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Perhaps
a word should be said here about the law of Moses and the teaching of
Jesus. Apart from respect for
parents, the key social commandments of Moses that is, the 5th commandment
re murder, the 6th one about adultery and the 7th one about stealing, are
taken to a new level by James (c/f analysis of Reality Search in Acts). James apparently warns against blood
sports, fornication, and unjust business practices. On the other hand it may appear the
gospel structures are about the construction of societies rather than
'pushing up the bar' as to what constitutes sin. The key 'sins' that Jesus chides
people about, appear to revolve around the barriers they put up to prevent
the building of a balanced society. Forgiveness is stressed and there are
warnings about hardness of heart.
So where is the connection between these two factors and the basic
moral law of Moses? A balanced
society allows the moral law to prevail. A balanced society requires
forgiveness and a compassionate heart.
These latter qualities may not appear to be crucial but in the
general picture they are.
Forgiveness fosters internalised law which in turn reflects the
spirit of Living Law.
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2. Invites
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Come and see/
Give me a drink
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1:35-51
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Into Galilee
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4:1-42
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Into Galilee
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1:35-51
The next day John (the Baptist) again stood (by the Jordan
river) with two of his disciples. He was looking at Jesus walking
along and said "Look, there is the Lamb of God." The two disciples heard him speaking
(on these lines) and they followed Jesus. Then Jesus turned and seeing them
following him said to them. "What are you looking for?" They replied to him "Rabbi -
(which means teacher), where are you staying?" He says to them "Come and see." They
therefore went and saw where he was staying and stayed with him that
day. At that time it was about
the tenth hour (4 p.m.). One of these two was Andrew the
brother of Simon Peter who had been listening to John and so followed
(Jesus). The first thing he did was to go and find his brother Simon
and say to him "We have found the Messiah - (which means the Christ).
(Then) he led him to Jesus.
Jesus looked at him and Continued
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4:1-42 When the Lord (Jesus) knew
that the Pharisees had heard how he was making and batpizing more disciples
than John, though it was his disciples baptizing and not himself, he left
Judea and went back into Galilee.
It suited him to pass through Samaria. He came therefore to a city of Samaria
being called Sychar, near the piece of land that Jacob had given to his son
Joseph. There was there a well
of Jacob. Therefore Jesus who
had become weary from the journey sat by the well. It was about midday. A woman of Samaria came along to draw water. Jesus says to her "Give me a drink." His disciples had gone away
meanwhile into the city to buy food.
The Samaritan woman said.
"How is it that you, who are a Jew ask me, a woman who is a
Samaritan for a drink? Jews do not associate with Samaritans." Jesus answered and said to her. "If you knew the gift of God
and who the one is who is asking you "Give me a drink", it would
be yourself doing the asking and he would have given you living water." She said to him "Sir you do not
have a bucket. And the well is deep.
How then could you have living water? Are you greater than our
father Jacob who gave us the well and
drank of it himself as well as his sons and his cattle." Jesus answered and said to her
"Everyone who drinks this water will thirst again. But whoever drinks of the water that
I give to them will by no means thirst again until the end of the age. The water that I will give will
become a fountain within that person and it will well up into eternal
life." The woman says to
him "Give me this water so that I will not be thirsty again nor need
to come here to draw up water."
He says to her "Go and tell your husband to come
here." The woman answered
and said "I do not have a husband." Jesus says to her "Well said by
saying "I do not have a husband." Indeed you have had five husbands
and the man who is with you now is not your husband. You have spoken truly." The woman says to him "Sir I
perceive that you Cont.
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Continued said "You are Simon the son of John. You will be called Cephas - (which
is translated Peter, the rock).
On the next day (Jesus) headed towards Galilee and found
Philip. Jesus says to him
"Follow me." Now
Phillip was from Bethsaida which was also
the city of Andrew
and of Peter. Then Phillip
found Nathanael and tells him "We have found the one that was
written about in the law of Moses and in the prophets. He is Jesus the son of Joseph from
Nazareth. Nathanael said to him. "Can any good come out of Nazareth?" Philip says to him "Come and
see." Jesus saw
Nathanael as he approached and said about him "Look here comes a
true Israelite. There is no
guile in him." Nathanael
(on coming up) said to him "How
is you know me?" Jesus
answered and said to him "Before Philip called you, when you were
under the fig-tree, I saw you."
Nathanael answered him "Rabbi, you are the Son of God. You are king of Israel." Jesus answered and said to
him. "Do you believe
(this) because I told you that I saw you underneath the fig-tree? You will see greater things
than this." He (Jesus) said to Nathanael) "Truly truly I tell
you, you will see heaven opened up and the angels of God going up and
coming down upon to the son of Man."
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Continued
that you are a
prophet. Our fathers
worshipped in this mountain and you say that Jerusalem is the place where one should
worship." Jesus says to
her "Believe me woman, the hour is coming when neither in this
mountain nor in Jerusalem
will you worship the Father.
You worship what you do not know. We worship what we do know because
salvation (is to come) from the Jews. But an hour is coming and indeed
has come, when the true worshippers will worship the Father in spirit and
in truth. Indeed the Father
is looking for those who will worship him (in this way). God is spirit and it behoves those
who worship in spirit and in truth to worship him (this way)." The woman says to him "I know that the Messiah is
coming. He is the one who is
called Christ. When this one
comes he will tell us everything." Jesus said to her "I am that
one who is talking with you (here and now)." With this the disciples came upon
him and they marvelled that he was talking with a woman. However nobody said "What are
you looking for or why are you speaking with her?" Rather, the woman left her water
pot and went away into the city.
She said to the men there.
"Come and see a man who has told me everything I have
done. Would this not be the
Christ?" They therefore
went out of the city and came to him. In the meantime his disciples
asked him saying "Rabbi (will you not) eat?" But he said to
them "I have food to eat that you do not know about." The disciples therefore said to one another "Has someone
brought him something to eat?"
Jesus said to them "My food is to the will of the one who has
sent me a so that I may finish his work. Do you not say that in four months
there will be the harvest?
Look I tell you, lift up your eyes and see the fields. They are white and ready to
harvest (now). Already the
one who reaps receives wages and gathers fruit to eternal life. So that the one who sows may
rejoice together with the one who reaps. In this way the word is true that
one person sows while another one reaps. I have sent you to reap what you
have not laboured for. Others
have laboured and you have entered into their labour." Meanwhile many people out of that
Samaritan city believed in him because of the word of the woman who gave
witness in saying "He told me everything that I have
done." Therefore when
the Samaritans came they asked him to stay with them and he did stay
there for two days. There
were more still, who believed because of his word(s). To the woman they said "We no
longer believe because of what you say. We have heard for ourselves and we
know that this man is truly the Saviour of the world."
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At the back of John's gospel we have a
situation in which Jewish Christians and Gentile Christians are trying
to co-exist and find some specific ways of linking themselves together
into the future. By John's
selection of what was said and done, it appears he is addressing those
of a Gentile background in his Section B in order to draw them towards
a deeper appreciation of faith (and authority). What does he mean talking about
those who sow being together with those who reap? Over the centuries the Jews had
laboriously witnessed to the rest of the world, the existence of a
moral God. It was they who 'sowed' this understanding of God amongst
their neighbours. Now it is
the believers of a Gentile background who are 'reaping' converts who
are ready to become believers in such a God. John acknowledges the importance
and validity of the background of the Jewish heritage and the
Christians who have converted from Judaism..
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