John Overview: Water in the Old Testament
Spoken Gospel podcast with a photo of David and Seth

John Overview: Water in the Old Testament

About This Episode

From Jesus' baptism to the woman at the well, from healing beside a pool to walking on the sea, John uses water imagery to describe Jesus' ministry.

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Tracing Water Through the Old Testament: The Imagination Behind John's Gospel

Show Notes

In this episode of the Spoken Gospel Podcast, hosts David and Christine continue their journey through John's Gospel by pausing to trace the theme of water through the Hebrew Bible. Because John saturates his Gospel with water imagery—from baptism to Jesus turning water into wine, from a thirsty Samaritan woman to a crippled man by a pool, from walking on water to rivers of living water gushing from those who trust him—the episode steps back to map the Old Testament terrain that shaped John's imagination. To understand why Jesus says, "Come to me and drink, and you will never thirst again," readers have to first inhabit the world of Scripture that taught John what water means.

Two Beginnings, Two Waters: Chaos and Garden

The first time water appears in the Bible, it is the problem. Genesis 1:2 describes the formless, empty world as waters over which the Spirit of God hovers. For the Hebrew imagination, “nothing” was not a category; the absence of creation looked like an uncontainable, turbulent, formless deep. Water is the perfect metaphor for that disorder. It cannot be held or stacked. It is unreliable and untamed. It is sometimes life-giving and sometimes death-bringing. In the opening verses of Scripture, it is associated with chaos and emptiness. Yet unlike the ancient Near Eastern creation myths in which sky gods battled storm gods, the God of Genesis does not clash with the waters. He hovers over them like a mother bird, gently and powerfully, and speaks order into existence. He solves the two problems of formlessness and emptiness by giving form to what is formless and filling what is empty. He separates the waters above from the waters below, draws land out of the sea, and fills the spaces with life.

In Genesis 2, the picture flips. Now the problem is not too much water but too little. The land is an arid wilderness with no shrub, no plant, no rain, and no man to work the ground. God solves these new problems in the same way: He brings up streams from the earth, forms a man from the moistened dust, breathes the Spirit of life into him, plants a garden in Eden, and sends a river out of that garden that splits into four headwaters to irrigate the whole earth. Adam himself becomes a kind of liquid—water mixed with dirt and full of the breath of God—and like the river, he too is separated. From his side God forms a woman so that together they can spread out, multiply, and carry the garden to the ends of the earth. The Bible's first picture of humanity is of water-like image-bearers whose vocation is to flood the world with life from the mountain temple of Eden where God dwells with them.

The Flood, the Wells, and the Women

When humanity refuses that vocation and fills the earth with violence instead of life, God hands the world over to the chaos it has chosen. The flood in Genesis 6-9 is uncreation in reverse: the waters above and the waters below collapse back together. The boundaries God set in Genesis 1 dissolve, and everything with the breath of life dies. And yet, even here, water is not only death, but also cleansing, separation, and rescue. Peter writes that Noah and his family were saved by water, not merely from it. The same flood that drowns the corrupt generation lifts the ark above the chaos and sets a new humanity down on a mountain to be fruitful and multiply. Water in Scripture begins to do a double work—it kills what is unrighteous and it cleans what is righteous, washing away death so that true life can rise.

This same pattern threads through Genesis as the patriarchs meet their wives at wells. Adam finds Eve in a well-watered garden. Isaac's servant finds Rebecca at a well. Jacob discovers Rachel at a well. Moses meets Zipporah at a well. Women, water, weddings, and wells keep appearing together because the Bible has already taught its readers that water flows out to multiply life, and that human beings—joined together as husband and wife—are the embodied form of that multiplication. Miriam, too, is bound up with water: she watches over baby Moses in the Nile, leads Israel in song after the Red Sea, and her death coincides with the drying up of Israel's water in the wilderness. The Hebrew Bible closely connects life-bringing water with the life-giving woman, and that thread is one John pulls on when Jesus encounters a woman near a well in Samaria.

Egypt, the Red Sea, and the Tabernacle Threshold

When the story moves to Egypt, the imagery sharpens. The Nile is supposed to be a Genesis 2 gift—a river in a desert that turns wasteland into a garden civilization. But Egypt's ruler is an anti-Adam. Rather than tending the land in the image of God and welcoming new life, Pharaoh becomes anti-multiplication, turning the river into a tomb for Hebrew baby boys. Out of that death water, God draws Moses—whose very name means "drawn out"—saved by five women and raised to confront the death-bringer with the life of God. When Israel finally escapes, the Red Sea opens just like Genesis 1: God separates the waters and dry land appears so that the people can walk through into new creation. The same waters that are salvation for Israel become judgment for Pharaoh's army, because, like with Noah’s flood, water separates the righteous from the unrighteous and hands the unrighteous over to the chaos they have chosen.

At Sinai, God commissions the construction of a portable Eden. The tabernacle is his garden-temple, and at its threshold sits a basin of water. Every time a priest enters God's presence, he must wash and physically pass through the waters, reenacting both the parting of the Red Sea and the first separation of Genesis 1. The priests become walking pictures of new creation, cleansed humans carrying God's life out from the sanctuary to the world. Two craftsmen—Bezalel and Oholiab—work alongside God to build this microcosm of Eden, a quiet echo of the original Adam-and-Eve commission. Israel is meant to be a mobile garden, carrying the well-watered presence of God through the wilderness toward a new Promised Land where life will overflow.

The Holy Cow Waters and the Crossing of the Jordan

Two of the strangest water rituals in the Torah turn on the same ingredients used in opposite directions. In Exodus 32, Israel commits adultery against God at the foot of Sinai by worshiping the golden calf. Moses grinds the idol into dust, mixes it with water, and forces the people to drink it—a foreshadowing of the test of the unfaithful wife in Numbers 5, in which a woman suspected of adultery drinks consecrated water mixed with holy dust to prove her guilt or innocence. Israel drinks the ground-up idol and a plague breaks out, because the test reveals what is already true: the bride has been unfaithful. And yet God shows mercy, refusing to wipe his people out, and reveals his glory in the face of a man in the very next chapter.

In Numbers 19, the ingredients return, but everything is reversed. A red heifer is sacrificed, passed through fire, and its ashes are mixed with water to create a cleansing solution for a land polluted by Death. Where the first water had no life in it because the idol was never alive, this water carries the life of a sacrificial creature that died so that Death itself could be washed from the camp. It is impossible to miss the shape of Jesus in this pattern. The ultimate sacrifice passes through death, joins himself to water in baptism, and becomes the means by which his people are cleansed. When believers are baptized into Jesus, they drown their unfaithfulness in the waters and rise with him to new life. The fact that water can be both the test that condemns and the bath that cleanses is the whole logic of the Gospel: in Jesus, the water that should expose Sin becomes the water that washes it away. This same logic carries Israel across the Jordan into the Promised Land, where the waters part once more, the old wilderness generation is left behind, and a new people enters the garden God has been preparing.

Kings, Prophets, and the Sea of Nations

The water pattern continues to unfold in the story of David and Bathsheba. A king sits in a high place. He looks down and sees a woman by water. He takes her as his wife. The biblical pattern of meeting a bride at a well-watered place seems to be playing out—except that Bathsheba is married to Uriah, and the king is committing adultery rather than building Eden. David's son with Bathsheba dies, and David himself, exposed as the unfaithful one, drinks the cup of judgment and lives only because of mercy. His prayer in Psalm 51—"Wash me, and I will be whiter than snow"—pleads for the cleansing waters of the heifer to wash away the death he has brought. The astonishing turn is that Jesus, the true King, comes through this broken line. He is the heavenly Bridegroom who looks down from the height of Heaven and chooses an adulterous bride, shedding his own blood and dying for her so he can wash her clean. Every righteous heart that recoils from David's sin must remember that Jesus does something even more scandalous than David, taking an unfaithful humanity to himself in mercy.

As Israel continues to break their covenant with God’s covenant, the prophets warn that the sea of nations will rush into their land. Jonah, told to cross those chaotic waters to call Assyria to repent, flees instead into the deep and is swallowed by a sea monster—a living parable of what Israel itself will experience when Babylon swallows Jerusalem. Yet even in exile, water becomes the means of cleansing. God washes his bride of her idolatry in the floodwaters of Babylon and brings back a remnant scrubbed clean. From this season of judgment and chaos, Isaiah promises new creation: a voice crying in the wilderness, streams in the desert, and a highway of holiness where the unclean shall not walk. Ezekiel sees a new temple with a river gushing from beneath the threshold, flowing out to bring the Dead Sea back to life. Joel and Amos picture water cascading down from God's mountain, healing the nations, and turning embodied justice into a river that floods the parched earth. When John the Baptist later stands in the Jordan calling people to repent, every one of these prophetic streams is rushing into one moment.

The End of the Story: No More Sea, A River of Life

The Bible's final pages bring water full circle. In Revelation, John sees a new Heavens and a new Earth in which there is no longer any sea. The chaotic, death-bringing waters of Genesis 1 are finally and forever gone—every wave bowed, every storm stilled, every Sin and Death drowned. And in their place flows the river of life from the throne of God and the Lamb, with the tree of life on its banks bearing fruit for the healing of the nations. The two waters of Genesis—the chaos that needed to be conquered and the river that needed to be poured out—both find their resolution in Jesus. He is the Bridegroom who meets his bride in the waters of baptism, the sacrificed Lamb whose life cleanses Death from the world, the temple from whom living water flows, and the new Adam who gives his Spirit so that people become rivers of life themselves.

This is the good news the Hebrew Bible has been preaching all along. Humanity was made to be like water—filled with the Spirit, separated and multiplied, sent out to flood the world with the life of God. We failed that purpose. We turned the rivers of Eden into the Nile of Pharaoh. We became the unfaithful bride who deserved the cup of judgment. But Jesus came as the true and faithful Image-bearer, was baptized into our death, drowned our adultery in his own grave, and rose as the source of living water that will never run dry. When his people are joined to him in baptism, they receive his Spirit, his Father, and his life. They become the channels through which his healing waters reach a thirsty world—until the day the river finally fills the Earth, and every desert blooms, and every nation is healed by the leaves of the tree that grows beside the water of life. The next episode will trace how John takes all of these threads and weaves them into the Gospel of Jesus.

Transcript

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