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Departure From Judea

Now when Jesus[a] knew that the Pharisees[b] had heard that he[c] was winning[d] and baptizing more disciples than John (although Jesus himself was not baptizing, but his disciples were),[e] he left Judea and set out once more for Galilee.[f]

Conversation With a Samaritan Woman

But he had[g] to pass through Samaria.[h] Now he came to a Samaritan town[i] called Sychar,[j] near the plot of land that Jacob had given to his son Joseph.[k] Jacob’s well was there, so Jesus, since he was tired from the journey, sat right down beside[l] the well. It was about noon.[m]

A Samaritan woman[n] came to draw water. Jesus said to her, “Give me some water[o] to drink.” (For his disciples had gone off into the town to buy supplies.[p])[q] So the Samaritan woman said to him, “How can you—a Jew[r]—ask me, a Samaritan woman, for water[s] to drink?” (For Jews use nothing in common[t] with Samaritans.)[u]

10 Jesus answered[v] her, “If you had known[w] the gift of God and who it is who said to you, ‘Give me some water[x] to drink,’ you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water.”[y] 11 “Sir,”[z] the woman[aa] said to him, “you have no bucket and the well[ab] is deep; where then do you get this[ac] living water?[ad] 12 Surely you’re not greater than our ancestor[ae] Jacob, are you? For he gave us this well and drank from it himself, along with his sons and his livestock.”[af]

13 Jesus replied,[ag] “Everyone who drinks some of this water will be thirsty[ah] again. 14 But whoever drinks some of the water that I will give him will never be thirsty again,[ai] but the water that I will give him will become in him a fountain[aj] of water springing up[ak] to eternal life.” 15 The woman said to him, “Sir, give me this water, so that I will not be thirsty or have to come here to draw[al] water.”[am] 16 He[an] said to her, “Go call your husband and come back here.”[ao] 17 The woman replied,[ap] “I have no husband.” Jesus said to her, “Right you are when you said,[aq] ‘I have no husband,’[ar] 18 for you have had five husbands, and the man you are living with[as] now is not your husband. This you said truthfully!”

19 The woman said to him, “Sir, I see[at] that you are a prophet. 20 Our fathers worshiped on this mountain,[au] and you people[av] say that the place where people must worship is in Jerusalem.” 21 Jesus said to her, “Believe me, woman,[aw] a time[ax] is coming when you will worship[ay] the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem. 22 You people[az] worship what you do not know. We worship what we know, because salvation is from the Jews.[ba] 23 But a time[bb] is coming—and now is here[bc]—when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father seeks[bd] such people to be[be] his worshipers.[bf] 24 God is spirit,[bg] and the people who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.” 25 The woman said to him, “I know that Messiah is coming” (the one called Christ);[bh] “whenever he[bi] comes, he will tell[bj] us everything.”[bk] 26 Jesus said to her, “I, the one speaking to you, am he.”

The Disciples Return

27 Now at that very moment his disciples came back.[bl] They were shocked[bm] because he was speaking[bn] with a woman. However, no one said, “What do you want?”[bo] or “Why are you speaking with her?” 28 Then the woman left her water jar, went off into the town and said to the people,[bp] 29 “Come, see a man who told me everything I ever did. Surely he can’t be the Messiah,[bq] can he?”[br] 30 So[bs] they left the town and began coming[bt] to him.

Workers for the Harvest

31 Meanwhile the disciples were urging him,[bu] “Rabbi, eat something.”[bv] 32 But he said to them, “I have food to eat that you know nothing about.” 33 So the disciples began to say[bw] to one another, “No one brought him anything[bx] to eat, did they?”[by] 34 Jesus said to them, “My food is to do the will of the one who sent me[bz] and to complete[ca] his work.[cb] 35 Don’t you say,[cc] ‘There are four more months and then comes the harvest?’ I tell you, look up[cd] and see that the fields are already white[ce] for harvest! 36 The one who reaps receives pay[cf] and gathers fruit for eternal life, so that the one who sows and the one who reaps can rejoice together. 37 For in this instance the saying is true,[cg] ‘One sows and another reaps.’ 38 I sent you to reap what you did not work for; others have labored and you have entered into their labor.”

The Samaritans Respond

39 Now many Samaritans from that town believed in him because of the report of the woman who testified,[ch] “He told me everything I ever did.” 40 So when the Samaritans came to him, they began asking[ci] him to stay with them.[cj] He stayed there two days, 41 and because of his word many more[ck] believed. 42 They said to the woman, “No longer do we believe because of your words, for we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this one[cl] really is the Savior of the world.”[cm]

Onward to Galilee

43 After the two days he departed from there to Galilee. 44 (For Jesus himself had testified that a prophet has no honor in his own country.)[cn] 45 So when he came to Galilee, the Galileans welcomed him because they had seen all the things he had done in Jerusalem[co] at the feast[cp] (for they themselves had gone to the feast).[cq]

Healing the Royal Official’s Son

46 Now he came again to Cana in Galilee where he had made the water wine.[cr] In[cs] Capernaum[ct] there was a certain royal official[cu] whose son was sick. 47 When he heard that Jesus had come back from Judea to Galilee, he went to him and begged him[cv] to come down and heal his son, who was about to die. 48 So Jesus said to him, “Unless you people[cw] see signs and wonders you will never believe!”[cx] 49 “Sir,” the official said to him, “come down before my child dies.” 50 Jesus told him, “Go home;[cy] your son will live.” The man believed the word that Jesus spoke to him, and set off for home.[cz]

51 While he was on his way down,[da] his slaves[db] met him and told him that his son was going to live. 52 So he asked them the time[dc] when his condition began to improve,[dd] and[de] they told him, “Yesterday at one o’clock in the afternoon[df] the fever left him.” 53 Then the father realized that it was the very time[dg] Jesus had said to him, “Your son will live,” and he himself believed along with his entire household. 54 Jesus did this as his second miraculous sign[dh] when he returned from Judea to Galilee.

Footnotes

  1. John 4:1 tc Several early and significant witnesses, along with the majority of later ones (P66c,75 A B C L Ws Ψ 083 ƒ13 33 M sa), have κύριος (kurios, “Lord”) here instead of ᾿Ιησοῦς (Iēsous, “Jesus”). As significant as this external support is, the internal evidence seems to be on the side of ᾿Ιησοῦς. “Jesus” is mentioned two more times in the first two verses of chapter four in a way that is stylistically awkward (so much so that the translation has substituted the pronoun for the first one; see tn note below). This seems to be sufficient reason to motivate scribes to change the wording to κύριος. Further, the reading ᾿Ιησοῦς is not without decent support, though admittedly not as strong as that for κύριος (P66* א D Θ 086 ƒ1 565 1241 al lat bo). On the other hand, this Gospel speaks of Jesus as Lord in the evangelist’s narrative descriptions elsewhere only in 11:2; 20:18, 20; 21:12; and probably 6:23, preferring ᾿Ιησοῦς most of the time. This fact could be used to argue that scribes, acquainted with John’s style, changed κύριος to ᾿Ιησοῦς. But the immediate context generally is weighed more heavily than an author’s style. It is possible that neither word was in the autographic text and scribes supplied what they thought most appropriate (see TCGNT 176). But without ms evidence to this effect coupled with the harder reading ᾿Ιησοῦς, this conjecture must remain doubtful. All in all, it is best to regard ᾿Ιησοῦς as the original reading here.
  2. John 4:1 sn See the note on Pharisees in 1:24.
  3. John 4:1 tn Grk “Jesus”; the repetition of the proper name is somewhat redundant in English (see the beginning of the verse) and so the pronoun (“he”) has been substituted here.
  4. John 4:1 tn Grk “was making.”
  5. John 4:2 sn This is a parenthetical note by the author.
  6. John 4:3 sn The author doesn’t tell why Jesus chose to set out once more for Galilee. Some have suggested that the Pharisees turned their attention to Jesus because John the Baptist had now been thrown into prison. But the text gives no hint of this. In any case, perhaps Jesus simply did not want to provoke a confrontation at this time (knowing that his “hour” had not yet come).
  7. John 4:4 sn Travel through Samaria was not geographically necessary; the normal route for Jews ran up the east side of the Jordan River (Transjordan). Although some take the impersonal verb had to (δεῖ, dei) here to indicate logical necessity only, normally in John’s Gospel its use involves God’s will or plan (3:7, 14, 30; 4:4, 20, 24; 9:4; 10:16; 12:34; 20:9).
  8. John 4:4 sn Samaria. The Samaritans were descendants of 2 groups: (1) The remnant of native Israelites who were not deported after the fall of the Northern Kingdom in 722 b.c.; (2) Foreign colonists brought in from Babylonia and Media by the Assyrian conquerors to settle the land with inhabitants who would be loyal to Assyria. There was theological opposition between the Samaritans and the Jews because the former refused to worship in Jerusalem. After the exile the Samaritans put obstacles in the way of the Jewish restoration of Jerusalem, and in the 2nd century b.c. the Samaritans helped the Syrians in their wars against the Jews. In 128 b.c. the Jewish high priest retaliated and burned the Samaritan temple on Mount Gerizim.
  9. John 4:5 tn Grk “town of Samaria.” The noun Σαμαρείας (Samareias) has been translated as an attributive genitive.
  10. John 4:5 sn Sychar was somewhere in the vicinity of Shechem, possibly the village of Askar, 1.5 km northeast of Jacob’s well.
  11. John 4:5 sn Perhaps referred to in Gen 48:22.
  12. John 4:6 tn Grk “on (ἐπί, epi) the well.” There may have been a low stone rim encircling the well, or the reading of P66 (“on the ground”) may be correct.
  13. John 4:6 tn Grk “the sixth hour.”sn It was about noon. The suggestion has been made by some that time should be reckoned from midnight rather than sunrise. This would make the time 6 a.m. rather than noon. That would fit in this passage but not in John 19:14 which places the time when Jesus is condemned to be crucified at “the sixth hour.”
  14. John 4:7 tn Grk “a woman from Samaria.” According to BDAG 912 s.v. Σαμάρεια, the prepositional phrase is to be translated as a simple attributive: “γυνὴ ἐκ τῆς Σαμαρείας a Samaritan woman J 4:7.”
  15. John 4:7 tn The phrase “some water” is supplied as the understood direct object of the infinitive πεῖν (pein).
  16. John 4:8 tn Grk “buy food.”
  17. John 4:8 sn This is a parenthetical note by the author, indicating why Jesus asked the woman for a drink.
  18. John 4:9 tn Or “a Judean.” Here BDAG 478 s.v. ᾿Ιουδαίος 2.a states, “Judean (with respect to birth, nationality, or cult).” The same term occurs in the plural later in this verse. In one sense “Judean” would work very well in the translation here, since the contrast is between residents of the two geographical regions. However, since in the context of this chapter the discussion soon becomes a religious rather than a territorial one (cf. vv. 19-26), the translation “Jew” has been retained here and in v. 22.
  19. John 4:9 tn “Water” is supplied as the understood direct object of the infinitive πεῖν (pein).
  20. John 4:9 tn D. Daube (“Jesus and the Samaritan Woman: the Meaning of συγχράομαι [Jn 4:7ff],” JBL 69 [1950]: 137-47) suggests this meaning.sn The background to the statement use nothing in common is the general assumption among Jews that the Samaritans were ritually impure or unclean. Thus a Jew who used a drinking vessel after a Samaritan had touched it would become ceremonially unclean.
  21. John 4:9 sn This is a parenthetical note by the author.
  22. John 4:10 tn Grk “answered and said to her.”
  23. John 4:10 tn Or “if you knew.”
  24. John 4:10 tn The phrase “some water” is supplied as the understood direct object of the infinitive πεῖν (pein).
  25. John 4:10 tn This is a second class conditional sentence in Greek.sn The word translated living is used in Greek of flowing water, which leads to the woman’s misunderstanding in the following verse. She thought Jesus was referring to some unknown source of drinkable water.
  26. John 4:11 tn Or “Lord.” The Greek term κύριος (kurios) means both “Sir” and “Lord.” In this passage there is probably a gradual transition from one to the other as the woman’s respect for Jesus grows throughout the conversation (4:11, 15, 19).
  27. John 4:11 tc ‡ Two early and significant Greek mss along with two versional witnesses (P75 B sys ac2) lack ἡ γυνή (hē gunē, “the woman”) here; א* has ἐκείνη (ekeinē, “that one” or possibly “she”) instead of ἡ γυνή. It is possible that no explicit subject was in the autographic text and scribes added either ἡ γυνή or ἐκείνη to make the meaning clear. It is also possible that the archetype of P75 א B expunged the subject because it was not altogether necessary, with the scribe of א later adding the pronoun. However, ἡ γυνή is not in doubt in any other introduction to the woman’s words in this chapter (cf. vv. 9, 15, 17, 19, 25), suggesting that intentional deletion was not the motive for the shorter reading in v. 11 (or else why would they delete the words only here?). Thus, the fact that virtually all witnesses (P66 א2 A C D L Ws Θ Ψ 050 083 086 ƒ1,13 M latt syc,p,h sa bo) have ἡ γυνή here may suggest that it is a motivated reading, conforming this verse to the rest of the pericope. Although a decision is difficult, it is probably best to regard the shorter reading as authentic. NA28 has ἡ γυνή in brackets, indicating doubts as to their authenticity. For English stylistic reasons, the translation also includes “the woman” here.
  28. John 4:11 tn The word for “well” has now shifted to φρέαρ (phrear, “cistern”); earlier in the passage it was πηγή (pēgē).
  29. John 4:11 tn The anaphoric article has been translated “this.”
  30. John 4:11 sn Where then do you get this living water? The woman’s reply is an example of the “misunderstood statement,” a technique appearing frequently in John’s Gospel. Jesus was speaking of living water which was spiritual (ultimately a Johannine figure for the Holy Spirit, see John 7:38-39), but the woman thought he was speaking of flowing (fresh drinkable) water. Her misunderstanding gave Jesus the opportunity to explain what he really meant.
  31. John 4:12 tn Or “our forefather”; Grk “our father.”
  32. John 4:12 tn Questions prefaced with μή () in Greek anticipate a negative answer. This can sometimes be indicated by using a “tag” at the end. In this instance all of v. 12 is one question. It has been broken into two sentences for the sake of English style (instead of “for he” the Greek reads “who”).
  33. John 4:13 tn Grk “answered and said to her.”
  34. John 4:13 tn Grk “will thirst.”
  35. John 4:14 tn Grk “will never be thirsty forever.” The possibility of a later thirst is emphatically denied.
  36. John 4:14 tn Or “well.” “Fountain” is used as the translation for πηγή (pēgē) here since the idea is that of an artesian well that flows freely, but the term “artesian well” is not common in contemporary English.
  37. John 4:14 tn The verb ἁλλομένου (hallomenou) is used of quick movement (like jumping) on the part of living beings. This is the only instance of its being applied to the action of water. However, in the LXX it is used to describe the “Spirit of God” as it falls on Samson and Saul. See Judg 14:6, 19; 15:14; 1 Kgdms 10:2, 10 LXX (= 1 Sam 10:6, 10 ET); and Isa 35:6 (note context).
  38. John 4:15 tn Grk “or come here to draw.”
  39. John 4:15 tn The direct object of the infinitive ἀντλεῖν (antlein) is understood in Greek but supplied for clarity in the English translation.
  40. John 4:16 tc Most witnesses have “Jesus” here, either with the article (אc C2 D L Ws Ψ 086 M lat) or without (א* A Θ ƒ1,13 al), while several significant and early witnesses lack the name (P66,75 B C* 33vid). It is unlikely that scribes would have deliberately expunged the name of Jesus from the text here, especially since it aids the reader with the flow of the dialogue. Further, that the name occurs both anarthrously and with the article suggests that it was a later addition. (For similar arguments, see the tc note on “woman” in 4:11).
  41. John 4:16 tn Grk “come here” (“back” is implied).
  42. John 4:17 tn Grk “answered and said to him.”
  43. John 4:17 tn Grk “Well have you said.”
  44. John 4:17 tn The word order in Jesus’ reply is reversed from the woman’s original statement. The word “husband” in Jesus’ reply is placed in an emphatic position.
  45. John 4:18 tn Grk “the one you have.”
  46. John 4:19 tn Grk “behold” or “perceive,” but these are not as common in contemporary English usage.
  47. John 4:20 sn This mountain refers to Mount Gerizim, where the Samaritan shrine was located.
  48. John 4:20 tn The word “people” is not in the Greek text, but is supplied to indicate that the Greek verb translated “say” is second person plural and thus refers to more than Jesus alone.
  49. John 4:21 sn Woman was a polite form of address (see BDAG 208-9 s.v. γυνή 1), similar to “Madam” or “Ma’am” used in English in different regions.
  50. John 4:21 tn Grk “an hour.”
  51. John 4:21 tn The verb is plural.
  52. John 4:22 tn The word “people” is not in the Greek text, but is supplied to indicate that the Greek verb translated “worship” is second person plural and thus refers to more than the woman alone.
  53. John 4:22 tn Or “from the Judeans.” See the note on “Jew” in v. 9.
  54. John 4:23 tn Grk “an hour.”
  55. John 4:23 tn “Here” is not in the Greek text but is supplied to conform to contemporary English idiom.
  56. John 4:23 sn See also John 4:27.
  57. John 4:23 tn Or “as.” The object-complement construction implies either “as” or “to be.”
  58. John 4:23 tn This is a double accusative construction of object and complement with τοιούτους (toioutous) as the object and the participle προσκυνοῦντας (proskunountas) as the complement.sn The Father wants such people as his worshipers. Note how the woman has been concerned about where people ought to worship, while Jesus is concerned about who people ought to worship.
  59. John 4:24 tn Here πνεῦμα (pneuma) is understood as a qualitative predicate nominative while the articular θεός (theos) is the subject.
  60. John 4:25 tn Both Greek “Christ” and Hebrew and Aramaic “Messiah” mean “the one who has been anointed.”sn The one called Christ. This is a parenthetical statement by the author. See the note on Christ in 1:20.
  61. John 4:25 tn Grk “that one.”
  62. John 4:25 tn Or “he will announce to us.”
  63. John 4:25 tn Grk “all things.”
  64. John 4:27 tn Or “his disciples returned”; Grk “came” (“back” is supplied in keeping with English usage). Because of the length of the Greek sentence it is better to divide here and begin a new English sentence, leaving the καί (kai) before ἐθαύμαζον (ethaumazon) untranslated.
  65. John 4:27 tn BDAG 444 s.v. θαυμάζω 1.a.γ has “be surprised that” followed by indirect discourse. The context calls for a slightly stronger wording.
  66. John 4:27 tn The ὅτι (hoti) could also be translated as declarative (“that he had been speaking with a woman”) but since this would probably require translating the imperfect verb as a past perfect (which is normal after a declarative ὅτι), it is preferable to take this ὅτι as causal.
  67. John 4:27 tn Grk “seek.” See John 4:23.sn The question “What do you want?” is John’s editorial comment (for no one in the text was asking it). The author is making a literary link with Jesus’ statement in v. 23: It is evident that, in spite of what the disciples may have been thinking, what Jesus was seeking is what the Father was seeking, that is to say, someone to worship him.
  68. John 4:28 tn The term ἄνθρωποι (anthrōpoi) used here can mean either “people” (when used generically) or “men” (though there is a more specific term in Greek for adult males, ανήρ [anēr]). Thus the woman could have been speaking either (1) to all the people or (2) to the male leaders of the city as their representatives. However, most recent English translations regard the former as more likely and render the word “people” here.
  69. John 4:29 tn Grk “the Christ” (both Greek “Christ” and Hebrew and Aramaic “Messiah” mean “one who has been anointed”). Although the Greek text reads χριστός (christos) here, it is more consistent based on 4:25 (where Μεσσίας [Messias] is the lead term and is qualified by χριστός) to translate χριστός as “Messiah” here.
  70. John 4:29 tn The use of μήτι (mēti) normally presupposes a negative answer. This should not be taken as an indication that the woman did not believe, however. It may well be an example of “reverse psychology,” designed to gain a hearing for her testimony among those whose doubts about her background would obviate her claims.
  71. John 4:30 tn “So” is supplied for transitional smoothness in English.
  72. John 4:30 sn The imperfect tense is here rendered began coming for the author is not finished with this part of the story yet; these same Samaritans will appear again in v. 35.
  73. John 4:31 tn Grk “were asking him, saying.”
  74. John 4:31 tn The direct object of φάγε (phage) in Greek is understood; “something” is supplied in English.
  75. John 4:33 tn An ingressive imperfect conveys the idea that Jesus’ reply provoked the disciples’ response.
  76. John 4:33 tn The direct object of ἤνεγκεν (ēnenken) in Greek is understood; “anything” is supplied in English.
  77. John 4:33 tn Questions prefaced with μή () in Greek anticipate a negative answer. This can sometimes be indicated by using a “tag” at the end in English (here it is “did they?”).
  78. John 4:34 sn The one who sent me refers to the Father.
  79. John 4:34 tn Or “to accomplish.”
  80. John 4:34 tn The substantival ἵνα (hina) clause has been translated as an English infinitive clause.sn No one brought him anything to eat, did they? In the discussion with the disciples which took place while the woman had gone into the city, note again the misunderstanding: The disciples thought Jesus referred to physical food, while he was really speaking figuratively and spiritually again. Thus Jesus was forced to explain what he meant, and the explanation that his food was his mission, to do the will of God and accomplish his work, leads naturally into the metaphor of the harvest. The fruit of his mission was represented by the Samaritans who were coming to him.
  81. John 4:35 tn The recitative ὅτι (hoti) after λέγετε (legete) has not been translated.
  82. John 4:35 tn Grk “lift up your eyes” (an idiom). BDAG 357 s.v. ἐπαίρω 1 has “look up” here.
  83. John 4:35 tn That is, “ripe.”
  84. John 4:36 tn Or “a reward”; see L&N 38.14 and 57.173. This is something of a wordplay.
  85. John 4:37 tn The recitative ὅτι (hoti) after ἀληθινός (alēthinos) has not been translated.
  86. John 4:39 tn Grk “when she testified.”
  87. John 4:40 tn Following the arrival of the Samaritans, the imperfect verb has been translated as ingressive.
  88. John 4:40 tn Because of the length of the Greek sentence and the sequencing with the following verse, the conjunction καί (kai) has not been translated here. Instead a new English sentence is begun.
  89. John 4:41 tn Or “and they believed much more.”
  90. John 4:42 tn Or “this.” The Greek pronoun can mean either “this one” or “this” (BDAG 740 s.v. οὗτος 1).
  91. John 4:42 sn There is irony in the Samaritans’ declaration that Jesus was really the Savior of the world, an irony foreshadowed in the prologue to the Fourth Gospel (1:11): “He came to his own, and his own did not receive him.” Yet the Samaritans welcomed Jesus and proclaimed him to be not the Jewish Messiah only, but the Savior of the world.
  92. John 4:44 sn This is a parenthetical note by the author.
  93. John 4:45 sn All the things he had done in Jerusalem probably refers to the signs mentioned in John 2:23.
  94. John 4:45 sn See John 2:23-25.
  95. John 4:45 sn John 4:44-45. The last part of v. 45 is a parenthetical note by the author. The major problem in these verses concerns the contradiction between the proverb stated by Jesus in v. 44 and the reception of the Galileans in v. 45. Origen solved the problem by referring his own country to Judea (which Jesus had just left) and not Galilee. But this runs counter to the thrust of John’s Gospel, which takes pains to identify Jesus with Galilee (cf. 1:46) and does not even mention his Judean birth. R. E. Brown typifies the contemporary approach: He regards v. 44 as an addition by a later redactor who wanted to emphasize Jesus’ unsatisfactory reception in Galilee. Neither expedient is necessary, though, if honor is understood in its sense of attributing true worth to someone. The Galileans did welcome him, but their welcome was to prove a superficial response based on what they had seen him do at the feast. There is no indication that the signs they saw brought them to place their faith in Jesus any more than Nicodemus did on the basis of the signs. But a superficial welcome based on enthusiasm for miracles is no real honor at all.
  96. John 4:46 sn See John 2:1-11.
  97. John 4:46 tn Grk “And in.”
  98. John 4:46 sn Capernaum was a town located on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee, 680 ft (207 m) below sea level. It existed since Hasmonean times and was a major trade and economic center in the North Galilean region. The population in the first century is estimated to be around 1,500. Capernaum became the hub of operations for Jesus’ Galilean ministry (Matt 4:13; Mark 2:1). In modern times the site was discovered in 1838 by the American explorer E. Robinson, and major excavations began in 1905 by German archaeologists H. Kohl and C. Watzinger. Not until 1968, however, were remains from the time of Jesus visible; in that year V. Corbo and S. Loffreda began a series of annual archaeological campaigns that lasted until 1985. This work uncovered what is thought to be the house of Simon Peter as well as ruins of the first century synagogue beneath the later synagogue from the fourth or fifth century A.D. Today gently rolling hills and date palms frame the first century site, a favorite tourist destination of visitors to the Galilee.
  99. John 4:46 tn Although βασιλικός (basilikos) has often been translated “nobleman” it almost certainly refers here to a servant of Herod, tetrarch of Galilee (who in the NT is called a king, Matt 14:9, Mark 6:14-29). Capernaum was a border town, so doubtless there were many administrative officials in residence there.
  100. John 4:47 tn The direct object of ἠρώτα (ērōta) is supplied from context. Direct objects were frequently omitted in Greek when clear from the context.
  101. John 4:48 tn The word “people” is not in the Greek text, but is supplied to indicate that the verb is second person plural (referring to more than the royal official alone).
  102. John 4:48 tn Or “you never believe.” The verb πιστεύσητε (pisteusēte) is aorist subjunctive and may have either nuance.
  103. John 4:50 tn Grk “Go”; the word “home” is not in the Greek text, but is implied.
  104. John 4:50 tn Grk “and went.” The words “for home” are implied by the following verse.
  105. John 4:51 sn While he was on his way down. Going to Capernaum from Cana, one must go east across the Galilean hills and then descend to the Sea of Galilee. The 20 mi (33 km) journey could not be made in a single day. The use of the description on his way down shows the author was familiar with Palestinian geography.
  106. John 4:51 tn Traditionally, “servants.” Though δοῦλος (doulos) is normally translated “servant,” the word does not bear the connotation of a free individual serving another. BDAG notes that “‘servant’ for ‘slave’ is largely confined to Biblical transl. and early American times…in normal usage at the present time the two words are carefully distinguished” (BDAG 260 s.v.). One good translation is “bondservant” (sometimes found in the ASV for δοῦλος) in that it often indicates one who sells himself into slavery to another. But as this is archaic, few today understand its force. Also, many slaves in the Roman world became slaves through Rome’s subjugation of conquered nations, kidnapping, or by being born into slave households.
  107. John 4:52 tn Grk “the hour.”
  108. John 4:52 tn BDAG 558 s.v. κομψότερον translates the idiom κομψότερον ἔχειν (kompsoteron echein) as “begin to improve.”
  109. John 4:52 tn The second οὖν (oun) in 4:52 has been translated as “and” to improve English style by avoiding redundancy.
  110. John 4:52 tn Grk “at the seventh hour.”
  111. John 4:53 tn Grk “at that hour.”
  112. John 4:54 tn This sentence in Greek involves an object-complement construction. The force can be either “Jesus did this as,” or possibly “Jesus made this to be.” The latter translation accents not only Jesus’ power but his sovereignty too. Cf. 2:11 where the same construction occurs.

耶稣与撒马利亚妇人

耶稣[a]知道,法利赛人听说他收门徒和施洗比约翰更多。 其实不是耶稣亲自施洗,而是他的门徒们施洗。 于是耶稣离开犹太地区,又前往加利利地区。 但他定要经过撒马利亚 这样就来到了撒马利亚的一个城,叫叙加。这城靠近雅各给他儿子约瑟的那块地, 雅各井就在那里。耶稣因旅途劳累,就坐在井边。那时大约是中午十二点[b]

有一个撒马利亚妇人来打水。耶稣对她说:“请给我一点水喝。” 那时,他的门徒们进城买食物去了。

撒马利亚妇人对他说:“你是犹太人,怎么向我一个撒马利亚妇人要水喝呢?”原来犹太人不和撒马利亚人来往。[c]

10 耶稣回答她,说:“如果你明白神的恩赐,也知道是谁对你说‘给我一点水喝’,你早就求他了,他也把活水给你了。”

11 妇人问:“先生,你没有打水的器具,井又深,你从哪里得来那活水呢? 12 难道你比我们的先祖雅各更大吗?他给我们留下了这口井。他自己、他的子孙、他的牲畜都喝这井里的水!”

13 耶稣回答说:“所有喝这水的人,还会再渴。 14 但如果有人喝了我给他的水,就绝不干渴,直到永远。不但如此,我给他的水将要在他里面成为泉源,一直涌流到永恒的生命。”

15 妇人说:“先生,请给我那水,使我不渴,我也不用到这里来打水了。”

16 耶稣说:“去叫你的丈夫,再回到这里来。”

17 妇人回答说:“我没有丈夫。”

耶稣说:“你说你没有丈夫,这话没错。 18 其实你已经有过五个丈夫,你现在有的,不是你的丈夫。你说的是真的。”

19 妇人对他说:“先生,我看出你是先知! 20 我们的祖先在这山上敬拜,而你们却说敬拜的地方必须在耶路撒冷。”

21 耶稣说:“妇人,你当相信我,时候就要到了!那时你们敬拜父,既不在这山上,也不在耶路撒冷 22 你们敬拜你们所不认识的;我们却敬拜我们所认识的,因为救恩是出自犹太人的。 23 然而,时候就要到了,现在就是了!那时真正敬拜的人,要在灵里和真理中敬拜父,因为父就是想要这样的人来敬拜他。 24 神是灵,敬拜他的人必须在灵里和真理中敬拜。”

25 妇人说:“我知道那称为基督的弥赛亚要来。他来的时候,就会把一切都传讲给我们。”

26 耶稣说:“这和你说话的我,就是那一位。”

庄稼熟了

27 正在这时,他的门徒们回来了。他们见耶稣与一个妇人一同说话,就感到惊奇。只是没有人问“你想要什么?”或“你为什么与她说话?”

28 那妇人放下她的水罐,回到城里告诉人们说: 29 “你们来看!有个人把我过去所做的一切都说了出来,这个人会不会就是基督呢?” 30 大家就出城,来到耶稣那里。

31 这其间,门徒们劝耶稣说:“拉比,请吃。”

32 但耶稣说:“我有食物吃,是你们所不知道的。”

33 门徒彼此问:“难道有人拿东西来给他吃了吗?”

34 耶稣对他们说:“我的食物就是遵行那派我来者的旨意,并且完成他的工作。 35 你们不是说‘收割的季节还有四个月才到’吗?看哪,我告诉你们:举目向田里观望,庄稼已经成熟[d],可以收割了! 36 收割的人得酬报,收集果实归入永恒的生命,好使撒种的和收割的一同快乐。 37 实际上,这样的说法是真实的:‘一人撒种,另一个人收割。’ 38 我派你们去收你们未曾劳苦的;别人劳苦了,你们也进入了他们的劳苦中。”

救世主

39 当时,那城里有许多撒马利亚人信了耶稣。这是因为那妇人见证说:“他把我过去所做的一切都说了出来。” 40 这样,撒马利亚人来到耶稣那里的时候,请求他住在他们那里。于是耶稣在那里住了两天。 41 后来,因着耶稣的话,信的人就更多了。 42 他们告诉那妇人说:“现在我们信,不再是因为你的话,而是因为我们亲耳听到了,并且知道这一位真是世界的救主[e]。”

加利利人欢迎耶稣

43 两天后,耶稣离开了那里,前往加利利地区。 44 他曾亲自见证说,先知在自己的家乡得不到尊敬。 45 当耶稣来到加利利地区,加利利人就接受他,因为他们也曾经上耶路撒冷去过节,看到耶稣节日期间在那里所行的一切事。

治愈大臣的儿子

46 耶稣又来到加利利迦拿,就是他把水变成酒的地方。有一个大臣,他的儿子在迦百农患了病。 47 这个人听说耶稣从犹太来到加利利,就到耶稣那里去,请求他下去治愈他的儿子,因为他的儿子快要死了。

48 耶稣对他说:“你们如果没有看见神迹和奇事,你们就绝不会信!”

49 那大臣对耶稣说:“先生,求你在我的孩子还没有死之前下来吧!”

50 耶稣对他说:“你回去吧,你的儿子活了!”那人相信耶稣的话,就回去了。

51 他正下去的时候,他的奴仆们迎着他来[f],告诉他孩子活了。 52 他就问孩子好转的时间,他们说:“昨天下午一点[g],烧就退了。” 53 这位父亲就知道,那正是耶稣说“你的儿子活了”的时间。于是他自己和全家人都信了。

54 这是耶稣从犹太回到加利利以后所行的第二件神迹。

Footnotes

  1. 约翰福音 4:1 耶稣——有古抄本作“主”。
  2. 约翰福音 4:6 中午十二点——原文为“第六时刻”。
  3. 约翰福音 4:9 有古抄本没有“原来犹太人不和撒马利亚人来往。”
  4. 约翰福音 4:35 成熟——原文直译“白了”。
  5. 约翰福音 4:42 有古抄本附“——基督”。
  6. 约翰福音 4:51 有古抄本附“报告”。
  7. 约翰福音 4:52 下午一点——原文为“第七时刻”。

When Yeshua learned that the P’rushim had heard he was making and immersing more talmidim than Yochanan (although it was not Yeshua himself who immersed but his talmidim), Yeshua left Y’hudah and set out again for the Galil. This meant that he had to pass through Shomron.

He came to a town in Shomron called Sh’khem, near the field Ya‘akov had given to his son Yosef. Ya‘akov’s Well was there; so Yeshua, exhausted from his travel, sat down by the well; it was about noon. A woman from Shomron came to draw some water; and Yeshua said to her, “Give me a drink of water.” (His talmidim had gone into town to buy food.) The woman from Shomron said to him, “How is it that you, a Jew, ask for water from me, a woman of Shomron?” (For Jews don’t associate with people from Shomron.) 10 Yeshua answered her, “If you knew God’s gift, that is, who it is saying to you, ‘Give me a drink of water,’ then you would have asked him; and he would have given you living water.”

11 She said to him, “Sir, you don’t have a bucket, and the well is deep; so where do you get this ‘living water’? 12 You aren’t greater than our father Ya‘akov, are you? He gave us this well and drank from it, and so did his sons and his cattle.” 13 Yeshua answered, “Everyone who drinks this water will get thirsty again, 14 but whoever drinks the water I will give him will never be thirsty again! On the contrary, the water I give him will become a spring of water inside him, welling up into eternal life!”

15 “Sir, give me this water,” the woman said to him, “so that I won’t have to be thirsty and keep coming here to draw water.” 16 He said to her, “Go, call your husband, and come back.” 17 She answered, “I don’t have a husband.” Yeshua said to her, “You’re right, you don’t have a husband! 18 You’ve had five husbands in the past, and you’re not married to the man you’re living with now! You’ve spoken the truth!”

19 “Sir, I can see that you are a prophet,” the woman replied. 20 “Our fathers worshipped on this mountain, but you people say that the place where one has to worship is in Yerushalayim.” 21 Yeshua said, “Lady, believe me, the time is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Yerushalayim. 22 You people don’t know what you are worshipping; we worship what we do know, because salvation comes from the Jews. 23 But the time is coming — indeed, it’s here now — when the true worshippers will worship the Father spiritually and truly, for these are the kind of people the Father wants worshipping him. 24 God is spirit; and worshippers must worship him spiritually and truly.”

25 The woman replied, “I know that Mashiach is coming” (that is, “the one who has been anointed”). “When he comes, he will tell us everything.” 26 Yeshua said to her, “I, the person speaking to you, am he.”

27 Just then, his talmidim arrived. They were amazed that he was talking with a woman; but none of them said, “What do you want?” or, “Why are you talking with her?” 28 So the woman left her water-jar, went back to the town and said to the people there, 29 “Come, see a man who told me everything I’ve ever done. Could it be that this is the Messiah?” 30 They left the town and began coming toward him.

31 Meanwhile, the talmidim were urging Yeshua, “Rabbi, eat something.” 32 But he answered, “I have food to eat that you don’t know about.” 33 At this, the talmidim asked one another, “Could someone have brought him food?” 34 Yeshua said to them, “My food is to do what the one who sent me wants and to bring his work to completion. 35 Don’t you have a saying, ‘Four more months and then the harvest’? Well, what I say to you is: open your eyes and look at the fields! They’re already ripe for harvest! 36 The one who reaps receives his wages and gathers fruit for eternal life, so that the reaper and the sower may be glad together — 37 for in this matter, the proverb, ‘One sows and another reaps,’ holds true. 38 I sent you to reap what you haven’t worked for. Others have done the hard labor, and you have benefited from their work.”

39 Many people from that town in Shomron put their trust in him because of the woman’s testimony, “He told me all the things I did.” 40 So when these people from Shomron came to him, they asked him to stay with them. He stayed two days, 41 and many more came to trust because of what he said. 42 They said to the woman, “We no longer trust because of what you said, because we have heard for ourselves. We know indeed that this man really is the Savior of the world.”

43 After the two days, he went on from there toward the Galil. 44 Now Yeshua himself said, “A prophet is not respected in his own country.” 45 But when he arrived in the Galil, the people there welcomed him, because they had seen all he had done at the festival in Yerushalayim; since they had been there too.

46 He went again to Kanah in the Galil, where he had turned the water into wine. An officer in the royal service was there; his son was ill in K’far-Nachum. 47 This man, on hearing that Yeshua had come from Y’hudah to the Galil, went and asked him to come down and heal his son, for he was at the point of death. 48 Yeshua answered, “Unless you people see signs and miracles, you simply will not trust!” 49 The officer said to him, “Sir, come down before my child dies.” 50 Yeshua replied, “You may go, your son is alive.” The man believed what Yeshua said and left. 51 As he was going down, his servants met him with the news that his son was alive 52 So he asked them at what time he had gotten better; and they said, “The fever left him yesterday at one o’clock in the afternoon.” 53 The father knew that that was the very hour when Yeshua had told him, “Your son is alive”; and he and all his household trusted. 54 This was a second sign that Yeshua did; he did it after he had come from Y’hudah into the Galil.