3rd Sunday of Lent, Year A – March 8, 2026

 

3rd Sunday of Lent, Year A– March 8, 2026

Exodus 17:3-7; Romans 5:1-2, 5-8; John 4:5-42

 

Theme: The Living Water and The Divine Identity of Jesus

 

A.    Exegetical Analysis of Jn 4:5-42

 

1.      Historical and Literary Contexts

The story of John the Baptist’s final witness about Jesus (3:22-36) precedes and sets the background for our text. Jesus spent time with his disciples, who were baptizing many people in the region of Judea. John the Baptist was also baptizing people in Aenon near Salim. John’s disciples raised a dispute about why many people were going to Jesus’ baptism, administered by Jesus’ disciples, and not by Jesus himself (see 4:1-2). In his answer, John the Baptist testified that Jesus was the Messiah, not him. Due to this dispute, and especially because the Pharisees became aware of how Jesus was making more disciples, Jesus decided to leave Judea and return to Galilee, where he had to pass through Samaria (4:1-4). Our Gospel story picks up from here. It is in the context of Jesus’ self-revelation to the Samaritans. The story of the second sign at Cana (4:43-54) follows our account.

 

2.      Form, Structure, and Movement

Our Gospel passage is a narrative story filled with metaphors. Vv. 5-6 serve as an introduction, while v. 43, which the lectionary has omitted, can be seen as a conclusion. The body of the text (vv. 7-42) contains three movements. The first movement (vv. 7-15) involves a conversation about Living Water. The second movement (vv. 16-26) addresses Jesus’ divine identity. In the third movement (vv. 27-42), the woman and her townspeople recognize Jesus as the Messiah.

 

3.      Detailed Analysis

Vv. 5-6. There was significant conflict between the Jews and Samaritans during both the time before and during Jesus. They share the same patriarch, Jacob, the ancestor of Israel's twelve tribes. After Solomon's death, Israel divided into two kingdoms. Ten tribes of Jacob (Asher, Dan, Ephraim, Gad, Issachar, Manasseh, Naphtali, Reuben, Simeon, and Zebulun) established the independent kingdom of Israel in the north, with Samaria as its capital. The other two tribes (Judah and Benjamin) formed their own kingdom in the south, known as the Kingdom of Judah, with Jerusalem as its capital. The Assyrians conquered the northern kingdom in 722 BC, deporting the Israelites to Assyria and bringing in five foreign nations that intermarried with the Israelites who remained. The descendants of these remaining Israelites and the five foreign nations are identified as Samaritans, who worshipped the gods of those nations. The deported Israelites never returned, and the biblical tradition identifies them as the “lost sheep of Israel.”

The descendants of the Southern kingdom of Judah are known as the Jews. The Babylonians overthrew them in 587/586 B.C. They returned from the Babylonian exile to Jerusalem in the late 500s B.C. Since their return, their relationship with the Samaritans has been poor, as they accused them of losing the right to be “God’s chosen people” due to intermarrying with foreign nations and worshiping pagan gods. Bit by bit, the Samaritans abandoned the worship of foreign gods and returned to worshiping the God of Israel. However, the Jews still prohibited them from worshiping in Jerusalem, which is considered the only legitimate place for worship according to the covenant with David (see the comments of the Samaritan woman in our Gospel passage in v. 20b). In response, the Samaritans, in the fourth century, built their own Temple on Mount Gerizim (that our Gospel refers to in v. 20a) to rival Mount Zion in Jerusalem.

In its spiritual sense, the woman represents all the Samaritans. The five husbands married to the Samaritan woman mentioned in v. 18 of our Gospel passage allude to the five foreign nations that intermarried with the Israelites and the five foreign gods that the people of Israel worshiped.

 Vv. 7-15. Jesus opens the conversation with a simple command: “Give me a drink.” The woman attempts to halt the conversation with a question that carries a hint of mockery (v. 9). She points out to Jesus that the discussion he seeks to start is illogical due to the conflicts between the Jews and Samaritans. Jesus refrains from commenting on their conflict but persists with the topic of water, introducing two shifts. First, he shifts the subject from regular water to “living water.” Second, he alters the roles that he and the woman play in this conversation: Jesus, who initially asked, becomes the giver, while the woman, who was previously the giver, becomes the one who asks. For these two shifts to take effect, the woman must first recognize two facts or truths: (1) The gift of God identified as the living water and (2) the divine identity of Jesus who speaks to her (v. 10). These two facts form the essential foundation for the entire conversation.

The story continues with the theme of living water as God’s gift. The woman questions what Jesus will do to obtain the “supposed living water” from the well since he does not have a bucket and the pool is deep (v. 11). Previously, in v. 9, she referred to Jesus as a “Jew,” but here she calls him “Sir,” which shows a slight improvement in how she relates to Jesus. She compares Jesus to their patriarch, Jacob. This indicates that at this point, she cannot see beyond their tradition, which regards Jacob as the greatest because he provided them with the pool that continues to sustain their lives (v. 12). In his reply, Jesus contrasts the water from Jacob’s well with the living water that he offers, suggesting that he is greater than Jacob. People who drink the water from that well will be thirsty again, but those who drink the living water Jesus provides will never thirst, for it will become a spring of water welling up to eternal life (vv. 13-14). Then, this woman asks Jesus to give her the water he speaks of (v. 15). However, she remains focused on physical water and thirst because, thus far, her faith in Jesus is based on material rather than spiritual needs.

Vv. 16-26. The narrator shifts the topic from the “living water” to “Jesus’ divine identity.” Jesus reveals to this woman her secret about the five “husbands” she had in her life (vv. 16-18). Here, the woman represents all the Samaritans, and the “five husbands” allude to the five foreign gods worshiped by the Samaritans. This indicates that Jesus exposes the unfaithfulness of the Samaritans without judging them because his goal is to call them to repentance and extend God’s salvation to them. Following this revelation, the woman confesses that Jesus is a “prophet.” “Sir, I can see that you are a prophet.” (V. 19). Her faith journey is improving. She moves from referring to Jesus as a “Jew” in v. 9, then as “Sir” in vv. 11 and 15, to calling him a “prophet” here in v. 19.

The Samaritan woman feels guilty because Jesus knows her secret sins. She questions Jesus about the correct place to confess her sins and worship God: The temple on Mount Zion in Jerusalem (for the Jews) or the temple on Mount Gerizim in Samaria (for the Samaritans) (V. 20). Jesus’ answer is a prophecy about extending his Church to all nations when the believers will no longer need to come to these two Mountains to worship God (v. 21). His declaration in v. 22 means that the salvation story continues with the Jews, who are the descendants of the southern kingdom of Judah since the Samaritans mixed their faith in God with other pagan gods and the Israelites from the northern kingdom were deported by the Assyrians and never returned. So, in his answer, Jesus asserts that the salvation that was primarily for the Jews is now extended to all true worshipers, who will worship the Father in Spirit and truth. God seeks such worshipers, and he came to seek the Samaritans to become part of these worshipers (vv. 23-24). The expression in Spirit and truth is “not a reference to an interior worship within one’s own spirit. The Spirit is the spirit given by God that reveals truth and enables one to worship God appropriately (Jn 14:16-17. Cf. ‘born of water and Spirit’ (Jn 3:5).”[1]

The woman’s reply in v. 25 connects Jesus’ explanation about the correct place to worship God to what the Samaritans believe about the forthcoming Messiah: They believe that it is the Messiah who, when he comes, will answer this question to end the dispute between them and the Jews (v. 25). Here, it is Jesus who answers this question and resolves their quarrel with the Jews. Jesus confirms to her that “I am he,” meaning, I am the Messiah you are waiting for (v. 26). The expression “I am he,” which can also be translated as “I AM,” is the expression that the Old Testament used to refer to Yahweh (see Is 43:3). So, here, Jesus is asserting that he is both the Messiah and God.

Vv. 27-42. The journey of faith for this woman comes to its fullness: Jesus is no longer “a Jew” (see v.9), or “a Sir” (see vv. 11, 15), or “a Prophet” (see v. 19), but now the Messiah. This faith transforms her into a missionary. She leaves her water jar and goes to share her experience with the townspeople. Leaving her water jar symbolizes abandoning everything in favor of prioritizing the proclamation of the Gospel. The townspeople believe in Jesus thanks to the mission work of this woman (vv. 29-30, 39). However, they deepen their faith when they have their own experience with Jesus (see vv. 40-42). Vv. 31-38 captures Jesus’ conversation with his disciples. He tells them that the mission to do his Father’s will is his primary “food.” In their absence, he fulfilled this mission; he extended salvation to the Samaritans through this woman.

 

4.      Synthesis

The Jews did not consider the Samaritans to be the chosen people, yet Jesus extended salvation to them through a woman he met at Jacob’s well (vv. 5-6). The conversation unfolded in three stages and developed two essential topics: The Living Water as the Gift of God and (2) the revelation of Jesus’ divine identity. The first stage (vv. 7-15) focused on the Living Water as the Gift of God. Here, Jesus led this woman to believe that he is the Living Water, which, upon drinking it, becomes a spring of water welling up to eternal life. In the second stage (vv. 16-26), Jesus systematically helped this woman discover his divine identity. In the third stage (vv. 27-42), the woman became a missionary who spread news of Jesus to her townspeople. The Samaritans first believed in Jesus because of her missionary work, and later, they deepened their faith, no longer based on her words but on their own experience with Jesus.

 

B.     Pastoral Implications

 

1.      The Liturgical Context

The Gospel texts selected for the remainder of Lent serve as a form of sacramental catechesis, as catechumens begin intensive preparation for initiation into the sacraments. The liturgy of this Third Sunday of Lent invites us to meditate on the themes of the “Living Water” and the “Divine Identity of Jesus.” In the Gospel, Jesus affirms his divine identity to a Samaritan woman. Just as God provided drinking water to the thirsty Israelites in our first reading, Jesus is the source of Living Water for all who believe in him (Gospel). In the second reading, Saint Paul reminds us that Jesus, the Messiah, died for us and justified us. He then calls us to embrace the justification Jesus offers us through our faith in him, hope in eternal salvation, and love for God and our brothers and sisters.

 

2.      What the Church Teaches Us Today

Today, Jesus meets each of us as he met the Samaritan woman in our Gospel. The well symbolizes the baptistery and font where the catechumens will be baptized, and all of us, the baptized, will renew our baptismal promises at this coming Easter vigil. Our encounter with Jesus in the baptismal font of our Church will signify the moment of the full light of our faith in Christ.

In vv. 7-15, Jesus opens the conversation by asking for water because he is thirsty. In a spiritual sense, Jesus thirsts not for water but for extending salvation (the gift of God) and revealing his divine identity to the Samaritans. Jesus continues to feel “thirsty” even today. Jesus’ thirst is the Church’s thirst and our thirst. As Jesus’ followers, our mission is to extend God’s salvation to our brothers and sisters, including those we consider enemies, and help them believe in Jesus as the Messiah, who came to lead us to the full light of our faith in God through the water of baptism. In our Gospel, the woman tries to stop this conversation, reminding Jesus of the conflict between the Samaritans (represented by the woman) and the Jews (represented by Jesus). People may also prevent us from evangelizing them. Like Jesus, let us not give up because their salvation matters.

Then, the Samaritan woman compares Jesus to their patriarch, Jacob. At this point, she cannot go beyond their tradition, which considers Jacob the greatest because he gave them this pool, which continues to save their lives (v. 12). Like this woman, we sometimes allow our human traditions and convictions to prevent us from believing in Jesus. Our relationship with Jesus should be based not on material but on spiritual needs. For instance, we attend Mass, serve our Church in different ministries, and help people in our community not because we want Jesus to pay us back, but out of gratitude for his love.

In vv. 16-26, the narrator shifts the topic from the “living water” to “Jesus’ divine identity.” Through the woman in our Gospel, Jesus reveals how the Samaritans are unfaithful to God without passing judgment, as his goal is to call them to repentance and extend God’s salvation to them.  Jesus continues to unveil the secrets of our hearts to each of us. He knows us better than we know ourselves. He highlights our infidelity without judging us because his mission is to prompt us to repent and embrace the salvation he offers. In our second reading, Saint Paul tells us that Jesus died for us and justified us. Then, Saint Paul invites us to claim this justification through our faith in Jesus, hope in eternal salvation, and love for God and our brothers and sisters. We can achieve this only by regularly attending Mass and worshiping our God in “spirit and truth” in our local Churches, as Jesus prophesies to the woman in our Gospel (see v. 21). 

In vv. 27-42, the narrator reveals how this woman's faith journey reaches its fullness. She believes Jesus to be the Messiah and becomes his missionary, abandoning everything to prioritize the proclamation of the Gospel to her townspeople. Once our faith reaches its fullness at the end of this Lenten journey, the catechumens will receive the sacraments of initiation, and all of us, the baptized, will renew our baptismal promises during this Easter Vigil. Then, like the woman in our Gospel, we will become missionaries who prioritize proclaiming the Word of God to our brothers and sisters, inviting them to come to Jesus and experience him for themselves. The Samaritan people in our Gospel first believed in Jesus through the woman’s missionary work, and later, they deepened their faith through their own experience with Jesus. This signifies that we build our faith on what others (priests, parents, schoolteachers, catechists, etc.) tell us about Jesus and what we learn during this Lenten season. We should not stop there. After the sacraments of initiation (for the catechumens) and the renewal of the baptismal promises (for the baptized) during the Easter Vigil, we will be called to deepen our faith by starting our own one-on-one relationship with Jesus.

May this Eucharistic celebration enable us to experience Jesus, mature our faith in him, and become his missionaries wherever we live. Amen.  

Rev. Leon Ngandu, SVD

Pastor of Holy Family Catholic Church, Jackson, MS &

SVD USS Biblical Apostolate Coordinator

 



[1] NABRE, note to Jn 4:23.

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3rd Sunday of Lent, Year A – March 8, 2026

  3rd Sunday of Lent, Year A– March 8, 2026 Exodus 17:3-7; Romans 5:1-2, 5-8; John 4:5-42   Theme: The Living Water and The Divine Ide...