Third Sunday of Lent. Year A - Sunday, March 12, 2023 (EPISODE: 410)
  
  Readings for Sunday, 12 March  2023
  FIRST READING: Exod 17:3-7
  Ps 95:1-2, 6-7b,  7c-9. "If today you hear his voice, harden not your hearts."
  SECOND READING: Rom 5:1-2, 5-8
  GOSPEL ACCLAMATION (cf. John 4:42+15). Glory to you, Word of God,  Lord Jesus Christ.  Lord you are truly  the Saviour of the World. Give me living water, that I may never thirst again.
  GOSPEL: John 4:5-42 – Samaritan Woman
  
  Image Credit: Shutterstock Licensed. Image Credit-  Shutterstock Licensed. Stock Photo ID: 1630381168   - OHRID, MACEDONIA - MAY 04, 2019: Jesus and  the Samaritan woman, fresco in the Church of Saint Paraskeva of the Balkans  near Saint Naum Monastery, Ohrid in Macedonia - Important information -  Editorial Use Only. Photo Contributor: Zvonimir Atletic
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  Please listen to the audio-recordings of the Mass – (Readings,  prayers and homily), for Third Sunday of Lent. Year A - Sunday, March 12, 2023 by clicking this link here: https://soundcloud.com/user-633212303/faith-hope-and-love-the-third-sunday-of-lent-year-a-episode-410/s-MyvPjaOAc7a
  (EPISODE: 410)
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  As our Lenten  journey continues, We have the wonderful incident of Our Lord meeting and  speaking with the Samaritan Woman at the well.   This extraordinary encounter and discussion bring home to us that Jesus  came to bring about unity, through the salvation of the entire people of  Israel, not just the tribe of Judah, but the whole of Israel. Including the  Samaritan people and in fact people of every tribe, nationality or tongue.   Our Lord's sensitivity and care and concern  for all people shines through brightly in this meeting.  
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  We are very familiar with this delightful meeting of Christ with the Samaritan  woman at the well.  Even so, it is  important that we always remain open to the many layers and deeper truths that  can always be plumbed from God's living word, and approach this incident with  minds and hearts open to being further nourished. 
  
  There are so many wonderful elements in this scene. We know that even the  disciples are described as surprised to see Jesus talking with this woman. It  is often assumed that this is because he is speaking with a woman, but actually  it is not so unusual that an exhausted and parched traveller might ask for some  water from anyone they come across. The biggest surprise was that he was  speaking to a Samaritan. And the most astounding thing for this lady is that he  seemed to be asking for her to share her water container, as he had none. It  was well known that Samaritans and Jews did not associate and certainty didn't  share eating or drinking implements, for they thought of each other as  heretics.  Despite this, they believed  many of the same things and their practices were not so different. They  differed massively in where the proper place for worship was, with Jews saying  God's temple, and the Samaritans, Mount Gerizim.
  
  Despite this, they had the same spiritual ancestors and were all descended from  the different tribes of the originally united Israel, (combining Judah and  Israel, the latter which included Samaria). 
  
  Over the centuries many assumptions have been made about the woman at the well  that are not necessarily borne out by the text. We are fortunate that as we  collect more and more perspectives from the Jewish cultural practices and  beliefs of the time, a richer window opens up to us.  For example, it has been often assumed that  the woman was at the well in the heat of the day, to avoid her fellow  Samaritans with the thought that she may have been a woman held in low esteem  in the village. But, there is nothing to suggest that this is summertime, it  could be the middle of winter. Also, the hottest part of the day would not be  midday but 3 pm.
  
  In any case, there are heaps of reasons a person might be avoiding their fellow  townsfolk other than sin, including illness, sorrow, depression, and tragedy.  She may have withdrawn from others due to what seems like a tragic series of  events that had befallen her and her family. We know that the lady had been  married several times, but again it is unfairly assumed that she was morally  poor or a public sinner. Her husbands may all have died through tragedy.  (Perhaps like the awful incident in the Book of Tobit where a woman's newly we  husbands - all seven husbands in a row- each died on their wedding night – in  that famous biblical scene, the people felt pity for her, and some thought she  might be cursed, but they did not cast her out, but the woman in that scene  felt shame and distress). Or this Samaritan woman's husbands may have divorced  her, with no-fault attributed to herself, as only men could divorce women  without any particular reason.
  
  Jesus points out that she is not married, as the man she lives with is not her  husband, but again, this man could be a relative or a son. He could well be  simply pointing out that with no husband, she was in that culture and  time-dependent on the charity of distant relatives.  This lady may have been depressed and  downcast, having suffered so much personal tragedy in her life...  The people might have felt that God was not  blessing her, and had abandoned her, because of all that had happened in her  life.   Our Lord's gentle words can be  taken to say, "I know all that you have been through. I know what has  happened to you. God's Kingdom is for you too."  This would be very fitting of one who came to  heal and to reach out to those bowed down.    
  
  If the lady were truly an outcast, she would not be so readily believed by the  townsfolk when she told them she had met the messiah. Why believe the word of a  woman of ill repute? We are told they believe her and go to see themselves and  then believe no longer because of what she said but because of meeting  him.   Astoundingly, we are also told  something often missed. HE stays with the Samaritans for three days.  He eats with them, stays in their shelter and  talks with them. This is amazing. 
  
  The other clue is at the start...  It  says..  the well is the one Jacob  built...   the bones of the prophet  Joseph are buried here.  They are heirs,  like the Jews, to the promise of Jacob and Joseph and the forefathers.  Our Lord, in a deep theological discussion  with the woman at the well, promises that he is the living water from  heaven...  and he offers her and the  Samaritans this as well.  He indeed says  salvation is from the Jews, but he is the Messiah, who comes to reunite the  divided kingdom -- And it is the reunited Jews (from Judah and Samaria), he is  preaching and bringing back into the fold.   When Our Lord tells the woman all about herself, she feels welcomed and  understood. He is filled with compassion for her suffering. Is he comparing her  to the experiences of Joseph, whose suffering at the hands of his brothers and  his being sold into slavery in Egypt eventually led to the salvation of his  family and his people?  Was Our Lord  assuring the lady that her suffering and pain over all these years will be healed  by his ministry and inclusion? Through her inexplicable suffering, the Lord,  the water of life, was giving not only her but her whole township new and  eternal life... and reunion with the one Kingdom of Israel.
  
  The most amazing part of this encounter is when Jesus says to her: "We  worship in Jerusalem, and you on this mountain here..." (which sounds  initially very inflexible and with no room to move for either  "side")... but then he adds something that astounds and amazes everyone:   "but there will come a time when we  will worship not on this or that mountain, but will worship God in Spirit and  Truth."  That time has already come  through Christ, who is the living temple and from whom the waters of life flow  to all. Christ, again finds ways of healing, reconnecting and unifying all  people, not through compromise, but from a thoroughly liberating wider  perspective and way of truth and life where all sides can move forward as God's  people.  Jesus' example shows us that the  solution to division and disagreement is compassion, respect, listening,  healing, and lovingly being open to the fullness of vision that doesn't stand  on narrow refusal to have a meeting of heart and mind.  
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  References:  
  Fr Paul W. Kelly; 
  
  The Samaritan Woman Reconsidered. Kindle Edition. Eli Lizorkin-Eyzenberg  (Author), Pinchas Shir (Editor), Ludmila  Lizorkina (Editor). ISBN: 1713300362. December 1, 2019; 
  
  Gutiérrez, G. and Dees, C. (1997). Sharing the Word through the liturgical  year. 1st ed. Maryknoll: Orbis Books.
  
  Image  Credit- Shutterstock Licensed. Stock Photo ID: 1630381168   - OHRID, MACEDONIA - MAY 04, 2019: Jesus and  the Samaritan woman, fresco in the Church of Saint Paraskeva of the Balkans  near Saint Naum Monastery, Ohrid in Macedonia - Important information -  Editorial Use Only. Photo Contributor: Zvonimir Atletic
  
  
  Third Sunday of Lent. Year A  (Sunday, March 12, 2023)  (EPISODE: 410)
  The Lord  be with you.
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  {{May Our  Lord's gift of hope encourage you.}} welcome everyone, we gather -  Praise and  Worship of our God. On this Third Sunday  of Lent. Year A
  
  My brothers  and sisters, trusting in God's mercy and love, let us call to mind our sins.
  option two on the cards/ Have mercy on us, O Lord./  For we have sinned against you./ Show us, O Lord, your mercy. And grant us your  salvation.
  May almighty God have mercy on us, forgive us our sins, and  bring us to everlasting life.  Amen.
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  Memorial Acclamation
  1. We proclaim your Death, O Lord, and profess your  Resurrection until you come again.
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  Ps 95:1-2, 6-7b, 7c-9. "If today you hear his voice, harden not  your hearts."
  
  GOSPEL ACCLAMATION (cf. John 4:42+15). Glory to you, Word of God, Lord Jesus Christ.  Lord you are truly the Saviour of the World.  Give me living water, that I may never thirst again.
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  PREFACE: Samaritan Woman
  Euch II
  Communion side.   pwk:  
  (theme variation: 4 )
  
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  {thanks everyone. And may God sustain you with his  grace and love.}
  
  Go forth, the Mass is ended.
  
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  Archive of homilies and  reflections:  http://homilycatholic.blogspot.com.au
  To contact Fr. Paul,  please email:  paulwkelly68@gmail.com
  
  To listen to my weekly  homily audio podcast, please click this link here:  https://soundcloud.com/user-633212303/tracks
  
  You are welcome to subscribe  to Fr Paul's homily mail-out by sending an email to this address: paulkellyreflections+subscribe@googlegroups.com
  
  Further information relating to the audio productions linked  to this Blog:
  
  "Faith, Hope and Love - Christian worship and reflection" - Led by  Rev Paul Kelly
  
  Prayers and chants — Roman Missal, 3rd edition, © 2010, The International  Commission on English in the liturgy. (ICEL)
  
  Scriptures - New Revised Standard Version: © 1989, and 2009 by the NCC-USA.  (National Council of Churches of Christ - USA)
  
  "The Psalms" ©1963, 2009, The Grail - Collins publishers.
  
  Prayers of the Faithful - " Together we pray" by Robert Borg'. E.J.  Dwyer, Publishers, (1993). (Sydney Australia).
  
  "Quiet Time."  Instrumental Reflection  music. Written by Paul W Kelly. 1988, 2007. & This arrangement: Stefan  Kelk, 2020.
  
  Lenten Hymn: "Have Mercy"  Inspired  by Psalm 50(51). Music by Paul W. Kelly. Arranged and sung, with additional  lyrics by Stefan Kelk. 2020.
  
  Sound Engineering and editing -  P.W.  Kelly. 
  Microphones: - Shure Motiv MV5 Digital Condenser. 
  
  Editing equipment:    NCH software -  MixPad Multitrack Studio Recording Software
  
  NCH – WavePad Audio Editing Software. Masters Edition v 12.44
  
  Sound Processing:  iZotope RX 6 Audio  Editor
  
  [ Production -  KER -  2023]
  
  May God bless and keep you.
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