Palm Sunday reflection
Girls fetch water for their families from a community water source in Santa Catarina Masahuat, El Salvador. (Photo: Paul Jeffrey)

I remain confident of this: I will see the goodness of the LORD in the land of the living.

 Psalm 27:13

My first few years in El Salvador it was common to see women carrying jugs of water on their heads. Usually, they were carrying the water that their households needed for the day. Just a few years ago many Salvadoran families lived without close access to water.

Today it is not very common in El Salvador to see anyone carrying water. This makes the reality of inadequate water access much more hidden. In many communities running water may be available only a few days a week. And when it is available the demand is so high that it only runs at a trickle. While families have running water on their property, they still must complete basic chores like laundry washing at the river because water is scarce.

With this context in mind, the concept of living water that Jesus offered to the Samaritan woman at the well, and continues to offer to anyone who is thirsty today, has a greater significance. It is often in the dry spells of life that a need is more recognizable. Give thanks to God for any need that you may have today. Many times, we as humans are ashamed of our needs, thinking that need represents weakness, shortcomings or failure. Without need we never long for a Savior. Need is not something to avoid, rather it is something to be embraced. Give thanks to God for any need that you may have today and take time to reflect upon how that need may represent an opportunity to grow in your faith and trust in Jesus.

Imagine the One, who is and was and is to come, sitting on a humble donkey, entering Jerusalem with full knowledge of each of the events that would occur in the upcoming days, eventually leading to him laying down his very life for the sake of others. It is incredible to have a creator who loves his creation enough to step down from his throne and take on the very life of that creation. I am moved by the extreme level of humility that Jesus took on to have a living relationship with me. I am even more humbled when I realize that I am called to follow his example.

In following Jesus’ example of a humble servant, we are called to lay down anything that may hinder us from connecting to him. What looks like a blessing in the physical or material world may be a hindrance. What looks like suffering or need may be a blessing.

Where many see suffering and lack, Jesus sees blessing. What many see as abundance and “at your fingertips” access and luxurious comfort, may be a stumbling block.

Prayer: Holy God, Lord of Heaven and Earth, Savior of the world, thank you for coming as a humble servant. Thank you for creating us with an eternal need for You. Help us today to see need in a new light, as an opportunity to trust in you. Help us not to try to erase need from the world, but to embrace it by finding ways to live in community with those in need, together pointing each other to you. Amen.

About this reflection

Ellyn Benson Dubberly is a Global Missionary serving as a leadership development coordinator in Central America with the Evangelical Methodist Church in Central America.