"You have given into the hand of your servant this great victory. Must I now die of thirst and fall into the hands of the uncircumcised?" (Judges 15:18)
Samson's wife has been given to his companion. He catches three hundred foxes, ties them in pairs with torches between their tails, and sets them loose in the Philistine grain fields, vineyards, and olive groves. The Philistines burn his wife and father-in-law. He attacks them ferociously. The men of Judah, fearing Philistine reprisal, bind him and hand him over. At Lehi, the Spirit of the LORD comes powerfully on him; the ropes become like charred flax and snap. He picks up a fresh donkey's jawbone and kills a thousand Philistines.
Then he is desperately thirsty and cries out: You have given into the hand of your servant this great victory. Must I now die of thirst and fall into the hands of the uncircumcised? God opens up the hollow place in Lehi and water comes out. The prayer of Samson after the battle is the prayer of the person who has served God's purposes and is now utterly empty. The great victory leaves him destitute. God provides the water. The Catechism sees in this the pattern of divine provision after the complete expenditure of human capacity: when there is nothing left, God opens the hollow place (CCC 2738).
Brothers and sisters, the great victory left Samson dying of thirst. The completion of the divine assignment does not guarantee the comfort of the divine provider. But when he cried out, God opened a spring. After your greatest acts of service, when you are emptied and thirsty, cry out. God opens hollow places in stones.
Lord God, after the thousand dead Philistines Samson was dying of thirst. Open a spring for every person emptied by faithful service. And give us the humility to cry out for water even when the victory is complete. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.