Commentary
Traveling from Judea toward Galilee, Jesus stops at Jacob's well in Samaria and asks a Samaritan woman for water. The exchange moves from literal thirst to the "living water" Jesus gives, then through the truthful exposure of her marital history to the question of where God is rightly worshiped. Jesus declares that the hour has arrived when the Father seeks worshipers not defined by Gerizim or Jerusalem, but by worship in spirit and truth, and he openly identifies himself as the Messiah. The woman brings her town to him, and Jesus interprets the arriving Samaritans as a field already white for harvest. The scene presents Jesus as the giver of eternal life, the revealer of the Father, and the one through whom faith is already taking root beyond customary Jewish boundaries.
John 4:1-42 shows Jesus giving life and revealing the Father across the Samaritan-Jewish divide: his word creates true worshipers, exposes sin without evasion, and turns an unlikely encounter at the well into a present harvest of faith.
4:1 Now when Jesus knew that the Pharisees had heard that he was winning and baptizing more disciples than John 4:2 (although Jesus himself was not baptizing, but his disciples were), 4:3 he left Judea and set out once more for Galilee. 4:4 But he had to pass through Samaria. 4:5 Now he came to a Samaritan town called Sychar, near the plot of land that Jacob had given to his son Joseph. 4:6 Jacob's well was there, so Jesus, since he was tired from the journey, sat right down beside the well. It was about noon. 4:7 A Samaritan woman came to draw water. Jesus said to her, "Give me some water to drink." 4:8 (For his disciples had gone off into the town to buy supplies.) 4:9 So the Samaritan woman said to him, "How can you - a Jew - ask me, a Samaritan woman, for water to drink?" (For Jews use nothing in common with Samaritans.) 4:10 Jesus answered her, "If you had known the gift of God and who it is who said to you, 'Give me some water to drink,' you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water." 4:11 "Sir," the woman said to him, "you have no bucket and the well is deep; where then do you get this living water? 4:12 Surely you're not greater than our ancestor Jacob, are you? For he gave us this well and drank from it himself, along with his sons and his livestock." 4:13 Jesus replied, "Everyone who drinks some of this water will be thirsty again. 4:14 But whoever drinks some of the water that I will give him will never be thirsty again, but the water that I will give him will become in him a fountain of water springing up to eternal life." 4:15 The woman said to him, "Sir, give me this water, so that I will not be thirsty or have to come here to draw water." 4:16 He said to her, "Go call your husband and come back here." 4:17 The woman replied, "I have no husband." Jesus said to her, "Right you are when you said, 'I have no husband,' 4:18 for you have had five husbands, and the man you are living with now is not your husband. This you said truthfully!" 4:19 The woman said to him, "Sir, I see that you are a prophet. 4:20 Our fathers worshiped on this mountain, and you people say that the place where people must worship is in Jerusalem." 4:21 Jesus said to her, "Believe me, woman, a time is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem. 4:22 You people worship what you do not know. We worship what we know, because salvation is from the Jews. 4:23 But a time is coming - and now is here - when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father seeks such people to be his worshipers. 4:24 God is spirit, and the people who worship him must worship in spirit and truth." 4:25 The woman said to him, "I know that Messiah is coming" (the one called Christ); "whenever he comes, he will tell us everything." 4:26 Jesus said to her, "I, the one speaking to you, am he." 4:27 Now at that very moment his disciples came back. They were shocked because he was speaking with a woman. However, no one said, "What do you want?" or "Why are you speaking with her?" 4:28 Then the woman left her water jar, went off into the town and said to the people, 4:29 "Come, see a man who told me everything I ever did. Surely he can't be the Messiah, can he?" 4:30 So they left the town and began coming to him. 4:31 Meanwhile the disciples were urging him, "Rabbi, eat something." 4:32 But he said to them, "I have food to eat that you know nothing about." 4:33 So the disciples began to say to one another, "No one brought him anything to eat, did they?" 4:34 Jesus said to them, "My food is to do the will of the one who sent me and to complete his work. 4:35 Don't you say, 'There are four more months and then comes the harvest?' I tell you, look up and see that the fields are already white for harvest! 4:36 The one who reaps receives pay and gathers fruit for eternal life, so that the one who sows and the one who reaps can rejoice together. 4:37 For in this instance the saying is true, 'One sows and another reaps.' 4:38 I sent you to reap what you did not work for; others have labored and you have entered into their labor." 4:39 Now many Samaritans from that town believed in him because of the report of the woman who testified, "He told me everything I ever did." 4:40 So when the Samaritans came to him, they began asking him to stay with them. He stayed there two days, 4:41 and because of his word many more believed. 4:42 They said to the woman, "No longer do we believe because of your words, for we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this one really is the Savior of the world."
Observation notes
- The unit repeatedly uses misunderstanding as a narrative device: water, husband, worship, food, and harvest are all first heard at a surface level and then reinterpreted by Jesus.
- John notes Jesus' fatigue and thirst at the well, which grounds the scene in ordinary human experience even as the conversation reveals extraordinary knowledge and authority.
- The woman is marked by multiple boundaries: Samaritan, female, and morally compromised, and the narrative deliberately foregrounds these barriers before showing Jesus transcend them.
- Gift of God,' 'living water,' and 'eternal life' connect Jesus' offer not merely to relief from physical need but to divine life mediated through him.
- Jesus does not leave the woman's sin unaddressed; disclosure of her history is integral to the movement toward recognition rather than a detachable moral aside.
- The contrast between 'our fathers worshiped on this mountain' and 'we worship what we know, because salvation is from the Jews' preserves Jewish salvation-historical priority even while announcing a coming change in worship's location and mode.
- The phrase 'a time is coming—and now is here' signals inaugurated fulfillment: the future order of worship has already begun in Jesus' ministry.
- The Father is central in the worship section; true worship is not generic spirituality but response to the Father as he is now revealed through the Son's mission, in accordance with truth and by the reality signaled in 'spirit.
- The woman's leaving her water jar is a small but telling narrative marker: the original task recedes as witness to Jesus becomes urgent.
- The harvest saying is interpreted by the immediate context, where Samaritans are already on their way to Jesus; the imagery is not abstract but missionally concrete.
- The closing confession 'Savior of the world' expands the scope of Jesus' significance beyond Judea and anticipates the Gospel's wider horizon of faith.
Structure
- 4:1-6 sets the travel situation, locating Jesus at Jacob's well in Samaria and noting both his deliberate route and his physical weariness.
- 4:7-15 opens the dialogue with the Samaritan woman, moving from ordinary water to Jesus' offer of living water that becomes a spring unto eternal life.
- 4:16-19 exposes the woman's relational history, validating Jesus' supernatural knowledge and shifting her estimate of him from stranger to prophet.
- 4:20-26 redirects the worship dispute from mountain versus Jerusalem to worship of the Father in spirit and truth, climaxing in Jesus' self-revelation as the Messiah.
- 4:27-30 records the disciples' return and the woman's immediate witness to her townspeople, which begins drawing others to Jesus.
- 4:31-38 uses the disciples' misunderstanding about food to interpret Jesus' mission as obedience to the Father and to frame the incoming Samaritans as a ready harvest involving both sowers and reapers together.
- 4:39-42 concludes with two stages of Samaritan belief: first through the woman's testimony and then through direct hearing of Jesus, culminating in the confession that he is the Savior of the world.
Key terms
hydor zon
Strong's: G5204, G2198
Gloss: living, life-giving water
The term carries the conversation from physical need to Jesus as the source of divine life, controlling the passage's movement from well water to salvation.
dorea
Strong's: G1431
Gloss: gift, gracious giving
This wording places the initiative with God and prepares for Jesus' life-giving provision as grace, not ritual achievement.
zoe aionios
Strong's: G2222, G166
Gloss: life of the age, everlasting life
The passage is not about improved earthly conditions but about participation in the life Jesus mediates.
proskyneo
Strong's: G4352
Gloss: worship, bow in reverence
Its repetition makes worship the controlling issue in the middle of the dialogue and shows that Jesus' mission creates a new worship reality.
pneuma
Strong's: G4151
Gloss: spirit
The term guards against reducing worship to locality or external system, while still keeping it tethered to God's own nature and revelation.
aletheia
Strong's: G225
Gloss: truth, reality, genuineness
The term prevents 'spirit' from being read as mere inward sincerity detached from revelation.
Syntactical features
Conditional sentence introducing the offer
Textual signal: "If you had known the gift of God and who it is... you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water" (4:10)
Interpretive effect: The unreal condition exposes the woman's present ignorance and simultaneously identifies knowledge of Jesus' identity as decisive for receiving his gift.
Universal and particular contrast
Textual signal: "Everyone who drinks... will thirst again / whoever drinks... will never be thirsty again" (4:13-14)
Interpretive effect: The formulation sharply contrasts temporary physical provision with the enduring sufficiency of what Jesus gives.
Double temporal formula of inauguration
Textual signal: "a time is coming—and now is here" (4:23)
Interpretive effect: This signals that the transformation of worship belongs both to an anticipated future and to a present reality already arriving in Jesus' ministry.
Necessity statement
Textual signal: "the people who worship him must worship in spirit and truth" (4:24)
Interpretive effect: The wording marks this not as one valid preference among others but as the necessary mode of worship corresponding to God's nature.
Emphatic self-identification
Textual signal: "I, the one speaking to you, am he" (4:26)
Interpretive effect: The directness of Jesus' declaration forms the narrative climax of the dialogue and explains the woman's subsequent witness.
Textual critical issues
John 4:9 explanatory comment
Variants: Some witnesses vary in the wording of the parenthetical explanation about Jewish-Samaritan relations, including whether the verb is framed as 'have no dealings with' or with a nuance involving shared use of utensils.
Preferred reading: The standard explanatory note that Jews do not associate or use things in common with Samaritans.
Interpretive effect: The exact nuance affects how specifically the social hostility is described, but not the larger point that strong ethnic-religious separation makes Jesus' request surprising.
Rationale: The broader narrative context already requires a real boundary, and the common reading fits both the woman's response and John's explanatory style.
John 4:42 confession wording
Variants: Some manuscripts read 'the Christ, the Savior of the world' while others read simply 'the Savior of the world.'
Preferred reading: 'the Savior of the world.'
Interpretive effect: Including 'the Christ' would make the confession slightly more explicit, but the shorter reading already carries a climactic universal claim and fits John's tendency toward concise confessional statements.
Rationale: The shorter reading is widely supported and the longer form likely reflects explanatory expansion.
Old Testament background
Jeremiah 2:13
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The contrast between broken cisterns and the Lord as the fountain of living waters forms a strong backdrop for Jesus' claim to give water that truly satisfies.
Isaiah 12:3
Connection type: echo
Note: The imagery of drawing water with joy from the wells of salvation illuminates the salvation-life symbolism attached to Jesus' living water.
Isaiah 55:1
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The invitation to the thirsty to come and receive aligns with Jesus' gracious offer of life-giving water.
Ezekiel 36:25-27
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: Promises of cleansing and a new spiritual reality help frame worship no longer tied merely to place but to God's renewing action.
Genesis 33:18-20; Joshua 24:32
Connection type: pattern
Note: The Jacob/Sychar setting evokes patriarchal inheritance and covenant memory, against which Jesus appears as greater than Jacob and the bringer of a fuller gift.
Interpretive options
Meaning of 'he had to pass through Samaria' (4:4)
- Primarily geographic necessity on the route from Judea to Galilee.
- A deeper divine-mission necessity within John's theology of Jesus as the one sent by the Father.
Preferred option: A divine-mission necessity expressed through the travel route.
Rationale: While the route explains the movement at the narrative level, John's use of necessity and the way the scene unfolds as a purposeful encounter suggest more than mere geography.
Meaning of 'worship in spirit and truth'
- Primarily inward sincerity contrasted with external ritual.
- Worship enabled by the new spiritual order Jesus inaugurates and governed by the truth of God's self-revelation in him.
- A direct reference to the Holy Spirit plus objective doctrinal truth.
Preferred option: Worship enabled by the new spiritual order Jesus inaugurates and governed by the truth of God's self-revelation in him.
Rationale: The immediate context contrasts ignorance with knowledge and locality with the Father-seeking true worshipers; this favors a reading broader and richer than mere sincerity, while not requiring a fully developed later pneumatological formula.
Force of 'salvation is from the Jews'
- A temporary polemical concession to the woman before universalizing salvation.
- A salvation-historical claim that God's saving revelation comes through the Jewish covenantal line, even as its saving reach extends beyond Israel.
- A statement only about proper temple location in Jerusalem.
Preferred option: A salvation-historical claim that God's saving revelation comes through the Jewish covenantal line, even as its saving reach extends beyond Israel.
Rationale: The phrase sits within the worship discussion but exceeds geography, grounding Jesus' universal mission in Israel's historical role rather than erasing it.
Identity of the sowers in 4:36-38
- The prophets and earlier Old Testament witnesses.
- John the Baptist and preparatory ministry immediately preceding Jesus.
- Jesus himself and others who have labored before the disciples, without requiring a single exclusive referent.
Preferred option: Jesus himself and others who have labored before the disciples, without requiring a single exclusive referent.
Rationale: The plural 'others have labored' and the immediate setting allow a composite background; the point is that the disciples enter work already advanced by prior divine preparation.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The unit must be read within John's recurring pattern of sign, misunderstanding, revelation, and faith; the closing Samaritan confession interprets the whole scene better than isolated phrases do.
mention_principles
Relevance: high
Note: 'Salvation is from the Jews' mentions Jewish salvation-historical priority without denying the immediate inclusion of Samaritans; mention of one line of redemptive origin should not be turned into ethnic exclusivism.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: The passage's center is Jesus' identity as giver of living water, revealer of the Father, and Messiah; worship language must be interpreted through his self-disclosure, not abstracted from him.
moral
Relevance: medium
Note: The woman's sexual history is neither the whole point nor irrelevant; Jesus' revelation reaches moral reality directly, so the text resists both moralistic reduction and sin-blind sentimentalism.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: high
Note: Water, food, and harvest are symbolic within the narrative, but each symbol is anchored in the literal setting; this guards against uncontrolled allegory.
chronometrical_dispensational
Relevance: medium
Note: The move from mountain/Jerusalem rivalry to worship in spirit and truth reflects a redemptive-historical transition in administration without denying prior Jewish covenantal significance.
Theological significance
- Jesus gives what Jacob's well cannot: life that does not end in renewed thirst but becomes a spring "to eternal life."
- The dispute over Gerizim and Jerusalem is not settled by endorsing one rival sanctuary over the other; Jesus announces that the Father is now seeking worshipers in a new mode fitted to God's own nature and revelation.
- The line "salvation is from the Jews" preserves Israel's salvation-historical role even as the story moves toward the Samaritan confession that Jesus is "the Savior of the world."
- Jesus' knowledge of the woman's life is neither incidental nor merely condemnatory; it advances recognition, bringing hidden reality into the open under his truthful word.
- The Father's initiative governs the scene: he seeks worshipers, and the Son's sustaining "food" is to do the Father's will and finish his work.
- The harvest image presents mission as entry into work God has already prepared, not as a field the disciples create by their own effort.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The dialogue works by repeated shifts in level: water, food, and harvest begin as ordinary terms and are then filled with revelatory meaning by Jesus. John uses misunderstanding not as ornament but as a way of showing how natural perception must be corrected by the speaker's identity.
Biblical theological: At Jacob's well and within the Gerizim-Jerusalem dispute, Jesus steps into Israel's covenantal story and carries it forward. He does not erase Jewish priority; he brings its goal into view and extends its saving reach to Samaritans.
Metaphysical: The passage assumes that visible needs are real but not final. Thirst, hunger, and place matter, yet Jesus speaks of a deeper order in which eternal life, true worship, and the Father's will define what is most real.
Psychological Spiritual: Recognition unfolds in stages. The woman moves from stranger, to sir, to prophet, to possible Messiah; the townspeople move from trust in her report to conviction grounded in hearing Jesus for themselves.
Divine Perspective: God is portrayed as actively seeking worshipers rather than waiting passively for them, and the Son's mission brings grace into a setting marked by hostility, confusion, and moral exposure.
Category: character
Note: The Father seeks worshipers, showing initiative rather than mere response to human religious searching.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: Jesus' plain self-identification to the woman shows divine revelation arriving personally and authoritatively.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: The Samaritans' response shows that God's saving work is already underway before the disciples fully grasp it.
Category: attributes
Note: "God is spirit" grounds why worship cannot finally be contained by sacred geography.
- Jesus is tired and thirsty at the well, yet he offers water that ends thirst in a deeper sense.
- Salvation comes from the Jews, yet the Samaritans rightly confess Jesus as the Savior of the world.
- Worship is no longer tied to Gerizim or Jerusalem, yet it is not left undefined or relativized.
- The woman's witness is effective, yet fuller belief comes through direct hearing of Jesus.
Enrichment summary
Read within the Samaritan-Jewish dispute over covenant legitimacy and sanctuary, the woman's question about worship is central rather than evasive. Jesus neither grants Samaritan claims nor simply reasserts Jerusalem as the final answer. He affirms Jewish salvation-historical priority and then declares that, with his coming, access to the Father is being recast. In that setting, "living water" carries scriptural resonance with God's own life-giving provision, and the arrival of the townspeople functions as an early sign of end-time ingathering across a long-standing communal breach.
Traditions of men check
A therapeutic reading that treats any mention of sin as contrary to compassion.
Why it conflicts: Jesus brings the woman's relational history into the conversation as part of his revelatory work, not as a lapse in mercy.
Textual pressure point: 4:16-19 connects the disclosure of her life with her recognition that he is a prophet.
Caution: The scene does not license harsh imitation; it shows truthful exposure under Jesus' redemptive authority.
A relativistic reading of "neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem" that treats all worship claims as equally valid.
Why it conflicts: Jesus says the Samaritans worship in ignorance, affirms that salvation is from the Jews, and insists on worship "in spirit and truth."
Textual pressure point: 4:22-24 joins critique, salvation-history, and necessity.
Caution: Jesus transcends the sanctuary rivalry by fulfilling it, not by suspending truth.
A ministry culture that treats evangelism mainly as technique and measurable strategy.
Why it conflicts: Jesus describes the disciples as entering labor already performed by others and points to a harvest already prepared before they perceive it.
Textual pressure point: 4:35-38 frames reaping as participation in prior divine work.
Caution: This does not minimize witness; the woman still speaks, and the disciples are still sent.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: temple_cultic_frame
Why It Matters: The Gerizim-versus-Jerusalem dispute concerns rightful sanctuary, covenant legitimacy, and where Israel's God is to be approached. Jesus first affirms Jewish salvation-historical priority and then announces that the decisive transition in worship is arriving through his mission.
Western Misread: Reducing the exchange to a discussion of worship style or private spirituality.
Interpretive Difference: "In spirit and truth" names a new access-to-God reality bound to the Father and disclosed through Jesus, not simply inward feeling.
Dynamic: corporate_vs_individual
Why It Matters: The conversation is personal, but the language of "our fathers," "you people," and the town's response shows that communal estrangement is in view throughout. The woman's testimony becomes the opening through which a wider Samaritan response emerges.
Western Misread: Reading the scene only as an individual healing moment.
Interpretive Difference: The story addresses a historic breach between peoples and presents the Samaritan response as a concrete firstfruits harvest, not merely a private conversion account.
Idioms and figures
Expression: living water
Category: idiom
Explanation: At the surface level the phrase can mean fresh or flowing water, which explains the woman's first response. In Israel's scriptural world it also evokes God's own life-giving provision. Jesus uses the ordinary sense to lead into the deeper claim that he gives what the well cannot.
Interpretive effect: The image points to divine life mediated through Jesus, not merely to better water or vague spiritual uplift.
Expression: worship in spirit and truth
Category: other
Explanation: The phrase is often reduced either to inward sincerity or to a later technical formula about the Holy Spirit and correct doctrine. In this setting it fits worship shaped by the new reality Jesus brings and governed by the truth of God's self-disclosure, with genuine Spirit resonance.
Interpretive effect: It rules out both subjectivism and detached dogmatic reduction; worship is no longer site-bound, yet it remains normed by revelation.
Expression: My food is to do the will of the one who sent me
Category: metaphor
Explanation: Jesus uses food as an image for the sustaining force of obedience to the Father. As with the water motif, the disciples first hear the saying at the material level before Jesus gives its deeper meaning.
Interpretive effect: The metaphor shows that mission is not an external task added to Jesus' life but the very thing that sustains it.
Expression: the fields are already white for harvest
Category: metaphor
Explanation: Harvest imagery commonly evokes ingathering, and here the saying is anchored in the immediate scene of Samaritans coming out to meet Jesus.
Interpretive effect: The image should first be read as Jesus' interpretation of the present moment before it is generalized to later mission.
Application implications
- Crossing entrenched social, ethnic, or moral boundaries is not secondary to Jesus' mission in this scene; Christian witness should expect him to work in places religious instinct may avoid.
- Witness should aim beyond interest in the messenger toward direct engagement with Jesus' word, since the Samaritans' confession deepens when they hear him for themselves.
- Worship should be tested by its correspondence to the Father as revealed by the Son, not by inherited rivalries, sacred nostalgia, or mere sincerity.
- Hidden shame is not beyond the reach of Christ's life-giving word; in this scene truthful exposure becomes part of the road to recognition rather than a barrier to grace.
- Those engaged in ministry should learn to notice where God has already prepared response instead of assuming every field is still months away from harvest.
Enrichment applications
- Judge worship less by place, ancestry, or branding and more by whether it is actually shaped by the Father as revealed in the Son.
- Expect gospel response across inherited communal hostilities; the Samaritans in this scene are not a marginal aside but the visible harvest in front of the disciples.
- Let testimony function as invitation rather than replacement, since the woman's report is crucial but the town's fuller conviction comes through hearing Jesus.
Warnings
- Do not reduce "worship in spirit and truth" to either bare inward sincerity or a fully developed later doctrinal formula without attending to the immediate argument.
- Do not over-symbolize every narrative detail; the well, water jar, and noon setting serve the story, but not every element carries independent theological weight.
- Do not read the Samaritan response as canceling 4:22; the passage keeps universal scope and Jewish salvation-historical priority together.
- Do not let the woman's marital history eclipse the main movement of the scene toward revelation, worship, and faith.
- Read the harvest saying first against the arrival of the Samaritans in 4:30 and 4:39-42 before extending it more broadly.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not claim more precision about Samaritan beliefs and practices than the evidence supports; the central rivalry is clear, but some reconstructions remain tentative.
- Do not use the passage to argue against all gathered or embodied worship; Jesus is relativizing contested sanctuary claims, not endorsing disembodied spirituality.
- Do not force "living water" into either an exclusively non-pneumatological reading or an exhaustive later doctrine of the Spirit; the phrase carries life-giving meaning with strong Spirit resonance.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: "In spirit and truth" means any sincere spiritual approach to God is acceptable.
Why It Happens: Readers detach the phrase from the dispute over true worship and from Jesus' own role in revealing the Father.
Correction: Jesus contrasts ignorance and knowledge, affirms Jewish salvation-historical priority, and then announces a new worship reality tied to the Father and his own revelation.
Misreading: "Salvation is from the Jews" either has no continuing force in the passage or excludes outsiders from salvation.
Why It Happens: Interpreters often assume they must choose between Israel's historical role and the universal reach of Jesus' mission.
Correction: The line grounds salvation in the Jewish messianic line, while the narrative immediately shows Samaritans drawn into that salvation and confessing Jesus as Savior of the world.
Misreading: The woman's sexual history is the controlling focus of the story.
Why It Happens: That detail is vivid and can easily dominate preaching or discussion.
Correction: Jesus brings it forward to reveal himself truthfully and move the conversation toward worship, Messiah, and communal faith.
Misreading: The harvest saying is mainly a timeless rule for ministry productivity.
Why It Happens: The metaphor is often abstracted from the people already approaching in the narrative.
Correction: Jesus is first interpreting the incoming Samaritans as a ripened field; later application should preserve that emphasis on discerning God's prior work.