YOU MUST BE BORN AGAIN
Jn.3: There was a man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews:
2 The same came to Jesus by night, and said unto him, Rabbi, we know that thou art a teacher come from God: for no man can do these miracles that thou doest, except God be with him.
3 Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.
4 Nicodemus saith unto him, How can a man be born when he is old? can he enter the second time into his mother's womb, and be born?
5 Jesus answered, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.
6 That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.
7 Marvel not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born again.
8 The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit.
9 Nicodemus answered and said unto him, How can these things be?
10 Jesus answered and said unto him, Art thou a master of Israel, and knowest not these things?
11 Verily, verily, I say unto thee, We speak that we do know, and testify that we have seen; and ye receive not our witness.
12 If I have told you earthly things, and ye believe not, how shall ye believe, if I tell you of heavenly things?
13 And no man hath ascended up to heaven, but he that came down from heaven, even the Son of man which is in heaven.
14 And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up:
15 That whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have eternal life.
16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
Several decades ago the phrase “born again” fell out of favor in evangelical parlance. When I became Christian I was intrigued by the term, and Chuck Colson had written a book entitled “Born Again”. I began to read that book and I listened to his interview about the book and his life. I saw some bumper stickers that said born again, and I heard Billy Graham use that term. Born again. I had never heard the term in the mainline Lutheran church in which I had been raised. Again, I was intrigued.
When I heard those words I thought they had been cleverly put together by someone who wanted to describe the salvation experience. I had no idea it was in the Bible. And in 1975 I had never heard someone say “I am saved”. That term has also fallen off the evangelical cliff. We seem to have become way too sophisticated for archaic terms like that. I mean who wants to be viewed as a radical? Who wants to be ostracized and treated like a nut? Like my atheistic aunt, who I loved, used to tell me, “It’s all right to be religious, just don’t become a fanatic!”
But Nicodemus asked the natural question. “How can these things be?” You see, the natural mind does not mind being religious, it just resists being spiritual. And everyone understands a birth in the flesh. Many have seen a natural birth on television and some have even filmed their children’s birth. That kind of birth is universally understood. But when you delve into the spiritual, and when you connect the Spirit of God with the word “birth”, well now you have left the religious crowd behind. Yes, intriguing isn’t it?
But we hear all kinds of terms that are used today. Church member, Christian, Baptist, Catholic, and even believer are used most often to describe someone who professes Christ or some form of the Christian faith. These terms are way less offensive and radical than being called “born again“. But curiously that term was not invented by some theologian or by some radical sect of Christianity. No, it came from the lips of Jesus Himself, and it caused Nicodemus some confusion. Let’s face it, Nicodemus was a seeker and instead of Jesus rearranging His verbiage so as not to scare Nicodemus off, Jesus addressed him straight forward with penetrating words of truth.
Being born again is the non-negotiable essence of what it means to be a true disciple of Jesus. In fact, without being born again no man will see the kingdom of God. Would that qualify to be most important within church teaching? But even if someone does use the term born again in a sermon, it is usually emasculated and presented as an insipid religious term but without the profound nature of its eternal truth. The born again experience is what transforms a sinner and translates him from the kingdom of darkness into the Kingdom of God’s dear Son. Without that divine experience you are just a religious person who stands in need of being born again.
Let us make an observation. It would make sense that anyone who experienced such a thing would know it, right? I mean if you were walking in darkness and suddenly someone turned on a light, you would know it. I realize children are taught to say the sinner’s prayer at a very young age, and many adults testify that they were saved at that young age. Some surely were. But many children feel coerced into following what their parents tell them or what the other children are doing. And sadly we have many children who were systematically led in the sinner’s prayer, baptized, and continued to attend church and Sunday School.
But many of these children show no spiritual fruit as they grow older, and many drop away from church or anything remotely Christian. What happened? They had been told over and over again that they were saved. In fact, the church has become very proficient at convincing people that they are saved even when no one really knows who is actually saved or not. But is it that easy that a sinner can believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and be saved in the space of a few moments? Yes, it is that easy. But be aware, it is also very easy to go through the motions and not be born again.
It is altogether possible that millions of people inhabit evangelical pews and have church member credentials without ever being born again. That is an incredible tragedy and it exposes the modern church as shallow and interested in growth and money rather than souls. While the church gatherings should not be designed for evangelism, the gospel itself should always be a mainstay. But instead of laboring to minister to people in a deep and scriptural way, the evangelical church operates in an assembly fashion where sinners are rushed to make a decision before they can even pause to think about it. The church is now constructed like a business. "Close the deal" is a borrowed mantra. But if you have been truly born again, you cannot help but realize that is what all sinners need.
But no one can see eternal life without being born again. And if that is at the very heart of redemption, why is there so little emphasis on it? It is a pathetic reality that as the mega churches expand, and as Christian television gains more and more stations, that the true gospel is being systematically diluted until for all practical purposes it has been eliminated. Morality and politics and nationalism have replaced the everlasting gospel. Instead of having the born again experience, now people must be pro-life and anti-gay marriage and anti-gay agenda. But how many evangelical “conservatives” live without being born again of the Spirit of God?
I said,
"How many evangelical “conservatives” live without being born again of the Spirit of God?"
The church has been lured away from the life of Christ and been led into a life defined by the culture with a sprinkling of religious terms but an embarrassing little amount of the everlasting gospel. When the national culture invites you to have a seat at the table of secular maneuverings, well you can be assured that the gospel has been quenched. I can remember when Jimmy Carter of all people said he was born again. But regardless of how his life and views substantiate that claim, when do men running for office boldly say that anymore?
But when you are born again you cannot help but be eternally grateful to the Lord Jesus. And if you were at least a teenager you can remember walking in utter darkness and you can well remember your eyes being spiritually opened. But if you just “phased in” to being a Christian I would be very suspicious. I realize that in today’s church we accept the most tepid and timid profession of faith as authentic. And if that person gets baptized and joins the church he is considered rock solid. But I have seen many people who meet those requirements but who have no observable interest in spiritual things. Let us be frank with each other. How many evangelical church members go through the religious motions, and there are even different levels of those motions?
But to be born again does not mean you become perfect. It does not even guarantee earthly success. It does not even mean you will never have some bouts of depression. But what it does mean is that regardless of what happens, you can never deny or forget what Christ did for you. And upon your death bed, just before you breathe in your last breath, you can go to be with Christ with a knowledge of your own gracious redemption. And just before you go, turn to the nurses and doctors and say with a weak but confident voice, “You must be born again.”
In order to be "born again", you MUST die. You are "born again" at the resurrection. You are "born" of flesh and bone (NOT flesh and blood) just as Jesus was in His resurrected body
ReplyDelete@ Anonymous...Jesus said it clearly, and you would do well to read very carefully..."that which is born of the flesh, is flesh, and that of the Spirit is Spirit. Marvel NOT that I say unto thee, thou MUST be born again." Don't forget, even those that die outside of Christ, will be resurrected on judgement day, and believe the Word, they will not be considered "born again"!
ReplyDeleteNo. The Scriptures are very clear. Those that die in their sins will not have another post mortum chance. If they did, who would rejct Christ if they saw Him? Then hell would be irrelevant. But as Jude said, some will be svaed with fear.
ReplyDeletefear of what? God's judgment and the prospect of hell. In fact, Jesus said that the Pharisees made their followers twice as worthy of hell.
I NEVER post on the internet, but I feel led to right now after reading this.
ReplyDeleteI have attended Baptist churches all my life. I thought I was saved because I walked down the aisle at age 9 or 10. In 2008 at age 43, I lost my automotive job and found myself with plenty of time to read and study the Bible while searching for another job. In retrospect, I thank God with all my heart for that terrible time.
I can tell you with absoulte confidence that I was NOT saved when I walked the aisle as a kid. I know this because after reading His Word and finally understanding who I was (a miserable sinner)and what He did for me on the cross, I literally broke down before Him on my face in tears for the first time in my life. I begged for His mercy. He is ever merciful, and I was born again at that moment. He saved my soul and my life.
My life totally changed from that point. I can not do the things I used to do regularly without feeling like confessing them immediately. I have to study His Word every day. My internet time is consumed with sites like this one. He is everything to me.
Something happened that day that changed me forever and I praise Him for it! The burden I have is for all of the people who are just like I was who have not realized that walking an aisle as a kid is not the same as being born again.
My sincere hope is that those in our pulpits will return to this Gospel. The New Testament opens with John the Baptist and Our Lord preaching repentance. Nothing has changed. I fear there are literally millions in church every Sunday who think all is well, no repentance needed. If they are like I was, all is certainly not well. I can attest to that.
Sorry so long winded, but this article hits close to home with me. Keep up the good work and may God bless this column.
PS
I am blessed by your testimony! May He receive all the glory for what He has done for us all!
ReplyDeleteGod's spirit was working hard in 2008 because that is the year that he sat me down from a very profitable job as a real estate agent. I was a 20+ year veteran making six figures and 8th in a company of 350. I had been dx with parkinson's disease. When he sat me down, I picked up His Word, and my life has not been the same. Thank God for this disease and His Word.
ReplyDelete"Thank God for this disease and His Word."
ReplyDeleteWould to God we all could praise Him in everything. Thank you for that testimony and may Jesus receive all the praise!
Isn’t it odd that if the Baptists and evangelicals are correct that their “born again experience” is the true and ONLY means of salvation, the term “born again” is only mentioned three times in the King James Bible? If “making a decision for Christ” is the only means of salvation, why doesn’t God mention it more often in his Word? Why only THREE times? Isn’t that REALLY, REALLY odd?
ReplyDeleteWhy is it that the Apostle Paul, the author of much of the New Testament, NEVER uses this term? Why is this term never used in the Book of Acts to describe the many mentioned Christian conversions? Why is this term only used by Jesus in a late night conversation with Nicodemus, and by Peter once in just one letter to Christians in Asia Minor?
If you attend a Baptist/evangelical worship service what will you hear? You will hear this: “You must be born again: you must make a decision for Christ. You must ask Jesus into your heart. You must pray to God and ask him to forgive you of your sins, come into your heart, and be your Lord and Savior (the Sinner’s Prayer). You must be an older child or adult who has the mental capacity to make a decision to believe, to make a decision to repent, and to make a decision to ask Jesus into your heart.”
It is very strange, however, that other than “you must be born again” none of this terminology is anywhere to be found in the Bible! Why do Baptists and evangelicals use this non-biblical terminology when discussing salvation?
Maybe…making a “decision” for Christ is NOT the manner in which sinners are saved!
Gary
Luther, Baptists, and Evangelicals
Five questions that Baptists and Evangelicals should ask themselves
ReplyDelete1. Does the Bible state that a sinner is capable of choosing righteousness/choosing God?
The Bible states that the sinner must believe and repent, but are these actions initiated and performed by man of his own intellectual abilities, or are faith, belief, and repentance a part of the entire "package" of salvation? Are faith, belief, and repentance part of the "free gift"? Does God give you faith, belief and repentance at the moment he "quickens" you, or does he require you to make a decision that you want them first, and only then does he give them to you?
2. Is there any passage of Scripture that describes salvation in the Baptist/evangelical terms of: "Accept Christ into your heart", "Make a decision for Christ", "Pray to God and ask him to forgive you of your sins, come into your heart, and be your Lord and Savior (the Sinner's Prayer)". Is it possible that being "born again" is something that God does at a time of his choosing, and not something that man decides to do at a time of his choosing? Is man an active participant in his salvation in that he cooperates with God in a decision to believe, or is man a passive participant in his salvation; God does ALL the work?
3. Is the Bible a static collection of words or do the Words of God have real power, real supernatural power? How does the Bible describe the Word? Is it the meaning of the Word that has power or do the words themselves have supernatural power to "quicken" the souls of sinners, creating faith, belief and repentance?
4. Does preaching the Word save everyone who hears it, or only the "predestined", the "elect", the "called", the "appointed" will believe when they hear the Word at God's appointed time?
5. WHEN does the Bible, if read in its simple, plain, literal rendering, say that sins are forgiven and washed away?
Gary
Luther, Baptists, and Evangelicals