Friday, March 6, 2026

Leaving our Water Jars Behind:

 

Leaving our Water Jars Behind

                                          

The Third Sunday in Lent 2026 

March 8, 2026

www.johnpredmoresj.com | predmore.blogspot.com

Exodus 17:3-7; Psalm 95; Romans 5:1-8; John 4:5-42

 

The overwhelming theme in this passage is that we thirst and that God is the only reality that quenches our real thirst. Moses deals with the grumbling Israelites as they stumble through the parched desert. God provides a supply of water from a rock to settle their physical thirst. We are not in our right minds if we are thirsty, and many of us do not hydrate well enough. The Israelites hardened their hearts of Meribah and Massah and they doubted God’s care.

 

The woman at the well was spiritually thirsty and the encounter with Jesus revealed the depth of her desires for God and for liberation. The conversation with Jesus reveals her identity, her mission, and her redemption. She becomes the person she was designed to be from the beginning without shame, without regret, and with great courage. Jesus also becomes the person he was designed to be when he lay on the cross and yelled, “I thirst.” 

 

A detail in the Gospel that strikes me as important is that this woman left behind her water jar. She was full, full of her restored personhood. She was spiritually filled. Her conversion was complete through that encounter with Jesus. This is the invitation for Lent for us because we fill ourselves with so many things that do not satisfy. We remain thirsty until we have this needed encounter with Christ. 

 

We consume in order to be nourished, and we miss the mark. We thirst because our needs are not met. What are some of those things that we seek? Affirmation and acceptance, the pursuit of success and a sense of belonging, positive regard and respect from others, control over people and situations, intimacy and meaningful relationships, and so much more. We thirst for many needs that remain unmet. We have been trying to drink many things that are not God, and we remain restless. We try to pray, we fast, we do good works, and we have to let “thirst” become our prayer because only God can provide this living water. 

 

The woman at the well had to stay in conversation and her sarcasm moved to sincerity. That’s what we want. Authenticity. To be seen and known. To be valued. To be embraced at our core. The living water that we seek is a real encounter with God that moves us to stay in the conversation. We want a meaningful relationship with God in which we can relate comfortably and often. We want to feel the presence of God so we know we are on the right track. We need to stay open enough to receive what God wants to generously give to us. God’s grace is a gift to us. Jesus reminds the woman, and us, If you knew the gift of God…” All we have to do is ask. 

 

Our work is to believe in these words of the Gospel: Jesus said to her,
“I am he, the one speaking with you.” Our belief helps us to worship in spirit and in truth, and we can be like the faithful woman at the well. We can leave our water jars behind. 

 


 

Thursday, March 5, 2026

The Gift of Hope . . .





https://www.ncronline.org/opinion/guest-voices/these-hopeless-times-hope-gift-and-choice

A Blessing in stormy times . . .

 




May God be the Anchor of your life, keeping you steady in stormy times, holding you in a place of trust when waves of violence and hopelessness threaten to rock your life. May you cling to this Anchor of unconditional love and may you be an anchor of love and compassion to those around you. May God the Anchor, the God of Stability, bless and keep you.

--Maxine Shonk, OP

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

It's all about ambition . .



Link for video:

 https://youtu.be/5bT4Aykwtz4?list=PLpTzvCOJa7DAoMqHc4moKtTJSI6gsth32






A Prayer for Guidance . . .

 


Trust That Guidance Will Come

Trust and act on the guidance you have now.  Some parts of our lives appear like a long, paved highway.  We can see exactly where to go; we have a panoramic view.

Other times, it may feel like we’re driving in the dark with only one headlight - on a winding road through the fog.  We can only see a few feet in front of the car.

Don’t worry if you can’t see that far ahead, if you only have a glimmer of light to guide your path.  Slow down.  Listen to your heart.  Guidance will come.

Trust what you hear.  Do the small thing.  Take that one step.  Go as far as you can see.  Then go back to your heart, and you’ll hear the next step.  It may be a step of immediate action, or deliberate inaction.

Sometimes you may have to quiet down, wait, and prepare yourself to hear what you’re to do next.  Trust and act on the guidance you have  now, and more will come.

(Melodie Beattie ~Journey to the Heart)



Blessing for Waiting

 



Who wait for the night to end.

bless them.

 

Who wait for the night to begin

bless them.

 

Who wait in the hospital room

who wait in the cell

who wait in prayer

bless them.

 

Who wait for news

who wait for the phone call

who wait for a word

who wait for a job - a house - a child

bless them.

 

Who wait for one who will come home...

who wait for one who

will not come home

bless them.

 

Who wait with fear

who wait with joy

who wait with peace

who wait with rage

who wait for the end

who wait for the beginning

who wait alone

who wait together

bless them.

 

Who wait without knowing

what they wait for or why

bless them.

 

Who wait when they

should not wait

who wait when they should

be in motion

who wait when they need to rise

who wait when they need to set out

bless them.

 

Who wait for the end of waiting

who wait for the fullness of time

who wait emptied and

open and ready

who wait for you,

O bless.

 

Jan Richardson

Circle of Grace http://www.janrichardson.com/index.htmlichardson.com 
janrichardson.com

A Lenten Prayer for Peace of Heart . . .

 


A LENTEN PRAYER

God of peace,
you do not want us to know relentless worry
but rather a humble repentance of heart.
It is like a surge of trusting that enables us

to place our faults in you.
And then, by the inner light of forgiveness,
little by little we discover a peace of heart.

 

Christ of compassion,
through your Gospel we discover
that measuring what we are or what we are not leads nowhere.
What matters is the humble trusting of faith.
By it we are led to glimpse the innocence of God
And to understand that “all God can do is give love.”

 

Holy Spirit,
even when we can feel nothing of your presence,

you are always there.
You remain continually active in us,
opening little ways forward to escape from our dead ends
And to move towards the essential of faith, of trust.

May we ever keep safe in all its fullness
the gift your love once gave
and your mercy now restores.

Amen

— Taizé, adapted