He said that we are to be born again...
John 3:3, 5
Born again just means that we have come to know that God is real.....
and if we believe that then we will certainly want to obey Him.
wondering,
In my understanding, John 3:3 and being born again means more than that.
What was Jesus’ reply to Nicodemus? Read v. 3. There are three main points in this verse:
This is the truth. This is the reality. It is literally, ‘Amen, Amen’ or ‘Truly, truly’; It seems strange language to us, but in John’s Gospel, ‘the double amen occurs 25 times and always introduces statements of the greatest weight’.
[1]
‘No one’ can see the kingdom of God unless. John does not say, ‘Nicodemus, you can’t see the kingdom of God unless you, Nicodemus….’. The specific language of the Greek uses
tis, thus referring to everyone or ‘no one’.
That person is born again.
Why is this verse of such great importance?
There is absolute zero possibility of seeing or entering the kingdom of God without a spiritual re-birth. We know what normal physical birth is. It is the way you and I entered into the world, whether by natural birth or Caesarean section. With our physical birth, we come with the ability to adjust to our world, starting with sucking on mother’s breast, feeding from a bottle, moving up to solids and then crawling before walking.
The NIV translates the Greek word used in verse 3 as ‘born again’. The verb,
anōthen, means ‘born from above’ (the word also is used in John 3:7. That’s how it should be understood here. If any person in the world, wants to enter God’s kingdom he or she must be born into that kingdom – born again.
This is what is known as regeneration. Regeneration means ‘a secret act of God in which he imparts new spiritual life to us; sometimes called “being born again”.
[2] John Wesley provided this definition: Regeneration ‘
is that great change which God works in the soul when he brings it into life; when he raises it from the death of sin to the life of righteousness’.[3]
It is so easy to rush by and say, ‘the kingdom of God’, but what is it? We know of kingdoms on the earth – the United Kingdom, Denmark is ruled by a queen; Norway, Sweden, the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain & Tonga by kings. Is the USA a kingdom ruled by Joe Biden? No, it’s a republic. Saudi Arabia is ruled by a king, Japan by an emperor. Earthly kingdoms must be furthest from our mind when we speak of the kingdom of God.
The kingdom of God goes back to the beginning of time and it will rule the world until Jesus returns. However, the children of God’s kingdom are heirs by the grace of God that has enabled them to enter this spiritual kingdom.
Born again
We need to be born again to enter this kingdom. How and when does this re-birth take place? This is where there is some controversy of understanding among Christians or churches. There are two main views:
Some Calvinists: R C Sproul states that ‘a cardinal point of Reformed theology is the maxim: “Regeneration precedes faith”’. He went on to say that ‘we do not believe in order to be born again, we are born again in order that we may believe’.
[4] He also stated that ‘in regeneration, God changes our hearts. He gives us a new disposition, a new inclination. He plants a desire for Christ in our hearts. We can never trust Christ for our salvation unless we first desire him. This is why we said earlier that
regeneration precedes faith’.
[5]
Verses used by these people to support that position include: Acts 13:48; Eph 2:1-9.
Some Arminians: James Arminius, in discussing Romans 7, wrote that ‘true and living faith in Christ precedes regeneration strictly taken, and consisting of the mortification or death of the old man, and the vivification [renewal, bringing to life] of the new man, as Calvin has, in the same passage of his Institutes, openly declared, and in a manner which agrees with the Scriptures and the nature of faith’.
[6]
How should we respond? Is being born again (regeneration) before or during salvation? Remember these facts:
To be spiritually ‘dead’ does not mean that a person cannot believe. To be ‘dead’ refers to being separated from God and not annihilation or destruction (see Isa 59:2; Rom 1:20; Col 2:12-13). The image of God in human beings has not been destroyed by the Fall (see Gen 9:6; James 3:9).
Those who are spiritually ‘dead’ can believe. See Eph 2:8 (NIV), ‘For it is by grace
you have been saved, through faith--and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God’. So faith in Jesus is the means and the result is salvation.
I have not been able to find any verses, when properly interpreted, that state that regeneration comes before faith. Verses that show that faith is prior to salvation include: Luke 13:3; John 3:6-7, 16; Acts 16:31; Rom 3:24-25; Rom 5:1; Titus 3:5-7.
For these biblical reasons, I do not accept that: (1) An unsaved, sinful person is not free to believe, and (2) That being born again (regeneration) is prior to faith.
Oz
[1] Lenski (1943:175).
[2] Grudem (1999:492).
[3] See
https://quizlet.com/29966057/bible-doctrine-chapter-20-flash-cards/ (2016).
[4] Sproul (1986:72).
[5] Sproul (1986:118, emphasis is Sproul’s).
[6] Arminius (1996:2.498). Available online at:
https://www.ccel.org/ccel/arminius/works2.vi.iii.i.html (Accessed 4 February 2017).