Indies.

There was a final Imperial Conference on December 1, 1941. The cabinet reported to Hirohito that negotiations had failed. The Army and Navy both argued that war was now unavoidable. Hirohito approved the resolution that war with the United States, Britain, and the Netherlands would begin in early December. Diaries record Hirohito as somber, but he gave no objection. His silence ratified the decision. Hirohito performed the ritual reading of the imperial rescript that authorized hostilities. The debate was closed.

In his post-war memoirs, Lord Privy Seal Kido wrote that Hirohito considered the Hull Note a “humiliation” Japan could not accept. There are layers of reasons why, but from Japan’s perspective the U.S. was treating Japan like a defeated power before a shot was fired. Kido recorded that Hirohito was deeply offended that the U.S. would presume to dictate terms so sweeping without acknowledging Japan’s own status as a great power. Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Tōgō wrote that it was “tantamount to a demand for unconditional surrender” for a war that had not begun.

Japan had spent a decade building the “New Order in East Asia” and the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. The Hull Note demanded Japan dismantle these achievements entirely — which would have been politically impossible for the Army, and a blow to Hirohito’s prestige as the figurehead of expansion. 

In Japanese political culture, especially at that time, “losing face” before domestic and international audiences was nearly as bad as military defeat. If Hirohito had accepted the Hull Note, he would have been remembered as the Emperor who surrendered Japan’s destiny without a fight. Even though he disliked war, he considered acceptance dishonorable and humiliating — worse than risking war with the U.S.

On the same day the Hull Note was received, November 26th, the Japanese First Air Fleet (Kido Butai) — the carrier strike force that attacked Pearl Harbor — sailed. It consisted of 6 aircraft carriers, 2 battleships, 3 cruisers, 9 destroyers, 8 oilers. At dawn on December 7 it launched its first wave of aircraft. 

The Asia-Pacific War in the Pacific expanded to include the United States, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Australia, New Zealand, and in time a host of other nations. 

A small fire at the Marco Polo Bridge in 1937 spread to Manchuria, northern China, key Chinese ports, and French Indochina. On December 7, 1941 by attacking the U.S. Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor, the growing fire became the full firestorm of the Asia-Pacific War that lasted until September, 1945 at the cost of more than 30 million Asian lives.

It was a battle that the leaders of Japan knew they could not win. A war the Japanese government’s Total War Research Institute reported there was no chance of winning. Their actions were not rational; made no sense to the Western mind. Even the best minds in Japan argued against the possibility of success. But as Prime Minister Tōjō once remarked: “Occasionally, one must conjure up enough courage, close one’s eyes and leap off the veranda of the Kiyomizu Temple.”

Such was the path to the Asia Pacific War.


Image credit: various photographs from Naval Aviation Museum, National World War II Museum, and US Navy Archive. 

The Setting and Healing

This weekend we celebrate the 4th Sunday in Lent . In yesterday’s post we considered St. John’s treatment of “sin.” Today we move into the text itself.

If you wanted a one sentence summary of this account – here it is: “I came into this world for judgment, so that those who do not see might see, and those who do see might become blind”(v.39). Or: as a sign that he is the light, Jesus gives sight to a man born blind. But there is a richness to be gained in a detailed look at the text and narrative.  The Johannine scholar, Fr. Raymond Brown suggests the following outline: Continue reading

The Bulwark

We should certainly hear an echo of the Lord’s Prayer in today’s gospel: ““Lord, if my brother sins against me, how often must I forgive him? As many as seven times?” Jesus answered, “I say to you, not seven times but seventy-seven times.” The mention of “forgiveness” should echo Jesus’ teaching about prayer. In the Lord’s prayer we are told to forgive others as we are forgiven: “If you forgive others their transgressions, your heavenly Father will forgive you. But if you do not forgive others, neither will your Father forgive your transgressions.” (Mt 6:14-15)

Continue reading

The Hull Note

The Hull note, in its essence, was the same four principles that Secretary Hull had presented to the Japanese since 1937.  The note, in part, reads as follows:

The Government of the United States and the Government of Japan both being solicitous for the peace of the Pacific affirm that their national policies are directed toward lasting and extensive peace throughout the Pacific area, that they have no territorial designs in that area, that they have no intention of threatening other countries or of using military force aggressively against any neighboring nation, and that, accordingly, in their national policies they will actively support and give practical application to the following fundamental principles upon which their relations with each other and with all other governments are based:

The principle of inviolability of territorial integrity and sovereignty of each and all nations.

The principle on non-interference in the internal affairs of other countries.

The principle of equality, including equality of commercial opportunity and treatment.

The principle of reliance upon international cooperation and conciliation for the prevention and pacific settlement of controversies and for improvement of international conditions by peaceful methods and processes. 

Historians do not agree on a single meaning or intention behind the Hull Note of November 26, 1941. As noted in other parts of this series, depending on when the historical research was conducted, what sources were available, one reaches a different conclusion. 

Early postwar and revisionist historians portrayed the Hull Note as a de facto ultimatum that made war inevitable. The core argument is that the demand for complete Japanese withdrawal from China and Indochina amounted to strategic capitulation. Given Japan’s internal politics, acceptance was politically impossible. In this view, the U.S. leadership, especially President Roosevelt, either knew this or was willing to accept war as the price of principle. Most historians now see this view as overly deterministic and insufficiently attentive to the reality of Japanese internal politics, decision-making, and control by the military.

The dominant 20th century view holds that the Hull Note was not an ultimatum, but a reiteration of long-standing U.S. policy principles. The note did not introduce new demands; it restated positions held since 1937–1938 and it left room for negotiation if Japan chose to engage. The conclusion is that the U.S. did not intend it as a war trigger, but as a repetition of the clear baseline based on principles accepted by modern nations. Secretary of State Cordell Hull himself insisted the note was a “statement of principles”, not a take-it-or-leave-it demand. Perhaps naively, some U.S. officials continued to believe Japan might choose restraint given the note avoided explicit threats or deadlines. One critique of this view is that it does not pay enough attention to how Japanese leaders perceived the note.

Most contemporary historians adopt a synthetic view: the Hull Note neither caused nor prevented war, but clarified that war was already likely. The argument goes as follows:

  • By late November, Japan had already committed internally to war, pending a final diplomatic check.
  • The Hull Note exposed the incompatibility of U.S. and Japanese strategic visions.
  • It removed ambiguity, making continued diplomatic hedging impossible.

In this view, the note functioned less as a trigger than as a diagnostic moment. It must be remembered that Japan’s Imperial Conference of September 6, 1941 had already set war preparation in motion, the Japanese cabinet debated war before receiving the Hull Note, and the note was used in Tokyo primarily to justify a decision already made, not to cause it.

A crucial modern insight is the asymmetry of interpretation:

  • Americans saw the note as a firm but reasonable statement.
  • Japanese leaders saw it as a demand for humiliation and abandonment of empire.

This gap, rather than bad faith alone, helps explain why the same document could be viewed as both principled and provocative.

Most historians today conclude that the Hull Note was not designed to force war, was not a sudden escalation, did not meaningfully alter Japanese military timelines but it did clarify that no negotiated middle ground remained. In short, the Hull Note was less the cause of war than the moment when diplomacy finally caught up with strategic reality.

From Dialogue to War

On November 26, Hull presented what became known as the Hull Note, demanding full Japanese withdrawal from China and Indochina and adherence to multilateral principles. Within Japan, the note was discussed in emergency meetings and ultimately rejected as unacceptable. Hull delivered what was seen within Japan as an ultimatum. It required Japan to:

  • withdraw all military forces from China and Indochina.
  • end support for any puppet regimes (i.e., dissolve Manchukuo).
  • recognize the Nationalist government (Chiang Kai-shek) as legitimate in China.
  • abandon the Tripartite Pact commitments.
  • agree to non-aggression pacts and equal commercial opportunity in the Pacific.
  • and in return, the U.S. would resume normal trade, including oil.

For leaders who had already committed themselves to war preparation, it confirmed that diplomacy could not secure Japan’s objectives. 

Japan’s leaders viewed this ultimatum as humiliating and as requiring them to give up everything they had fought for since 1931. Yet, Japan’s oil reserves were running out. The Navy warned that by late 1942 or early 1943, Japan would be unable to support its armed forces anywhere in the Pacific.

Historians have asked if Hull’s note was a rogue act and the historical record is clear that it was not. Negotiations were dragging on and MAGIC intelligence (diplomatic not military) pointed to Japanese troop movements toward Southeast Asia along with repositioning of naval assets in that general direction. Roosevelt and his Cabinet were increasingly suspicious of Japanese intentions, seeing the protracted delays in responses as “stalling” to complete their war footing.

Going to War

The Second Imperial Conference was held November 5, 1941 after weeks of Army–Navy–Cabinet debates. It was decided that Japan would give negotiations until early December. If no settlement was reached, Japan would launch war against the U.S., Britain, and the Netherlands. The military finalized operational plans — the Navy would strike Pearl Harbor while also moving into Malaya and the Dutch East Indies.

There was a final Imperial Conference on December 1, 1941. The cabinet reported to Hirohito that negotiations had failed. The Army and Navy both argued that war was now unavoidable. Hirohito approved the resolution that war with the United States, Britain, and the Netherlands would begin in early December. Diaries record Hirohito as somber, but he gave no objection. His silence ratified the decision. Hirohito performed the ritual reading of the imperial rescript that authorized hostilities. The debate was closed.

In his post-war memoirs, Lord Privy Seal Kido wrote that Hirohito considered the Hull Note a “humiliation” Japan could not accept. There are layers of reasons why, but from Japan’s perspective the U.S. was treating Japan like a defeated power before a shot was fired. Kido recorded that Hirohito was deeply offended that the U.S. would presume to dictate terms so sweeping without acknowledging Japan’s own status as a great power. Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Tōgō wrote that it was “tantamount to a demand for unconditional surrender” for a war that had not begun.

Japan had spent a decade building the “New Order in East Asia” and the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. The Hull Note demanded Japan dismantle these achievements entirely — which would have been politically impossible for the Army, and a blow to Hirohito’s prestige as the figurehead of expansion. 

In Japanese political culture, especially at that time, “losing face” before domestic and international audiences was nearly as bad as military defeat. If Hirohito had accepted the Hull Note, he would have been remembered as the Emperor who surrendered Japan’s destiny without a fight. Even though he disliked war, he considered acceptance dishonorable and humiliating — worse than risking war with the U.S.

On the same day the Hull Note was received, November 26th, the Japanese First Air Fleet (Kido Butai) — the carrier strike force that attacked Pearl Harbor — sailed. It consisted of 6 aircraft carriers, 2 battleships, 3 cruisers, 9 destroyers, 8 oilers. At dawn on December 7 it launched its first wave of aircraft. 

The Asia-Pacific War in the Pacific expanded to include the United States, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Australia, New Zealand, and in time a host of other nations. 

A small fire at the Marco Polo Bridge in 1937 that spread to Manchuria, northern China, key Chinese ports, and French Indochina. On December 7th, by attacking the U.S. Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor, the growing fire became the full firestorm of the Asia-Pacific War that lasted until September, 1945 at the cost of more than 30 million Asian lives.

It was a battle that the leaders of Japan knew they could not win. A war the Japanese government’s Total War Research Institute reported there was no chance of winning. Their actions were not rational; made no sense to the Western mind. Even the best minds in Japan argued against the possibility of success. But as Prime Minister Tōjō once remarked: “Occasionally, one must conjure up enough courage, close one’s eyes and leap off the veranda of the Kiyomizu Temple.”

Such was the path to the Asia Pacific War.


Image credit: various photographs from Naval Aviation Museum, National World War II Museum, and US Navy Archive. 

Sin

This weekend we celebrate the 4th Sunday in Lent . In yesterday’s post we considered the purpose of miracles (signs) in the fourth gospel. Today, we will see how St. John treats the category of “sin.” In our passage, the concept of sin will be quickly introduced via the disciples’ question in v.2 : “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?”  This reflects traditional Jewish speculation on the relationship of illness and sin. In 1st century Palestine, people commonly assumed that disease and disorders on both the personal and national level were due to sin, as summarized in the rabbinic saying from around 300 CE that “there is no death without sin and there is no suffering without iniquity” (b. shabbat 55a). Continue reading

November 1941

In late September into early October, 1941Prime Minister Konoe floated the idea of a summit meeting with President Roosevelt. Konoe was increasingly convinced that Japan could not win a prolonged war with the United States, diplomacy through normal Foreign Ministry channels had stalled, and only a direct leader-to-leader meeting might override military rigidity on both sides. 

Konoe-Roosevelt Summit?

Roosevelt was intrigued but cautious. One of the great “what ifs” of the run-up to war was what if Roosevelt and Konoe had met. One of the problems for Konoe/Japan was the U.S. has already broken the Japanese diplomatic code (MAGIC). It was clear that Konoe did not have support of the Army, we understood that there needed to be unanimity among Japanese leaders directly advising the Emperor, and so it was clear that Konoe could not come to any meeting with the ability to commit the Japanese to anything agreed upon in any meeting. The fatal flaw was there was no real way to bypass the hardliners and militarists in Japan. 

Roosevelt had his own hardliners: the American First movement that did not believe that we should in any way be embroiled in foreign wars. They had already claimed Roosevelt was dragging the U.S. into war. So, if the President met Konoe without preconditions, opponents would accuse him of “appeasement” — the same word used against Britain at Munich in 1938. And hence Roosevelt insisted he needed “substantial evidence of sincerity” from Japan before he could even consider a summit.

Word was relayed via Ambassador Nomura that he might meet Konoe, but only if Japan showed good faith first. The US was the first to “put its cards on the table.” The US asked that:

  • Japan must halt further aggression: no more moves into Southeast Asia or the Pacific.
  • Respect the territorial integrity of China: withdraw from newly occupied zones and stop expansion.
  • Renounce Axis obligations: the U.S. wanted assurances Japan would not support Germany if America entered the war in Europe.
  • The U.S. would ease some trade restrictions. 

Japan’s counter proposal was

  • U.S. to accept Manchukuo (Japanese puppet state of Manchuria) as legitimate.
  • U.S. recognition of its “special position” in China, with acknowledgement of a new economic order in East Asia that included China
  • Stop aid to Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist China 
  • Stop reinforcing the Philippines and other U.S. Pacific outposts.
  • Pledge to not interfere with Japan’s “Co-Prosperity Sphere.”
  • Its alliance with Germany and Italy must be respected

At this point the positions were “oceans apart.” The Konoe–FDR summit was seriously “bandied about” in some channels, lingered tenuously into early October, and then disappeared entirely with Konoe’s resignation on Oct 18th. 

The Final Phase of Diplomacy

General Tōjō Hideki was appointed Prime Minister and immediately formed a new cabinet whose majority were military officers who supported the military move into Southeast Asia and war against the U.S. should diplomacy fail. The new cabinet directed the Foreign Ministry to draft a comprehensive proposal that might avert war while preserving Japan’s core positions in China. The draft took shape in late October and early November, under tight military oversight and with an explicit awareness of Japan’s dwindling oil reserves.  It would eventually construct two negotiating proposals: Plan A and Plan B.

“Plan A” was formally approved at an Imperial Conference on November 5, 1941. At the same conference, Japan also authorized continued military preparations and set a diplomatic deadline, making clear that negotiations would not be open-ended. The proposal was Japan’s first comprehensive peace proposal of the final negotiation phase. It was presented in Washington on November 7, 1941, by Ambassador Nomura (soon joined by Envoy Kurusu). Key details of the Japanese proposal included:

The proposal contained the following core elements:

  • China: Japan would withdraw troops from most of China after the establishment of peace with Chiang Kai-shek. Manchuria (Manchukuo) was explicitly excluded from any withdrawal. Also, Japan insisted on a bilateral Japan–China settlement, not one imposed by the United States.
  • Indochina: Japan promised no further military advance from Indochina into Southeast Asia. Japanese troops would be withdrawn from Indochina after peace was restored in East Asia, not immediately.
  • Tripartite Pact: Japan reaffirmed adherence to the Tripartite Pact, while asserting it was defensive and did not threaten the U.S.
  • Economic Relations: Restoration of normal trade relations, including access to oil. Mutual lifting of asset freezes. Economic cooperation between Japan and the United States.
  • General Principles: Mutual non-aggression in the Pacific. Respect for territorial integrity as interpreted by Japan.

American officials concluded that the proposal did not require immediate withdrawal from China or Indochina and that what withdrawal was offered was at best contingent and vague while asking the U.S. to first restore trade and supply oil. The implication was that the U.S. would accept Japan’s continental gains. As a result, Proposal A was judged insufficient and evasive, though Washington did not immediately reject it outright. In fact, while Japan formally delivered its plan via diplomatic note, the U.S. never formally replied. Between Nov 12 and 15, Secretary Hull conveyed the U.S. position orally to Nomura (and later Kurusu) that Proposal A was insufficient:

  • Conditional and delayed withdrawals from China were unacceptable
  • Restoration of oil and trade could not precede concrete military withdrawal
  • The U.S. could not recognize Japan’s “special position” in China

This was a clear negative signal, but not a formal diplomatic note. Japan understood the message. 

After U.S. officials made clear that Plan A would not be accepted, Prime Minister Tōjō directed the Foreign Ministry to prepare a minimal, provisional proposal designed primarily to secure short-term oil supplies while Japan completed military preparations. The draft took shape around November 15–18, with the Army and Navy insisting it be strictly temporary and not include withdrawal from China. The plan was approved at a Nov 19th Imperial Conference. The same conference reaffirmed Japan’s resolve to proceed with war preparations if negotiations failed, making clear that Plan B was a stopgap, not a compromise of peace. The proposal was presented in Washington on November 20, 1941, by Ambassador Nomura and Special Envoy Kurusu. It offered a temporary freeze on further military advances, limited Japanese withdrawals from southern Indochina, and non-aggression assurances, in exchange for partial unfreezing of assets and renewed oil shipments.

When the United States responded on November 26 with the Hull Note, Japanese leaders concluded that diplomacy had reached a dead end.


Image credit: various photographs from Naval Aviation Museum, National World War II Museum, and US Navy Archive. 

Miracles/Signs

The gospel for this 4th Sunday in Lent is taken from the ninth chapter of the Gospel of John. It is important to note that in John 8 one of the key points is Jesus’ self-identification as the “light of the world.” Jesus’ claim to be the light of the world (8:12) is repeated in 9:5, and the healing miracle in John 9 stands as a demonstration of this claim. In addition, the Mishnah identifies Siloam, the water in which the blind man bathes (v.7), as the source of the water for the water libations of the Tabernacles feast, also mentioned in the previous chapter.  John 8 also captures an on-going engagement with the religious authorities – an engagement which continues in conflict in John 9. Continue reading

At the crossroad

The Church’s choice of the Samaritan Woman at the Well (John 4) for the 3rd Sunday of Lent (Year A) gospel is a great choice for a gospel to follow the readings from the 1st and 2nd Sundays of Lent. Together they form a clear movement of Lenten themes: temptation → revelation → conversion. 

The First Sunday of Lent can be described as a battle that begins in the wilderness where Jesus confronts the fundamental human struggle: temptation (Matthew 4:1–11) using the human tendency to place trust on the ability to obtain items of human desire: bread, spectacle and power. The wilderness is the testing ground where Jesus encounters the fullness of human temptation. It is easy to think of the encounter as jousting using Scripture as the weapon of choice, but we need to note that Jesus responds to Satan using verses with one common theme: trust in God. The lesson for us is clear: the first step of conversion is recognizing that trust in God is the only path from the wilderness of temptations.

After the desert encounter with temptation comes a moment of revelation. The Second Sunday of Lent is the story of the Transfiguration that reveals Jesus as the beloved Son (Matthew 17:1–9). On the mountain, the disciples see the glory of Christ, but the center of the reading is the voice of God that proclaims: “This is my beloved Son. Listen to him.” In order to listen with need to walk the Lenten road with eyes fixed on Christ, with hearts strengthened by hope, with ears open to the Father’s voice, and with courage to follow Jesus off the safety of the mountain top to the hill top scene of Jesus’ crucifixion. In the horror of that moment we entrust ourselves to God that glory lies on the other side.

This brings us to this Sunday when Jesus encounters the Samaritan woman at the well. If the preceding gospels taught us to trust in God and how to walk the Lenten road of life, this gospel teaches us where the road leads. The Samaritan woman represents the human heart searching for fulfillment. It is her story of a journey of conversion and is held up to us for our consideration. 

St. John tells us that Jesus arrived at the well “about noon.” At first this sounds like an unimportant detail, but in the ancient Near East people did not go to the well at noon. Water was drawn in the cool morning or evening, and it was usually a communal activity where women gathered together. For a woman to come alone at the hottest and brightest hour of the day suggests something about her situation: she was socially isolated or marginalized. But there is also a symbolic dimension. 

In John’s Gospel, light exposes truth. Noon is the hour when nothing can hide in shadow. Spiritually, it becomes the moment when this woman’s life is brought into the light, not to shame her but to set her out on the path. This small detail reminds us that Christ meets us precisely at those places in life where we feel most exposed, isolated or vulnerable.

This is a story of the gift of Living Water (John 4:5–42). We all recognize that water is absolutely needed for continued life. It is one reason we are drawn to the well. But to first-century listeners, Jesus’ offer of “living water” would have echoed a whole network of biblical images where water represents life, salvation, and God’s sustaining presence.  

During the Exodus at God’s command, Moses strikes the rock to bring flowing, life giving water to a people dying of thirst. This moment becomes a defining symbol in Israel’s memory: God gives life to His people when they cannot provide it themselves. When Jesus tells the Samaritan woman: “Whoever drinks the water I shall give will never thirst ” He is presenting Himself as the new source of water in the wilderness; the one through whom God sustains His people.

The prophets often described Israel’s spiritual problem as abandoning the true source of life. In the Book of Jeremiah 2:13: “My people have committed two evils: they have forsaken me, the fountain of living waters, and dug for themselves broken cisterns that hold no water.” When Jesus offers “living water,” He is telling the Samaritan woman (and us) that He is the divine source Israel has been seeking.

Another prophetic image appears in Book of Ezekiel 47:1–12. Ezekiel sees a vision of water flowing out from the Temple in Jerusalem. The water becomes a great river that brings life wherever it flows, trees grow, deserts bloom, and even the Dead Sea becomes fresh. It is a vision that looks to the time when God’s presence would one day renew the entire world. In John’s Gospel, Jesus replaces the Temple as the true source of life; the source of  “living water.” He is telling the Samaritan woman (and us) He fulfills Ezekiel’s vision.

The choice of this gospel during Lent asks a challenging question: where do we go to quench our thirst? Like Israel in the desert or the people in Jeremiah’s prophecy, we often dig “broken cisterns”; things we hope will satisfy us but never fully do. Christ alone offers the living water, the true wellspring of life. Will we take the offer? Does the Samaritan woman take the offer?

The woman left her water jar and went into the town.” The detail appears small, but it carries tells that by listening to Jesus she has chosen to follow Him. She came to the well because she was thirsty. The jar represents her original purpose. Yet once she encounters Christ, the jar is forgotten. In other words, she came seeking ordinary water but discovered something far greater. Her priorities change immediately. Instead of continuing her errand, she runs to tell others about Jesus. The abandoned jar symbolizes leaving behind the old life: the habits, identities, and pursuits that once seemed necessary but lose their importance after encountering Christ. This is precisely what Lent invites believers to do: leave the jar behind.

The Samaritan woman comes to the encounter, alone, seeking dignity, belonging and peace. Her faith deepens through honest encounter, not instant certainty. Did you notice the slow unfolding of Jesus’ identity: a Jewish man, a prophet, the Messiah, and finally, “I am he.” This mirrors how faith grows during Lent. Conversion rarely happens all at once. It unfolds through dialogue, resistance, misunderstanding, and trust. The Church places this Gospel here to reassure us that on this Lenten road, faith deepens through honest encounter, not instant certainty.

If the preceding gospels taught us to trust in God and to walk the Lenten road of life, this gospel teaches us how to walk the road: sustained by the living water of Christ.

This is the movement of Lent. The woman comes alone, she leaves her jar behind, and she returns to the town as a witness. This is the shape of Christian conversion: encounter, repentance, and mission. On this Third Sunday of Lent, the Church wants us to see that repentance is about being sent back into life but sent differently.

We all come to this moment in time with our ordinary human experience: broken relationships, unmet desires, spiritual fatigue, and longing for something more. So too, the Samaritan woman. In her encounter with Jesus, she listens, she trusts, and discovers her deepest desire if fulfilled. That is the Lenten promise to all of us. Listen, trust, name our deepest thirst, and decide if we are willing to let Christ satisfy it. 

At this crossroad of the Lenten season,  will you hope that the “broken cisterns” of human desires satisfy or will you drink deeply of the living waters of Christ?”


Christ and the Woman of Samaria | Pierre Mignard, 1681 | The North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh | PD

We have heard

Jesus’ words overflow with metaphor: living water, the hour, food, harvest. Each of these metaphors attempts to open reality in fresh ways for his conversation partners. Jesus wants to open the eyes of the Samaritan woman and his disciples so that they can see what is being offered to them in the present instead of continuing to view everything through the lens of old realities. Jesus wants the Samaritan woman to see who is speaking with her at this moment and the gifts that he offers (4:10). He wants her to see that the present moment is the time of eschatological fulfillment (4:23-24). Jesus wants his disciples to see that the harvest is ready now, contrary to popular understandings (4:35). In both conversations (4:7.26, 31-38), Jesus takes familiar images and fills them with new meaning in order to open up for his listeners the possibilities of a life defined by God’s gifts. The metaphors of these verses keep the terms of the conversations always fresh, always suggestive, always open to new meanings in changing circumstances.

Everything is to be newly defined by the arrival of the hour, by the impingement of the eschatological future on the present. God’s salvation is available now, to all who will receive it (cf. 2 Cor 6:2). Salvation will be offered on God’s own terms, however, not necessarily in the form that those who wait on it have determined in advance. The Samaritans’ acclamation of Jesus as savior of the world reminds the reader of that. The savior in whom they put their faith does not conform to their prior expectations. The reality of God’s presence in Jesus redefines their previous categories.

The woman, the disciples, and the Samaritan villagers all received more from Jesus than their conventions and assumptions had led them to expect. One could say that once again Jesus transformed ordinary water into wine. An incredulous Samaritan woman becomes a witness to the gospel, Jesus’ questioning disciples become co-workers in the harvest, the despised Samaritans spend two days with the “savior of the world.” John 4:4-42 is a text of promise, of expectations overturned and surpassed. This text suggests that the life of faith and discipleship will be refreshed and reanimated by attending to Jesus’ vision of transformed reality and, most important, to Jesus himself. Jesus’ metaphors of living water and worship in spirit and truth invite the church to a new relationship to its God and to one another through his incarnate presence.

The closing words of the Samaritan villagers hold the key to understanding the narrative techniques of this text. The Samaritans no longer need the secondary witness of the woman’s word because “we have heard for ourselves” (v.42). Effective witness does not replace the immediate experience of Jesus in the Fourth Gospel; it leads to that experience. John 4:4-42 is narrated so that the readers, too, can sense that they have heard Jesus for themselves. As a result of reading this text, one may come to recognize oneself as a “Samaritan”—one to whom the good news has come in unexpected places at unexpected times.

It is a living parable of the sower and the seed – as well as a tale for those who would think that sowing the living word of God is a task limited to the insiders or professionals church people.


Christ and the Woman of Samaria | Pierre Mignard, 1681 | The North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh | PD