Radiant Church Visalia

Could this be the Messiah?

Daniel Kunkel

radiantvisalia.com
Could this be the Messiah? (John 4:1-20; 25-29)

Scripture References: John 4:1-29

Intro: Welcome to this week's sermon! We're pausing our Apostles' Creed series (but keep memorizing!). Today, we're blessed to hear from Daniel Kunkel. Daniel shares his powerful testimony of how Radiant Church profoundly impacted him as a teenager over ten years ago. He describes Radiant as "holy ground," a place where God showed him that following Jesus could be full of genuine joy, not somber obligation. He thanks the congregation for being the living proof of Jesus' reality that drew him in, even though they didn't know the impact they were having.

Key Points (John 4 - The Woman at the Well):

  1. Jesus Crosses Barriers (v. 4-9): Jesus intentionally travels through Samaria (which Jews avoided) and initiates conversation with a lone Samaritan woman (culturally taboo). His love and mission transcend social, racial, and gender barriers.
  2. Purpose Before Correction (v. 7): Jesus' first words aren't condemnation but a request for help ("Give me a drink"). He affirms her worth and gives her purpose before addressing her complicated past.
  3. Spiritual Invitation vs. Physical Focus (v. 10-15): He offers "living water" – deep, spiritual satisfaction. She gets stuck on the physical logistics ("You have no bucket," "the well is deep"). How often do we miss God's spiritual invitation because we cling to the tangible or comfortable, like reading about prayer instead of actually praying?
  4. Letting Go to Truly Receive (v. 16-18): Jesus brings up her five previous husbands. This isn't primarily to shame her, but because receiving the true Living Water requires acknowledging and letting go of the inadequate "wells" we've dug trying to satisfy our thirst or save ourselves. Like a drowning person needing to stop flailing, we must cease self-reliance to receive His rescue.
  5. Jesus Runs To, Not Away From, Sinners (v. 6, Context): This woman was a social outcast, fetching water alone at noon (the hottest time, usually avoided). Jesus deliberately sought her. He is drawn to brokenness with compassion, not repulsed by it. He runs toward us in our mess. Do we truly grasp this?
  6. Radical Encounter Leads to Witness (v. 28-29): Meeting the Messiah – who knew everything about her yet offered unconditional love and eternal life – changes everything. She forgets her task (leaves the water jar), overcomes her shame, and runs back to the very community that ostracized her, urging them, "Come, see a man... Could this be the Messiah?"

Conclusion: Daniel compares Radiant Church to this woman – through their genuine faith and love, they invited him (and continue to invite others) to "Come meet this man." He encourages the church, especially the youth heading to camp, to keep living authentically for Jesus, inviting others to encounter Him. Taking communion reminds us that this Messiah, Jesus, truly gave Himself completely for us.

Call to Action: Reflect on the Jesus presented here: the One who crosses barriers for you, offers dignity, invites you beyond the physical, and runs to you with compassion, regardless of your past or present struggles. Where might you be focusing on the "bucket" and missing the "Living Water"? What areas of self-reliance do you need to surrender to fully receive His grace? Embrace the truth that He loves you now. Then, be inspired by the woman – tell others, "Come meet this man!"

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