Jesus
and Nicodemus; Regeneration; Spiritual Birth; John 3:1-5
Even moral people
who are convinced of their own righteousness sometimes in the wee hours of the morning
when they are somewhat honest with themselves will doubt that all their good
deeds and all their good works are really sufficient enough to gain them
salvation. We have a case in point in John chapter three. Here we find a man
who by almost any standard of religious activity is someone who i9t would be
thought to have secured his place in heaven for all eternity. But apparently
when alone, like so many others if they possess integrity and the least little
bit of honesty, when they begin to question their own life and evaluate their
own good deeds, their ritual and religion, they realize they are insufficient
to provide them what they really want. So here we find a man who has just a
little bit of courage, but he screws up his courage to confront his concern.
This episode with Nicodemus is one that John the apostle weaves into his
narrative in order to teach us many things about the work of our Lord Jesus
Christ.
We need to remind ourselves
of the theme. Why did the apostle John
write this Gospel? John 20:30, 31 NASB “Therefore many other signs
Jesus also performed in the presence of the disciples, which are not written in
this book;
John writes to show that
Jesus is the Messiah, the promised Messiah of the Old Testament, and he
presents the evidence for this claim. The evidence is so powerful and so
overwhelming that the Jews had no excuse for rejecting Him. God’s condemnation
of
So the first thing that we
see here by way of introduction is that the apostle John is presenting the
claims of Jesus to be the Messiah and that those claims were overwhelming. The
second thing that we have seen and need to be reminded of is John’s particular
style. On the basis of all of the years that have passed he arranges his
material in such a way as to bring out
for us a much deeper significance. This is one of the challenging things about
studying this Gospel. At a surface level if we read through the Gospel there
are many things that we can learn and understand and can come to a saving
knowledge of Jesus Christ as Saviour, but if we stop and start taking it apart
and unweave the various strands that are here, you can go deeper and deeper and
deeper. You cannot exhaust the text. When we say that John arranges his
material so that there is a deeper significance it is not to say that this is
allegorical.
One of the greatest heresies
that came into the early church was the whole principle of allegorical
interpretation, and there are some people today that have slipped into this
type of interpretation. John’s Gospel can be understood at a couple of
different levels, but not to the expense of any other level. In other words,
what allegory does is say that you have a text at a physical level but there is
a spiritual truth and the physical truth is irrelevant or it didn’t happen.
What happens with some people is that they say that, yes, there is a physical
sense of the text and you have the various lines of the text but you have to
“read between the lines and then the Holy Spirit will reveal some truths to you
about reality at a higher level of doctrine.” Often that so-called spiritual
truth derived from reading between the lines is in contradiction to the literal
truth of the passage, and the literal truth of the passage becomes irrelevant
and reduced in significance to emphasize this so-called higher spiritual truth.
That is not what we are talking about here.
What we are talking about the
fact that John, while emphasizing the literal historical events of the four
days that took place in the life of John the Baptist, everything happened as
John tells us they did, but as John the writer under the inspiration of God the
Holy Spirit, having reflected on these things over all of these years and looks
back, sees a further significance to these events. That on day one there is a
discussion with John the Baptist who represent Old Testament prophets in the
Old Testament dispensation. Then there is the coming of Jesus representing the
hypostatic union on the second day, and the call of the disciples, Andrew and
John representing the church age on the third day. Then there is Nathanael who
represents true remnant of
Another thing that we see
about the style of the apostle John is that he is always taking physical things
from the immediate environment which Jesus uses to illustrate spiritual truth.
In chapter one He talks to Nathanael about being under the fig tree, and He
talks about this thing in his natural environment and then he expands upon that
to apply it to spiritual truth. In the temple after He has run out the money
changers and the Pharisees challenge Him He says, “Destroy this temple and in
three days I will raise it up.” So he is taking that which is in the immediate
physical environment. In chapter four when he is talking to the woman at the
well He says, “If you drink the water that I give you, you will never thirst
again.” So He is taking the element of water that is right there in the
immediate vicinity to use to teach spiritual truth. We could go through every
chapter of John to note these things about how the apostle John is emphasizing
this. These kinds of themes and trends are important to be able to actively
understand and interpret the text.
So now we come to this event
at the beginning of chapter three. Remember there were no chapter divisions in
the original, so we will read from
John
John is showing us that
many of those in chapter two included many among the highest echelons of Jewish
society. He is showing us that those who believed in Jesus and accepted His
claims to be Messiah are not from among the rabble and are bot the unlearned
and uneducated of
Nicodemus was very
concerned with what many call today the spiritual side of life. It is really a
misnomer because they don’t understand a thing about the spiritual side of
life. Nicodemus is in that class, he is not really sure what spirituality is,
he has been caught up in ritual instead of reality. He is concerned about the
following of the Mosaic Law and the precepts of the Mosaic Law in order to
somehow substantiate or to gain righteousness so that he could have a standing
before God. He thinks that somehow he is going to do enough to impress God to
save him. But what he is going to learn from Jesus is that spirituality is
based on a relationship, not on ritual; it is based on regeneration and not
religion. Remember that religion is man doing the work so that God will bless
him, and what we learn from this is that religion is the enemy of true
Christianity.
The evidence Jesus
presented, the evidence that took place in chapter two of changing the water
into wine at
Another thing we need to
observe here that John wants us to see is that though many people in
John 3:1 NASB
“Now there was a man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews;
What we are going to see
is that Jesus has a wonderful skill at conversing with people. Nicodemus is
asking these sort of third-party questions. He is appropriately named because
his name is a Greek name which in its root form means a ruler of the people. So
he is born into Jewish aristocracy, he has been trained from childhood in the
Scriptures and we know that he is a Pharisee, a religious conservative,
incredibly moral, consistently righteous and does everything he can to dot
every i and cross every t when it comes to obedience to the Mosaic Law. So if
anyone is going to have the right to say to God, You ought to let me into
heaven because I’m living the right kind of life, it would be Nicodemus. Yet
Nicodemus was honest enough with himself to know that at his very best he is
not sure that he is really good enough, and if he at his very best is not good
enough then the rest of us at our very best fall far short of a man like
Nicodemus. That is why Jesus said: “Unless your righteousness exceeds that of
the scribes and the Pharisees you cannot see the
Nicodemus was also a
rather timid man. This is the picture we have in Scripture. In chapter 7 what
has happened in the Sanhedrin has sent out a commission to confront Jesus and
to arrest Him. They return empty handed and Jesus has once again slipped away
and they have been thwarted in their efforts to arrest Him. When they return
there is a dialogue that takes place among the Sanhedrin and we get a little
insight into Nicodemus’s character.
John
[50] Nicodemus (he who
came to Him before, being one of them) said to them,
But we see a
transformation in him by the end of the Gospel. John 19:38 NASB
“After these things Joseph of Arimathea, being a disciple of Jesus, but a
secret {one} for fear of the Jews, asked Pilate that he might take away the
body of Jesus; and Pilate granted permission. So he came and took away His body.
In John chapter three
Nicodemus comes to Jesus at night. Why is that important? What is John saying
here? John is going to use the fact that Nicodemus came at night to emphasize a
spiritual principle. Night in Scripture is darkness, it represents sin and
blackness. John is saying that Nicodemus is typical of every unbeliever who
comes to Jesus out of the darkness of the world, out of the darkness of their
carnality. Many unbelievers come to Jesus just like this. They are timid, they
come slowly, they come one small step at a time, uncertain and cautious but
they still keep coming. Sometimes it takes people many years as they progress
in their understanding. We see with Nicodemus that he has taken many steps in
approaching the gospel. He is not there yet in John 3 but he has made advances,
and this is true of so many unbelievers. Nicodemus has his PhD in religion but
he is still in spiritual darkness, which unfortunately like so many religious
leaders today. They have studied everything, they have the degrees, they go out
and teach on spirituality, but they don’t have a clue as to what spirituality
is all about.
It is no coincidence that
John returns to this theme of light and darkness down in verse 19: “This is the
judgment, that the Light has come into the world, and men loved the darkness rather
than the Light, for their deeds were evil. [20] For everyone who does evil
hates the Light, and does not come to the Light for fear that his deeds will be
exposed.” But what has happened? Nicodemus has come out of darkness to the
Light. [21] “But he who practices the truth comes to the Light, so that his
deeds may be manifested as having been wrought in God.” In John
Darkness and light are
used in the Scriptures to refer metaphorically to sin and evil and loss of
salvation. So Nicodemus comes at night in the darkness. Notice how he begins
the conversation. He is uncertain and begins on a little bit of a tangent, a
side note. He doesn’t come right to the point, somewhat like John and Andrew in
chapter one. When they start off to follow Jesus, Jesus turns and says, “What
do you seek?” They say finally, “Teacher, where are you staying?” They are
uncertain, they don’t really know what to say. Nicodemus is timid, uncertain,
and he is not going to approach Jesus directly. But what we see is that Jesus
is the one who knows what is in their heart, what they are thinking, what they
want, and he doesn’t attack them, criticise them, embarrass them because of
their timidity. Instead, because of what he knows and what they are really
seeking he addresses the real issue. His response, His gentleness, His
directness gives them permission to come to Him directly.
John 3:2 NASB
“this man came to Jesus by night and said to Him, Rabbi, we know that You have
come from God {as} a teacher; for no one can do these signs that You do unless
God is with him’.” What an amazing thing that Nicodemus addresses Jesus as
Rabbi! Jesus is the “unlearned carpenter’s son” from that backward place called
He says, “Rabbi, we know
that You have come from God.” We
know! It is the third person plural. That tells us that Jesus has been quite a
matter of discussion among the Sanhedrin, that there are others beside
Nicodemus in the Sanhedrin who have looked into the Scriptures and what Jesus
has done, all of His miracles, His cleansing of the temple, and they look at it
and say, “This man gives us the evidence we need, He fits the picture portrayed
in the Old Testament, He has the credentials. So controversy has erupted at the
highest level of political power and the highest governing body in
Then he says: “We know
that You have come from God as a teacher.” The term “teacher from God” had at
this time become a technical term. In the
Nicodemus has certain
assumptions that are part of his very nature. One of these is that he believes
the Old Testament is true and valid. Secondly, he believes that the promised
Messiah is going to perform certain miracles, and the conclusion is that if the
Old Testament predicted this and this man is doing this that there is only one
inescapable conclusion. That is that Jesus is that man. Now he has some real
questions: Is my righteousness good enough? He doesn’t come out and say that
but that is what he is asking, because in his theological system all his life
he has been trying to be good enough for God. He is afraid that maybe there is
something in his background, something that he has done that affects his
standing before God. He has worked hard and diligently at accumulating enough
good works to gain God’s approval. He is concerned about his eternal destiny.
He doesn’t say any of that, so how do we know that is what his real question
is? Because that is the question that Jesus answered. Jesus doesn’t answer
about His signs or His credentials or His being the Messiah; he goes right to
the real issue. Nicodemus is asking: Is my righteousness good enough t get me
into the kingdom of heaven.
John 3:3 NASB “Jesus
answered and said to him, ‘Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again
he cannot see the
One thing we notice from
this passage is that Nicodemus takes this as the first meaning, the surface
meaning. Look at how he responds: “How can a man be born when he is old? He
cannot enter a second time into his mother’s womb and be born, can he?” We will
see that this word is used a couple more times in this chapter and John
gradually shifts our attention from the primary meaning or the superficial
meaning of “again” to the more significant meaning of “from above”; that this
verse has its source not in man but in God.
When Jesus says this to
Nicodemus he expects Nicodemus to know this principle. How? First of all we
have to pay attention to the fact that he uses the term
Jesus recognizes this in
Matthew 19:28 NASB “And Jesus said to them, ‘Truly I say to you,
that you who have followed Me, in the
regeneration when the Son of Man will sit on His glorious throne, you also
shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of
What does it mean to be
born again? We have to be technical here and ask the question: What is born?
When man was originally created in the garden he had a body, soul and spirit; a
trichotomy. But when Adam sinned he died spiritually. That means he lost his
human spirit. The human spirit is that immaterial aspect of man which gives him
the capacity to have a relationship with God, to understand spiritual truth,
and to have eternal life. What happens when you are born you already have a
physical body and a human soul, but you were born physically without a human
spirit; therefore you have no way to understand spiritual truth, no way to have
a relationship with God, and you do not possess eternal life. The consequence
is that you will die physically and unless there is a spiritual rebirth you
will suffer eternal condemnation, and this is the point in John 3:18 NASB
“He who believes in Him is not judged; he who does not believe has been judged
already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of
God.” What Jesus is saying to Nicodemus is, Unless you receive this human
spirit you can’t have a relationship with God and you can’t be in the
regeneration. Now Nicodemus is asking how to receive this human spirit; he is
totally confused. We receive the human spirit by faith alone in Christ alone.
When we believe in Jesus Christ, which is where we get to down in verse 18, “He
who believes in Him is not judged,” at that instant God the Holy Spirit creates
and imparts to us a new human spirit which is our regeneration. God the Father
imputes to that human spirit His very own eternal life and so we can have
eternal life, and that human spirit interacts with our soul and gives us the
capacity on the one hand to understand all doctrine and spiritual truth and to
have a relationship with God. It is God the Holy Spirit who works in and
through our human spirit to make doctrine understandable and perspicuous to us.
But without the human spirit we can’t go anywhere, we can’t have a relationship
with God, and we can’t understand the things of the Spirit of God.
Nicodemus asks: “How can a
man be born when he is old?” He is an old man himself. John 3:5 NASB
“Jesus answered, ‘Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and
the Spirit he cannot enter into the
Nicodemus knows the Old
Testament, so we turn back to Ezekiel 36:25 and find out what Jesus was
referring to from the Old Testament: NASB “Then I will sprinkle
clean water on you, and you will be clean; I will cleanse you from all your
filthiness and from all your idols.” This is a direct reference to the new
covenant promise of God in Ezekiel 36. Remember the water pots at the wedding
at
John 3:9 NASB “Nicodemus
said to Him, ‘How can these things be?’ [10] Jesus answered and said to him,
‘Are you the teacher of
Jesus said: “Unless you
are born of water and the Spirit.” Both refer to the two aspects of
regeneration. Why are they aspects of regeneration? Some people refer to the
water as physical birth and the Spirit referring to spiritual birth. Why is it
not that? Look at Titus 3:5 NASB “He saved us, not on the basis of
deeds which we have done in righteousness, but according to His mercy, by the
washing of regeneration and renewing by the Holy Spirit.” The same two elements
that are mentioned in Ezekiel 36 are mentioned by Jesus when he is talking to
Nicodemus and they are picked up by the apostle Paul when he is writing this
letter to Titus. These are two of the key elements that take place at
salvation. There is an absolute total cleansing from sin. Sin is not the issue.
You are cleansed and purified and that relates to the imputation of the perfect
righteousness of Jesus Christ at the point of salvation. Then there is a
renewal, a new birth, you are given a human spirit by God the Holy Spirit at
the point of salvation, and this is what qualifies you to enter into the
John 3:6 NASB
“That which is born of the flesh is flesh [physical birth], and that which is
born of the Spirit [Holy Spirit] is spirit [human spirit]. [7] “Do not be
amazed that I said to you, ‘You must be born again’. [8] The wind blows where
it wishes and you hear the sound of it, but do not know where it comes from and
where it is going; so is everyone who is born of the Spirit’.” John is
beginning to shift from the again concept to the above concept. Where does the
wind come from? The wind comes from above. Remember what Jesus said: “The rain
falls on the just and the unjust.” God sends the rain on the just and the
unjust. It comes from above. Where is the Spirit? The Spirit is above. It comes
from the Holy Spirit.
John 3:9 NASB
“Nicodemus said to Him, ‘How can these things be?’” What are the mechanics?