The Divine Necessity of New Birth

Pastor Groelsema delivers a robust, orthodox exposition of John 3. The sermon successfully balances the sovereignty of God in regeneration with the urgent call to faith in Christ. It avoids common pitfalls of moralism and decisionism, instead pointing listeners to the 'miracle' and 'mystery' of the new birth. The homiletical structure is clear, and the theological diagnostics indicate a healthy, gospel-centered presentation.

🟢
Theological Status: FAITHFUL (Sound) Biblical Parallel(Archetype): Philadelphia
❓ What do these grades mean?
🔍 Biblical Discernment: The 7 Church Parallels
The Faithful Parallels Smyrna • Philadelphia
Teaching that parallels the churches that endure suffering with true spiritual riches (Rev 2:9) and keep the Word of Christ without denial despite having "little strength" (Rev 3:8).
The Cold Orthodox Parallel Ephesus
Teaching that upholds doctrinal precision yet parallels the loss of the "first love"—the vital, motivating power of the Gospel (Rev 2:4).
The Compromised Parallel Pergamum
Teaching that parallels churches tolerating the "doctrine of Balaam" through cultural accommodation (Rev 2:14), characterized by weak boundaries, sloppy theology, and worldly compromise.
The Corrupted & Dead Parallels Thyatira • Sardis • Laodicea
Teaching that parallels churches with active heresy, synergism, therapeutic deism, or dead orthodoxy (Rev 2:20, Rev 3:1, Rev 3:17). These represent systemic, fundamental errors that corrupt the Gospel engine.
Date: 2026-01-13 | Church: Christ Covenant Church | Speaker: Tom Groelsema

🧐 Overview

Theological Verdict & Summary

Sermon Summary: Why is spiritual rebirth not just an option, but an absolute necessity? This sermon unpacks the mystery of being born again, moving beyond religious ritual to the supernatural work of God.

Pastoral Analysis: Pastor Groelsema delivers a robust, orthodox exposition of John 3. The sermon successfully balances the sovereignty of God in regeneration with the urgent call to faith in Christ. It avoids common pitfalls of moralism and decisionism, instead pointing listeners to the 'miracle' and 'mystery' of the new birth. The homiletical structure is clear, and the theological diagnostics indicate a healthy, gospel-centered presentation.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Philadelphia — This sermon exemplifies the faithful exposition of core gospel truths. It maintains doctrinal integrity regarding the necessity of regeneration while offering clear, Christ-centered application. The preaching is sound, orthodox, and spiritually edifying, reflecting a church that holds fast to the name of Christ without denying His faithfulness.

Big Idea: Being born again is a divine necessity, a supernatural miracle performed by God, and a spiritual mystery that points believers to faith in Jesus Christ. [00:09:45 ▶️ 📄]

🎨 The Visual Metaphor

The cracked clay represents the natural human condition, incapable of self-renewal. The sprout signifies the divine necessity of regeneration, a miraculous new creation initiated solely by God's sovereign power.


📖 How they Handle Scripture & Jesus

  • Primary Text: John 3:1-15
  • Usage Classification: Expository
  • Text-to-Talk Ratio: High
  • Pulpit Decorum: ✅ PASS - The pastor maintains a respectful, pastoral tone. No coarse language or pejoratives were detected. The use of personal anecdotes (grandchild, Minnesota wind) is appropriate and illustrative.

✝️ Christological Focus: Typological and Direct

"The sermon connects the new birth directly to the cross (bronze serpent typology) and commands listeners to look to Jesus for salvation, ensuring Christ remains the center of the gospel message."

Scripture Saturation: Verses Read: 15 | Referenced: 7 | Alluded: 0

Passages Read Aloud:

  • John 3:1-15 [00:02:08 ▶️ 📄]
    "Now there was a man of the Pharisees named Nicodemus, the ruler of the Jews. This man came to Jesus by night and said to him, Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher come from God, for no one can do these signs that you do unless God is with him. Jesus answered him, truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God. Nicodemus said to him, how can a man be born when he is old? can he enter a second time into his mother's womb and be born? Jesus answered, truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit. Do not marvel that I said to you, you must be born again. The wind blows where it wishes and you hear it sound, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes. And so it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit. Nicodemus said to him, how can these things be? Jesus answered him, are you the teacher of Israel and yet you do not understand these things? Truly, truly, I say to you, you speak of what we know and bear witness to what we have seen, but you do not receive our testimony. If I have told you earthly things and you do not believe. How can you believe if I tell you heavenly things? No one has ascended into heaven except he who descended from heaven, the Son of man. And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of man be lifted up that whoever believes in him may have eternal life."

Key References: John 2:23, John 1:12, Jeremiah 17:9, 1 Corinthians 2:14, Ezekiel 36:25-27, John 1:33, Numbers 21:9


🎙️ Sermon Content & Delivery

Word Count: 4,573 words

📌 Key Topics Addressed

  • Regeneration / Being Born Again [00:09:35 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor defines regeneration as a necessary, miraculous work of God that transforms the heart, mind, and will, distinguishing it from mere intellectual belief or religious credentials.
  • Nicodemus's Spiritual State [00:09:57 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor analyzes Nicodemus as a prestigious, wealthy, and knowledgeable religious leader who nonetheless lacked true saving faith and needed spiritual rebirth.
  • Faith vs. Works/Credentials [00:14:42 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor argues that religious status, intelligence, and even initial belief based on signs are insufficient; one must be born again to enter the kingdom.
  • Regeneration / New Birth [00:17:48 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor defines regeneration as a spiritual transformation where God enlightens the mind, replaces the heart of stone with a heart of flesh, and renews the will, serving as the entrance into the Christian life.
  • Divine Sovereignty in Salvation [00:18:35 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor argues that being born again is a 'must' that humans cannot perform; it is a work of God alone, creating a conundrum where the command implies human responsibility but the power lies solely with God.
  • Exegesis of 'Water and Spirit' [00:20:02 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor analyzes John 3:5, rejecting views that equate 'water' with natural birth or baptism, and instead argues that 'water and Spirit' are two elements of one work of God, drawing from Ezekiel 36 where water cleanses and the Spirit renews.
  • Parental Responsibility vs. Divine Power [00:28:00 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor addresses parents, stating that while they can provide education, home life, and Scripture, they cannot give new life; the only effective action is persistent prayer for God to work the miracle of regeneration.
  • The Mystery of the Holy Spirit [00:31:07 ▶️ 📄]
    > Using the analogy of wind, the pastor explains that the Spirit's work is invisible and uncontrollable, but its effects (new interest in God, joy, humility) are visible, similar to seeing a flag move.
  • Evidence of the Spirit's Work [00:33:50 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor describes visible signs of the Spirit's work, such as new interest in God, commitment to prayer, and transformation from despair to joy.
  • The Origin of Faith [00:35:01 ▶️ 📄]
    > Using Spurgeon's anecdote, the pastor argues that the desire to seek God is itself evidence of God's prior influence and authorship of faith.
  • The Ministry of the Spirit as a Spotlight [00:38:05 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor explains that the Holy Spirit does not draw attention to Himself but acts as a spotlight shining exclusively on Jesus.
  • The Call to Look to Christ [00:39:07 ▶️ 📄]
    > Referencing the bronze serpent and Jesus' lifting up, the pastor urges listeners to look to Christ for eternal life rather than seeking the Spirit directly.

🖼️ Illustrations & Stories

  • Sermon Illustration [00:04:27 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor shares the personal news of the birth of his 11th grandchild, James Michael, to illustrate the miracle of physical birth and contrast it with the greater miracle of spiritual rebirth.
  • Sermon Illustration [00:18:17 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor uses the analogy of the 'front door of a school' to describe regeneration as the necessary entrance into the 'school of Christ' (referencing John Calvin).
  • Sermon Illustration [00:18:17 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor uses the analogy of a school's front door to describe regeneration as the necessary entrance into the 'school of Christ.'
  • Sermon Illustration [00:34:40 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor references John Wesley's description of his heart being 'strangely warmed' to illustrate the internal work of the Spirit.
  • Sermon Illustration [00:35:01 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor recounts Charles Spurgeon's testimony of realizing that his own seeking of God was actually initiated by God's prior influence, leading him to ascribe his change wholly to God.
  • Sermon Illustration [00:32:37 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor shares a personal anecdote about living in west-central Minnesota, noting that tree groves are planted on the west and north to block the wind, illustrating that while we can redirect or block the wind's effects, we cannot control its direction or source.
  • Sermon Illustration [00:34:40 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor recounts John Wesley's experience of feeling his heart 'strangely warmed' and Charles Spurgeon's realization that his own seeking of God was induced by a previous divine influence, leading him to ascribe his change wholly to God.
  • Sermon Illustration [00:39:07 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor references the Old Testament account of Moses lifting up the bronze serpent in the wilderness, where those bitten by venomous snakes were healed by looking at the serpent, paralleling Jesus being lifted up on the cross for eternal life.
  • Sermon Illustration [00:40:51 ▶️ 📄]
    > The pastor notes that after Jesus was lifted up and died, it was Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus who took His body to the tomb, demonstrating their transformed, born-again state.

🚀 Calls to Action (Application)

  • Pastoral Charge [00:29:30 ▶️ 📄]
    > To persistently pray and plead with God for the spiritual rebirth of children.
  • Pastoral Charge [00:40:15 ▶️ 📄]
    > Flee to Jesus, look to Him in faith, and turn from sin to Christ.

🧭 Biblical Alignment Dashboard

Overall Verdict: Sound & Commendable

CategoryStatusReasoning
Gospel Presentation ✅ PASS The gospel engine is fully intact. The sermon correctly identifies regeneration as God's sovereign work while maintaining the biblical command to 'flee to Jesus' for salvation. It avoids the error of making regeneration a human work or a mere emotional experience, anchoring it firmly in Christ's lifting up.
Soteriology ✅ PASS The sermon affirms the necessity of regeneration (John 3:3), the sovereignty of the Spirit (John 3:8), and the role of faith in Christ (John 3:14-15). It correctly distinguishes between human effort and divine grace.
Bibliology ✅ PASS The sermon treats Scripture with authority, using it to define the nature of the new birth. It references historical confessions (Westminster) and theologians (Calvin, Spurgeon) in service to the biblical text.
Hermeneutic ✅ PASS The exegesis of John 3 is sound. The pastor correctly interprets 'born again' as spiritual regeneration, not physical rebirth, and connects the bronze serpent typology to Christ's crucifixion appropriately.
Theology Proper ✅ PASS The sermon presents a biblical view of God as the active agent in salvation, renewing the will and enlightening the mind. It avoids deism and pelagianism.
Sacramentology ⚪ N/A The sermon focuses on the word and Spirit, not the ordinances. No errors detected regarding sacramental theology.
Confessional Depth ❌ FAIL The sermon references the Westminster Confession and Calvin, showing a connection to historic orthodoxy, but remains accessible to a lay audience without becoming overly academic.

⚙️ The Gospel Engine (Confessional Distinctives)

The Law And Wrath: Not observed in the sermon.

Total Depravity And Inability:

"our inability, our inability to believe without a mighty work of the Spirit in our hearts, our inability to bring someone else to believe without that same work of the Spirit, our inability, Lord, to make somebody hear this word and to believe what it says" [00:00:42 ▶️ 📄]

Active Obedience Of Christ: Not observed in the sermon.

The Cross And Atonement:

"He actually points him to himself. He wraps it all up. He says, as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up that whoever believes in him may have eternal life." [00:39:07 ▶️ 📄]

✅ Commendations

Theological Clarity | Clear Distinction Between Human Effort and Divine Grace

The pastor effectively uses the wind analogy to illustrate the sovereignty of the Spirit, helping the congregation understand that regeneration is not a human achievement but a divine miracle.

Pastoral Application | Practical Guidance for Parents and Evangelists

The application to parents to pray persistently and to evangelists to rely on God's power rather than their own eloquence is both biblically grounded and practically helpful.

Gospel Focus | Christ-Centered Call to Faith

The sermon avoids the trap of making 'being born again' a vague spiritual experience. Instead, it clearly directs non-believers to 'flee to Jesus' and 'turn from sin to Christ,' providing a clear path to assurance.

🛡️ Verified Orthodox Mechanics

✅ Regeneration is a necessary work of God for salvation.

✅ The Spirit's work is sovereign and mysterious, like the wind.

✅ Faith in Christ is the means by which we receive eternal life.

✅ Religious status does not guarantee regeneration.


📜 Full Sermon Transcript (Audit)

Use the 📄 icons next to quotes above to automatically jump to their location in this raw transcript.

[00:00:00] [SPEAKER SPEAKER_00]
[00:00:00] Please turn with me in your Bible to the Gospel of John, John chapter 3. We'll be looking together at verses 1 through 15 as Jesus encounters this man that many of us have heard of before, Nicodemus. John chapter 3, verses 1 through 15.
[00:00:32] Before we read it together, let's pray for God to instruct our hearts.
[00:00:42] Father in heaven, as we turn to this part of your word, we are conscious, Lord, of our inability, our inability to believe without a mighty work of the Spirit in our hearts, our inability to bring someone else to believe without that same work of the Spirit,
[00:01:10] our inability, Lord, to make somebody hear this word and to believe what it says, even though we preach it and proclaim it without the work of your Spirit, God, it's going to fall to the ground like dead seed. We need your Spirit, God, to take this word and bring it to our hearts
[00:01:34] so that we listen, we are changed, we are transformed.
[00:01:43] We plead with you, oh God, to lift the scales from our eyes, to remove the calluses from our hearts so that, God, we may be changed and transformed by your word and by your spirit.
[00:02:00] We ask these things humbly in Jesus' name, amen.
[00:02:05] Let's read together now from God's word.
[00:02:08] Now there was a man of the Pharisees named Nicodemus, the ruler of the Jews. This man came to Jesus by night and said to him, Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher come from God, for no one can do these signs that you do
[00:02:24] unless God is with him. Jesus answered him, truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God. Nicodemus said to him, how can a man be born when he is old?
[00:02:41] can he enter a second time into his mother's womb and be born? Jesus answered, truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.
[00:02:58] That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit. Do not marvel that I said to you, you must be born again. The wind blows where it wishes and you hear it
[00:03:11] sound, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes. And so it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit. Nicodemus said to him, how can these things be? Jesus answered him, are you the
[00:03:29] teacher of Israel and yet you do not understand these things? Truly, truly, I say to you, you speak of what we know and bear witness to what we have seen, but you do not receive our testimony. If I
[00:03:43] have told you earthly things and you do not believe. How can you believe if I tell you heavenly things? No one has ascended into heaven except he who descended from heaven, the Son of man. And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of man be lifted up
[00:04:06] that whoever believes in him may have eternal life. Well, dear people of God, I hope that you would indulge me for a moment and allow you to tell me that Sherry and I were blessed with another
[00:04:27] grandchild this week, number 11. Yes, praise God. We're thankful for it. James Michael was born on Thursday, born at 10.15 a.m., 7 pounds, 20 ounces. He's healthy, mom is well, and our family is blessed once again. I mention all this because when I think about the birth of a child,
[00:04:54] birth of a grandchild, when you witness that or are part of that, you're witnessing something miraculous, aren't you? That's incredible to think that in nine months that God knits together a human being, not a rock, not a tree, not an insect,
[00:05:20] but a person, someone who has had the breath of life breathed into them, someone made in the image of God. Bones, ligaments, muscles, organs, a respiratory, circulatory, endocrine, sensory, neurological systems, eyes that can see, a brain that causes the little one to think,
[00:05:54] to respond, to react, a soul. There is not a scientist, not an inventor in the world who is able to create, invent, make a human being. Thirty-six times the miracle of birth.
[00:06:21] Happened in Christ's covenant, 2025, 36 times, a little one born in the image of God.
[00:06:31] In 2026, already, God's blessed us again.
[00:06:36] We celebrate with the Androids, the birth of their son, Nathaniel.
[00:06:44] Well, people of God, if the birth of a child is miraculous, even more so is our spiritual birth, our spiritual rebirth.
[00:06:54] birth. In John's gospel, if you have your Bibles open, you can see at the end of chapter 2 that Jesus encountered a number of people, which it says they believed in his name because they saw
[00:07:09] the signs that Jesus was doing. Jesus had changed water into wine. There are other signs that Jesus did that aren't recorded for us exactly right here in the early part of John's gospel. We know
[00:07:24] they're there because it says they saw the signs. And they came to believe in a way in Jesus.
[00:07:33] They believed in his name. And yet it appears that their trust in Christ, their faith was a miracle-based faith. They saw what Jesus was doing. They were drawn by the signs that Jesus had performed. And they said, we believe. And yet they were, this was a faith dependent on
[00:07:54] what Christ had revealed to them or done before their eyes. Not true saving faith.
[00:08:03] And we know this because of what the Bible says. At the end of chapter 2, it says, Jesus on his part did not entrust himself to them because he knew all people and he himself knew
[00:08:17] what was in man. He knew what was in their hearts. He knew what was happening deep down inside. It's an amazing thing, isn't it? Jesus knows our hearts. Jeremiah in chapter 17 verse 9 says, our hearts are desperately sick. Who can understand them? Who can know them? We don't even
[00:08:44] know our own hearts, is what Jeremiah is saying. But God does. Jesus does. He knows that they're desperately sick. He knows that our hearts need fixing, that they need a cure, they need a transformation. And that is why Jesus came along to Nicodemus and he said, Nicodemus, I have an
[00:09:08] answer for you. I have an answer actually for everyone whose heart is sick, everyone. You need a miracle. You need a rebirth. You must be born again. Our outline this morning is simple. As Jesus describes this to Nicodemus. There is a must, there is a miracle, and there is a mystery.
[00:09:45] A must, a miracle, and a mystery. The must. Jesus came to Nicodemus who was a prestigious man.
[00:09:57] He was a spiritual man. You can see at the very beginning of the chapter some descriptions of Nicodemus. First, we read that he was a Pharisee. He was part of the who's who of the
[00:10:09] religious community. Pharisees were scholars. They were considered holy men. Their passion was to interpret the law of God with exactness and to follow the law of God with rigor.
[00:10:26] It's also said here that he was a ruler of the Jews. In other words, Nicodemus wasn't just any average Pharisee. But he was a member of the Jewish ruling council. He was a member of the Sanhedrin.
[00:10:43] The Sanhedrin was made up of 70 of the most respected religious leaders. It was both a religious and a civil body. A religious court of appeal for people who felt that they had been done an injustice at a lower court. It was given some authority by the Roman government to
[00:11:06] make decisions in certain civil matters. And so Nicodemus was a religious and political authority.
[00:11:17] In fact, Jesus is going to say about him, verse 10, that he was the teacher of Israel. He holds a prestigious place within Israel as a teacher of the word and as a member of the Sanhedrin.
[00:11:36] He's probably wealthy. We gather this because of his name. He has a Greek name. Most in Judea would only have had a Hebrew name except for those who are wealthy and educated. And this is the case
[00:11:53] with Nicodemus. He goes about with this Greek name. And then also notice this. He's a seeker.
[00:12:02] He came to Jesus at night. He came in the dark so that no one would see him. This was a clandestine operation to meet up with Jesus. But the darkness also probably says something about
[00:12:18] his heart, symbolic of his heart, of his need. He comes looking to Christ for something that he did not have. He knew Jesus was a teacher who had come from God, and he wants to know more from
[00:12:32] Jesus. People, God, if you take all of this together, all these descriptions of Nicodemus, and you look at all the other people in the Bible who had reason to expect that they may belong to God's kingdom, had it together, really needed very little from God,
[00:12:52] Nicodemus is that kind of man. Well-respected, looked up to man. I mean, he's a pillar in the church. He's the kind of guy that you look to for wisdom and knowledge. He probably would be one of
[00:13:13] our elders, a perfect combination of a teaching elder and a ruling elder. Wise, authoritative, a standout leader in the church. Maybe belongs to the session. He's the guy who's going to press meetings and general assembly and all of that, just a man that you look up to. And yet Jesus
[00:13:37] said to him, Nicodemus, you have a tremendous need. You have all these things going for you, but you have a tremendous need. Look how Jesus puts it, verse 3 and in verse 5.
[00:13:59] Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again, Nicodemus, he cannot see the kingdom of God. And Jesus says something similar. Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water
[00:14:14] and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God. Nicodemus had come to Christ assessing who Jesus was. Jesus, we know that you have come from God. Nobody can do these signs unless God is with
[00:14:32] them. He comes to Jesus assessing Christ, and Jesus turns it around, and He assesses Nicodemus.
[00:14:42] And He says to Nicodemus, here's your need. Nicodemus, you must be born again. It's a requirement, a necessity. It doesn't matter what your credentials are. It doesn't matter even if you come to Christ. It doesn't exempt you. If you are not born again, then you do not belong
[00:15:09] to the kingdom of God. Jesus says it in two ways, although they're not very different at all from one another. He says you cannot see the kingdom unless you're born again. You cannot have eyes
[00:15:31] to see. You will not have eyes to comprehend spiritual things unless you have this rebirth.
[00:15:41] You will be blind to the things of God unless you're born again. They will not make sense to you. They are not going to register with you. You are going to have no interest, no passion
[00:15:55] for these things. It's just as Paul said in 1 Corinthians 2, 14, he says, the natural man does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is unable to understand them because they are spiritually discerned. You bring the truth
[00:16:21] of God to somebody who has not been born again, and no matter how many times you try to pound it in, you cannot see the kingdom of God unless you are born again. And then Jesus says, verse 5,
[00:16:40] no one can enter the kingdom unless he is born again. You do not have a relationship with Christ until you experience this rebirth. You do not belong to God's kingdom without it, His kingdom being His realm, His reign. To be born again means to be born a second time.
[00:17:05] It also means to be born from above, to be born of God. We use the theological word for this times regeneration, the act of God by which a sinner is given new spiritual life from spiritual
[00:17:24] deadness to life, a new nature, a new heart. The Westminster Confession of Faith describes it like this. God calls us out of a state of sin into grace, and when He does this, He enlightens our minds spiritually. He takes away the heart of stone and gives us a heart of
[00:17:48] flesh. He renews our will. You see this transformation, this change? Mind, heart, will, all of it turned upside down, made new by the Spirit of God, this rebirth. It's the starting point in the Christian life. John Calvin said it is the proper entrance into the school of Christ.
[00:18:17] Think about the front door of a school.
[00:18:19] This is the front door into the school of Christ.
[00:18:25] A must.
[00:18:27] No other alternative to life in Christ.
[00:18:32] Second, it's a miracle.
[00:18:35] In other words, it is something that we cannot make happen, but only God can.
[00:18:44] You see, there's a bit of a conundrum here, isn't there?
[00:18:46] In Jesus' words, sort of a puzzle.
[00:18:50] The Bible says we must be born again.
[00:18:52] it's like a command to obey. Okay, I must be born again. What do I have to do? And yet, we can't do it. And you see then, the must is really a statement about something God has to do
[00:19:12] if we're going to be saved. When Jesus says, you must be born again, He's describing a work of God, not something you have to run out and do from here this morning. It's a work of God.
[00:19:24] You see this in Jesus' statements. In verse 3 again, he says, unless one is born again, they cannot enter the kingdom. And then in verse 5, Jesus says, unless one is born of water and
[00:19:42] the Spirit, they cannot enter the kingdom. Jesus is making a parallel here. To be born again and to be born of water and the Spirit, they're parallel statements. But it's that second statement that is probably the most confusing part of the passage here. What does it mean when
[00:20:02] Jesus says one has to be born of water and the Spirit? Well, there have been multiple, multiple viewpoints on understanding this word or this phrase of Jesus. One common viewpoint is this, that water and the Spirit is simply referring to our natural birth, water, and our spiritual birth,
[00:20:32] born of the Spirit. And some who would take this position tie it into verse 6, because Jesus goes on to say, that which is born of the flesh is flesh, natural birth. That which is born of the Spirit is Spirit. And so, water and Spirit, just when we're born from our mother's
[00:20:52] womb and born of the Spirit of God. Well, the problem with this view is this, that these two things don't seem to be equivalent. Being born of water and the Spirit, if we're talking about
[00:21:08] natural birth and spiritual birth, that doesn't make a very good parallel with what Jesus said in verse 3, to be born again, where it's clear He's talking about a spiritual birth. It's the supernatural birth, not our natural birth, but our supernatural birth that gets the emphasis here
[00:21:33] on the part of Christ. And so to say to be born of water is natural birth just seems a bit out of place here. Another common view is this, that water in the Spirit refers to Christian baptism
[00:21:48] and regeneration. Water referring to our baptism, be born of the Spirit, our regeneration, And some would say, well, this makes a good interpretation because John has already connected water and the Spirit before in his gospel. If you go back to chapter 1 and you look at the
[00:22:10] baptism of Jesus, Jesus goes down into the water, the Spirit of God in the form of a dove descends, so there you already have water and Spirit in the baptism of Christ. And others would go on to say
[00:22:27] Christian baptism and regeneration, these are initiatory events, aren't they? When we baptize a person here at Christ's covenant, whether baby or adult, we say this is an initiatory right into the covenant community. And of course, regeneration comes at the very start of our walk with the Lord
[00:22:51] or our experience with Christ, but there's a problem here too. In Jesus' baptism, baptism by water and the Spirit are really contrasted, not united. They seem to hold together here in John 3, but in Jesus' baptism, they're separated, actually. Remember how John the Baptist put it?
[00:23:15] I baptize with water. Oh, but there's another baptism coming. He will baptize you by the Holy Spirit and with fire. And if water here in John 3 is simply a reference to baptism, it would seem that Nicodemus wouldn't be that puzzled by what Jesus is saying.
[00:23:44] What would be the view that I would take? It would be this, that water and spirit actually are not two separate things. Jesus is not talking about two different things, to be born of water
[00:24:00] and then to be born of the Spirit, but he's actually talking about one work of God and describing two elements of that work. Water and the Spirit are together, one work of God, two elements of it, but one work of God. And where do we get this from? The clue
[00:24:19] is back in the Old Testament. Just turn back with me quickly to Ezekiel 36. This is Ezekiel's passage where he's describing the new covenant. What's going to come with the coming of the Messiah, the new covenant that God will make with his people? Ezekiel 36. Let's start at verse 23
[00:24:46] and we'll read through verse 27. God says, I will vindicate the holiness of my great name, which has been profaned among the nations, which you have profaned among them, and the nations will know that I am the Lord, declares the Lord God. When through you I vindicate my holiness
[00:25:05] before their eyes. I will take you from the nations and gather you from all the countries and bring you into your own land. So here's speaking to the exiles. I'm going to bring you back. And then look at verse 25. I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you shall be clean from
[00:25:27] all your uncleannesses and from all your idols. I will cleanse you, and I will give you a new heart and a new spirit I will put within you. I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and
[00:25:38] give you a heart of flesh and I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes and be careful to obey my rules. Here in Ezekiel 36, we have water, we have spirit. And God says,
[00:26:03] I will sprinkle water on you to cleanse you. It's a cleansing agent. I will cleanse you from all your iniquities, from all your idols, and I will put my spirit upon you to renew you
[00:26:16] so that you walk in my ways. You will be careful to obey my rules. One promise to cleanse and to transform water and spirit. And I think this is what Jesus was drawing from when he was speaking
[00:26:34] to Nicodemus. Jesus, in a sense, was saying, hey, all that Ezekiel promised was part of the new covenant, guess what? Here I am. And the new covenant has arrived so that you must be born
[00:26:50] by water and spirit if you're going to enter the kingdom of God, this promise that God has made that he will do for his people. Friends, doesn't this make sense? Jesus has said to Nicodemus,
[00:27:06] You are the teacher of Israel. Here is an Old Testament scholar, and Jesus talking about water and spirit, just drawing from the Old Testament, a passage, a text that Nicodemus would have known so well. Be born again by water and spirit. And people got, this is only something God can do.
[00:27:38] It's part of the new covenant promise.
[00:27:40] It's already clear.
[00:27:41] This is something God is going to do for his people.
[00:27:44] I will put my spirit on you.
[00:27:46] I will sprinkle water on you.
[00:27:48] I will cleanse you.
[00:27:49] This is God's doing to be born again, to be born of water and spirit.
[00:28:00] What does flesh give birth to, said Jesus?
[00:28:04] Flesh can only give birth to flesh, but Spirit gives birth to Spirit.
[00:28:15] Parents, we can give our children all kinds of things, right?
[00:28:20] And we want to do that.
[00:28:22] You're raising your children.
[00:28:24] You want to give them a good education.
[00:28:25] You want to give them a good home.
[00:28:27] You want to give them the Scriptures.
[00:28:28] You want to bring them to church so that they know about Christ.
[00:28:32] You give and you give and you give, and there's one thing you can't give.
[00:28:37] you cannot give them new life. You give and you give and you give. And we pray for them and we disciple them and we bring them to worship and we read the Scripture to them and we do it over and
[00:28:51] over and over again. And the one thing we can't do is to take all of that and make it enter their heart by the Spirit. That's the one thing we cannot do for our children. But only the Spirit
[00:29:08] can transform them. You know, the one thing that's probably more important than anything else you can do for your children or your grandchildren? It's pray. Pray and pray and pray. And yes, put the Scriptures in front of them and bring them to church and tell them about Christ,
[00:29:30] but pray and pray and pray and plead with God that they would be born again, that they would be born of water and the Spirit and so be changed and transformed and know Christ.
[00:29:50] It's the same truth for those that you would witness to.
[00:29:57] It's the same truth for every preacher that gets up behind this pulpit.
[00:30:03] I'm going to preach, but I can't change anyone.
[00:30:09] God changed them, transformed them, entered their heart, caused them to be born again.
[00:30:17] And do you ever wish, desire, as you are living in biblical times and could witness miracles like we see throughout the Scriptures, Jesus healing a blind man or a deaf man or a lame person or whatever, raising the dead? Sometimes we think, you know, man, it would be great to
[00:30:43] see a miracle today. Every time somebody becomes a Christian and is born again, there's a miracle.
[00:30:56] God still does miracles.
[00:31:02] So it's a must.
[00:31:04] Be born again is a miracle.
[00:31:07] And it's also a mystery.
[00:31:10] Because how does it happen?
[00:31:12] When does it happen?
[00:31:16] Jesus talks about this when he describes the Holy Spirit in the wind.
[00:31:22] So verse 8, the wind blows where it wishes.
[00:31:25] You hear its sound, but you do not know where it comes from or where it's going.
[00:31:30] And so it is with everyone who is born.
[00:31:34] of the Spirit. Can't see the wind. Where does it come from? Where is it going? We know things, you know, like wind direction. We know if the wind is coming from the north to the south or
[00:31:53] the south to the north. We don't know when it starts. And in fact, most of the time, you know, I guess all the time, really, the only way that we know which way the wind is blowing is we see
[00:32:05] the effects of the wind. Go look at a flag. Is it this way? Is it this way? Is it this way? You know, how is the flag standing? And this is how I know where the wind is blowing. I can't see the
[00:32:20] wind, but I can see the effects of the wind. The wind, you cannot harness it. First five years of our ministry, we lived on the plains. We lived west central Minnesota, almost to South Dakota.
[00:32:37] that was always blowing.
[00:32:43] And you go to a farm, and on that farm, there's a grove of trees.
[00:32:51] And I could tell you that every grove of trees in west-central Minnesota is on the west and on the north.
[00:33:01] Don't put it on the south, because that's not where the wind comes from.
[00:33:05] You put this grove of trees to block the wind, but you can't stop the wind.
[00:33:09] It didn't stop it, it just redirected it.
[00:33:12] made it go around that farm place can't catch the wind in a pail i can't make the wind from the south blow from the north i can't change its direction the wind blows where it wills
[00:33:29] and jesus says so it is with the spirit we don't know when the spirit changes the heart we don't start it all we can see is the effects signs maybe there's a new interest in god
[00:33:50] or Christ, and it's clear. God's been working. How long? I don't know, but I can see it.
[00:34:05] Maybe there's a new commitment to prayer, to reading the Scriptures and see God is at work.
[00:34:10] There's joy where there was despair, love where there was hate, forgiveness where there was bitterness, humility where there was pride, moving like the wind. Wesley, I'm going to sing one of his hymns in just a moment. But Wesley, when he talked about the work of the spear in his heart,
[00:34:40] he said, I felt my heart strangely warmed. The spirit was moving, blowing. Spurgeon said, one night, one weeknight, when I was sitting in the house of God, I was not thinking much about the preacher's sermon, for I did not believe it. The thought struck me, how did you become a
[00:35:01] Christian. I sought the Lord. But how did you come to seek the Lord? The truth flashed across my mind in a moment. I should not have sought him unless there had been some previous influence in
[00:35:15] my mind to make me seek him. I prayed, but then I asked myself, how did you come to pray?
[00:35:24] I was induced to pray by reading the Scriptures. Well, how came I to read the Scriptures?
[00:35:30] And he says, in a moment, I saw that God was at the bottom of it all and that he was the author of my faith.
[00:35:39] And so the whole doctrine of grace opened up to me and I ascribe my change wholly to God.
[00:35:50] God was blowing.
[00:35:52] The wind was blowing.
[00:35:56] Friends, what about you?
[00:36:00] Some of you have a sense when the wind started blowing in your life, suddenly the Bible became interesting to you.
[00:36:11] where maybe despair scattered and hope was alive, where your pride, self-worship, self-salvation was shattered and you were humbled before God. There's others of us here this morning who have no idea. I don't know at all when any of this happened. I felt like I've known Christ my whole
[00:36:42] life. And yet there are signs of the Spirit's work, right? You have a heart for God. You want to run from sin. You can see evidences of the wind. What if you're not at either one of those
[00:37:01] places this morning? You know you don't belong to Christ. And so maybe you're asking the question, how can I be born again? Well, the Bible doesn't say this. It doesn't say, well, seek the Spirit.
[00:37:22] Rather, the Bible would simply point to Christ and it would say, turn to him in faith.
[00:37:30] John has said this in his gospel already in the first chapter, to all who received him, Jesus, to those who believe in his name, he gave the right to become children of God, children born not of natural descent nor of human decision or a husband's will, but born of God.
[00:37:52] Friends, you see, the Spirit of God that Jesus has been talking to Nicodemus about, the Spirit of God's ministry is always a spotlight ministry.
[00:38:05] It's a spotlight, and like spotlights, what's he shining on?
[00:38:09] The thing that the spotlight shines on, what's most important, right?
[00:38:13] Nobody goes around and says, let me stare at the spotlight.
[00:38:17] You want to stare at the thing that the spotlight is shining on.
[00:38:20] What does the Spirit always shine on?
[00:38:24] He always shines on Jesus.
[00:38:25] always Jesus. And in fact, that's what Nicodemus did here, or Jesus did with Nicodemus.
[00:38:37] In the wrap-up to the conversation, Nicodemus is stumped. Jesus says to him, or he says to Jesus, how can these things be? And what does Jesus do? He doesn't point him more to the Spirit of God.
[00:38:53] He actually points him to himself. He wraps it all up. He says, as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up that whoever believes in him
[00:39:07] may have eternal life. It's taking us back to Numbers 12 in the wilderness. God's people were bit by those venomous snakes, and God says, take a pole and put a serpent on the pole, and whoever
[00:39:23] looks to the serpent will be healed, will live. And so Jesus, just in a short time, would be lifted up on a pole, on a tree, on the cross, the one who knew no sin becoming sin for us,
[00:39:47] so that as Jesus said to Nicodemus in the very last words, whoever believes in Him, whoever looks to Christ may have eternal life. Do you hear what Jesus is saying this morning?
[00:40:05] You don't have to seek to be born again. You don't have to flee to the Spirit to be born again. No, flee to Jesus. Just flee to Christ. Look to Him in faith. Turn from your sin to Christ. And
[00:40:20] when you do that, you'll know you've been born again. You'll know the Holy Spirit has already been at work. He's opened your heart. He's transformed you. And people go, God, this is exactly what happened to Nicodemus. He was born again. How do we know? Because when Jesus was
[00:40:51] lifted up. Who was there to take him down, to place him in the tomb? Who was there when the disciples had fled? Who's there in those last moments? It's Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus.
[00:41:20] Give his body to us, and we'll lay it in the tomb, born again, changed, transformed by the Spirit of God.
[00:41:35] Let's pray together.
[00:41:42] We do plead with you, Lord, that you now take your word as we've been listening, as we've been hearing.
[00:41:54] May your word be used, God, for our comfort.
[00:42:00] If need be, may your word be used for our conviction.
[00:42:08] We pray, O God, that it would be used for our conversion.
[00:42:16] Holy Spirit, we do pray that through the word you'd cause us to be born to a living hope in Christ Jesus.
[00:42:26] We pray these things in his name, amen.