“Give Me a drink.”
These words of Jesus/Yeshua are unusual as more often than not, He was the one doing the giving; however, after walking on a very long journey during the heat of the day, He was thirsty.
Around noon, He came to a well in a town named Sychar and it was in that ancient place that Jacob’s well had been dug some 2000 years prior.
The town of Sychar, was probably on the site of the present-day town of Aschar, which is near the ancient ruins of Shechem.
Tired and hot, Jesus/Yeshua sat down by that well.
Soon, a woman came to that same well.
Jesus therefore, being wearied with his journey, sat thus on the well: and it was about the sixth hour. There cometh a woman of Samaria to draw water: Jesus saith unto her,
Give me to drink.
Interesting correlation?
Jesus/Yeshua says to her, give Me a drink, because He was thirsty. This is the same and only request that He had when He was on the cross, I thirst. 19:28.
Asking for a drink, is a natural enough request from a tired and thirsty traveler, who was resting by a well in the deserts of Palestine during the hottest part of the day. This request was for a simple act of kindness, or at least that is what we see on the surface of this meeting. However as we are finding out, the stories recorded in the gospels are far deeper than the well at Sychar.
John 4:10-15; 10. Jesus answered and said to her, If you knew the gift of God and who it is who is saying to you, ‘Give Me a drink,’ you would have asked Him, and He would have given you living water. 11. The woman said to Him, Sir, You have nothing to draw with and the well is deep.
Again it seems a natural and very practical observation on the part of the woman! Then He replies with an astounding statement!
Jesus answered, “Everyone who drinks this water will get thirsty again. But no one who drinks the water I give will ever be thirsty again. The water I give is like a flowing fountain that gives eternal life.” The woman replied, “Sir, please give me a drink of that water! Then I won’t get thirsty and have to come to this well again.”
In John 4:14 Jesus/Yeshua said, The water that I shall give [you] will become in [you] a fountain of water springing up into everlasting life.
Another translation says:
But everyone who shall drink of the waters that I will give him shall not thirst for eternity, but those waters that I give him shall be springs of waters in him that shall spring up into eternal life.
While preparing previous posts there seems to be a sort of connection to the Hebrew words for WELL and the Hebrew word for EYES; which led to further thoughts shared here purely for pondering purposes.
When we read the scriptures, we read the work of translators and scholars. They have transformed an ancient document, by substituting English words for the original Hebrew words. The problem is, many times the words are translated correctly, but the original Hebrew thought is lost. The words are there, but the meaning is missing. With that in mind we will explore a little further.
According to Strongs and the Hebrew lexicon, the word for eye, ayin, can also mean spring, as in a source of ground water.
Hebrew Lexicon Strongs #:05869
Well . בְּאֵר
A well, pit; feminine noun.
Strongs # 875
בְּאֵר
beer
(be-ayr’)
from baar.
Also from the root word, baar, comes
בֹּאר
bor: a cistern, pit, well.
Phonetic Spelling: (bore)
Strongs # 877
עַיִן
AYIN means EYE in Hebrew, and we still retain an almost identical word for eye in the English.
As it also means fountain or spring, it is possibly because eyes well up with water/tears when irritated or the person is crying from sadness. The ancient letter AYIN was a picture of an EYE.
This letter represents the ideas of seeing and watching as well as knowledge, as the eye is the window of knowledge.
The letter Ayin is the 16th letter of the Aleph-Bet, having the numeric value of 70.
Pronounced ah yeen and like the alef it has no sound of its own but rather has a vowel connected with it. (An a,e,i,o, or u)
The two words don’t have similar letters yet have a similar definition and meaning, which gives them a connection. The word eye in Hebrew also means: sight, look, appearance, aperture and hole.
In the case of eyes, these holes, apertures or wells, give a glimpse into the real person inside the physical body. It is the only eternal part of us that is visible; whether we call it soul, spirit or combination of both. Eye contact is one of the ways we communicate one to another without needing to speak words.
עיניים
Mem, Yod, Noon, Yod, Ayin (read R to L)
Eye is made plural in Hebrew by adding IM; as in, the eyes of the Lord.
Springs are usually associated with wells or places where water naturally springs up from the ground. In Biblical times, many springs were protected and enclosed, because they were very important for the survival of both the shepherds and their flocks. Jesus/Yeshuas’ reference to these things in His teaching, was due to the prevailing culture and lifestyle and the everyday things which people could understand by association.
We do not see the same significance in quite the same way today, because of the modern society in which we live and the conveniences which we have the privilege of using.
Jesus/Yeshua’s reference to Himself being the living water and also referring to being a well springing up to eternal life; take on another deeper meaning in considering the ancient lifestyles.
It is not without significance that women were the water bearers. Women are the bringers forth of life. They are the ones whose waters break and gush forth, introducing the next generation from the place of our hiding.
The fact that it is women who seek out and provide that life giving and life sustaining water, for both human and animal consumption; is an important token of their role and priority in God’s creation and order. Water is the one thing we cannot live without for more than 3 days and is 75%+ of our physical makeup.
Wells, pools and springs are mentioned many times in numerous scriptures and connected to many significant events in history; mainly because a well was the place of, and source of, life giving water, in a land that had so much dry desert and barren earth.
There were often disputes and sabotage was inflicted on wells that had been dug. Ownership of them was key to the livelihood and prosperity of those who lived locally, or those who needed to access to water when driving herds across parched desert terrain.
Most travel routes followed a path that had wells along the WAY for obvious practical reasons.
A few of the references to wells:
Jacobs well below as it looks today.
Hebrew: באר יעקב , Be’er Yaaqov;
Also known as Jacob’s fountain and Well of Sychar, it is a deep well hewn out of solid rock that has been associated in religious tradition with Jacob for roughly two millennia, either because it was handed down by tradition that he dug it, or because it was near to the land which he gave to Joseph. Genesis 33:19; 47:22; Joshua 24:32.
Abrahams well at Beersheba is connected to Hagar and Ishmael.
Abraham rose up early in the morning, and took bread and a bottle of water, and gave it to Hagar, putting it on her shoulder; and gave her the child, and sent her away. She departed, and wandered in the wilderness of Beersheba.
Gen. 21:17-19, 30-31.
Hebrew: בְּאֵר שֶׁבַע Be’er Sheva biblical town of southern Israel, now a city and the main centre of the Negev (ha-Negev) region.
Phonetic Spelling: (be-ayr’ sheh’-bah) Strongs# 884
It was because of a well that Beersheba first appeared on the pages of biblical history.
Abraham paid the price of seven ewe lambs to secure ownership of a well at Beersheba.
The site takes its name from the phrase:
the well of the seven
the place of swearing by 7 lambs
or well of oath.
Beersheba is first mentioned as the site where Abraham, founder of the Jewish people, made a covenant with the Philistine king Abimelech of Gerar. (Genesis 21:25-34).
Beersheba is at the southern tip of Israel. It is the last piece of fertile land before the forbidding Negev Desert. Here, travelers in ancient times would water their animals before they entered the blistering heat of the desert. Beersheba in the south and Dan in the north: these two cities stood at either end of the land of the Bible.
Rachel was at the well because every afternoon, she watered her flock of sheep at this well near Haran, an outpost of the ancient city of Ur.
Rachel in Hebrew: רָחֵל Rāḥêl, meaning: ‘ewe’, female sheep. (resh, hey, lamed).
Stone wells with wooden buckets were covered with a broad flat stone, too large for one man to move. (Was there supernatural help for this action?)
The symbolic significance of this fact is that the connection to Rachel, who was about to appear at the well, would not be a natural and simple one, but rather would require enormous effort in order to uncover the well and to draw its waters, that is, in a symbolic meaning, to make Rachel become Jacob’s wife and the mother of his children.
Jacob saw Rachel with his uncle Laban’s flock, he went to the well, rolled the stone back, and watered the sheep. Genesis 29:1-7
Jacob was sent by his father Isaac to find a wife from a relative‘s family. He met Rachel at the well and for him, it was love at first sight. He went to the well and single-handily moved the great stone cover off of the well.
There is a likeness here to the stone being rolled away supernaturally from the tomb of Messiah; and the living water of eternal life that flowed from His resurrected life.
Then Jacob went on his journey, and came into the land of the people of the east. 2 And he looked, and behold a well in the field, and, see, there were three flocks of sheep lying by it; for out of that well they watered the flocks: and a great stone was on the well’s mouth.
7 “Look,” said Jacob, “it is still broad daylight; it is not yet time to gather the livestock. Water the sheep and take them back to pasture.” 8 But they replied, “We cannot, until all the flocks have been gathered and the stone has been rolled away from the mouth of the well.
So here are some thoughts:
Eyes/ayin we see with our eyes.
We have both natural and spiritual sight.
Spiritual sight is given by Ruach Hakodesh.
Ruach HaKodesh is often associated with water and a wellspring of life from within. This inner flow enhances our spiritual eyesight.
And as we noted earlier according to Strongs and the Hebrew lexicon, the word for eye, ayin, can also mean spring, as in a source of ground water.
So there does seem to be a connection.
We say that scripture is the WORD of God and also Jesus/Yeshua is Himself the WORD. The Word or scripture itself, is associated with water, washing of the water of the Word, which renews our mind. (Eph. 5:26; Rom.12:2)
He said, eat and drink of Me. It has the meaning of spiritual drinking, from the waters springing up into eternal life. John 4:14
Miriam was seen as the water source the spiritual rock they drank from that was Christ.
and all drank the same spiritual drink; for they long drank the water that flowed from the spiritual rock that went with them–and that rock was the Christ. 1Cor. 10:4
There are also many springs that became pools where ritual cleansing took place. Settlements usually formed around water sources, later developing into large cities over time especially those on trade routes.
So water, wells, pools, springs, and eyes and spiritual elements are connected.
There’s a reference to the Pools of Heshbon in Song of Songs/Song of Solomon,
where he likens his love’s eyes to the pools of Heshbon, which refers to the magnificent fish-pools of Heshbon.
Song 7:4. The eyes of the Shulammite.
‘Your eyes are like the sparkling pools in Heshbon by the gate of Bath-rabbim.’
Here we find pool, water, eyes, and fish are connected in this Song.
There is a metaphysical meaning to the phrase: eyes like sparking pools of Heshbon.
This speaks of great intelligence, light, and understanding, of which the eyes are the outer organs. The eyes shine in beauty and brilliance according to the depths of true spiritual sight, the very light of life, which is realized in consciousness.
The beauty of the pool is in its power of reflection, which the turbulent roaring of the seas and oceans constantly moving with their great heaving tides, are not calm enough to reflect anything but the color of the skies above. Neither are sweeping rivers, muddy and always swirling downward, they too are never still enough.
There is also a connection to eyes in the story of Leah in Genesis 29:17 as follows: Leah was tender eyed;
the Torah describes her eyes as soft from weeping.
Or one translation says she had watery eyes. Some translations say weak, or showing a sorrowing soul, watery or tearful eyes. Some scholars say her eyes were blue or blue/green, which were unusual to the brown eyed people of the middle eastern countries. (Leah tender-eyed—that is, soft blue eyes—thought a blemish.)
Leah’s bleared eyes would be regarded in the East as a great defect, just as bright eyes were much admired. (See 1Samuel 16:12, where David is described as fair of eyes.)
Leah’s face was not ugly, however its possible that her eyes were not clear and lustrous, dark and sparkling, rather they were weak or soft, wanting in clearness and brilliancy; as in all probability Rachel’s were.
Blue is obviously the color as that we see reflected in water. Blue eyes are known to be less strong than brown, especially in bright sunlight, and they would have looked watery in color, compared to dark brown eyes. It may also have been the reason for the term, tender, where we use the word sensitive or delicate.
There is strong connection with women and wells and water and these were some of the women who went above and beyond;
among them:
Hagar
Samaritan Woman
Rachel
Rebekah
Miriam ’s Well (Be’erah shel Miriam), is the name of the spring that miraculously provided water and accompanied the Israelites throughout the 40 years they traveled in the wilderness.
The Hebrew letter ע Ayin has a value of 70, which stands for appointed times, as defined by Leviticus 23:2. Also Seventy, (70) elders were appointed by Moses. (Numbers 11:16)
There are 70 specially appointed times for holy days, called HaMoyadim, (ha mow ya dimm), in a year.
The 70 specific appointed times in the Jewish calendar are:
52 weekly Sabbaths each year.
Passover Week includes seven feast days.
Then there’s Shavuot (Pentecost),
Yom Teruah (Feast of Trumpets),
Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement),
and the seven days of
Sukkot (Feast of Tabernacles).
The end of Sukkot is celebrated by Shemini Atzeret, the eighth-day assembly.
When all these are added together, there’s a total of 70 appointed times/HaMoyadim.
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