RCL Lent 3A [i]
8 March 2026
Parish of Saint Helen
Vancouver BC
For more than five years I was an unofficial member of the support staff for my younger son’s rugby club and school rugby teams. This role meant that I always kept blankets, towels, extra clothing, umbrellas and my Wellingtons in the back of my car.
During the many car trips to and from games, the boys learned that I value the proper use of the English language. So, to the question, ‘Can we go to McDonald’s?’, I always responded, ‘We can, but the right question is “May we?”.’ This and many other similar conversations have led my children’s friends to coin a new verb – ‘to leggett’ – which means ‘to insist on correct and accurate use of the English language’. Just within the last year or so, one of my younger son’s friends was visiting and when, in the conversation I took a breath, he said, ‘Oh no! He’s going to leggett!’
It’s true. I love language and value its careful use. Language has the ability to explain something clearly or to deceive us deviously. Language can heal our wounds or hurt us deeply. Language can open windows onto the beauty and mystery of creation or can build walls to confine our imagination and limit us to the repetition of conventional certainties.
Last week Jeffrey opened to us the grammar of the Gospel according to John. He did so by looking carefully at the words and phrases used in the Gospel, especially those that bear more than one interpretation. I am going to do a bit of the same today and then do something some people think should not be done in a sermon: I am going to end with a question for each one of us to take home and ponder.
We are probably familiar with the story of Jesus and the Samaritan woman at the well. It happens to be one of my favourite stories in all of the Scriptures. Because of this story and several others in this Gospel, I once responded to the question, ‘If you could only take one Gospel with you, which one would you choose?’, I answered, ‘John’. But, to understand this story, we need to read the verse that comes just before the first verse of today’s reading. Before we read about Jesus arriving at the well outside the city of Sychar, the evangelist writes, “ . . . (Jesus) left Judea and started back to Galilee. But he had to go through Samaria.” [ii]
The thing is that Jesus did not have to go through Samaria to return north to Galilee. There were any number of routes north that would permit him to avoid travelling through a region of Samaria. So, we need to parse out the simple statement, ‘But he had to go . . . ‘. As I read the thoughts of various commentators who have opinions on this passage, I finally came to agree with those who understand this simple statement to mean this: Jesus must go to Samaria if he is going to be faithful to the One who sent him.
Going through Samaria has nothing to do with finding a safe or quick route home to Galilee. Going through Samaria has everything to do with what God is seeking to accomplish in the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth. This early part of the Gospel according to John is sometimes referred to as ‘the book of signs’ – the changing of water into wine at Cana and, in next week’s reading, the healing of a man born blind. Jesus’ decision to travel through Samaria is another sign of who he is and what God is doing in the world through Jesus.
What is the sign? Jesus chooses to travel through Samaria, a region inhabited by people that the Jews considered collaborators with the Babylonian invaders six centuries earlier and who, because of intermarriage, had lost their link to genuine Jewishness. Despite the devotion of the Samaritans to the first five books of Moses and their belief in the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, Jewish religious leaders considered Samaritan beliefs inferior at best, heretical at worst – a little bit like how some Roman Catholics feel about Anglicans. Nothing is more fierce than a fight between close kin!
By travelling through Samaria and then, as John tells us, spending two days in the neighbourhood teaching them, Jesus has crossed a boundary. It becomes yet one more reason why the religious authorities in Jerusalem begin to worry about this itinerant rabbi from the north. What are they to do with a man who is doing powerful things and dares to say, “ . . . the hour is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem.” [iii] What are the authorities who are anxious to preserve the centrality of the Temple in Jerusalem to Jewish identity and faith with a man who says, “But the hour is coming and is now here when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father seeks such as these to worship him.” [iv] But Jesus had to go through Samaria if he was to be faithful to the One who sent him.
Jesus compounds his disregard for boundaries when he engages not just a Samaritan but a Samaritan woman in a serious theological discussion. I love this woman. Each time I hear this story, I have to stop myself from laughing out loud when, in response to Jesus telling her he has living water, she says, “Sir, you have no bucket, and the well is deep.” [v] She actually has a claim to the title of ‘apostle’ – ‘one who is commissioned or sent with a message’ – when she goes into the city to share her experience with her neighbours and then invites them to meet him with, “Come and see . . . “. [vi] But Jesus had to go through Samaria if he was to be faithful to the One who sent him.
My friends, in a world where we see new tribalism rising to the left and to the right, where respect for diversity is dismissed as weak and threatening to the privileges of a few, where must we go if we are to be faithful to God? In a world where the algorithms of social media are designed to channel us into like-minded groupings, where must we go if we are to be faithful to our baptismal promises? At the heart of John’s gospel is the belief that the mission entrusted by God to Jesus is entrusted to us by the Spirit: “Very truly, I tell you, the one who believes in me will also do the works that I do and, in fact, will do greater works than these, because I am going to the Father. I will do whatever you ask in my name, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If in my name you ask me for anything, I will do it.” [vii]
So, where are the Samarias that God is asking us, whether as a community or in our personal lives and relationships, to travel? It’s a good thing that we have a few more weeks of Lent to ponder this question before offering our answer in the light of the Easter candle.





