Henry Carrington Alexander on drinking the living water

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Reformed Covenanter

Cancelled Commissioner
If thou knewest the gift of God, and who it is that saith to thee. Give me to drink; thou wouldest have asked of him, and he would have given thee living water. — John iv. 10.

IF the puzzled woman had but known that the mysterious stranger then talking with her was no mere Jew, but the divine Creator of all the floods of waters, and the divine Friend and Redeemer of the soul that is at the same time sin-smitten and athirst for heavenly blessings, she would have become a suppliant herself and would have sued for that “gift of God”‘ which Christ, the gracious and omnipotent Jehovah, had it in his power to bestow upon her.

Nor would he have denied her request, but would have conferred upon her that true inward “fountain of living water “so faintly symbolized by the freshly bubbling fountainheads and leaping streams of this earth. Eternal Life.” He who, as some think, pointed to the rising sun when he exclaimed, “I am the light of the world,” stood amidst the pillared galleries of Herod’s temple when the golden flagon was brought from the pool of Siloam on the last day of the feast and poured on the altar, and cried, “If any man thirst, let him come unto me and drink.”

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