of Samaria to reach their destination. It was this city of Samaria, which the disciples were sent to buy food leaving the Lord Jesus alone resting at the well outside the city.
The well where our Lord was resting was known as "Jacob's well" (shown right). It was a very old and deep well. There was not many wells along the path the Lord Jesus was traveling so it was indeed a welcome site and one frequently visited by those who lived nearby and needed water.
A woman of Samaria came to well where the Lord Jesus was resting with her water jar to draw water. As the Samaritan woman approached the well, the Lord Give Me a drink" (John 4:10). The woman from Samaria obviously noting the Lord was a Jew, questioned the Lord's asking her for a drink of water. The Samaritans were a mixed race of people unlike the Jews and it was generally accepted that the Samaritans and Jews did not like each other and often were enemies whom fought one another.
The Samaritan woman was a very sinful woman whom had had many husbands and was openly living with a man outside of marriage when she met the Lord Jesus Christ. She did not have any remorse at all about her shameful life in which she chose to live. The Lord Jesus knew of her sinful ways, told her this lifestyle was wrong, and to confess, repent, and be converted to the Christian faith. She was very amazed and astounded at the all knowing of the Lord Jesus Christ about her life having never seen Him nor Him her.
The Lord Jesus Christ told the Samaritan woman about water that "lived" not that flowed from a stream or ran down the side of a mountain. "Living water" meant the grace of the Holy Spirit giving those who believe in our Lord Jesus and obey Him--eternal life that is they will go to Heaven.
First, the Samaritan woman thought our Lord was a great prophet or leader like Jacob whom the well was named after. She thought this because the Lord told her all the many sins she had committed. When the Samaritan woman left the well and went back to the city she told everyone, "Come, see a Man who told me all things that I ever did. Could this be the Christ?" (John 4:29).
The townspeople people followed the Samaritan woman back to Jacob's well. They asked the Lord to come to their town where they stayed with the Lord and listened to His teachings for two entire days. They did not ask "how much longer was the sermon" or "when will this be over so I can have something to eat and drink". They listened very carefully to all that the Lord Jesus Christ had to say.
This was also earmarked as a great Biblical event as it was the first time our Lord Jesus admitted to being a messenger from God our Father.
On the day of Pentecost, the Samaritan woman and her five sisters (Anatolia, Phota, Photida, Paraskeva and Kyriake) were baptized. When the Samaritan woman was baptized on the day of Pentecost she took the name "Photini" which means the enlightened one. St. Photini helped to spread the Good News about the Lord. Following her baptism, she became a missionary and was known for her brave Christian teachings. She went to Carthage to spread the gospel. She would give her life and that of her children for the Lord Jesus Christ by refusing to deny the Lord Jesus and His teachings. While there, her and her family (including her two sons Victor and Josiah) were arrested, taken to Rome under Nero, imprisoned and later martyred for Christ by being thrown into a well.
The holy, incorrupt foot of St. Photini the Great Martyr is treasured by the Monastery of Iveron in Mount Athos, Greece.
Read the chapter on Saint Photini in "Christina’s True Heroes" by Maria C. Khoury
One craft we found from Illumination Learning was to make water bottles in honor of St. Photini's service to Jesus Christ
Use a glass of water for a visual so the children can see the "living water" that flows through Christ our True God!