At the church where I serve, we
have been spending the weeks leading up to Christmas by pausing from the
growing expectation, anticipation, and intensity of the countdown to Christmas
in order to ask a simple question. And that question is this: Why Christmas?
Why are we counting down to Christmas? Why is Christmas celebrated? Why is
Christmas so significant? And specifically, why would Jesus enter into humanity
that first Christmas?
To answer these questions, we
are going to look at five different passages that are found in the letters that
make up the New Testament of the Bible. And as we look at these five different
sections of letters that are found in the New Testament of the Bible, we are
going to discover five timeless answers to the question “Why Christmas?”
This week, as we reflect on
Christmas, I would like for us to look at a fifth passage that is found in a
section of an account of Jesus life in the Bible called the gospel of John. And
as we look at an event that occurred during Jesus life here on earth that is
recorded for us in the gospel of John, we are going to discover another
timeless answer to the question “Why Christmas?” So let’s discover that
timeless answer together, beginning in John 3:1-2:
Now there
was a man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews; 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."
John begins this section of his account of Jesus life by introducing
us to a man named Nicodemus, who he explains was a Pharisee and a ruler of the
Jews. The Pharisees were a leading group of Jewish religious leaders during
Jesus life on earth. Nicodemus was also a part of the Sanhedrin, which was the Senate and
Supreme court of the Jewish nation. John tells us that Nicodemus came as a
representative of the Jewish religious leadership one evening in order to have
a conversation with Jesus.
You see, at
this point in Jesus life, Jesus was viewed with an almost celebrity-like status.
After all, Jesus had performed miracles; He had recently turned water into wine
at a wedding reception. Jesus had also recently entered the Temple courtyards
with a whip, turning over tables and driving out those who were financially
exploiting people who came to worship God. And when asked about why He had
drove out and destroyed all the kiosks where they were making money; when asked
who He thought He was that He would even think to do such a thing, Jesus
replied by saying that if they destroyed the Temple, that He would raise a new
one in three days.
For the
Jewish religious leaders, Jesus was doing and saying things that were hard to
understand and explain. They were having a hard time figuring Him out. And,
worse yet, from their perspective, people were connecting with Him and His
message. Jesus was becoming very popular. Large crowds were gathering around
Him wherever He went. These religious leaders had questions that needed asking
and answered. So these, leaders got together and decided that someone would
need to confront Jesus and get answers to their questions. These leaders wanted to know who Jesus was and selected
Nicodemus to go on their behalf to find out who Jesus was.
Nicodemus,
wanting uninterrupted time with Jesus and privacy for fear of being embarrassed
by Jesus, approached Jesus at night in order to get the answers to their
questions. Nicodemus carefully approached Jesus with a very respectful
greeting. This greeting, if communicated in the language we use in our culture
today, would have sounded something like this: Jesus, it is a well known and
generally accepted fact that you are a teacher that God has sent to us, because
the miracles that you are doing could only be done by the power of God. We
recognize that you have come as God’s messenger with a message from God”.
However, before Nicodemus could even ask what that message from God was, Jesus
takes control of the conversation with a statement that John records for us in
verse 3:
Jesus answered and said to him, "Truly, truly, I say to you, unless
one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God."
When Jesus uses the phrase kingdom of God, He is
referring to God’s royal reign. You see, the Jewish people were looking for a rescuer,
a deliverer, a Messiah who God had promised would someday come to bring the
Jewish people back to God and back to prominence in the world. Jesus tells
Nicodemus that, in order to be a part of this kingdom with the Messiah, one
must be born again. This little phase, born again, in the language that this
letter was originally written in, literally means to be born from above. We see
John record Nicodemus response in verse 4:
Nicodemus said to Him, "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?"
At this point, Nicodemus is totally caught off guard.
Nicodemus had a list of questions that he was supposed to ask Jesus, but Jesus
has just blown up that list of questions and replaced them with a whole new set
of questions. And while Nicodemus asks a question about the improbability of a physical
rebirth, Jesus responds by blowing up some more of Nicodemus theological
categories in verse 5-8:
Jesus answered, "Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is 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.
"Do not be amazed that I said to you, 'You must be born again.' "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."
At this point Nicodemus was probably thinking to himself,
“Why does He always have to talk that way? Why does He always say things like
that?” Jesus statement, if communicated in the language we use today would have
sounded something like this:
“No Nicodemus, you
cannot enter into the womb again, you cannot be born from above because of
something you do. To be born from above is something that the Spirit of God
does to you. In the same way that you have been brought into the world
physically in a way that resulted in you entering into a relationship with your
earthly parents, you also have to be brought into a relationship with God by
the Spirit of God. Nicodemus, you should not be surprised at what I am telling
you. It’s like the wind. The wind moves throughout the world every day. And no
one has any control over the wind. The wind does whatever it desires. The wind
starts when it wants to start; the wind goes where it wants to go; the wind
ends when it wants to end. Just as no one can control the wind, no one can
control the activity of the Holy Spirit and what He does in bringing people to
the place where they are brought into a relationship with God."
We see Nicodemus response in verse 9-12:
Nicodemus said to Him, "How can these things be?" Jesus answered
and said to him, "Are you the teacher of Israel and do not understand
these things? "Truly, truly, I say to you, we speak of what we know and
testify of what we have seen, and you do not accept our testimony. "If I
told you earthly things and you do not believe, how will you believe if I tell
you heavenly things?
In other words, Jesus asks Nicodemus “Are you not a
pastor to the Jewish people? Are you not one of the most educated and powerful
people in the Jewish nation? How is it that you are unable to wrap your mind
around what I am saying? Nicodemus, I am telling you that this is what the
Bible says and that we have been saying this all along, yet the religious
leaders that you represent have missed it all along. And if you are having a
hard time understanding the simple earthly illustration that I gave you so as
to trust Me, then what are you going to do if I really start unpacking what the
Bible and we have been saying?”
Now to understand why Nicodemus was having such a hard
time wrapping his mind around the significance of Jesus words here, we first
need to understand how Nicodemus believed one entered into a relationship with
God. You see, Nicodemus, and the Jewish religious leaders of Jesus day,
believed that it was what you did for God that made you right with God. They believed that it was your performance
for God that determined whether or not you were able to have a relationship
with God.
Nicodemus grew up and lived his entire life trying to do
things for God. And now Jesus was telling Nicodemus that everything that he had
learned, lived by, and was teaching others was wrong. Jesus was telling
Nicodemus, and the Jewish religious leaders of the day that they had missed
what it meant and how they could live in relationship with God.
Maybe you can totally relate to Nicodemus. Maybe you
thought that a relationship with God was based on what you did for God. Maybe you
thought that it was your performance for God that determined whether or not you
were able to have a relationship with God. Maybe Jesus statement that a
relationship with God is something that you cannot achieve apart from the
Spirit of God has caught you off guard. Maybe you find that all your categories
about God have just been blown up.
If I have just described you I just want to let you know
that you are not the first person to experience that because that is exactly
where Nicodemus was at. After blowing up all of the categories that Nicodemus
had when it came to God, Jesus answers the question that drove the religious
leaders to send Nicodemus to Jesus in the first place.
And that question was this: Who did Jesus think He was
and what authority did He think He had to say and do what He was doing.
Tomorrow, we will see how Jesus answered that question...
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