In the Gospel of Luke, we read where two disciples walking on the road to Emmaus, encounter Jesus but do not recognize Him, even after speaking with Him at length. It was only after Jesus took bread, blessed it and gave it to them, that their eyes were suddenly opened to see Him (see Luke 24:13-35).
And the ninth chapter of the Book of Acts
relates the story of Paul’s (then Saul) encounter with Jesus Christ. Saul, a
relentless persecutor of Jesus and everyone who believed in Him, was on his way
to Damascus when Jesus revealed Himself saying,
“Saul, Saul, why
are you persecuting Me?...Then the Lord said, “I am Jesus, whom you are
persecuting.” – Acts 9:4,5 (NKJV)
Have you ever experienced such an
encounter? Has Jesus Christ revealed Himself to you?
Jesus reveals Himself to us in various ways
and none of us will encounter Him the same way.
Early on in her conversation with Jesus, the woman at the well was “like the deaf adder that stops [her] ear” (Psalm 58:4), then as if the living water touched her soul, she confessed, “I have no husband” (John 4:17).
“…if we confess
our sins, God will forgive us. We can trust God to do this. He always does what
is right. He will make us clean from all the wrong things we have done.” – 1 John 1:9 (ERV)
As if her confession broke the power of her
restraints, what Jesus said next became for her a water shed moment – a point
of turning where Jesus begins to reveal Himself to her.
“Jesus said to
her, You have spoken truly in saying, I have no husband. For you have had five
husbands, and the man you are now living with is not your husband. In this you
have spoken truly.” – John 4:17-18 (AMPC)
By the time Jesus had spoken this fifth
statement, she realized that Jesus was no ordinary man, she thinks that He is a
prophet because somehow, He knew her, He knew her life, and He knew her
circumstances. Still, she hadn’t recognized Him for who He truly was.
Can you relate?
You’ve had an encounter, you think it might
be Jesus, but you can’t say for sure that it is because you don’t know Him
intimately or for that matter, well enough to say without a doubt, “This is
Jesus”
The beginning of the Samaritan woman’s
transformation and ours starts with the realization that we are desperately in
need of something so much greater than what we believe we know, and Who we
think we know.
Beloved, when we realize that nothing and
no-one but Jesus can satisfy that need in us, is when we recognize Jesus for
who He truly is and when we cry out, “You are
the Christ, the Son of the living God” (Matthew
16:16 AMPC) is when He has been revealed.
Amen†
Shelley Johnson “Revealed” © 2017 revisited July 30, 2025
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