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In the hush of midday heat where shadows fled,
A woman came alone to Jacob’s well,
Her steps were guarded, veiled in silent dread,
For whispers chased her where the townsfolk dwell.
Five husbands lost to time’s unyielding thread,
And one who shared her bed without the vow—
She drew no water when the dawn was red,
But sought the sun’s fierce blaze to hide her now.

Yet there He waited, weary from the road,
The Son of Man who needed not her cup,
Yet asked of her a drink, as if bestowed
A gift from one whom shame had lifted up.
“Give me to drink,” He said in gentle tone,
Though Jew and Samaritan should never meet;
He crossed the chasm sin had carved in stone,
And made her heart, though guarded, pause and beat.

She marveled at His words that broke the wall,
“How dost Thou ask of me, a woman scorned?”
He spoke of living streams that never pall,
Of water welling up where thirst is mourned.
“Thou hast had five,” He said with truth unveiled,
“And he thou hast is not thine own by right.”
No lash of judgment in His voice assailed,
But light that pierced the dark without a fight.

She turned to safer ground, to mount or shrine,
“Where shall we worship, Lord—on Gerizim?”
He answered not with rite or earthly line,
But spirit and in truth the Father seeks within.
The hour is come, He said, and now is here,
When true adorers bow not to a place,
But meet the God who draws the soul most near,
In hearts made clean by unearned, boundless grace.

Then, bold as dawn that breaks the prison night,
“I am He,” He declared, the Christ foretold,
To her whose name the righteous shunned in flight,
The Messiah spoke—His glory, pure and bold.
She left her jar, that vessel of her pain,
Forgot the thirst that drove her to the stone;
For One had filled her with eternal rain,
And burdens old were cast, no longer known.

Back to the town she ran, no longer veiled,
The faces once avoided now she sought;
“Come see a Man who told me all I’ve done,”
She cried, and many through her words were caught.
Not polished tale, nor life remade in show,
But honest witness born of grace received—
The outcast now a herald, bold to go
Where once her soul in shadowed fear had grieved.

O soul that hides beneath the noonday sun,
Who carries jars of shame in weary hands,
He meets thee not when all thy work is done,
But in the heat where no one else withstands.
He asks thee first, though He hath all to give,
Reveals thy wounds not to condemn or bind,
But offers drink that bids the spirit live,
And makes the broken heart His dwelling find.

Through finished work upon the cross of old,
The old hath passed; behold, the new is come.
No more performance, no more chains of gold—
In Christ thou art accepted, known, and home.
So leave thy jar, and run with voice restored,
Thy story now a door for others’ light;
The Well of Life hath called thee to Himself—
Precious soul, sought, valued, by thy Redeemer adored,
Bathed forever in salvation’s gift of life and light.