Our Lutheran father in the faith, Philip Melanchthon, wrote, “The mysteries of 
God are to be adored, rather than investigated” (Loci Communes, 1521 edition).  
He is correct.  For after confessing the faith in the words of the Athanasian 
Creed, who can fully explore, let alone, understand what we just confessed?

In the Athanasian Creed, we just confessed the “what” of our faith: that God is 
one God in three persons.  Yet, the Creed does not even come close to 
explaining the “how,” how God could be who He is.

That’s the mystery of the faith.  We can know the “what,” even if we never 
fully understand the “how.”  It’s that way in our Gospel reading with 
Nicodemus.  But with Nicodemus, he wants to know the “how” even before he is 
willing to accept and believe the “what.”

Nicodemus was a Pharisee.  He heard Jesus speak and saw Him perform miracles.  
So Nicodemus knew that Jesus was from God in some way, but he wanted to know 
more.  So one night, Nicodemus quietly went to visit Jesus.  Then the 
conversation began, with the “how” questions soon making themselves known.

Jesus: “I assure you: Unless someone is born from above he cannot see the 
kingdom of God.” (vs. 3)

Nicodemus: “How can anyone be born when he is old?  He can’t go back into his 
mother’s womb a second time and be born, can he?” (vs. 4)

Jesus: “I assure you: Unless someone is born of water and Spirit he cannot 
enter the kingdom of God.” (vs. 5)

Nicodemus: “How can that be?” (vs. 9)

Nicodemus asked “how.”  How can someone be born when he is old?  How can that 
be?  But Jesus never answered the “how” for Nicodemus.  Instead, Jesus focused 
on what--what is and what must be.  “Unless someone is born of water and Spirit 
he cannot enter the kingdom of God.”

Like Nicodemus, we are slow to believe unless we first understand.  We insist 
on asking “how” because we think the answer will help us better believe the 
“what” that Jesus gives us.

Like Nicodemus, we want to probe the mystery of God.  Like Nicodemus, we want 
to know “How can this be?”  The answer Jesus gives is the answer He has always 
given.  Trust in “what” I tell you, even if I never reveal the “how” of what I 
tell you.

This trust, this faith, that Jesus urges us to have--it’s not only of the 
intellect or emotion.  That’s what frustrated Nicodemus.  And that’s what often 
frustrates us.  For we don’t want a faith unless we can first see how it can 
be.  We want to understand, know, feel, and be convinced of what we first are 
to believe.  We want to trust in only in what we can first see or experience.  
The Bible calls that walking by sight instead of by faith (2 Corinthians 5:7).

But Jesus says, “Trust in what I tell you.  For the ‘how’ may or may not ever 
be revealed.”  After all, you may not be able to understand the “how” anyway.  
And the matter of faith is always trust, even when you can’t understand the 
“how,” or even when your senses tell you otherwise.

Yet, Nicodemus continued to ask, “How?  Can a man crawl back into his mother’s 
womb to be born a second time?”  Obviously, Nicodemus wasn’t even getting what 
Jesus was saying.  Nicodemus was thinking about physical, human birth.   That’s 
why Jesus steered him away from such thinking.  Jesus said, “Whatever is born 
of the flesh is flesh, and whatever is born of the Spirit is spirit” (vs. 6).

Nicodemus thought what Jesus said to him was absurd.  How can an old man crawl 
back into his mother’s womb?  But Jesus was speaking of spiritual birth, not a 
physical rebirth.  And God brings about spiritual birth where no spiritual life 
had earlier existed.  That’s why it’s a birth, not a rebirth!

It was a classic case of apples and oranges.  Jesus was talking about one 
thing; Nicodemus thought He was talking about something else.  Jesus was 
talking about spiritual birth; Nicodemus thought He was talking about physical 
rebirth.  That’s why Nicodemus was talking about being “born again” when Jesus 
was speaking about being “born from above.”

Nicodemus missed the whole point.  That’s why Jesus said to him, “You’re a 
teacher of Israel, and you don’t understand this?”  Jesus told Nicodemus what 
He would use to bring about--not physical rebirth--but spiritual birth.  
Through “water and Spirit,” Jesus will bring about spiritual birth (vs. 5).

Understand and believe what Jesus is saying: spiritual birth comes about by 
“water and Spirit.”  And where does water and Spirit join to do this?  At 
baptism.  The Holy Spirit in the water gives you spiritual birth where only 
spiritual death once lived.  Believe in what Jesus tells you, even if you don’t 
understand how.

In His conversation with Nicodemus, Jesus never did answer the “how” of 
baptism.  Perhaps, it was because Nicodemus wasn’t even getting the “what” of 
what Jesus was saying.  That’s why it made no sense to move on to the “how.”

But later in Scripture, God answers, in part, how He does what He does in the 
water of baptism.  To hear that answer, we turn to the Apostle Peter.  In his 
first letter, Peter talked about the great flood in the Old Testament.  But 
instead of talking about whom the water killed, he focused on whom the water 
saved.  Peter wrote: “In the days of Noah, while an ark was being built; in it, 
a few--that is, eight people--were saved through water” (1 Peter 3:20).

Peter said that God saved 8 people through the water of the flood.  It’s then 
that Peter links baptism to the flood.  He continues, “Corresponding to that, 
baptism now saves you.”  Corresponding to what?  Corresponding to Noah and his 
family being saved through the water in the flood, that’s what.  In other 
words, in the same way that God saved Noah and his family through water, 
“Baptism now saves you.”  The Apostle Peter explains what Baptism does: 
“Baptism now saves you.”  They are words of God straight from the Scripture.

And it’s from there that, under Holy Spirit inspiration, Peter explains the 
“how” of baptism.  “Baptism now saves you--not because it removes dirt from 
your body--but because it is an appeal to God for a clean conscience” (1 Peter 
3:20-21).  So baptism does wash away something.  But the whole point of baptism 
is not if it happens to wash some dirt off your body.  The whole point is that 
it gives you a clean conscience toward God.

That’s the “how” of baptism: Through “water and Spirit,” Jesus gives you a 
clean conscience toward God the Father.  It’s exactly as Peter preached at 
Pentecost: “Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus the 
Messiah.”  Why?  “For the forgiveness of your sins” (Acts 2:38).  So baptism 
washes away your sin.  Ah, forgiveness of sins--now that’s a clean conscience 
toward God!

Our Small Catechism puts it this way.

How can [the] water [of baptism] do such great things?

It is not the water, but the word of God in and with the water that does these 
things, along with the faith, which trusts this word of God in the water.  For 
without the word of God, the water is simply water and no Baptism.  But with 
the word of God, it is a Baptism--a grace-filled water of life and a washing of 
the new birth in the Holy Spirit, as St. Paul says in Titus chapter three:  “He 
saved us through the washing of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit …” 
[Titus 3:5].

You have received that baptism.  You have been baptized by water and Spirit.  
If not, please come and talk to me.  By the Spirit, you get to believe that all 
of what Scripture says about baptism is true--even if you don’t know fully 
understand “how” it can be.  You know that through “water and Spirit,” through 
baptism, Jesus gives you a clean conscience toward God the Father.

Hang onto that truth.  Hang onto the baptism that Jesus gives you.  For that is 
where the Spirit is, breathing into you the breath of life, giving you 
spiritual birth where only death once reigned.  In Baptism, the entire 
Godhead--Father, Son, and Holy Spirit--are at work for you, giving His all for 
you, and fulfilling His promises of eternal life for you.

Live in your baptism.  When you look at the baptismal font, recall your 
spiritual birth by “water and Spirit.”  Every day, return to your baptism by 
turning away from your sins.  And know this: No matter what you’ve done and no 
matter how bleak life may get--your Lord God will never give up on you.  For He 
is the same Lord who has given you spiritual birth where only spiritual death 
once reigned supreme.

That’s the point Jesus makes when He answers Nicodemus.  He points you to the 
sure and certain work that He gives you in baptism.  And because of that, you 
can say in the Spirit that Jesus Christ is your Lord.

Jesus will see you through everything because He has died your death, suffered 
your sin and hell, and now lives His life with you, in you, and through you.  
That’s the God you have, who gives you spiritual birth through “water and 
Spirit.”  Amen.


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and spirit.

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