“Therefore with joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of salvation.” (Isa 12:3 AV)
These words of encouragement from the LORD through the prophet do not stipulate when the joy is present. Perhaps joy is already present and encourages us to continue to draw waters of refreshing from the wells of salvation. Or, it could mean that when we need joy, drawing from the wells of salvation is our source. Note also that there is more than one well of salvation. The word is plural. How can that be? How can salvation have more than one well? It is simple. We are saved from many things. We tend to think that salvation is only from our sins and a devil’s hell. But the word of God uses the word to describe various other forms of deliverance. The O.T. saint or king could be saved from a physical enemy. The sick can be saved from illness. Or the discouraged, anxious, or fearful can be delivered from their emotional turmoil. It is this second point to which I wish to consider.
It is interesting that the various wells of salvation tend to be something that rarely occurs to us. For instance, it is common for prayer to be offered for those in physical distress and disease for relief or complete healing from it. Yet the Bible clearly teaches us that we will all pass from this world unto eternity. There will come a time when there is no healing. Or, as in the case of Paul, we could be afflicted by a thorn in the flesh, and it is part of God’s plan for us. The wells of deliverance may not be what we think we need. They may not be what we would hope for. The wells of deliverance are wells intended to increase or bring upon us the joy of the LORD. Therefore, they are plural. Our struggle is to keep an open mind as God begins to fill our cup. We can be like little children sometimes. We want soda pop, but mom gives us ice water. Little do we know that the sugar in soda only makes us thirstier and the ice water quenches the thirst.
God does not have bitter wells. They are cool deep wells meant for our joy. The wells of salvation may make things a bit more difficult at first. No doubt Paul had to adjust his life to work around the throne he would now possess. Yet if we believe the wells of salvation are our source of joy, then joy is the result. I love ice water. The cleaner, the better. There is no better tasting water than natural spring water from an old-fashioned hand pump. I am not talking about that tap water bottled as spring water. I am speaking of water from a well dung on a mountainside that feeds only one home. Clean and fresh! The perfect glass of refreshing. Nothing added. No fortification. Direct from the hand of God without human influence. That are God’s wells of salvation. All God! From Him! All we need to do is receive what He has for us and learn to live in joy.