41 Truly I tell you, anyone who gives you a cup of water in my name because you belong to the Messiah will certainly not lose their reward.
8th December 2024: Horsham
For some reason, this short verse is somewhat overlooked in some of my commentaries. It comes in the midst of a wider passage of teaching (which is reviewed in great detail in all the commentaries), which is reproduced in similar form in Matthew 18 and Luke 9. In Luke 9:44, where Jesus introduces his teaching , Jesus tells his disciples to listen carefully. A literal translation of the Greek says ‘Let these words sink into your ears.’ At the time he spoke these words, Jesus was seated in the ‘teaching’ position of a rabbi. Listen, says Jesus. These teaching points, says Jesus, are really important.
I once had a friend who finished his emails to me with the word ‘blessings’. I’m sure his intentions were good, but it always seemed to me to be rather insincere, perhaps because the individual I am thinking of was my boss, and for many reasons, I rarely felt blessed by his emails.
For many years, I have chosen to finish my own emails to Christian friends with the phrase ‘Be encouraged’, or ‘Be blessed and encouraged in Jesus.’ Every time I write that, my heart is to say to the recipients, whatever life is throwing at you today, be encouraged that Christ is risen, he is Lord of your life, and this is His day. In short, my heart is to encourage my fellow believers.
A year or two ago, I came into work to find a blistering response to one of my emails from a local Church leader. She was struggling against enormous personal challenges with her health, her work and life in general. To her, the phrase ‘be encouraged’ sounded as if I was flippantly offering an evangelical piece of string to someone who was drowning, when what they really needed was a rope and a life raft. I called the lady straight away, and she told me in no uncertain terms how bad her life felt right now. She had good reason to feel down. She graciously allowed me to explain why I finished my emails in that way, and the conversation developed into a friendly and, I hope, supportive one which enabled me to encourage a friend in distress.
The teaching point in verse 41 describes the giving of a cup of water. Essentially, it says if anyone (who is a follower of Jesus), gives you, (another follower of Jesus), so much as a cup of water in the name of Jesus, they will certainly not lose their reward in heaven.
We can lose touch in our western culture with how critical water is to life. In Christ’s culture, to offer a cup of water was not only a sacrifice (if you drink my water, I have less water for myself!), but an act of service. There is a selfless intention in the offering of water to one who needs it, but there is also, in that simple act, something which refreshes and energises the thirsty.
Of course, Jesus is using a metaphor. It’s not really about the water, but it is about the criticality of water to our well being and the refreshment which a cup of water can bring to the thirsty. It simply says that even the smallest act to encourage a fellow follower of Jesus is important. The omnipresent Spirit sees the heart in which encouragement is offered. The one who does even the simplest act to encourage and bless another, will themselves receive a blessing from the living God.
As Christ once said, ‘Let that sink into your ears!’
Be blessed and encouraged in Jesus.