Paul James said:Thanks for the cookie, yeah!
As for your questions-
1. Woman at the well: Yes I would place more value on her deeds because Jesus new exactly what she had done in the past. What he had said had described her as a...well...slut. Therefor she was defined by her actions (better word than deed in this situation) more than she was defined by just who she was as a person (if that makes one bit of sense-I'm trying here so bear with me).
2. Salvation relation: Well...she had seen the salvation that Christ had brought to her by just telling her of past when she and He had never met. And she was astonished (I believe) when Jesus told her of the water of life.
3. We usually judge others by the color of their skin or by the way they dress, or anything else that is external. Jesus saw the internal part of the woman. And He basically (without saying it, but describing it) labled her as a slut. He bothered not with how the woman dressed, or by the color of her skin, but of how her past life had been.
I hope that answered your questions with at least something useful in there.
PJ
PS- Now how about a glass of milk for the cookie.
Paul, do you really think Jesus judged the woman at the well? Or did He merely speak the truth about her past and current life (history of actual facts)? My point is that Jesus did not judge the woman at all. He appears to have let her "judge herself", while he witnessed that judgement. And instead of letting her beat herself to death (which humans are quite capable of), He offered her an alternative, and a reprieve. No pun intended, but she was drowning in her own cesspool, and Jesus merely threw her a rope, and offered that if she grabbed hold and held on, He would pull her to safety.
Basically He said, "You admit you are in trouble...but if you trust me, I will get you out of that trouble, and that is a promisary note you can take to the bank."
He called her nor implied her to be no "slut". She judged herself, while he simply witnessed her confession, then offered her a means to find grace and reconcilliation both to herself, and with God.
Holy Redeemer, is his name...
my thoughts
v/r
Q
Oh, here is your milk, you have a choice of 1%, 2% or whole...