When the poor and the needy seek water,Here hangs the same one who promised the woman at the well that “those who drink from the water that I will give will never thirst again” (John 4:14). All of these symbolic sayings are in the past now, as Jesus faced with a prolonged agony, cries out for relief. Saint John tell us in his account that after he tasted the bitter drink he breathed his last and died, but the Synoptic accounts differ, recounting that the agony went on for longer, and the humiliation was to continue. We experience an echo of this sense of utter helplessness when our physical bodies do not function as we would like; when we are at the mercy of others for our welfare. God knows our feelings of humiliation because Jesus experienced this humiliation on the cross. Mother Theresa of Calcutta put this sign over each of her convent doors, “I thirst, I quench,” words that remind those who work for her that it is the thirst of Christ that is quenched each time a cup of water is given in his name. It is a reminder to us also, each time we hear these words or look on the image, that we are called to do likewise. . |
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