Sunday, March 8, 2026

Today's Worship Service - Third Sunday in Lent, March 8, 2026

 

Worship Service for March 8, 2026

Prelude

Announcements:

Call to Worship

L:      Come, let us celebrate the forgiving, reconciling love of God.

P:      For once we were lost and felt so far away; now we have been found and welcomed home.

L:      Know that God’s love is lavished upon you forever.

P:      We rejoice at the news of forgiveness and hope!

L:      Come, let us celebrate and praise the God of love.

P:      AMEN!

 

Opening Hymn –        The Old Rugged Cross         #327 Brown Hymnal

 

Prayer of Confession

Patient and ever-faithful God, we come to You this morning confessing that we can be a grumpy and unsatisfied people.  When things are not perfect in our eyes, we murmur and complain, and grumble and doubt.  We lose hope in the people around us and, even worse, we love hope in You.  We challenge instead of accept.  We put You to the test rather than trust Your caring love.  Forgive our doubts and complaining.  Forgive our loss of hope.  Let Your healing, life-giving waters pour over us.  Restore our souls. (Silent prayers are offered)  AMEN.

Assurance of Pardon

L:      Our hope and assurance rest in God’s unfailing love and forgiveness.  Open our hearts, minds, and souls that the healing waters of God’s never-ending love and forgiveness may flow into and over you.

P:      We know that in this love and forgiveness we have encountered the living God.  Thanks be to God!  AMEN!

 

Gloria Patri

Affirmation of Faith/Apostles’ Creed

I believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth; And in Jesus Christ His only Son our Lord; who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried; He descended into hell; the third day He rose again from the dead; He ascended into heaven, and sitteth on the right hand of God the Father Almighty; from thence He shall come to judge the quick and the dead.

I believe in the Holy Ghost, the holy catholic Church; the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins; the resurrection of the body; and the life everlasting.  AMEN

 

Pastoral Prayer and Lord’s Prayer

Gracious and life-giving God, we come before you this morning as people who are thirsty.  Like the woman who came to the well at midday, we arrive carrying the ordinary burdens of our lives—work and worry, hope and disappointment, questions and quiet longings. Yet we trust that when we come to the well of your presence, we do not meet judgment first, but grace.  Lord Jesus, you who sat beside the well in Samaria,
you who crossed boundaries of culture, religion, and suspicion,
meet us again in this sacred hour.  Speak to us the words you spoke that day: that you alone are the source of living water.  Pour into our dry places the water that restores the soul.  Let your Spirit flow through the cracked places of our hearts—the places worn down by fear, regret, exhaustion, or grief.  You know the stories we carry.  You know the histories that shape us, the mistakes that haunt us, and the hopes we barely dare to speak aloud.  And still, you call us into conversation.  Just as you revealed yourself to the woman at the well, reveal yourself to us again—
not as a distant stranger, but as the One who knows us completely
and loves us still. 

God of living water, we pray for a world that thirsts.  We pray for communities where violence and fear run deep.  Shine your peace into our neighborhoods and cities.  We pray for places of war and conflict across the world.  Where hatred divides and suspicion grows, let your reconciling love break down the walls that keep people apart.

We pray for those who thirst for justice—for those whose voices are ignored, whose dignity is denied, whose stories have been dismissed.
May your Spirit move through us and through your church so that living water flows not only into our lives but out through us into the world.

And we lift before you those close to our hearts— friends and family members who are struggling with illness, grief, uncertainty, or loneliness.
Hold them in your mercy.  Refresh them with hope.  Remind them that they are never alone.  Today we especially pray for….

In the quiet of this moment, O God, we bring to you the deepest prayers of our hearts… the concerns we cannot easily speak, the burdens we carry silently.  Hear us now as we pray in silence.

And now, trusting in the One who meets us at every well along life’s journey, we join our voices together in the prayer Jesus taught us, saying: Our Father who art in heaven.  Hallowed be Thy name.  Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.  Give us this day, our daily bread and forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.  And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.  For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever.  AMEN.

Hymn –     There is a Balm in Gilead            #394 Blue Hymnal

Scripture Reading(s): 

First Scripture Reading – Psalm 95

Second Scripture Reading –  John 4:5-42

Sermon -  “Living Water in Unexpected Places”
(based on John 4:5–42)

There are moments in life when the most ordinary places become sacred.    They can be a gas station on a long road trip.  Or in a long waiting line at the grocery store, or even a kitchen table, late at night.  And sometimes—according to the Gospel of John—at a dusty well outside a small town in Samaria.

The story begins simply enough.  Jesus is traveling.  The journey has been long, and the text tells us that: “Jesus, tired out by his journey, was sitting by the well.”  It is about noon, during the hottest part of the day and his disciples have gone into town to buy food.  It’s then that a woman arrives.  She comes alone, carrying a jar, walking the familiar path to Jacob’s well.  This is the same well that for hundreds of years have seen women come and go.  It is on or near the plot of land that Jacob gave to his son Joseph.  This current woman from Samaria is expecting nothing more than water for the day.  She certainly is not expecting a conversation that will change her life.  But that is often how grace works.  It meets us in the middle of ordinary routines.

Immediately, we notice that this encounter crosses boundaries.  Jesus is a Jew.  She is a Samaritan.  Jesus is a man.  And she is a woman.  In that time and place, those lines mattered deeply.  For generations Jews and Samaritans had lived with suspicion and hostility toward one another. Their histories were tangled with conflict, their religious practices different enough to create deep distrust.  It isn’t any different today.  There is deep distrust among the various communities, ethnicities, and cultures in the Middle East. 

Yet Jesus ignores those lines.  He doesn’t begin their conversation with a sermon.  He doesn’t begin it with a theological debate.  He begins with a simple request:  “Give me a drink.”  If you think about it, it’s kind of an astonishing moment.  The Son of God, the Messiah, the Savior of the World begins this conversation not from knowledge or power, but from being vulnerable.  He asks the woman for help.  Now, of course, this Samaritan woman immediately notices the crossing of boundaries.  “How is it that you, a Jew, ask a drink of me, a woman of Samaria?”  In other words: Why are you even talking to me; let alone asking me for help?

Believe it or not, but this astonishment, this shock of being spoken to and asked for help is a feeling that many people in our society know.  Thos people who have been ignored.  People who have been judged.  People who have been told they don’t belong.  They’ve learned to move in the shadows, to not seek recognition or notice.  People who just want to move along with their daily tasks without trouble.  This woman carries the weight of those experiences.

We later learn that her life story is complicated.  She has known broken relationships, perhaps loss, perhaps social stigma.  Coming to the well alone at noon suggests she has learned to avoid the crowds.  But Jesus sees her.  Not her reputation.  Not her past.  No, he sees Her.

And Jesus answers her question of him in a curious way.  “If you knew the gift of God… you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water.”  As anyone might be with that answer, she is a bit confused.  The well is deep.  Jesus has no bucket.  How could he possibly give her water?  But, of course, Jesus is speaking of something deeper.  “Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again. But those who drink of the water that I will give them will never be thirsty.”

Jesus, instead, is talking about the deep thirst of the human soul.  Not just physical thirst—but the thirst for meaning/understanding.  The thirst for belonging.  The thirst for hope.  And you know what?  We live in a world that is thirsty.  People search for fulfillment in careers, in possessions, in recognition, in endless distractions.  And yet the thirst remains.  The ancient prophet Jeremiah once spoke God’s lament: “My people have forsaken the fountain of living water and dug out cisterns for themselves.”  We’ll try anything to quench that thirst.  And we keep trying to satisfy our thirst with things that cannot truly sustain us.  This is where Jesus offers something different.  He offers a living water, instead, a water, a life connected to God that flows from within through God’s grace to us. 

The conversation turns unexpectedly when Jesus speaks about her life.  “Go call your husband and come back.”  She answers honestly: “I have no husband.”  And Jesus responds with a startling insight for her: he knows that she has had five husbands, and the man she is currently with is not her husband.  For many years, this part of the story has been interpreted and told as if Jesus were exposing her shame.  Exposing her sin, her unique need for this living water, God’s grace.  But the tone of the text suggests something even deeper than simply naming sin or exposing shame, because Jesus doesn’t condemn her.  He doesn’t say another word about it, in fact.  He is simply telling the truth for the purpose for her to fully realize who He is.  And the remarkable thing is this: she gets it and doesn’t run away.  Instead, she stays.

Somehow she senses that this truth is not spoken with cruelty but rather with compassion.  We all know that there is a kind of truth that wounds and shames people.  But there is also a kind of truth that sets people free.    And Jesus speaks this second kind.  He acknowledges the reality of her life, yet he continues the conversation as if her dignity is unquestioned.  For someone used to being dismissed, that must have been astonishing.

It is actually the woman from Samaria who shifts the conversation to religion.  She asks about the great argument between Jews and Samaritans: where is the right place to worship? On Mount Gerizim or in Jerusalem?  And Jesus lifts that conversation beyond just geography.  “The hour is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem… true worshipers will worship in spirit and truth.”  In other words, God cannot be confined to sacred locations.  God is not limited to temples, churches, or holy sites.  God meets people wherever they are, wherever hearts are open or, at least, wherever people are who are willing to listening and hear.  At a well in Samaria.  At a long waiting line.  At a kitchen table.

Then comes one of the most beautiful moments in the Gospel.  The woman says, “I know that Messiah is coming.”  She knows the story, the expectation, the long awaited for Messiah.  Jesus answers: “I am he.”  This is the first time in the gospel of that Jesus reveals his identity so directly.  And to whom does he reveal it?  It’s not to a powerful religious leaders or authorities.  It’s not even to his own disciples.  But instead, it’s to a Samaritan woman with a complicated past. 

Grace always moves in surprising directions.  And what happens next is even more surprising.  The woman leaves her water jar behind—almost as if the original reason for coming has become secondary—and runs back into town.  She tells the people: “Come and see a man who told me everything I have ever done! Could he be the Messiah?”

Notice what she doesn’t say to those who listen to her.  She doesn’t claim certainty.  She doesn’t present a polished argument about who this man is.  She simply shares her experience.  And begins to ask the foundational question.  Could this really be true?  Could he be the one?

They can’t truly believe that this might be, in fact, the Messiah.  They must come and see for themselves.  But it’s because of her testimony, that many people from the town come to meet Jesus.  A woman who had likely been marginalized becomes the first evangelist to her community.

Meanwhile the disciples return, confused to find Jesus talking with her.  They urge him to eat, but Jesus says something mysterious and strange: “I have food to eat that you do not know about.”  Then he speaks about the harvest.  “Look around you, and see how the fields are ripe for harvesting.”

God is already at work all the time in places we don’t expect.  The disciples may not have imagined that Samaritans—people they had long regarded as outsiders—could be part of God’s movement.  Yet here they are, coming toward Jesus in a growing crowd.  The fields are ripe and ready.  We automatically assume that certain people don’t want to hear or aren’t approachable.  However, Jesus proves otherwise.  Look and see.  Come and hear.  By the end of the story, many Samaritans believe.  At first because of the woman’s testimony.  Then because they encounter Jesus themselves.

Faith often begins with someone else’s invitation, a friend, a parent, a neighbor, maybe even a stranger at a well. 

This story reminds us of three things.

First, God’s grace crosses boundaries—social, cultural, religious.  The people we least expect may be the ones God is already reaching.

Second, living water is offered to every thirsty soul.  No past disqualifies us from grace.

And third, ordinary people can become witnesses.

Not because they have perfect theology.  But because they have encountered something real.  The woman at the well did not have a seminary degree.  She simply said: Come and see.  And that invitation changed an entire town.

Friends, we live in a thirsty world.  People all around us are searching for hope, for belonging, for meaning. 

What if the living water of Christ is already flowing within us?

What if the most powerful thing we can say is simply:

Come and see.

Come and see the grace that meets us in unexpected places.
Come and see the love that tells the truth without condemnation.
Come and see the living water that never runs dry.

Amen.

Offertory –

Doxology –

Prayer of Dedication –

 Life-giving God, we offer You ourselves and our resources.  Use us and our gifts, that we may be water bearers to a world thirsty for love, for meaning, for justice, and for hope.  May all Your people encounter fullness of life through the love of Christ, which lives within us.  AMEN

Closing Hymn –  When I Survey the Wonderous Cross                #101/324

Benediction

         We have encountered the living God through the love of the living Christ.  We have been refreshed by living water.  Go now to live in the hope this encounter inspires.  Be water bearers to a dry and parched world, knowing that the God of love and hope goes before you and with you always.  AMEN.

Postlude

Today's Lenten Devotion - Sunday, March 8, 2026

 

Third Sunday in Lent – March 8

Scripture: Luke 13:1–9

When tragedy strikes, people instinctively ask why. Jesus refuses simplistic explanations.  Those who suffered were not worse sinners.  Instead of assigning blame, he calls for repentance—not as guilt, but as awakening.

Repentance is not about speculating on others’ failures.  It is about examining our own lives in light of God’s mercy.

The parable of the fig tree follows.  A tree is given another chance.  Time is extended.  Care is offered.

Jesus holds urgency and patience together.  Change matters.  Growth matters.  But grace surrounds the invitation.

In a world eager to categorize, condemn, and weaponize suffering, Christ calls us inward before we speak outward.  Where do we rush to judgment?  Where do we assume moral superiority?

Lent is not about perfecting others.  It is about softening ourselves.

And yet repentance is hopeful.  The gardener believes fruit is possible.

So does God.

Reflection Questions

  1. Where do I rush to judge others’ circumstances?
  2. What change is God cultivating in me?
  3. How does grace shape my call to repentance?

Today's Lenten Devotion - Saturday, March 7, 2026

 

Saturday – March 7

Scripture: Psalm 42

“Why are you cast down, O my soul?”

Lent allows space for interior dialogue.  The psalmist speaks to his own soul—naming sorrow, yet summoning hope.

Faith does not eliminate sadness.  It refuses to let sadness have the final word.

We live in complex times.  Climate anxiety, political tension, institutional fatigue—these weigh on the soul.

The psalmist remembers worship, remembers community, remembers God.

Hope sometimes begins with memory.

Reflection Questions

  1. What weighs heavily on my soul?
  2. Where have I experienced God’s faithfulness before?
  3. Can I speak hope gently to myself?

Friday, March 6, 2026

Today's Lenten Devotional - Friday, March 6, 2026

 

Friday – March 6

Scripture: Romans 12:9–21

“Overcome evil with good.”

This is not naïveté. It is courageous discipleship.

Paul names real hostility—persecution, enemies, wrongdoing.  Yet retaliation is not the answer.

To overcome evil with good is to refuse to let darkness dictate behavior.

This requires deep grounding in Christ.  Otherwise, we mimic what we oppose.

Injustice must be confronted.  But the spirit in which we confront it matters.

Bless those who persecute you.

That may be the hardest Lenten discipline of all.

Reflection Questions

  1. Where am I tempted toward retaliation?
  2. What would overcoming with good look like?
  3. How does love resist becoming hatred?

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Today's Lenten Devotion - Thursday, March 5, 2026

 

Thursday – March 5

Scripture: Matthew 7:7–12

Ask.  Seek.  Knock.

Prayer is active engagement with God, not passive resignation.  To ask is to admit need.  To seek is to pursue alignment.  To knock is to expect response.

Jesus assures us that God is not reluctant.

Yet prayer reshapes the one praying.  We begin asking for outcomes; we end discovering transformation.

In dreaming the church to be more aligned with Christ, prayer is not peripheral.  It is central.  We do not simply strategize; we discern.

The Golden Rule follows—do to others as you would have them do to you.  Prayer and ethics intertwine.

The more we pray, the more we recognize shared humanity.

Reflection Questions

  1. What am I truly asking of God?
  2. How does prayer reshape my desires?
  3. Where can I embody the Golden Rule today?

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Today's Lenten Devotional - Wednesday, March 4, 2026

 

Wednesday – March 4

Scripture: Luke 13:6–9

The fig tree is barren.  The owner is ready to cut it down.  The gardener asks for time.

God is patient.

In a culture of immediate results, fruitfulness feels urgent.  Churches measure vitality.  Individuals measure productivity.  But growth cannot be forced.

The gardener tends, fertilizes, waits.

Lent is patient cultivation.  We do not measure spiritual growth in dramatic leaps but in slow ripening.

Where do you feel discouraged about lack of fruit?  In prayer?  In justice efforts?  In reconciliation attempts?

God’s patience with us should shape our patience with others.

Perhaps the tree is not dead.  Perhaps it simply needs tending.

The Church must resist the temptation to abandon what grows slowly.  Real transformation—personal and communal—takes seasons.  Give it time.

Reflection Questions

  1. Where do I need patience with myself?
  2. Who in my life needs patient tending?
  3. How can I cultivate growth rather than demand it?

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Today's Lenten Devotional - Tuesday, March 3, 2026

 

Tuesday – March 3

Scripture: Colossians 3:12–17

“Clothe yourselves with compassion…”

Paul describes discipleship as dressing each morning.  Compassion.  Kindness.  Humility.  Patience.

These are not abstract virtues.  They are daily garments.

In polarized times, we often clothe ourselves in suspicion or defensiveness.  We armor up rather than open up.  But Paul calls the church to something radically different: relational maturity shaped by Christ’s peace.

Let the peace of Christ rule.  Not your anger.  Not your need to win.  Not your anxiety.

Peace ruling does not mean silence in the face of injustice.  It means that even when confronting wrong, we do so from steadiness rather than hostility.

Compassion listens before labeling.  Kindness refuses cruelty disguised as conviction.  Humility remembers that we, too, are learners.

The Church’s witness falters not because it speaks too much about justice, but because it sometimes forgets to embody gentleness alongside it.

Lent is wardrobe inspection.  What have I been wearing lately?

Gratitude becomes the thread holding everything together.

Reflection Questions

  1. Which virtue needs strengthening in me?
  2. Does Christ’s peace guide my responses?
  3. How can I consciously “put on” compassion today?