Sermons

Summary: What does it mean to be born again? How can we be saved?

Second Sunday In Lent (Year A)

Many people attend sporting events carrying signs labelled JOHN 3:16, the promise that God so loved the world that he gave his only Son. I heard of a sporting event recently, where the announcers began to snicker and gawk at a sign one of the spectators held that said John 3:17. "He’s got it wrong! Doesn’t he know it’s JOHN 3:16 not JOHN 3:17! What an idiot." But listen to the words from John 3:17, "For the Son came into the world not to condemn the world, but that the world through him might be saved."

John 3:16 is one of the most well-known Bible verses. Nearly all Christians (and many non-Christians) know John 3:16, but may not be able to recite the reference or tell that it comes from Jesus’ encounter with Nicodemus? But in spite of its popularity and familiarity, the world thirsts more and more daily to know that God loves us, to understand what it means that God loves us. When we come to church, to God, to the pastor, asking for direction, many of us bring this same question, perhaps we might call it the Nicodemus question.

The Nicodemus Question. Nicodemus comes to Jesus by night. He is a respected man, a leader of the people, a religious authority and teacher, who knew the Law. Maybe Nicodemus doesn’t even know how to tell Jesus that he hungers for the love of God, or that he thirsts for the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, or that he wants to find a merciful Lord. Nicodemus doesn’t come out an ask Jesus anything. He comes proclaiming knowledge of who Jesus is. And even though he doesn’t come right out and ask the Nicodemus Question, it is there. The conversation between Jesus and Nicodemus revolves around the simple question: "How can I be saved?"

Alone with Jesus in the dark of night, Nicodemus, a respected teacher of the Law, made a confession of sorts to the young preacher-carpenter who sat before him. He said to Jesus, "Rabbi, we know you are a teacher who has come from God. For no one could perform the miraculous signs you are doing if God were not with him." Nicodemus’ approach to Jesus is very rational. He describes what he knows, that Jesus is from God, and how he knows it, because no one could do this stuff outside of God. Nicodemus came to this conclusion through perfectly logical, rational deduction.

Nicodemus knew only one way to God, the way of logic and law. And on this night, in the darkness, that is the way he approached Jesus. He came with a religion of the mind. But Jesus replied with, "I tell you the truth, no one can see the kingdom of God unless he is born again." Jesus responds, not by speaking to Nicodemus’ logic, but by telling Nicodemus that he needs to start over again if he really wants to understand. If you want to understand, if you really want to know the truth, if you want to see how it is that I have come to you from God, then you must start over from the beginning. But Nicodemus misunderstood Jesus’ words. "How can anyone be born after having grown old? Can one enter a second time into the mother’s womb and be born again?" Nicodemus was still arguing with his mind. His logic could not wrap around the truths that Jesus was telling him.

Many of us are like Nicodemus. We want proof. We live in an age that demands facts and ignores feelings. We see evidence, draw conclusions, and take action based on logical, rational thought. But God does not work in a rational way. Perhaps if we want to find that missing element in our walk with God, that hole which continually thirsts for meaning, then we must move beyond our intellect to our feelings, beyond our mind to our heart. Facts aren’t enough. Feelings must enhance the facts. Belief and experience must complement logic and reason.

Being born again is not something that happened on a Saturday afternoon, when the Holy Spirit came upon you and revealed Jesus to you. Being born again is not something that happened on a cloudy day when the heavens opened and God spoke to you. Being born again is a daily process of being recreated in God’s image. Each day, we have a new opportunity to live in the love of God. Each day, we face a new world with new possibilities. Being born again means that we recommit ourselves to our faith in God, so that no matter what happens, no matter what we have done, we can start anew with God’s help.

Jesus invites us to renew our faith every day by being born again. If you feel lost or alone, if all you do seems to be for naught, if you love God but feel that He is somehow distant from you, if your spiritual life isn’t what you want it to be, then ask God to come into your heart right now. Let God’s Spirit work in you to give you new birth, new life. Give your heart and your mind to God and be born again in the wonder of God’s love.

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