Si_conocieras_el_don_de_dios

"Si conocieras el don de Dios" is an invitation to look past the immediate "wells" of our lives. It suggests that our deepest cravings are not meant to be silenced by the world, but to lead us to a source that flows from within. The tragedy of the human condition is often not our sin, but our ignorance of the "living water" standing right in front of us.

The essay of our lives often changes the moment we "know" the gift. For the Samaritan woman, knowing the gift meant leaving her water jar behind—the very tool of her old labor and shame—to tell others about the man who "told me everything I ever did." The gift of God does not just provide a service; it provides a new identity. To know the gift is to realize that one is fully known and, despite that, fully loved. Conclusion si_conocieras_el_don_de_dios

The beauty of this phrase lies in its context: a midday encounter between two people who, by the social standards of the time, should never have spoken. When Jesus says, "If you knew the gift of God," He is not merely offering a religious abstract; He is pointing to a radical shift in how we perceive our own needs and the source of their satisfaction. 1. The Paradox of Thirst "Si conocieras el don de Dios" is an