This week in Come Follow Me, we read about Isaac and Jacob's attempts to find a wife. In both cases, their bride is found at a well. In Genesis 24 Abraham sends Eliezer to find a wife for Isaac among his kinsmen in Haran. When Eliezer arrives, he prays for a sign from God about which woman should be Isaac's wife. Rebecca fulfills the sign by drawing water from the well for Eliezer and all his camels. She turns out to be Isaac's cousin and agrees to return with Eliezer and marry Isaac.
In the next generation Jacob has fled his home because Esau has threatened his life for taking his blessing. Jacob goes back to the same set of relatives in Haran and sees his cousin Rachel at the well watering her flock. He falls instantly in love with her and ends up agreeing to work for her father for seven years in order to marry her.
So what is up with women and wells? Water is a complex symbol in the Bible. In the creation narrative, and in the story of Noah, water is a chaotic force that has to be subdued. In both places this roiling chaotic water of the ocean is called תהום (tahom) (Gen 1:2 and Gen 7:11). In the Law of Moses, water is a symbol of cleansing. For example, Leviticus 14 explains the cleansing ritual for leprosy with involves both blood and running water. But in these stories the water represents the life force.
My son and his wife live in New Mexico. When we drive there from Utah, especially in the summer, it is really clear how water gives life. As you drive everything is baren and dry, but if there is a river, you suddenly see trees and green plants.
If you have read my blog about the fall, you know that Adam's name in Hebrew means "soil" or fertile dirt, and when the Lord is cursing him for taking of the forbidden fruit, he is called "dust",i.e. infertile or dried up dirt instead of soil. Eve's name mean "life".
So how does dried up dirt become soil? By adding water. How can Adam become fruitful and multiply? By uniting with Eve. The life force, or fertility, in the Old Testament is therefore associated with water.
If we think of water as a symbol of feminine life force, then the meetings at the well make total sense. Eliezer approaches a city looking for a wife for his master's son, and the one he chooses is the one that offers him the symbol of feminine life force. Isaac + Rebecca = offspring just like dust + water = fertile soil.
Even more symbolic is when Jacob meets Rachel. Before he arrives she is not able to access the water from the well, but when he moves the stone from the well, she is able to water for flocks. Her life force is enabled by his arrival. Together they free the life force symbolized by the water in the well.
Of course, the third time we see a woman at the well in the New Testament (John 4). In this case Jesus asks the woman of Samaria to draw water for him. She is surprised that he, a Jew, would ask water of her, a Samaritan woman. They both knew the stories of Isaac and Rebecca and Jacob and Rachel. It is no wonder that the Samaritan woman was surprised at Jesus' request. When she hesitates, Jesus says that he "would have given thee living water." What symbolism of water is Jesus referring to here?
When we take the water of the sacrament which represents Jesus' blood, or when we are baptized, we think of the cleansing symbol of water. Later, however, Jesus says to the woman, "the water I shall give...shall be...a well of water springing up into everlasting life." That sounds more like the life-giving/fertility type of water symbol. The kind of water that turns dust into soil.
When Isaiah has a vision of the temple, he sees water gushing from under the temple (Ezekiel 47). In that vision the water gushing from the temple heals the earth and, "every thing shall live whither the river cometh." (v. 9) I think that in this vision the cleansing power of water and the life giving power of water are united in one symbol.
I am not sure exactly where I am going with this, only that women in the Bible are associated with water, a symbol of life-giving power, and that is why wives are often found at wells. The life-giving power that women have in these stories pertains to mortal fertility, since they allow their husbands to be fruitful and multiply, changing dust to soil. Jesus is also associated with life-giving water, but his water does not bring mortal life, but eternal life. That ability to bring eternal life is connected with the cleansing power of water and the life-giving power of water, and is possible through the atonement and the shedding of His blood for us. It is also associated with the temple, where God's promises of eternal life spread throughout the world, cleansing and healing the world.






