NICODEMUS
“Now when He was in Jerusalem
at the passover, during the feast, many believed
on His name, beholding His signs which He did.
But Jesus did not trust Himself unto them, for
that He knew all men, and because He needed not
that any one should bear witness concerning man;
for He Himself knew what was in man. Now there
was a man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus, a
ruler of the Jews: the same came unto Him
by night, and said to Him, Rabbi, we know that Thou
art a teacher come from God: for no man can
do these signs that Thou doest, except God be
with Him. Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily,
verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born anew,
he cannot see the kingdom of God. Nicodemus
saith unto 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, Verily, verily,
I say unto thee, Except a man be born of water
and the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom
of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh;
and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.
Marvel not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born
anew. The wind bloweth where it listeth,
and thou hearest the voice thereof, but knowest not
whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so
is every one that is born of the Spirit.” JOHN
i-ii.
The first visit of Jesus to Jerusalem
was not without considerable effect on the popular
mind. Many who saw the miracles He did believed
that He was a messenger from God. They saw that
His miracles were not the clever tricks of an impostor,
and they were prepared to listen to His teaching and
enrol themselves as members of the kingdom He came
to found. Yet our Lord did not encourage them.
He saw that they misunderstood Him. He recognised
their worldliness of heart and of aim, and did not
admit them to the intimacy He had established with
the five simple-minded Galileans. The Jerusalem
Jews were glad to fall in with one who seemed likely
to do honour to their nation, and their belief in
Him was the belief men give to a statesman whose policy
they approve. The difference between them and
those who rejected Christ was not a difference of
disposition such as exists between godly and ungodly
men, but consisted merely in the circumstance that
they were convinced that His miracles were genuine.
Had our Lord encouraged these men they would ultimately
have been disappointed in Him. It was better that
from the first they should be stimulated to reflect
on the whole matter by being coldly received by the
Lord.
It is always a point that calls for
reflection: we have to consider not only whether
we have faith in Christ, but whether He has faith in
us not only whether we have committed ourselves
to Him, but whether that committal is so genuine that
He can build upon and trust it. Can He count
upon us for all service, for fidelity in times when
much is needed? Thoroughgoing confidence must
always be reciprocal. The person you believe
in so utterly that you are entirely his, believes in
you and trusts himself to you his reputation,
his interests are safe in your keeping. So is
it with Christ. Faith cannot be one-sided here
any more than elsewhere. He gives Himself to
those who give themselves to Him. They who so
trust Him that He is sure they will follow Him even
when they cannot see where He is going; they who trust
Him, not in one or two matters which they see He can
manage, but absolutely and in all things, to
these He will give Himself freely, sharing with them
His work, His Spirit, His reward.
To illustrate the state of mind of
the Jerusalem Jews and Christ’s mode of treating
them, John selects the case of Nicodemus. He was
one of those who were much impressed by the miracles
of Jesus, and were prepared to attach themselves to
any movement in His favour. He belonged to the
Pharisees; to that party which, with all its narrowness,
pedantry, dogmatism, and bigotry, still preserved a
salt of genuine patriotism and genuine godliness,
and reared high-toned and cultivated men like Gamaliel
and Saul. Nicodemus, whether a member of the
Sanhedrim’s deputation to the Baptist or not,
certainly knew the result of that deputation, and
was aware that a crisis in the national history had
arrived. He could not wait for the community to
move, but felt that whatever conclusion regarding
Christ the Pharisees as a body might arrive at, he
must on his own responsibility be at the bottom of
those extraordinary events and signs that clustered
round the person of Jesus. He was a modest, reserved,
cautious man, and did not wish openly to commit himself
till he was sure of his ground. He has been blamed
for timidity. I would only say that, if he felt
it dangerous to be seen in the company of Jesus, it
was a bold thing to visit Him at all. He went
by night; but he went. And would that there were
more like him, who, whether cautious to excess or
not, do still feel constrained to judge for themselves
about Christ; who feel that, no matter what other men
think of Him, there is an interest in Him which they
cannot wait for others to settle, but must for themselves
settle before they sleep.
Probably Nicodemus made his visit
by night because he did not wish to precipitate matters
by calling undue attention to the position and intentions
of Jesus. He probably went with the purpose of
urging some special plan of action. This inexperienced
Galilean could not be supposed to understand the populace
of Jerusalem as well as the old member of the Sanhedrim,
who was familiar with all the outs and ins of party
politics in the metropolis. Nicodemus would therefore
go and advise Him how to proceed in proclaiming the
kingdom of God; or at least sound Him, and, if he
found Him amenable to reason, encourage Him to proceed,
and warn Him against the pitfalls that lay in His path.
Modestly, and as if speaking for others as much as
for himself, he says: “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!”
There is here neither patronizing acknowledgment nor
flattery, but merely the natural first utterance of
a man who must say something to show the state of his
mind. It served to reveal the point at which Nicodemus
had arrived, and the ground on which the conversation
might proceed. But “Jesus knew what was
in man.” In this acknowledgment of His miracles
on the part of Nicodemus, Jesus saw the whole mental
attitude of the man. He saw that if Nicodemus
had uttered all that was in his mind he would have
said: “I believe you are sent to restore
the kingdom to Israel, and I am come to advise with
you on your plan of operation, and to urge upon you
certain lines of action.” And therefore
Jesus promptly cuts him short by saying: “The
kingdom of God is quite another thing than you are
thinking of; and the way to establish it, to enlist
citizens in it, is very different from the way you
have been meditating.”
In fact, Jesus was becoming embarrassed
by His own miracles. They were attracting the
wrong kind of people the superficial worldly
people; the people who thought a daring and strong
hand with a dash of magic would serve all their turn.
His mind was full of this, and as soon as He has an
opportunity of uttering Himself on this point He does
so, and assures Nicodemus, as a representative of
a large number of Jews who needed this teaching, that
all their thoughts about the kingdom must be ruled
by this principle, and must start from this great
truth, that it was a kingdom into which the Spirit
of God alone could give entrance, and could give entrance
only by making men spiritual. That is to say,
that it was a spiritual kingdom, an inward rule over
the hearts of men, not an outward empire a
kingdom to be established, not by political craft
and midnight meetings, but by internal change and submission
in heart to God a kingdom, therefore, into
which admission could be given only on some more spiritual
ground than the mere circumstance of a man’s
natural birth as a Jew.
In our Lord’s language
there was nothing that need have puzzled Nicodemus.
In religious circles in Jerusalem there was nothing
being talked of but the kingdom of God which John
the Baptist had declared to be at hand. And when
Jesus told Nicodemus that in order to enter this kingdom
he must be born again, He told him just what John had
been telling the whole people. John had assured
them that, though the King was in their midst, they
must not suppose they were already within His kingdom
by being the children of Abraham. He excommunicated
the whole nation, and taught them that it was something
different from natural birth that gave admission to
God’s kingdom. And just as they had compelled
Gentiles to be baptized, and to submit to other arrangements
when they wished to partake of Jewish privileges, so
John compelled them to be baptized. The Gentile
who wished to become a Jew had to be symbolically
born again. He had to be baptized, going down
under the cleansing waters, washing away his old and
defiled life, being buried by baptism, disappearing,
from men’s sight as a Gentile, and rising from
the water as a new man. He was thus born of water,
and this time born, not a Gentile, but a Jew.
The language of our Lord then could
scarcely puzzle Nicodemus, but the idea did stagger
him that not only Gentiles but Jews must be born again.
John had indeed required the same preparation for entrance
to the kingdom; but the Pharisees had not listened
to John, and were offended precisely on the ground
of his baptism. But now Jesus presses upon Nicodemus
the very same truth, that as the Gentile had to be
naturalized and born again that he might rank as a
child of Abraham, and enjoy the external privileges
of the Jew, so must the Jew himself be born again if
he is to rank as a child of God and to belong to the
kingdom of God. He must submit to the double
baptism of water and of the Spirit of water
for the pardon and cleansing of past sin and defilement,
of the Spirit for the inspiration of a new and holy
life.
Our Lord here speaks of the second
birth as completed by two agencies, water and the
Spirit. To make the one of these merely the symbol
of the other is to miss His meaning. The Baptist
baptized with water for the remission of sins, but
he was always careful to disclaim power to baptize
with the Holy Ghost. His baptism with water was
of course symbolical; that is to say, the water itself
exercised no spiritual influence, but merely represented
to the eye what was invisibly done in the heart.
But that which it symbolised was not the life-giving
influence of the Holy Spirit, but the washing away
of sin from the soul. Assurance of pardon John
was empowered to give. Those who humbly submitted
to his baptism with confession of their sins went from
it forgiven and cleansed. But more than that
was needed to make them new men and yet
more he could not give. For that which would fill
them with new life they must go to a Greater than
he, who alone could bestow the Holy Ghost.
These then are the two great incidents
of the second birth the pardon of sin,
which is preparatory, and which cuts our connection
with the past; the communication of life by the Spirit
of God, which fits us for the future. Both of
these are represented by Christian baptism because
in Christ we have both; but those who were baptized
by John’s baptism were only prepared
for receiving Christ’s Spirit by receiving the
forgiveness of their sins.
Having thus declared to Nicodemus
the necessity of the second birth, He goes on to give
the reason of this necessity. Birth by the Spirit
is necessary, because that which is born of the flesh
is flesh, and the kingdom of God is spiritual.
Of course our Lord does not mean by flesh the mere
tangible substance of the body; He does not mean that
our first and natural birth puts us in possession
of nothing but a material frame. By the word
“flesh” He signifies the appetites, desires,
faculties, which animate and govern the body, as well
as the body itself the whole equipment
with which nature furnishes a man for life in this
world. This natural birth gives a man entrance
into much, and for ever determines much, that has
important bearings on his person, character, and destiny.
It determines all differences of nationality, of temperament,
of sex; apart altogether from any choice of his it
is determined whether he shall be a South Sea Islander
or a European; an antediluvian living in a cave or
an Englishman of the nineteenth century. But the
kingdom of God is a spiritual kingdom, into which
entrance can be had only by a man’s own will
and spiritual condition, only by an attachment to God
which is no part of a man’s natural equipment.
As soon as we clearly see what the
kingdom of God is, we see also that by nature we do
not belong to it. The kingdom of God so far as
man is concerned is a state of willing subjection
to Him a state in which we are in our right
relation to Him. All irrational creatures obey
God and do His will: the sun runs his course
with an exactness and punctuality we cannot rival;
the grace and strength of many of the lower animals,
their marvellous instincts and aptitudes, are so superior
to anything in ourselves that we cannot even comprehend
them. But what we have as our speciality is to
render to God a willing service; to understand His
purposes and enter sympathetically into them.
The lower creatures obey a law impressed upon their
nature; they cannot sin; their performance of God’s
will is a tribute to the power which made them so skilfully,
but it lacks all conscious recognition of His worthiness
to be served and all knowledge of His object in creation.
It is God serving Himself: He made them so, and
therefore they do His will. So it is with men
who merely obey their nature: they may do kindly,
noble, heroic actions, but they lack all reference
to God; and however excellent these actions are, they
give no guarantee that the men who do them would sympathize
with God in all things, and do His will gladly.
Indeed, to establish the proposition
that flesh or nature does not give us entrance into
God’s kingdom, we need go no further than our
own consciousness. Remove the restraints which
grace puts upon our nature, and we are aware that
we are not in sympathy with God, fond of His will,
disposed for His service. Let nature have its
swing, and every man knows it is not the kingdom of
God it takes him to. To all men it is natural
to eat, drink, sleep, think; we are born to these things,
and need to put no constraint on our nature to do
them; but can any man say it has come naturally to
him to be what he ought to be to God? Do we not
to this hour feel drawn away from God as if we were
not in our element in His presence? Flesh, nature,
in God’s presence is as much out of its element
as a stone in the air or a fish out of water.
Men who have had the deepest religious experience
have seen it most clearly, and have felt, like Paul,
that the flesh lusts against the spirit, and draws
us ever back from entire submission to God and delight
in Him.
Perhaps the necessity of the second
birth may be more clearly apprehended if we consider
it from another point of view. In this world
we find a number of creatures which have what is known
as animal life. They can work, and feel, and,
in a fashion, think. They have wills, and certain
dispositions, and distinctive characteristics.
Every creature that has animal life has a certain
nature according to its kind, and determined by its
parentage; and this nature which the animal receives
from its parents determines from the first the capabilities
and sphere of the animal’s life. The mole
cannot soar in the face of the sun like the eagle;
neither can the bird that comes out of the eagle’s
egg burrow like the mole. No training can possibly
make the tortoise as swift as the antelope, or the
antelope as strong as the lion. If a mole began
to fly and enjoy the sunlight it must be counted a
new kind of creature, and no longer a mole. The
very fact of its passing certain limitations shows
that another nature has somehow been infused into it.
Beyond its own nature no animal can act. You
might as well attempt to give the eagle the appearance
of the serpent as try to teach it to crawl. Each
kind of animal is by its birth endowed with its own
nature, fitting it to do certain things, and making
other things impossible. So is it with us:
we are born with certain faculties and endowments,
with a certain nature; and just as all animals, without
receiving any new, individual, supernatural help from
God, can act according to their nature, so can we.
We, being human, have a high and richly-endowed animal
nature, a nature that leads us not only to eat, drink,
sleep, and fight like the lower animals, but a nature
which leads us to think and to love, and which, by
culture and education, can enjoy a much richer and
wider life than the lower creatures. Men need
not be in the kingdom of God in order to do much that
is admirable, noble, lovely, because their nature as
animals fits them for that. If we were to exist
at all as a race of animals superior to all others,
then all this is just what must be found in us.
Irrespective of any kingdom of God at all, irrespective
of any knowledge of God or reference to Him, we have
a life in this world, and a nature fitting us for
it. And it is this we have by our natural birth,
a place among our kind, an animal life. The first
man, from whom we all descend, was, as St. Paul profoundly
says, “a living soul,” that is to say,
an animal, a living human being; but he had not “a
quickening spirit,” could not give to his children
spiritual life and make them children of God.
Now if we ask ourselves a little more
closely, What is human nature? what are the characteristics
by which men are distinguished from all other creatures?
what is it which marks off our kind from every other
kind, and which is always produced by human parents?
we may find it hard to give a definition, but one
or two things are obvious and indisputable. In
the first place, we could not deny human nature to
men who do not love God, or who even know nothing
of Him. There are many whom we should naturally
speak of as remarkably fine specimens of human nature,
who yet never think of God, nor in any way acknowledge
Him. It is plain, therefore, that the acknowledgment
and love of God, which give us entrance into His kingdom,
are not a part of our nature, are not the gifts
of our birth.
And yet is there anything that so
distinctly separates us from the lower animals as
our capacity for God and for eternity?
Is it not our capacity to respond to God’s love,
to enter into His purposes, to measure things by eternity,
that is our real dignity? The capacity is there,
even when unused; and it is this capacity which invests
man and all his works with an interest and a value
which attach to no other creature. Man’s
nature is capable of being born again, and that is
its peculiarity; there is in man a dormant or dead
capacity which nothing but contact with God, the touch
of the Holy Ghost, can vivify and bring into actual
exercise.
That there should be such a capacity,
born as if dead, and needing to be quickened by a
higher power before it can live and be of use, need
not surprise us. Nature is full of examples of
such capacities. All seeds are of this nature,
dead until favouring circumstances and soil quicken
them into life. In our own body there are similar
capacities, capacities which may or may not be quickened
into life. In the lower animal-creation many
analogous capacities are found, which depend for their
vivification on some external agency over which they
have no control. The egg of a bird has in it
the capacity to become a bird like the parent, but
it remains a dead thing and will corrupt if the parent
forsakes it. There are many of the summer insects
which are twice-born, first of their insect parents,
and then of the sun: if the frost comes in place
of the sun, they die. The caterpillar has already
a life of its own, with which, no doubt, it is well
content, but enclosed in its nature as a creeping
thing it has a capacity for becoming something different
and higher. It may become a moth, or a butterfly;
but in most the capacity is never developed, they
die before they reach this end their circumstances
do not favour their development. These analogies
show how common it is for capacities of life to lie
dormant: how common a thing it is for a creature
in one stage of its existence to have a capacity for
passing into a higher stage, a capacity which can be
developed only by some agency peculiarly adapted to
it.
It is in this condition man is born
of his human parents. He is born with a capacity
for a higher life than that which he lives as an animal
in this world. There is in him a capacity for
becoming something different, better and higher than
that which he actually is by his natural birth.
He has a capacity which lies dormant or dead until
the Holy Ghost comes and quickens it. There are
many things, and great things, man can do without
any further Divine assistance than that which is lodged
for the whole race in the natural laws which make no
distinction between godly and ungodly; there are many
and great things man may do by virtue of his natural
birth; but one thing he cannot do he cannot
quicken within himself the capacity to love God and
to live for Him. For this there is needed an
influence from without, the efficient touch of the
Holy Spirit, the impartation of His life. The
capacity to be a child of God is man’s, but the
development of this lies with God. Without the
capacity a man is not a man, has not that which is
most distinctive of human nature. Every man is
born with that in him which the Spirit of God may
quicken into Divine life. This is human nature;
but when this capacity is so quickened, when the man
has begun to live as a child of God, he has not lost
his human nature, but has over and above become a
partaker of the Divine nature. When the image
of God, as well as of his earthly parents, becomes
manifest in a man, then his human nature has received
its utmost development, he is born again.
Of the Agent who accomplishes this
great transformation there is need only to say that
He is free in His operation and also inscrutable.
He is like the wind, our Lord tells us, that blows
where it lists. We cannot bring the Spirit at
will; we cannot use Him as if He were some unintelligent
passive instrument; neither can we subject all His
operations to our control. The grub must wait
for those natural influences which are to transform
it; it cannot command them. We cannot command
the Spirit; but we, being free agents also, can do
more than wait, we can pray, and we can
strive to put ourselves in line with the Spirit’s
operation. Seamen cannot raise the wind nor direct
its course, but they can put themselves in the way
of the great regular winds. We can do the same:
we can slowly, by mechanical helps, creep into the
way of the Spirit; we can set our sails, doing all
we think likely to catch and utilize His influences believing
always that the Spirit is more desirous than we are
to bring us all to good. Why He breathes in one
place while all around lies in a dead calm we do not
know; but as for the wind’s variations so for
His, there are doubtless sufficient reasons.
We need not expect to see the Spirit’s working
separate from the working of our own minds; we cannot
see the Spirit in Himself we cannot see
the wind that moves the ships, but we can see the ships
moving, and we know that without the wind they could
not move.
If this, then, be the line on which
our human nature can alone be developed, if a profound
harmony with God be that which can alone give permanence
and completeness to our nature, if in accordance with
all that we see in the world around us some men fail
of attaining the end of their creation, and lie for
ever blighted and useless, while others are carried
forward to fuller and more satisfying life, we cannot
but ask with some anxiety to which class we belong.
Good and evil are in the world, happiness and misery,
victory and defeat; do not let us deceive ourselves
by acting as if there were no difference between these
opposites, or as if it mattered little in our case
whether we belong to the one side or the other.
It matters everything: it is just the difference
between eternal life and eternal death. Christ
did not come to play with us, and startle us with
idle tales. He is the centre and fountain of
all truth, and what He says fits in with all we see
in the world around us.
But in endeavouring to ascertain whether
the great change our Lord speaks of has passed upon
us, our object must be not so much to ascertain the
time and manner of our new birth as its reality.
A man may know that he has been born though he is
not able to recall, as no man can recall, the circumstances
of his birth. Life is the great evidence of birth,
natural or spiritual. We may desire to know the
time and place of birth for some other reason, but
certainly not for this, to make sure we have been
born. Of that there is sufficient evidence in
the fact of our being alive. And spiritual life
quite as certainly implies spiritual birth.
Again, we must keep in view that a
man may be born though not yet full grown. The
child of a day old has as truly and certainly a human
nature as the man in his prime. He has a human
heart and mind, every organ of body and soul, though
as yet he cannot use them. So the second birth
impresses the image of God on every regenerate soul.
It may not as yet be developed in every part, but
all its parts are there in germ. It is not a
partial but a complete result which regeneration effects.
It is not one member, a hand or a foot that is born,
but a body, a complete equipment of the soul in all
graces. The whole character is regenerated, so
that the man is fitted for all the duties of the Divine
life whensoever these duties shall come before him.
A human child does not need additions made to it to
fit it for new functions: it requires growth,
it requires nurture, it requires education and the
practice of human ways, but it requires no new organ
to be inserted into its frame; once born it has but
to grow in order to adapt itself with ease and success
to all human ways and conditions. And if regenerate
we have that in us which with care and culture will
grow till it brings us to perfect likeness to Christ.
If we are not growing, if we remain small, puny, childish
while we should be adult and full grown, then there
is something seriously wrong, which calls for anxious
enquiry.
But above all let us bear in mind
that it is a new birth that is required; that no care
spent on our conduct, no improvement and refinement
of the natural man, suffices. For flying it is
not an improved caterpillar that is needed, it is
a butterfly; it is not a caterpillar of finer colour
or more rapid movement or larger proportions, it is
a new creature. We recognise that in this and
that man we meet there is something more than men
naturally have; we perceive in them a taming, chastening,
inspiring principle. We rejoice all the more
when we see it, because we know that no man can give
it, but only God. And we mourn its absence because
even when a man is dutiful, affectionate, temperate,
honourable, yet if he have not grace, if he have not
that peculiar tone and colour which overspread the
whole character, and show that the man is living in
the light of Christ, and is moved by love to God,
we instinctively feel that the defect is radical,
that as yet he has not come into connection with the
Eternal, that there is that awanting for which no
natural qualities, however excellent, can compensate nay,
the more lovely and complete the natural character
is, the more painful and lamentable is the absence
of grace, of Spirit.