Sunday 15 March 2020
Third Sunday of Lent
Morning Masses in the Novus Ordo 8.30 & 10.15am- Evening Mass 6pm
St Peter's Catholic Church SS9 4BX
Eastwood Parish - Leigh on Sea
Please Note-Tuesday Evening Masses in the Ordinariate Use are Temporarily suspended
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Striking the Rock:
Scott Hahn Reflects on the Third Sunday of Lent
The Woman at the Well, Carl Heinrich Bloch, 1872
Readings:
Exodus 17:3–7
Psalm 95:1–2, 6–9
Romans 5:1–2, 5–8
John 4:5–15, 19–26, 39–42
The Israelites’ hearts were hardened by their hardships in the desert.
Though they have seen His mighty deeds, in their thirst they grumble
and put God to the test in today’s First Reading—a crisis point recalled
also in today’s Psalm.
Jesus is thirsty, too, in today’s Gospel. He thirsts for souls (see John 19:28). He longs to give the Samaritan woman the living waters that well up to eternal life.
These waters couldn’t be drawn from the well of Jacob, father of the
Israelites and the Samaritans, but Jesus was something greater than
Jacob (see Luke 11:31–32).
The Samaritans were Israelites who escaped exile when Assyria conquered the Northern Kingdom eight centuries before Christ (see 2 Kings 17:6, 24–41). They were despised for intermarrying with non-Israelites and worshipping at Mount Gerazim, not Jerusalem.
But Jesus tells the woman that the “hour” of true worship is coming, when all will worship God in Spirit and truth.
Jesus’ “hour” is the “appointed time” that Paul speaks of in today’s
Epistle. It is the hour when the Rock of our salvation was struck on the
Cross. Struck by the soldier’s lance, living waters flowed out from our
Rock (see John 19:34–37).
These waters are the Holy Spirit (see John 7:38–39), the gift of God (see Hebrews 6:4).
By the living waters the ancient enmities of Samaritans and Jews have
been washed away, the dividing wall between Israel and the nations is
broken down (see Ephesians 2:12–14, 18). Since His hour, all may drink of the Spirit in Baptism (see 1 Corinthians 12:13).
In this Eucharist, the Lord now is in our midst—as He was at the Rock of Horeb and at the well of Jacob.
In the “today” of our Liturgy, He calls us to believe: “I am He,”
come to pour out the love of God into our hearts through the Holy
Spirit. How can we continue to worship as if we don’t understand? How
can our hearts remain hardened?
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