Sunday, September 6, 2015

Streams of Living Water

One of the subjects that captivated my imagination was the "water of life" theme from Jean Corbon's The Wellspring of Worship.  A really, really good book!  I attempted to write a serious article on it, and I may indeed try to get it published some day.  The idea of the water of life comes from a number of Scripture passages--from the Old Testament as well as the New Testament.  The first reading at Mass this morning (see the Sunday readings here) briefly mentions this theme, Is 35:4-7...

Thus says the LORD:Say to those whose hearts are frightened:Be strong, fear not!Here is your God,he comes with vindication;with divine recompensehe comes to save you.Then will the eyes of the blind be opened,the ears of the deaf be cleared;then will the lame leap like a stag,then the tongue of the mute will sing.Streams will burst forth in the desert,and rivers in the steppe.The burning sands will become pools, and the thirsty ground, springs of water.

I think one of the things I love the most about the "living water" motif (which is not the ability to sound pretentious, using words like 'motif') is the visual.  I imagine a parched desert... tumbleweed blowing across... the cry of a bird of prey echoes throughout the landscape... the ground is dry and cracked where there's dirt, and the sand is more arid than something really arid.  (NB: good vocabulary isn't always part of my imaginings) (is using NB: pretentious too?  I'm on a roll!)  Out of this will come streams?  A desert gets barely a hint of rainfall and is the utter antithesis of fertile ground.  Pools?  Rivers?  Springs of water?  The odds of that happening naturally are so infinitesimal that it would be impossible.  

Latch onto that image of the desert.  See how incredibly absurd it would be for the desert to all of a sudden burst forth with streams, rivers, and pools.  With this illustration, Isaiah's prophetic words are showing us: SUCH IS THE POWER OF GOD!  What's naturally impossible is no barrier to Him.  Even the tiniest amount of His grace is stronger than the greatest evil.  

And it's no less absurd when His grace acts in us.  Humans have free will, and thus the power to magnificently screw up our own lives.  Our souls can resemble that desert--dry, parched, and barren.  When we sin, we do so against God and our fellow man.  By all rights, we've earned every tumbleweed and every grain of arid sand in our souls.  For us to fix ourselves, on our own?  Make that barren soul a life-giving, fertile soil?  Impossible.  

Here is God, coming to save fallen humanity.  Here is Jesus, promising "living water" and salvation.  It's not just salvation for (=heaven), but it's also salvation from the barrenness of sin within us.  Come to Him, be healed!  Drink of His living water and never thirst again!