Sunday Homilies
Today is the fourth Sunday after Pascha. This Sunday of the Samaritan Woman marks a transition in focus from the Resurrection toward Pentecost. The living water Jesus promises to the woman at the well invites us to turn our attention to the action of the Holy Spirit inside a disciple of Christ. Even the dialogue between Jesus and this woman indicates the action of the Holy Spirit upon the heart and mind of this interesting woman. It is vital to remember that Jesus goes out of His way, breaking normal procedure for Jews, to go intentionally into Samaria rather than around to meet this specific woman. When He asks her for a drink, she shows her surprise through her response: “How is it that you, a Jew, ask a drink of me, a woman of Samaria?” Jesus immediately raises the level of engagement from the mundane to one of spiritual truths. This Samaritan Woman tries to stay focused on the practical, but Jesus raises the stakes of their conversation to the level of ultimate salvation and the very real obstacles she has in her personal life that He could not know about unless He were God. She does not quite reach this conclusion but settles for thinking He might be a prophet. Jesus again responds in such a way as to raise her thoughts above the prophets to the Messiah they promised. By the end of their brief encounter at the well, this woman forgot all about collecting water for her family and left the well believing she had just met the very Messiah Himself. Her conviction is so strong and her repentance so great that her own family and many of her fellow villagers also become disciples of the Lord Jesus. This encounter from Scripture is amazing, but what happens in her life after this event is also inspiring. After convincing her entire family, they were all baptized. This woman received the name Photini, which means “illumined one,” for she went from living in the dark to entering the light through her meeting the Light of the World. St. Photini and her entire family traveled all over the Roman Empire sharing their testimony and preaching the reality of the cross and resurrection to all who would listen. Their success at converting thousands reached the ears of the emperor. He had them arrested, tortured and eventually martyred for their faith. When the emperor heard how St. Photini became a Christian at a well, he cruelly threw her into a deep and dry well wherein she gloriously passed from this life into eternal life in her Lord's Kingdom.
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