What Does It Mean to Be Born Again?
R. C. Sproul
Reformation Trust
publishing
a division of ligonier ministries • orlando, florida
What Does It Mean to Be Born Again?
© 2010 by R. C. Sproul
Published by Reformation Trust
a division of Ligonier Ministries
400 Technology Park, Lake Mary, FL 32746
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or otherwise—without the prior written permission of the publisher, Reformation Trust. The only exception is brief quotations in published reviews.
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations marked KJV are from The Holy Bible, King James Version.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Sproul, R. C. (Robert Charles), 1939–
What does it mean to be born again? / R. C. Sproul.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-1-56769-206-8
1. Regeneration (Theology) I. Title.
BT790.S67 2010
234′.4--dc22
2010009282
Must I Be Born Again?
I once spoke with a gentleman who said he wanted to learn more about the Christian faith. He said he thought that he was a Christian and wanted to know more of what Christianity involved. But, he cautioned, “I don’t want to be a born-again Christian.”
When I heard that, my mind snapped back to the 1976 presidential campaign, when Jimmy Carter identified himself as a born-again Christian. About that same time, Charles Colson, who had been an adviser to President Nixon and who became embroiled in the Watergate scandal, was converted to Christ and wrote a book titled Born Again, which sold millions of copies and was made into a movie by the same title. Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver and even Larry Flynt, the publisher of Hustler magazine, got into the act by announcing to the world that they had been “born again,” though Flynt now calls himself an atheist.
Suddenly the term born again, which had been known only in a very small segment of the church, became a hot news item and started to receive national attention. It was borrowed by the secular world and applied to things outside the Christian faith. For instance, if a baseball player had a good year following a particularly bad year, it was said he was a “born-again” player.
Somewhere in all the hype, however, the true meaning of the term born again became obscured. As a result, much confusion exists, even within the church, as to the precise nature of the new birth. The purpose of this booklet, then, is to examine what it means, biblically and theologically, to be born again.
At the outset, I must note that the phrase “born-again Christian,” in a narrow, technical sense, is a redundancy. This is because, according to the New Testament, in order to become a Christian, one must first be born again (John 3:3–5). Therefore, if a person is born again, he or she is a Christian. So to call somebody a “born-again Christian” is like saying that such a person is a Christian Christian. The New Testament knows of no other kind of Christian.
Also, the term born again is a popular synonym for the theological term regenerate. I know of no church in the history of Christendom that has not had a doctrine of regeneration or rebirth. That is, every Christian body in Western history has had to develop some kind of concept of what it means to be reborn spiritually. This is because the concept did not originate with theologians, Bible commentators, or preachers. The very idea of spiritual rebirth has its origins in the teaching of Jesus. Since Christians identify themselves as followers of Christ, naturally they have been interested in understanding what Jesus says about this idea.
A Necessary Condition
Notice how Jesus responded. He didn’t say, “I’m humbled by this honor that you’ve bestowed on Me, ruler of the Jews, member of the Sanhedrin; it’s great to be praised by someone in such a lofty position.” It’s almost as if Jesus could not wait for Nicodemus to stop complimenting Him. Once Nicodemus fell silent, Jesus responded as He always did in His teaching—by cutting through the fluff and getting to the heart of the issue. He said to Nicodemus, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God” (v. 3). In other words: “Nicodemus, stop talking about peripheral matters and personal honors. The thing I want to get across to you is this: There is something a person absolutely must do in order to see the kingdom of God.”
In theology and philosophy, we enjoy making distinctions, and one distinction that is very important in these disciplines is the one between what we call a “necessary condition” and a “sufficient condition.” A necessary condition is defined as something that absolutely must happen before something else can follow. For example, in order for a fire to ignite, the presence of oxygen is absolutely required. If there’s no oxygen, there can be no fire. By contrast, a sufficient condition is all that is necessary for a result to occur. Oxygen is not a sufficient condition for fire. It is necessary for fire, but alone it does not guarantee the result of fire. You cannot have fire without oxygen, but you can have oxygen without having a fire. In short, a necessary condition is a sine qua non—that without which the desired effect will not follow.
Jesus gave a necessary condition in this conversation with Nicodemus. Anytime Jesus teaches necessary conditions, our ears should perk up, but that is especially true in this case because He articulates an absolute requirement for entrance into the kingdom of God. He said, “Unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.” That is, unless “A” takes place, “B” cannot possibly follow. Do you see why that is so important? With these words, Jesus laid out the necessary condition for coming into His kingdom. He interrupted this man who was highly trained in theology, who was a religious ruler, who was recognized and praised by his fellow citizens in Israel, and hit him right between the eyes with the truth: “You need to be born again.” It’s as if I were to walk into a minister’s church, and while he was asking me a theological question or saying something kind to me, I said: “Hold it. You can’t even see the kingdom of God because you need to be born again.” It is no wonder the Pharisees were so hostile toward Jesus.
To put it as simply as I can, if you are not spiritually reborn, you are not a Christian. It is necessary to be reborn to be a Christian. No one is born a Christian. No one enters into this world already incorporated into the kingdom of God. The Pharisees thought that they were born into the kingdom of God. They reasoned: “We’re the children of Abraham. We do all the right things. We have the law of Moses.” But Jesus later would say to them: “You are not the children of Abraham. You are the children of those whom you serve” (see John 8:39–47).
I cannot emphasize enough how radical this pronouncement of Jesus was. It sounds radical to our ears, and it sounded even more radical to the contemporaries of Christ.
Think back to my friend who said, “R. C., I want to become a Christian, but I don’t want to be a born-again Christian.” Essentially, he wanted to have his cake and eat it too. In all probability, he merely meant, “I want to be a Christian, a real Christian, but I don’t want to be one of those people who wears it on his sleeve and annoys others with his obnoxious methods of evangelism.” That was how he was identifying a group of Christians that made him uncomfortable, a style within the Christian church that he perceived as unique to “born-again Christians.”
But in the actual meaning of the language, there is only one kind of Christian. There are different styles of that one kind of Christian. Some are polite and some are rude. Some are quiet and some are vociferous. Some are conservative and some are not so conservative. But the only kind that gets into the kingdom of God is the regenerate kind, because Jesus made the new birth a necessary condition. So the first thing that I want to communicate about rebirth is that it is necessary.
Jesus’ Use of Repetition
The Jews had two ways in which they used repetition for emphasis, and Jesus used them both in His conversation with Nicodemus. I explored one of these ways in my book The Holiness of God when I examined Isaiah 6, where the seraphim in the heavenly throne room of God are depicted singing “Holy, holy, holy” in antiphonal response. I explained the significance of this repetition of a word, a technique we see used throughout the Bible. When the Jews wanted to make something emphatic, instead of adding an exclamation point or using italics, they would simply repeat it.
When Jesus introduced His necessary condition, He did not simply say, “Unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.” Instead, He began by saying, “Truly, truly,” which, in the original language, would have read, “amēn, amēn.” We get the English word amen from this Hebrew word; it is a word we often use to end our prayers, by which we say, “Truly” or “So be it.” From time to time, Jesus prefaced His teaching by the repetition of the word amen, and this is one of those occasions. When Jesus said, “Truly, truly,” it was as if He was saying, “You had better put an asterisk next to this because it is extremely important.”
In my seminary classes, I used to tell my students, “Anytime you see me write something on the board, you should put a red ‘X’ next to it in your notes, because you can be sure that it is going to be on the examination.” Jesus did something similar when He said, “Truly, truly.” When He wanted to say, “Here’s something that’s very important,” He would say, “Truly, truly.”
There are thousands of ministers in the United States of America who will stand up this Sunday morning and say that it is not necessary to be born again in order to enter the kingdom of God. If you hear someone say that, let me ask you to remember that that is not what Jesus said. When you feel conflicted about whether being born again is or is not a requirement, you will have to decide who speaks with the supreme authority for the Christian church. The Lord of the church says, with emphasis, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.”
There was a second way in which the Jews used repetition. In addition to repeating a word, they would repeat a particular concept in slightly different wording. When the apostle Paul was warning the Galatians not to abandon the biblical gospel, he said to them, “Even if we or an angel from heaven should preach to you a gospel contrary to the one we preached to you, let him be accursed” (Gal. 1:8). Then the apostle added, “I say again: If anyone is preaching to you a gospel contrary to the one you received, let him be accursed” (v. 9). Paul used the second form of Jewish repetition here, making the same point twice with slightly different words.
Jesus did the same. He first said, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God” (John 3:3). Nicodemus replied: “How can a man be born when he is old? Can he enter a second time into his mother’s womb and be born?” (v. 4). Then Jesus responded, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God” (v. 5). The Lord’s repetition of this key requirement shows how essential it is.
Here’s what I deduce from the teaching of Jesus Christ: It is impossible to see the kingdom and to enter the kingdom unless one is born again. But that raises an important question: What does it mean to be “born again”? As I said before, every church has some doctrine of regeneration. Believe me, they don’t all have the same doctrine. All acknowledge that regeneration or rebirth is a requirement to get into the kingdom of God, but not all agree on how that requirement is fulfilled and precisely what is involved. In the chapters that follow, we will turn our attention to discerning just what Jesus meant when He laid down this necessary condition.
The above excerpt is the entire Chapter, Chapter 2 is next up
https://biblia.com/books/bornagsproul/Page.p_12
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