Samaritan: Satisfaction Through People
We often look to other people to make us happy. A Samaritan woman was desperately looking in all the wrong places for love. In this message, Pastor Philip Miller discusses the Samaritan woman’s trap, thirst, and transformation to reveal where true fulfillment is found. Will we leave our broken cisterns behind and drink from the only fountain that never runs dry?
Guest (Male): Many of us base our identities on finding satisfaction either through people, power, or possessions. None of these really satisfy. Today, we watch a Samaritan woman try to establish her identity through people in failed relationships. But then, Jesus gently guides her to true satisfaction.
Our story is taken from John Chapter 4. From Chicago, this is the Moody Church Hour, a weekly broadcast of worship and teaching with Pastor Philip Miller. Today, the eighth message in a series on Identity Traps. Our focus this time is the Woman at the Well. Here now is Pastor Philip along with worship leader Tim Stafford.
Pastor Philip Miller: Hey everybody, and welcome to the Moody Church. We're so grateful that you've chosen to join us for worship today as we look at a famous story, an interaction that Jesus had with the Samaritan woman at the well, a woman who had spent her whole life trying to find happiness in the arms of people and is about to discover the true fulfillment that can only come with a relationship with Jesus Christ.
So, we're going to learn where our true satisfaction lies today. Would you bow your heads and pray with me as we begin? Let's pray. Father, our hearts were made for you. We are restless until we find our rest in you. So Father, would you teach us where real satisfaction lies today? Help us to find our joy and our strength and our fulfillment in you and you alone as your beloved children. We pray this in Jesus' name. Amen.
Tim Stafford: Amen. Isn't God good? Let's come to Him today. Lord, help us to hear Your voice today. Not all of this sound, not just all of the noise, Your voice, we pray. In Jesus' name. Amen.
Spirit moving, mercy washing, healing in this living water. Lead Your children to the shoreline, life is in this living water. There's a river that flows with mercy and love. Bringing joy to the city of our God. Here our hope is secure. Do not fear anymore. Praise the Lord of living water.
All you thirsty, all you empty, come and drink this living water. For forgiveness, vast and boundless, Christ is in this living water. There's a river that flows with mercy and love. Bringing joy to the city of our God. Here our hope is secure. Do not fear anymore. Praise the Lord of living water. Praise the Lord of living water. Praise the Lord of living water.
Come, you sinners, poor and needy. Come, behold your Savior's face. Full of love and rich in mercy, hands outstretched with endless grace. Nothing you have done as earned it, full atonement, past and free. Nothing you can do can change it. Rest on Jesus' victory.
Our hearts are restless till we find our rest in You. Our lives are hopeless till we find our hope in You. Jesus, You are my life. Jesus, I give my life to You.
Come, you weary, heavy laden, burdened under shame and sin. There is never condemnation when your life in Christ is in. Our hearts are restless till we find our rest in You. Our lives are hopeless till we find our hope in You. Jesus, You are my life. Jesus, I give my life to You.
There is no one else to turn to. He will guide you all your days. His perfect love is perfect for you. Trust in Jesus' saving grace. Our hearts are restless till we find our rest in You. Our lives are hopeless till we find our hope in You. Our hearts are restless till we find our rest in You. Our lives are hopeless till we find our hope in You. Jesus, You are my life. Jesus, I give my life to You. Jesus, You are my life. Jesus, I give my life to You. Jesus, You are my life. Jesus, I give my life to You.
Thank You, Lord, for the invitation to come to You. We pray that we would today in Jesus' name. Seeking mercy for the lost ones, for the God of all creation. Come through Jesus to the Father, through the life-sustaining Vine. Drink deeply from the living water of life. Drink deeply from the endless water of life.
Like the woman at the well, we are human and with sin. Come through Jesus to the Father. Feel His quenching deep within. Drink deeply from the living water of life. Drink deeply from the endless water of life. Drink deeply from the endless water of life. Come through Jesus to the Father. Taste the water of life.
Jesus said that if I thirst, I should come to Him. No one else can satisfy. I should come to Him. Jesus said if I am weak, I should come to Him. No one else can be my strength. I should come to Him.
For the Lord is good and faithful. He will keep us day and night. We can always run to Jesus. Jesus, strong and kind.
Jesus said if I am fear, I should come to Him. No one else can be my shield. I should come to Him. For the Lord is good and faithful. He will keep us day and night. We can always run to Jesus. Jesus, strong and kind.
Jesus said if I am lost, He will come to me. And He showed me on that cross He will come to me. For the Lord is good and faithful. He will keep us day and night. We can always run to Jesus. Jesus, strong and kind. For the Lord is good and faithful. He will keep us day and night. We can always run to Jesus. Jesus, strong and kind. Jesus, strong and kind.
Thank You, Lord, for Your invitation to us to come today. For all who are weary, all who are heavy laden, all who are thirsty, may we come to You and find life this morning in Jesus' name. Amen.
Pastor Philip Miller: Well, we're in this series called Identity Traps. We're looking at nine ways we lose ourselves and how Jesus makes us whole. We've been working our way through these nine identity traps, nine ways that our orphan-hearted souls sort of cope their way through life apart from God.
Because underneath all of our identity strategies, the ones that we live into in life, there are three deep identity needs that undergird all of it: needs for significance, security, and satisfaction. And even though God made us to find those needs met in relationship with Him as our Father and we as His beloved children, we wake up in the universe estranged from God because of our sin and our orphan hearts tend to look everywhere else for those deep identity needs to be met.
We've seen how our search for significance can lead us into the trap of looking for significance in people, power, and possessions instead of the ultimate significance that comes from knowing that we are children of God, the sons and daughters of the King. We've seen how our longing for security often leads us into the trap of looking to people, power, or possessions for that security instead of the ultimate security that is found in knowing that we are secure in the love of our Father forever.
Today, we turn the corner to our desire for satisfaction and how that so often can lead us to look to people, power, or possessions instead of the unending joy, soul-satisfying delight, and goodness that can be found in the presence of our God. Today, we're going to look at the pivotal conversation that Jesus had with a Samaritan woman at the well that's recorded for us in the fourth chapter of the Gospel of John. This is a conversation that I find extraordinarily helpful in helping to sort of parse through the identity trap of looking for satisfaction through people. Satisfaction through people—that's the Samaritan woman's identity trap.
Now, we looked at this passage during our series Love by Jesus in a message called The Satisfier. We were working our way through the Gospel of John, some of you were there with us for that. At that time, we went through the whole passage looking at all the historical background and all of the context and there's a whole lot going on here that we don't have time to really dig into this morning. We're going to narrow our focus this morning and really laser in on this woman's identity trap and how Jesus frees her to find true satisfaction in God.
So that's our focus for this morning. Would you grab your Bibles? We're going to be in John chapter 4. We're going to hop around a little bit. We're going to look at verses 5 through 19 and 25 down to 42. Before we jump in, would you bow your heads? Let's pray together and ask the Lord to be our teacher this morning. Let's bow our heads.
Father, as we turn to this very real human interaction that shows us the heart of Jesus and the heart that we have as well deep down, Father, I pray that You would teach us where true satisfaction lies. Help us to look to You above all else for the delight and satisfaction of our souls. Nourish us, we pray this morning. The fountain of living water, we come to You in Jesus' name. Amen. Amen.
So, John chapter 4, verse 5. "So He," this is Jesus, "came to a town of Samaria called Sychar, near the field that Jacob had given to his son Joseph. Jacob's well was there, so Jesus, wearied as He was from His journey, was sitting beside the well. It was about the sixth hour." That's about noon.
Verse 7: "A woman from Samaria came to draw water. Jesus said to her, 'Give me a drink.' For His disciples had gone away into the city to buy food. The Samaritan woman said to Him, 'How is it that You, a Jew, ask for a drink from me, a woman of Samaria?' For Jews have no dealings with the Samaritans. Jesus answered her, 'If you knew the gift of God and who it is that was saying to you "Give me a drink," you would have asked Him and He would have given you living water.'
"The woman said to Him, 'Sir, You have nothing to draw water with and the well is deep. Where do You get that living water? Are You greater than our father Jacob? He gave us this well and drank from it himself, as did his sons and his livestock.' Jesus said to her, 'Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks of the water that I will give him will never be thirsty again. The water I will give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.'
"The woman said to him, 'Sir, give me this water so that I may not be thirsty or come have to come here to draw water.' Jesus said to her, 'Go, call your husband and come here.' The woman answered him, 'I have no husband.' Jesus said to her, 'You're right in saying "I have no husband," for you've had five husbands and the one you now have is not your husband. What you've said is true.' The woman said to him, 'Sir, I perceive that You are a prophet.'"
Now just pause for a moment. The conversation goes off on a bit of a theological sidebar, which is valuable but not essential for our purposes this morning. Let's pick it back up in verse 25. "The woman said to him, 'I know that Messiah is coming, He who is called Christ. When He comes, He will tell us all things.' Jesus said to her, 'I who speak to you am He.' Just then His disciples came back and they marveled that He was talking to a woman, but no one said to Him, 'What do You seek?' or 'Why are You talking with her?'
"So the woman left her water jar and went away into town and said to the people, 'Come, see a man who told me all that I ever did. Can this be the Christ?' They went out of the town and were coming to Him." Again, Jesus has a little conversation on the side with His disciples. We're going to skip. Go down to verse 39. "Many Samaritans from that town believed in Him because of the woman's testimony, 'He told me all that I ever did.' So when the Samaritans came to Him, they asked Him to stay with them and He stayed there two days.
"And many more believed because of His word. Then they said to the woman, 'It is no longer because of what you said that we believe, for we have heard for ourselves and we know that this is indeed the Savior of the world.'" Thanks be to the Lord for the reading of His word.
Now when it comes to this Samaritan woman, I'd like to show you this morning her trap, her thirst, and her transformation. That's our roadmap for this morning: her trap, her thirst, and her transformation. First of all, her trap. her trap. We have to ask the question: what is this Samaritan woman's identity trap? What is it? And there are little clues scattered throughout this passage that we can identify.
The first one, the first clue, is that she's drawing water at the wrong time of day. Verse 6 tells us that she's drawing water at the sixth hour, which is high noon. It's broad daylight. This is a desert country, so she's in the hottest part of the day that she makes this journey to draw water. This is the wrong time. The women would typically come in a group out of the village out to the well and in the cool of the morning do their drawing of water, help each other out, converse about the day, share the news of what's going on, and go back together.
But this woman is all alone. And she's here in the heat of the day when no one else would dare go out to get water. Something odd is going on here. So we just put a pin in that. That's clue number one. The second clue is that Jesus' conversation with this woman centers around satisfaction, doesn't it? It centers around satisfaction. Jesus is offering her living water, living water.
And the conversation shifts from drinking water from the well to spiritual nourishment of her soul. It shifts halfway along, doesn't it? Because Jesus is offering this woman access to the living waters of God's presence, the deep satisfaction of her longings, her spiritual thirst deep down. The Old Testament writers would often depict the presence of God with the imagery of water, abundant waters.
For example, in Psalm 63, verse 1, this is what we read: "O God, You are my God. Earnestly I seek You. My soul thirsts for You. My flesh faints for You, as in a dry and weary land where there is no water." So for people who lived in the desert, water is life. You don't have water, you're dead. No water, no life. And so this imagery was rich for the people of God who lived in these desert lands.
For the soul, God's presence is life, like water. No God, no life. No spiritual life. Just as our bodies thirst for waters, our souls thirst for the living God. And it is this living water, this imagery of this water, the presence of God, that Jesus is offering to this woman. So that's the second clue.
Now the third clue comes near the end when Jesus makes what looks like a really abrupt shift in the conversation. She asks for the water and He says, "Go call your husband." It's an odd move. It's an odd moment. But He's not actually changing the subject. It comes out that she's not married. She's had five husbands and the man she's with is not her husband.
So here she is, she has a string of broken hearts and broken vows, right? She can't seem to hold a relationship down and we can feel for her. This must be a very sad existence. But all of a sudden you start to see where all these dots are connected. So here this woman has been looking for love in all the wrong places. Everyone has let her down. And she's been labeled by the community.
All the women have, in a sense, disdained her. That's why she can't go with them to the well. She's been labeled a home-wrecker or something like this. And so she has to go draw water at noon by herself. And now Jesus comes along and He is offering her the soul-satisfying living waters that only God can provide. And it starts to connect. You see this.
The words of the prophet Jeremiah ring true for this woman. This is what Jeremiah writes in Jeremiah 2:13: "For My people have committed two evils: they have forsaken Me, the fountain of living waters, and hewn out cisterns for themselves, broken cisterns that hold no water." God is saying in this passage, "Look, instead of relying on Me as the fountain of living waters, you have gone off and you've tried to get your own water supply. You've hewn out your own broken cisterns."
These were like rainwater catch basins that they would try to hold their own water in, and they would leak and they would fissure and the water would drain out and they would be muddy and dry. And God is saying, "Look, here I am. I'm the God your souls were made for. And I am inviting you to come to Me, to drink deeply, to be nourished and satisfied and live. I'm the one your souls are made for, and yet you're out there trying to get your own water, trying to collect your own measly scraps of water, drops of water, anywhere, anywhere else but Myself. You're trying to satisfy your thirsty souls with these broken cisterns that can never satisfy."
And this is a picture, of course, of where this woman is at, isn't it? This Samaritan woman is seeking satisfaction through people. This is her identity trap. She's looking for satisfaction through people. All these matches, all these men, all these marriages—none of it's been enough. She still hasn't found what she's looking for. And so you see she's living like an orphan, isn't she? She's trying to get her own water, she's trying to live off these broken cisterns, and she's neglecting the one she's made for, the fountain of living waters, God Himself. But she's still hopeful, isn't she? She's on guy number six. Maybe he's the one. In our romance-saturated world, we get that. Don't we?
So that's her trap: looking for satisfaction through people. Secondly, let's look at her thirst. Her thirst. I love how Jesus is always pursuing the people that everyone else has written off. Don't you love that about Jesus? Even though she's been shunned by the town's women, has to go fetch the water alone, even though she's a Samaritan the Jews had nothing to do with, even though she's a woman that most men would never strike up a conversation with, Jesus breaks through all these social barriers because He sees her and He knows her and He loves her.
He sees to the very heart of her. He sees the child deep inside that all the hardship of this cruel world could never erase. And in love, He asks her for a drink. Don't you love this? He comes for her. And she's startled and says, "How is it that You, a Jew, ask for a drink from me, a woman of Samaria?" Flabbergasted.
Verse 10: "Jesus answers her, 'If you knew the gift of God and who it is that is saying to you "Give me a drink," you would have asked Him and He would have given you living water.'" You think it's odd that I'm asking you for a drink? What's odd is that you're not asking me for a drink. That's what's odd here. Because I've got a gift, a gift of God, and I can give you living water.
Verse 11: "The woman said to Him, 'Sir, You have nothing to draw water with and the well is deep. Where do You get that living water? Are You greater than our father Jacob? He gave us this well and drank from it himself, him and his sons, his livestock.' How can You offer me water like this? You don't even have a bucket, Jesus. How are You going to get water?"
Verse 13: "Jesus said to her, 'Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks of the water that I will give him will never be thirsty again. The water that I will give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.'" Jesus says, "Look, I'm not talking about the water at the bottom of this well. You drink that water, you're going to be thirsty again. I'm talking about an endless supply of living, bubbling water, an artesian well on the inside of your soul that will satisfy you forever, that will well up to eternal life and it will never stop."
It's the kind of water that Isaiah prophesied about in Isaiah 55, verses 1 and 3, when he wrote, "Come, everyone who thirsts, come to the waters. Incline your ear, come to Me. Hear that your soul may live." It's the kind of water that David sang about when he wrote, "As the deer pants for the flowing stream, so pants my soul for You, O God. My soul thirsts for God, for the living God." Psalm 42, verses 1 and 2.
And so the woman says to Jesus, verse 15, "Sir, give me this water so that I may not be thirsty and have to come here to draw water again." So even though she's not fully tracking with Jesus yet, something's awakened, some longing, some yearning. Jesus is offering her something and she wants it. "Sir, give me this water."
And then Jesus makes this famous move: "Go call your husband and come here." The woman answered him, "I have no husband." Jesus said to her, "You're right in saying 'I have no husband,' for you've had five husbands and the one you have now is not your husband. What you've said is true."
At this moment, Jesus shows His hand, doesn't He? This is no ordinary traveler. This is no haphazard conversation. And in this moment, this woman realizes this man knows her. She's known a lot of men, but no man has known her like this. He knows her all the way down to the very depths of her soul, to the place of her deepest longings. He says, "If you want this living water, this gift of God, this satisfaction your soul is longing for, then I need you to do something. I need you to turn aside from the broken cisterns you've hewn out for yourself."
Go call your husband. You see the connection. Remember the words of the prophet Jeremiah: "My people have committed two evils: they've forsaken Me, the fountain of living waters, and they've hewn out cisterns for themselves that were broken, that can hold no water." Jeremiah says the same thing down in chapter 17, verse 13: "They have forsaken the Lord, the fountain of living water." When Jesus tells her to call her husband, He's identifying her broken cistern, isn't He?
She's been looking for satisfaction in all these matches, in all these men, in all these marriages. This is the broken cistern that her thirsty soul keeps going back to, but it's leaky and dry and it keeps letting her down. None of these relationships have been enough. The Samaritan woman we find here is dissatisfied and dismissed, isn't she? Dissatisfied and dismissed. This string of broken relationships has no doubt left her feeling profoundly dissatisfied. Her aching heart longing to wonder, "Is there even a hope of real love out there anywhere?" And she's been dismissed time and time again, discarded, devalued, desperately left behind. Everyone has let her down. That's all she knows. And yet she thirsts.
Her trap, her thirst, and now her transformation. her transformation. Verse 19: "The woman said to Him, 'Sir, I perceive that You are a prophet.'" This last comment about her husbands is so personal, it's so perceptive, it must be prophetic. That's her conclusion. "I perceive You're a prophet." And then she goes off on this theological tangent. She asks him the hardest theological question she knows about the fundamental disputes about worship between the Jewish people and the Samaritan people.
And Jesus is so brilliant, He answers it real quickly and then He brings it right back around to her. So efficient. Verse 25: "The woman says to him, 'I know Messiah is coming, He who is called the Christ, and when He comes He will tell us all things.' Jesus said to her, 'I who speak to you am He.'" So in this moment, Jesus gets super real with her.
He's like, "Look, I know the real you all the way down—good, bad, and ugly. And now I'm going to show you the real me. I'm going to show you who I am. The one you've been longing for, the one the prophets have written about, the Messiah, the Christ, the anointed one of God, the one who will tell you everything you ever needed to know: I who speak to you am He. I'm right here. The satisfier your soul is longing for is standing right here in front of you."
Just then, verse 27, the disciples come back. Oh man, they interrupt at the worst part, don't they? They marveled, "Why is He talking to this woman?" But no one said to Him, "What do You seek?" or "Why are You talking with her?" Verse 28: "So the woman left her water jar." This is not an incidental detail. John wants you to perceive in this abandoned water jar that she has found a better living water. You see that? She came looking for one kind of water. She left with another kind of water.
And she went away into the town and said unto the people, "Come, see a man." How many times had they heard her say that? "Come, see a man. Come, see a man." She's always saying, "Come, see a man." But this time it's different. "Come, see a man who told me all that I ever did. Can this be the Christ?" So they went out of the town and were coming to Him.
Skip down to verse 39: "Many of the Samaritans from that town believed in Him because of the woman's testimony, 'He told me all that I ever did.' So when the Samaritans came to Him, they asked Him to stay with them and He stayed there two days. And many more believed because of His word. And they said to the woman, 'It's no longer because of what you said that we believe, for we have heard for ourselves and we know that this is indeed the Savior of the world.'"
So a revival breaks out in Samaria. And these people that everyone had abandoned, but not Jesus, discover that Jesus is Messiah, He is the Christ, and He is the Savior, not just of Israel but the Savior of the world, all on the testimony of this woman that Jesus met at a well, who left her water jar behind because she had found a better living water for her soul. And the Samaritan woman, you see, is learning to look to Jesus for the lasting satisfaction her soul longs for.
I think this is so beautiful that Jesus so loved this woman that He met her at the well in the heat of the day when she was shunned by everybody else. And He so gently unearths her soul's broken cisterns in order to offer to her Himself as the deeply satisfying living waters that her soul is so desperate for. What she could never find in all the matches and all the men and all the marriages, she would now find in Messiah, her Christ, her Jesus.
Because friends, God alone can truly satisfy. Amen? God alone can truly satisfy. As the psalmist writes in Psalm 16, verse 11: "In Your presence there is fullness of joy; at Your right hand are pleasures forevermore." Psalm 107, verse 9: "He satisfies the longing soul, and the hungry soul He fills with good things." Psalm 22, verse 26: "The afflicted shall eat and be satisfied; those who seek Him shall praise the Lord! May your hearts live forever!"
Which is why Jesus, the incarnate Son of God, when He walks on planet Earth declares in John 6:35, "I am the bread of life; whoever comes to Me shall never hunger, and whoever believes in Me shall never thirst." Or John 7:37: "If anyone thirsts, let him come to Me and drink. Whoever believes in Me, as the Scriptures have said, 'out of his heart will flow rivers of living water.'" Friends, the satisfaction our souls long for is found in the presence of God alone.
That's why Jesus is calling us, calling this woman, calling every single one of us to turn aside from the broken cisterns we build for ourselves. Our orphan hearts build cisterns to try to collect our own rain to satisfy our own thirst. They're broken and they leak and they're dry and they never work. And Jesus is inviting us instead to come to Him like little children, drinking deeply of the soul-nourishing, life-giving fountain of our Father's presence, which is available to us in Him.
How did this happen? Friends, do you realize on the cross Jesus cried out, "I thirst"? I thirst, in order that we might never thirst again. He came for us in all of our shame, in all of our estrangement, when no one would give us the time of day, when we were desperate and looking in all the wrong places for love and satisfaction. While we were yet enemies, Christ died for us. He took our place.
He died in our place and for our sake offered His life for us. He hung thirsty on the cross so that you and I might never thirst again. As Saint Augustine writes in his famous book The Confessions, "Thou hast made us for Thyself, and our heart is restless until it finds its rest in Thee." This is a profound insight. Our restless desires, friends, are like homing beacons pointing us to the one we were made for.
Blaise Pascal, in his Pensées, writes, "What else does this craving and this helplessness proclaim, but that there was once in man a true happiness of which all that now remains is the empty print and trace? This he tries in vain to fill with everything around him, though none can help, since this infinite abyss can only be filled by an infinite and immutable object, in other words, by God Himself."
What Augustine and Pascal are telling us is that our souls were made for God. There is a God-shaped void in the heart of every human being. Our souls were made for Him, and apart from God there is no lasting satisfaction. He is the desire and longing of our heart. The problem is not with our deep desire for satisfaction. That is God-ordained. We just try to satisfy it in all the wrong ways.
As C.S. Lewis writes in a famous talk called The Weight of Glory, this is what he said: "If we consider the unblushing promises of reward held out in the Gospels, it would seem that our Lord finds our desires not too strong, but too weak. We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered to us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased."
And so Jesus cries out, not just to this woman, not just in Jerusalem in the first century, but all the way down through the corridors of time. He cries out today, "If anyone thirsts, let him come to Me and drink. Whoever drinks the water that I will give him will never be thirsty again. The water that I will give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life." Friends, are you thirsty this morning? Come and drink. Come and drink. Let's pray.
Father, You have made us for Yourself. In our orphan-hearted wanderings, only leave us dissatisfied and aching. Father, forgive us for looking for love in all the wrong places, for looking for happiness in what can never satisfy. All the things of earth, all the relationships we cultivate, all the people around us can never give us the deep satisfaction that we were made for. We ache to know You. We ache to come home. We ache to be filled.
Father, we thank You that Jesus came to bring us home to You so that our thirsty souls might taste and see that the Lord is good, so that Your Holy Spirit might abide in us, welling up with eternal life from the inside, so that we might taste and know Your presence all the days of our life. And Father, we wait for the day of glory when we will be swept up and we will be we will have unremitted access to the waters of life that we might drink and drink and drink and drink again.
And until that day, we keep coming back to You. Fill us, satisfy, nurture us we pray with the waters of Your presence. We seek You in Jesus' name we pray. And all God's people said, amen. Amen.
I don't know where you're at in your life and your journey, spiritual journey, but if maybe today you realized that you need Jesus, that your soul has been looking in all the wrong places and that there's an infinite amount of living water that He can give you, I just invite you. Would you come, would you pray with us this morning? We've got a prayer team up here on either side, up in the balcony as well. We'd love to pray with you and introduce you to Jesus, the satisfier of our souls, the one you were made for. There's no better moment than when we come home, we taste and see that the Lord is indeed good. Amen? Amen.
Our benediction today, I just want to read these verses from Psalm 16, verse 11, that we read earlier, but they're so beautiful. This is what David writes: "You make known to me the path of life; in Your presence there is fullness of joy; at Your right hand are pleasures forevermore." This is your God. This is who He is for you, because you are indeed loved more than you know. So friends, let's now go and be the church. Have a great Sunday.
Guest (Male): On today's Moody Church Hour, we heard Pastor Philip Miller with another message in a series he's calling Identity Traps. We heard about the Samaritan woman seeking satisfaction through people. Next time, we meet Naomi, seeking satisfaction through power.
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- The Power of a Clear Conscience
- The Triumph of Unanswered Prayer
Video from Pastor Philip Miller
Featured Offer
What if your ordinary interactions with family, neighbors, and coworkers are actually invitations to adventure with God? This book, Sent, provides practical strategies to engage the world around you with the hope and love of Christ. Click below to receive this book for a gift of any amount or call us at 1.800.215.5001.
About Moody Church Hour
This Sunday morning program provides a meaningful worship service for those far from God or unable to attend a local church. With insightful teaching from Pastor Philip Miller and joyous congregational worship, you’re invited to join Jesus on the journey of a lifetime.
About Pastor Philip Miller
Philip Miller is the 17th Senior Pastor of The Moody Church. Philip holds a B.A in Pre-Seminary Bible from Cedarville University (’04) and a Th.M. in Pastoral Leadership and New Testament Studies from Dallas Theological Seminary (’10). His wife, Krista, also holds an Th.M. degree from DTS. They have four children: Claire, Violet, Cora, and Jude.
Philip is a visionary leader with over twelve years of ministry experience, including three at Christ Community Church in the western Chicago suburbs and nearly seven as Senior Pastor at Westwood Baptist in Olympia, WA. He believes people flourish as followers of Jesus when they live deeply in the gospel, experience the healing of true community, and join Jesus on mission in their world. He is committed to cultivating a gospel-centered church that welcomes spiritual explorers, promotes gospel clarity in culturally engaging ways, inspires passionate worship, fosters deep spiritual vitality, empowers people to holistic discipleship, and catalyzes a multiplication movement of gospel renewal both locally and globally.
Philip enjoys cycling and all things outdoors, Garrett’s Carmel popcorn, Lou Malnati‘s deep dish pizza, and Henry Weinhard‘s root beer. For more information about Philip and his family, visit moodymedia.org/pastorphilip.
Contact Moody Church Hour with Pastor Philip Miller
media@moodychurch.org
http://moodymedia.org/
Moody Church Media
1635 North LaSalle
Chicago, IL 60614
1.800.215.5001
Monday – Friday
8:00am – 5:00pm CST
Fax Number
1.312.642.4904