e=mc2? well actually John 3:3
This last Sunday
(8th March 2020), the famous passage of Nicodemus visit to Jesus was
our lectionary reading.
What struck
me on this reading of the passage is the initial exchange between Nicodemus and
Jesus.
Nicodemus
was a Pharisee, and a teacher. Those he associated with were not impressed by
Jesus. The Pharisees and religious leaders of the time were, if anything, antagonistic towards Jesus,
discounting any possibility that Jesus could have been the Christ, or in any
way favoured by God.
Yet some,
like Nicodemus, must have had mixed feelings.
I simply
assume that these mixed feelings caused Nicodemus some spiritual restlessness, and
this at some point drove him to enquire more, and enquire directly from Jesus.
He did this
at night, presumably to draw as little attention as possible to his meeting.
Again, presumably, because he would suffer some criticism from his peers for
entertaining any uncertainty regarding this unqualified religious person named
Jesus.
His first statement
to Jesus unmasks Nicodemus’ uncertainty.
“Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher who has
come from God. For no one could perform the signs you are doing if God were not
with him.”
It doesn’t
sound uncertain, but in the context of the rest of the passage, it is.
I find the approach of Nicodemus very interesting.
First he
addresses Jesus as “Rabbi”, meaning teacher, and, from my point of view, he is
submitting to Jesus' authority with this address.
The next
point he makes, to me, seems more of a question than a statement. The implied
question is; “Jesus, have you been sent by the most high God?, and if so, could
you show me some more legitimate qualifications?”
He might also have asked; “You perform miracles just as though you have been sent
by God, but you are an ordinary, unqualified, uneducated carpenter, so how
could you really be someone sent by God?”
My
rewording of the statement helps to show where I see Nicodemus, and many of us
also, approaching Jesus with mixed feelings.
Jesus'
answer is unexpected, and deals with Nicodemus’s heart.
Jesus replied, “Very truly I tell you, no one
can see the kingdom of God unless they are born again.”
This is one
of those bold, original and world changing statements, to me a bit like
Einstein’s e=mc2. With respect, I do not consider Einstein on
the same level as Jesus.
If we take Jesus statement at face value, I
want to make some spiritual deductions, if that is allowed.
Firstly, Jesus equates “teacher who has come
from God” with ”seeing the kingdom of God”.
In other words, for anyone, let alone Nicodemus,
to be able to “see” that Jesus is in fact a teacher sent by God, they are
actually “seeing” the Kingdom of God.
I would like to repeat, to be able to “see”
that Jesus is in fact a teacher sent by God, is the same as “seeing” the
Kingdom of God.
The next point is the one that inspired me to
write this little post.
For Nicodemus to know that Jesus is truly a
teacher sent by God, then Nicodemus is in fact, already “born again”, or “born
from above.”, or at least in the process.
If this is true, then Nicodemus was actually
compelled by the Holy Spirit to seek Jesus out. He didn’t then have to bow down
and “make Jesus Lord” so to speak, the Spirit was already blowing in his heart,
directing him to this life-changing meeting. Not that bowing down and
acknowledging the Lordship of Jesus is wrong or fruitless. In fact, soon, very
soon, every knee will bow, and every tongue confess exactly that.
I guess, what I am saying, from a different angle is that being "born again", does not come down to a simple formula. e=mc2 is a simple formula, but putting it into practice takes incredible atomic energy.
The atomic energy of "you must be born again" is found in that seismic, all-encompassing, self and sin destroying event known as the cross.
I guess, what I am saying, from a different angle is that being "born again", does not come down to a simple formula. e=mc2 is a simple formula, but putting it into practice takes incredible atomic energy.
The atomic energy of "you must be born again" is found in that seismic, all-encompassing, self and sin destroying event known as the cross.
May the Lord bless our earnest seeking of the truth..
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