Rev. Gary Davis would probably be the most known gospel recording but it was also recorded by:
Mahalia Jackson
Rev C.L. Franklin
Sister Rosetta Thorpe
Golden Gate Quartet
Swan Silvertones
also by:
Ian & Sylvia
Bob Dylan
Dave Van Ronk
Nick Cave
You can find the story of the woman at the well in the Bible in the Gospel of John, specifically in John 4:4-42. This passage describes Jesus' encounter with a Samaritan woman at a well, where he offers her living water and reveals that he is the Messiah.
The story is found in the 4th chapter of the Gospel of John. The place was Jacob's Well, at the city of Sychar in Samaria.
John 4 contains the story of Jesus and the woman at the well.
The clearest indication of the progress of the Gospel is that people are reading or hearing the Gospel or Good news of Jesus Christ and are coming to God through Jesus Christ in Salvation every day. The Gospel of Jesus Christ is alive and well and doing the Job God intended!
A:Over time, many of the disciples of Jesus were attributed gospels describing events associated with Jesus, either written anonymously or pseudepigraphically. The gospels that we know about included: Gospel of JamesThe Gospel of JohnGospel of JudasThe Gospel of LukeThe Gospel of MarkThe Gospel of MatthewThe Gospel of PeterThe Gospel of PhilipThe Gospel of ThomasIt is well established that none of the disciples actually wrote an eyewitness account, but many of the disciples were honoured with gospels in their names, including Matthew and John and several others.
The first person that Jesus told he was the Messiah was a woman from Samaria, known as the Samaritan woman or the woman at the well.
JOHNJohn 2:1-11 describes a marriage feast that took place in Cana of GalileeJohn 4:7-26 tells us about the woman of Samaria who came to draw water.
A woman at the well from Samaria (John 4).
A thirsty woman.
The Davis sisters
The Gospel of John presents Samaritans favorably in three instances: the encounter between Jesus and the Samaritan woman at the well (John 4), the healing of the Samaritan leper (Luke 17:11-19), and the parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25-37).
The question you have asked contains almost all that is known of the woman of Samaria. She was a resident of Sychar, a town in Samaria. She had had 5 husbands and was living with a man to whom she wasn't married. None of the accounts of Jesus' encounter with the woman at the well contain the woman's name. Jesus remained in Sychar for two days. It is highly probable that He and the disciples learned the woman's name (and her boyfriend's) during that time. Those names, whatever they were, were known only to the people there present. They were nowhere recorded in Scripture.