Feb 13, 2005
8.00am and 10.00am
John 3:1-17
Nicodemus
was an expert. He was a
religious expert. He knew what made for good religion, and he knew it
all. His
way of life, like many other of the Pharisees was pretty comfortable.
He was
respected and he’d even made it on to the ruling council. Life couldn’t
get
better. He was the ideal respectable and respected citizen.
Then
his comfort zone is invaded.
Along comes this firebrand of a teacher. Well, there had been John the
Baptist
already, and he’d caused enough trouble, apart from all the rude things
he had
said about respectable religious men like himself. Now there’s this
Jesus of
Nazareth. He’d caused quite a stir, it was rumoured, by turning gallons
of
water into wine at a wedding feast at Cana up in
So:
Nicodemus decides one night to
find Jesus out and have a few words with him. Now, it’s interesting
that he
comes to Jesus at night time. Was he afraid of what his
fellow-Pharisees might
think of him going and consorting with this Jesus? Or- did he simply
recognise
that there were too many crowds round Jesus during the day-time?
He
begins with a complement. ‘Rabbi’
(giving Jesus some mark of respect). ‘We know that you are a teacher
come from
God. For no-one could perform the miracles you are doing if God were
not with him’
Then Jesus cuts him short.
‘You
must be born again’ In effect
Jesus is saying to Nicodemus:
You've got to start all over again. It's no use seeing me as a special teacher or even a miracle worker from God; specially because I turned water to wine at the wedding. No! The water of your life has got to be turned into wine. Poor old Nicodemus was on the wrong track: he might witness the signs, but he could never perceive the Kingdom of God, of which they were but signs, without that complete new start which is the equal of a new birth; a new life with new faculties.
Nicodemus
just can’t fathom this out! Born again! You mean I’ve somehow got to
crawl back
into my mother’s womb! Put yourself in Nicodemus’ shoes. What else was
he to
think. And, unless you go through with this then there’s no place for
you in
God’s Kingdom. Certainly Jesus had set out, as John the Baptist had
with the
proclamation that the Kingdom was at hand, and well, yes, that’s what
every
good Jew looked forward to, and the Pharisees would surely have the
place of
honour in that Kingdom- they’d preserved the purity of God’s laws for
him, for
goodness sake! But- no place in the kingdom without being born all over
again.
Straightway Jesus tries to resolve Nicodemus’ conundrum for him. ‘Spirit gives
birth to spirit and flesh gives birth to flesh’. In other words,
Jesus is
talking about the birth of an entirely new form of life.
But,
let’s leave Nicodemus to one side for a moment. For what Jesus had to
say in
the midst of a night 2 000 years ago impacts us today. The message is
still
there; still true, still relevant, and you know, it still confounds and
annoys
many good ‘religious’ people. Plenty of good church people there are,
who
maybe, say, know what makes a good church service, who know what the
churches
ought to be doing, but at the mention of being born again, they lose
interest
at once.
We
are all born. Well, I hope so, though occasionally from vantage point
of a
pulpit one might be forgiven for doubting even that basic fact! We all
have
‘life’ The trouble with the English language is that it can’t cope with
all the
intricacies of New Testament Greek. For there are two words for ‘life’
First,
there’s bios. That’s biological life,
the physical life we have from our mother’s womb. It’s the basis of
human life.
We eat, sleep, talk and take part in all human activities, and possess
all
human faculties. Yet, that life is not sufficient. It is a life which
is
finite. The one certain event in our future is our physical death.
‘Bios’ will
come to an end. ‘Flesh gives birth to flesh’
But
there is another from of life- zo’e.
This is something quite different. It is ‘zoe’ which gives life to our
spirits,
and God’s Kingdom, which is eternal requires this extra dimension of
life, a
dimension of life that was lost when Adam and Eve sinned in the Garden.
So,
this life comes from God’s Spirit; it is something we can’t see, feel
or touch’
And it is not something at our- or anybody else’s, command. Only God
can give
it. We only have this life as God’s Spirit breathes it into us. It is
not
something which we can make or cause
to happen. We don’t know even
where it comes from or how. That’s maybe a corrective to those who
would try
and proscribe a set train of events before a person can be said to be
‘born
again’ The way and the route and sequence of events is as free as God’s
Spirit.
Paul
in 1 Corinthians spells this out for us: ‘The man without the Spirit does not
accept that come from the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him’
(2:14). Are we the totally passive in all this. Well, the short answer
is,
‘No!’. Something drove Nicodemus to seek Jesus out, and there lay the
first
key. And Jesus didn’t leave Nicodemus floundering. He points out two
things to
him; two things which are relevant also in the here and now.
Firstly,
Nicodemus was unbelieving.
Nicodemus
first question now (v9) is ‘How
can this be?’ Jesus answers him quite
straightly. Nicodemus, he says, you may be a teacher of
Secondly,
Nicodemus needed to receive. Nicodemus was learned, yes. He might
happily have
spent the whole night in discussion with Jesus, but Jesus knew that
wasn’t what
Nicodemus needed. Jesus, I suspect, knew Nicodemus was in earnest. He
knew he
was different in fact from the crowds who believed when he worked the
miracles
in
Rather,
Jesus points Nicodemus to his need, and cleverly, he does so by
latching on to
Old Testament Scripture with which Nicodemus would have been very
familiar.
‘Just as Moses lifted up the snake
in the desert, so the Son of Man must be
lifted up, that everyone who believes in him may have eternal life’
(v14).
Jesus
harked back to an occasion during the Exodus when deadly serpents were
biting
the Israelites. Moses killed one and hoisted it up on a pole, an all
who gazed
on it were saved from the deadly venom. We (like Nicodemus) have the
deadly
venom of sin in us, and only by gazing on Jesus and believing on Him
may we be
saved form that sin and live, live eternally.
This
leads us into the best-known and best-loved Gospel verse of them all.
John
3:16. ‘For God so loved the world
that he gave his one and only Son, so that
all who believe in him should not perish, but have eternal life’
That
verse is a key to eternal life; a key to the ‘new birth’, and it’s a
verse
which divides its hearers into two clear-cut groups. And that division
is of
utmost importance to our eternal destiny.
If
we believe, if we entrust our salvation to the Lord Jesus Christ, if we
look to
his Cross and recognize God’s judgment on our sin, then we shall indeed
live;
that process of new birth will be sown in us. Look, my fiends, for the
verb in
the verse about Moses’ serpent implied not a once off, cursory glance,
but a
steady gaze. That way, and that way alone, lies the portal of God’s
Kingdom,
and the door to eternal life.
For,
there is the other option. ‘that all who believe in him should
not perish, It matters that much. For without belief we
shall perish. And that word perish is used by Paul in 1 Corinthians
chapter 1,
where he writes about the Cross, and it was teaching on this verse
which led to
my spiritual birth at Lee Abbey in 1957.
‘The
message of the Cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to
us who
are being saved it is the power of God.’ (v18) People may
stubbornly
rebel in their sin. They may reject any knowledge of God and go from
bad to
worse. Natural man, even in his natural 'goodness' is divorced from God
and is
going from bad to worse. Even his good deeds are- so Isaiah, but ‘filthy rags’
(64:6) And in that separation here and now, man is doomed to eternal
separation. he is doomed to isolation and sunk into the despair of for
ever
going from bad to worse. Can you look hell in the face?
How
did Nicodemus respond? John in writing his Gospel does not leave us in
the
dark. Did Nicodemus stand and watch the crucifixion? Did he now recall
the
night when Jesus told him of the bronze serpent of Moses?; of the Son
of Man
lifted up; of eternal life? Did he now realise that eternal life is not
the
universal human possession, and needed a new birth, just as common life
needs a
birth?- and that this new birth comes through the Son of Man lifted up
on a
Cross? Did he now go out and seek Joseph?
Nicodemus, we are told, came to the burial with the anointing
mixture:
myrrh and aloes, about seventy pounds (v39) That much of these precious
spices
would normally only be used for a king. Had Nicodemus read the placard
on the
Cross- 'The King of the Jews'? Did he now realise its significance and
believe?
Did he come to honour the King of the Jews as his Messiah?
All
this leaves us with one very pointed question: What of you and I?
Do
we believe?
Are
you and I born again?
If
there be any shadow of doubt, look on the Son of God on the Cross, and
know
that he loves you and desires that you believe.