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Click to hear this sermon sermon100228
A story I read recently that has absolutely nothing to do with the
sermon,
but is a good one none-the- less...
"Being Reborn ..... A Chance for a
Do-Overl" Jack Keating Cicero
United Methodist Church
February 28, 2010 Text: John 3: 1-8 The Second Sunday of Lent
A story I read recently that has absolutely nothing to do with the sermon,
but is a good one none-the- less... Little Johnny's mother saw him playing church
with the family cat. The
cat was sitting there quietly while Johnny preached his sermon to the cat. Johnny's mother smiled and went
back to her work. A little while later, she heard a huge commotion where Johnny
was supposed to be playing. She heard the cat meowing and hissing. Obviously
something was dreadfully wrong and she rushed to the door and looked out to see
Johnny shoving the cat into a tub of water. "What
are you doing to the poor cat?" yelled his mother. "I'm trying to baptize
the stupid thing," Johnny yelled back. "You can't do that to a cat. It's afraid of water." "He
should have thought of that before he joined my church."
Have you ever played the game "If I had my life to live over again?" The older and more
experienced you get, the more you probably play this game --- the more you say
to yourself, "Man, if c only had
a second chance!" And as life goes on it only gets worse! And you begin to
worry and fret about things you never had the chance to do, and it begins to weigh you
down. Just before his death, Martin
Luther King thought about this and wrote: "Shattered dreams are the
hallmarks of our mortal lives."
One of the most agonizing problems of our human experience is that few, if any of us, live to see our fondest
dreams fulfilled---- it seems the hopes of our childhood and the promises of
our mature years are unfinished symphonies. And then you start to say to
yourself, "Well, if I had my life to live over again..."
If I had my life to live
over again, I would have completed
college and gone on to be ordained. I probably
would have gone into a music ministry and maybe traveled with the Gaither Vocal
Band. Of course, starting my life
over and doing that would also require different genetics and certainly a
better voice, as well! Of course, this is just my fantasy but it does help me
explore my more realistic desires and starting over is what I wanted to talk about today.
Because it seems to me that when it comes to having a relationship
with the Creator who made us, unless we start over again .... we'll never make it! And
Jesus told us exactly that in this morning's scripture reading from John's Gospel. The message is
uncompromising, clear and abrupt on this point, "T tell you the truth, no one can see the kingdom
of God unless he is born again," (vs. 3) "I tell you the truth, no one can
enter the kingdom of God unless he is born of water and the Spirit." (vs. 5) And the word
"unless" is categorical here, isn't it? Unless there is rain there
are no crops. Unless you're born again there's no Christianity. You have to start again. Jesus tells us, in verse 7, "You should not be
surprised at my saying, 'You
must be born again.'"
So Jesus is telling it straight to Nicodemus here, a person cannot be a
Christian unless he or she is born again. They
cannot enter the Christian life unless they're born again. It
is fundamental and foundational to the Christian experience. So in today's
scripture, we're going to look at three steps you can take to start your life
over.
The first step is...
1. Start your life over by having your own
private talk with Jesus. Nicodemus
was a man of distinction and outstanding character. He was intelligent, honest, upright and well known in
the community.
John tells us
that Nicodemus was a man of the Pharisees, 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 the signs
that you do unless God is with him."
(3: 1-2)
No doubt, Nicodemus, who was a member of the Sanhedrin, had
heard about Jesus.
Perhaps he
came at night so he could have a private meeting with Jesus and ask all the
questions he wanted to ask. He was a religious man. We know, since he was a Pharisee,
that he took his religion very seriously. These folks were strict, narrow traditionalists. He was a "ruler of the
Jews." He was used to being
first among his associates. He stood in a high position in the ruling class in Jerusalem. But, as we see in his estimation
of Jesus, Nicodemus also had a keen
sense of discernment. "We
know", he said, "that you have come from God as a
teacher."
But most importantly, in this episode, we see that Nicodemus was a
seeker --- a person who was sincere in
his quest for the kingdom
of God. But, in spite of all his
religious knowledge and enthusiasm, he was also a spiritual failure at this
point. Here was this nice, sincere man with a sincere hunger for truth who
comes to have a private talk with Jesus in the quietness of the night, away from all those who
could be distracting. And
he comes to Jesus so that he could have a private conversation about his very own, personal needs.
And Jesus had something that Nicodemus did
not have. Like each of us, I think, Nicodemus was
seeking for that something more in life
- looking, longing for spiritual bliss
and truth to fill the hole that's
felt in the human heart. Nicodemus, a man whose whole life was a religious exercise, had realized that Jesus had something he
did not have.
And one of the messages of this text
is just that! You may have all
sorts of Christian activity: you
may have grown up right and go to the right schools, having all the trappings of the faith. You may even have served as
a missionary, or taught Sunday school. Or perhaps
you've served in ruling
councils like church boards, as
had Nicodemus. Maybe you've founded your own
"holy club" like
John Wesley and done really excellent work in church organizations, maybe you've even figured
out some new method of
spirituality like Nicodemus; maybe you even got into a routine for Bible reading and praying but that is not enough to give you true
eternal life that is born from above and felt deeply in the heart.
The first step this
scripture teaches us is that to
start your life over you need to leave your own empty religious efforts behind and
have a private, personal talk with Jesus. Then the second step is...
2. Start your life over by understanding your need. You
know, the phrase "born again" wasn't invented by former
president Jimmie Carter. It wasn't coined by Ronald Reagan to
get the votes of the Southern Baptists. And it doesn't refer to a narrow, emotional, cult-like fringe type of Christianity. I had a friend, who every
so often used to say, "I'm a Christian, but I'm not one of those born-again
types." And I had to say to him, as I have to say to you, that there is actually a
necessity of new birth, an
absolute necessity.
This isn't
loony fringe. It's dynamite. And it's about a Creator God who
breaks into our lives, miraculously. It's not something bizarre for
dogmatic, crazy people. It's not an option - it's a necessity. And there could have been
nobody more shocked to hear that you had to be born again than the man we meet
in chapter 3, verse 1. No one would have
been more shocked that this man in our passage: "Now there was a man
of the Pharisees named Nicodemus, a
member of the Jewish ruling council." Supposedly this man had all
the right credentials to be accepted into the kingdom of God.
If anyone would be accepted, he would be: he has so much to commend him. Surely he wouldn't have
to start over ---
not him! He's
a disciplined man: he's a
Pharisee. He's on the Jewish ruling council. He's a learned man: "You're Israel's teacher," said Jesus in verse 10. This man was senior teacher
in Israel. He's even quite an open man; after all he comes to ask Jesus a
question. So he's disciplined, able, learned, and open. He'd have been honest in
business, a law and order man. He'd have been a faithful
husband, a church leader, diligent in his scripture reading, and absolutely fanatical about morality, as the Pharisees were. So no one was more moral, legalistic, and upright than this man. He's a model of middle class
respectability. And so he
would have been deeply shaken when Jesus said to him, "You need to be born
again." It would have been a
terrible shock when Jesus steps back and draws
a separating line between this man and a real relationship with God, and says, "Unless you are born again
you cannot know God."
And Nicodemus is so shaken when Jesus says this that he can only reply: "How can a man be born
when he is old? Surely he cannot enter a second time into
his mother's womb to be born!" (verse 4) So Jesus
says, "I'm not talking about
physical things,
I'm talking about spiritual things. You need to be born physically, "flesh gives birth to flesh ... " "Yes, you do need to
be born physically, but you also need to be
born spiritually"
.... "but the Spirit gives
birth to spirit." (v. 6) And Nicodemus, all your
religious credentials: disciplined, religious, able, learned, moral--- they're not good enough." None of them are good
enough. And we therefore have to
conclude that if a thoroughly good person like this needs to be born again .... then you and I can be absolutely sure that you need to
be born again and I will need to be born again and so does the whole of humanity.
Now why is this so? Well, the
Bible says that at one stage or another
we have all said, "No!" to God as God. That is why we need to be born
again, because we've all said that to God. We don't want him to be God
over us, we've all done our best
Frank Sinatra imitation: "I've lived a life that's full, I've traveled each and every
highway; but more than this, I did it my way." I've put myself at the
center. I was absolutely central to all that I did, that's what's going on
here. We've all said,
"No!" to God as God. We've
all said, "Look God, I'll take friends and family and fun and falling in love and food and fitness and all those things.
But actually I will run my life my way. And
my life will be about my goals, my
agenda, my desires. I will be the main
character, and God, you can be a footnote. You may give me each breath, but you can be a footnote,
because I'm going to be god and I'm going
to be central"
Now we've all done that. That
is the problem.
I've done that, you've done that; even Nicodemus, for all his credentials, had done that. And when we treat God like that, we use Him and ignore Him. Although to us it may seem as a small
thing, we actually die in the spirit world
because of it.
And so we need
to be born again, because it kills us when we behave like that. It's an absolute necessity
therefore to be born again. So
what then is new birth? What does it mean to be born again?
Well let me tell you, the first
things is this:
it doesn't mean turning over
a new leaf. It doesn't mean ''I'm going back on my diet; I'm going to give up smoking
or turn over new leaf for the umpteenth
time." I'm not talking
about another set of New Year resolutions, it's not about saying, "Well, I must get more morel." You couldn't get more moral
than old Nicodemus.
No, this new
birth is a radical change that God does. It's not something that I
do. It's what God does through
the power of the Holy Spirit. You can see it in verse 8: "The wind blows
wherever it pleases. You hear its sound, but you cannot tell where
it comes from or where it's going. So
it is with everyone born of the Spirit."
So it's not something I do, it's something God does -
and it is miraculous.
This is a miraculous intervention from God. God brings us back to life
as new people in the spirit. God
radically changes our thinking. So
this is a supernatural act of God in which God takes the Holy Spirit and
implants that Spirit in our hearts. In
other words, you might say that God gives us a heart transplant. That is what is being
spoken of here. And He gives us a changed mind, will and emotion; and our whole personality
wants to go in a very different direction. So we start to think the way He
thinks. And consequently we start to try to act in His way.
I remember a conversation I had with a former church member
about his Christian walk. He said
to me, "Jack, to tell you the
truth, I'm never going to keep it
up--- being a Christian."
I said, "Well, given your track record, I'd agree: you won't. What do you think will need
to happen," I asked, "to keep going as a
Christian?" He responded, "It's going to take a miracle for me to
keep going as a Christian!"
"Exactly" I said. We
all need a miracle in which
God causes a radical change to take place in our hearts. And you cannot do that by
yourself.
So, how do you start you life over? First you leave your empty
religious efforts behind and have your own private talk with Jesus. Secondly, you realize that
you need a miraculous transformation of your heart and the third step to
starting your life over is ...
3 Start your life over by responding to
Jesus' invitation. Jesus answered and said to
him, "Truly,
truly I say to
you, unless one is born again he
cannot see the kingdom
of God." (v. 3) "Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is
born of water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God."
(v. 5) Twice Jesus answered and
twice the condition given by Jesus was a new birth. Twice the ultimate
fulfillment of these conditions was entrance into the kingdom of God.
But what was the question? The very obvious question on the mind of Nicodemus
was" "How do I get into the kingdom of God?"
Jesus answered and with the answer gave the invitation: "Come on in!"
And John, reflecting on the meaning of the Jesus/Nicodemus
conversation, states God's most dramatic invitation to us in verse 16 .... "For God so loved the
world that he gave his one and only Son, that
whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life." So what did God do?
The first thing we see, He
loved the world and that's
us! And then what did he do? He gave his one and only Son, the Lord Jesus. So God allowed Jesus to die
on the cross to take the punishment we deserve. We've all seen the artist's
rendering of Jesus hanging on the cross: Jesus
in the middle between two thieves; the
soldiers all around, Mary, his mother is nearby ---
and he cries out on the cross, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken
me?" (Matthew 27:45)
Now, if Jesus is the Son of God, why
you ask is he forsaken? The scripture tells us that Jesus was forsaken so that
we need never be. He died and took the sin I deserve for saying, "I will do it my way. I'll run my life my way. I
know you've given me life, God, but I'll
take the gifts and I'll ignore you, the
Giver." That is a problem before
God, and Jesus died so that we can be forgiven for that. And as you see Him dying
there, you see Him dying for all
the times that you've sinned against Him, so
that you can be right with God. Jesus
died for you as a provision for and as an invitation to be born again into His
kingdom.
So how do you start your life over? Like Nicodemus you go to
Jesus privately and confess that you've done it your way long enough. Like
Nicodemus you will find that Jesus will know what you need even before you ask.
Go to Jesus and ask him how you can know and experience God's presence in your
life. You will find that with your request will come Jesus' invitation to enter into
God's kingdom, God's presence. God's Holy Spirit will then
do a transforming work in your heart and in your life and you will, indeed, get a second chance; you will get to start your
life over.
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