Intro
A Syrian commander, a well-respected military leader, who won the respect of 
his King.  Still, something can come along in your life and undo much of what 
you built up over the years.  Such is Naaman.  For a fearsome 
affliction—leprosy—now overshadows his imposing warfighting skills and combat 
prowess.

Main Body
To protect others from the infectious contagion, Naaman will need to isolate 
himself from everyone, including his family and friends.  No more will he be a 
leading officer of Syria but an untouchable and outcast, abandoned by all.  In 
desperation, he will try almost anything.

A slave in his household reports to him of someone named “Elisha.”  “Why do 
those Jews use such bizarre names,” he grumbles.  This enslaved girl informs 
him of a man in her homeland, who can heal him of his skin disorder.  The enemy 
of my enemy is my friend.  Unusual circumstances make strange alliances.  What 
else can he do?

So, he journeys to this man to find healing—he hopes!  How humbling to come 
before a conquered people and ask, perhaps plead, for help.  Oh, he hates this 
ailment, which is robbing him of everything he values.  How much pride must he 
swallow? 

In the threatening gloom, he curses under his breath and makes the trip, 
arriving at Elisha’s door.  The man, called a prophet, doesn’t bother to show 
his face and greet this superior—his servant does.  Such gall!  Can’t he grasp 
I can stride into his house and cut him down with one swift swing my sword?  
With a reddening face, blushing in anger, he stomachs more humiliation from 
this defeated people.  

The servant relays a message: “Wash seven times in the Jordan River.”  Now, if 
sending out your lackey didn’t humiliate me enough, now you tell me to scrub 
myself in some muddy waterway?  Give me lightning and thunder, something 
impressive, with arm-waving and arm-cutting antics, like the priests of Baal.  
The prognosis is grim, and washing in some filthy, second-rate tributary 
doesn’t do the deed.

No one is so stupid not to understand you need clean water, not dirty.  Now, if 
leprosy is something I can wash off, such a cesspool of a stream isn’t the 
place to go.  More inspiring and cleaner rivers flow in Syria!  Enraged, Naaman 
is ready to ride off.  By not slaying Elisha for insulting me, I’m showing him 
more mercy than he deserves.

“Wait!  Didn’t you come all this way?  At least try.  For if what Elisha tells 
you is nonsense, you are no worse off.”  The slave’s outcry gives the proud 
commander some perspective.  Off he goes, to do his seven washings within 
Jordan’s waters.

Well, washing is a stretch.  For he’s getting mud on himself and takes pleasure 
in his appearance, with spit and polish and gleaming armor.  The first washing 
and he’s still diseased.  So also the second and third.  Still, he presses on, 
four, five, and six.  Shouldn’t he be getting better?  Nothing is changed.  All 
right, one more time!  

Out from the murky water, he steps, stunned.  The prophet isn’t some nutty old 
man.  Those waters cleansed him!  Now, his skin is soft and supple as a baby’s 
bottom.  

Gaze deep, and you will find a little of Naaman, or a lot, inside yourself.  
Can we not use some spectacular, jaw-dropping miracles?  Those will show to the 
world the God I believe in is real.  “Oh, and while I’m asking, rescue me from 
my financial problems and family troubles.  O God, how about giving me heaven 
on earth?”

For Naaman, God worked a miracle, through the quiet and ordinary, devoid of 
glitz and spectacle.  Still, he expected something else.  Not so hasty, Naaman. 
 For God shows He works in hidden ways, often through His creation.  Consider 
the river’s water, which God used to achieve His purposes.  The point is so 
obvious because Naaman didn’t proceed from faith or trust.  No, he went to the 
water in case the washings might happen to work.  So, why not go to the Jordan? 

Think of Jesus’ incarnation.  The eternal God took our human blood and bone 
from His virgin mother.  Again, an understated act from God, unobserved by 
many, though not missed by those involved!  An older man, betrothed but not yet 
married, travels with his bride to the two-horse town of Bethlehem.  Unnoticed 
is the Savior’s birth—until announced and celebrated by countless angels and 
shared by astonished shepherds.  

The greatest miracle of all took place on a hill outside Jerusalem and at a 
nearby tomb.  The Son of God carried our sins up a stony slope to Calvary’s 
cross, enduring the death penalty we earned for ourselves.  The ashen body goes 
into the grave, with His followers expecting Jesus to stay dead.  For the 
morning after the Sabbath, the women go to anoint His cold and stiff corpse.

A couple of years before His execution, Jesus spoke to a man, Nicodemus.  In 
the discussion, Jesus pointed to what lay ahead and what He will institute.  
How can we say this?  In John 3, Jesus taught Nicodemus to be on the lookout, 
for soon He will agonize for the misdeeds of all.  

Still breathing and moving, Jesus talks, like He earlier died His atoning death 
for the entire world.  “For this is how God loved the world, he gave his only 
Son so all who believe in him will not perish but receive eternal life” (John 
3:16).  The God from eternity points this puzzled man to something still to 
come—but does so as past event.

Still, believing in Jesus isn’t something we can self-generate.  So, with His 
death sentence yet to occur, Jesus will tell Nicodemus what He will also put in 
place.  Somehow, what He will do on the crossbeam of death needs to come to 
someone so he can believe and live, not suffer everlasting death.

So, Jesus instructs this teacher of Israel of what will soon take place in His 
New Covenant, which He will establish.  Gone with the Old, superseded and 
fulfilled by the New.  Soon, the circumcision of infant boys will be a practice 
of the past.  For something else will come, for both boys and girls, which will 
connect His forgiveness from the cross to the person, bringing someone under 
the Father’s rule and reign.

The Messiah reveals to Nicodemus, “Unless someone is born anew, he cannot see 
the kingdom of God.”  Poor Nicodemus—he is clueless.  For the Greek word Jesus 
uses can mean “born from above,” meaning a spiritual birth, originating from 
God, but also, “born twice” or “again.”  In confusion, unsure of where Jesus is 
going, he thinks the birth from God’s Spirit is a repeated, second, physical 
birth.

The question Nicodemus asks exposes how misguided he is.  “How can anyone be 
born when he is old?  Can he enter his mother’s womb a second time and be 
born?”  So, the Rabbi from Nazareth must be clearer, “Unless someone is born of 
water and Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.  Whatever is born of the 
flesh, is flesh, and what is born of the Spirit, is spirit.”

The killing wood is yet to come, and yet our Lord speaks like He earlier died 
to give us life.  What God will do by water and Spirit is not yet commanded, 
but Jesus, likewise, refers to this heavenly birth as now in place.  So, what 
is this being born of water and Spirit?  Where does the enlivening Spirit use 
water, birthing us with spiritual life where only spiritual death once 
existed—baptism.

Like God using water to heal Naaman of his skin infection, Jesus will also take 
water, curing us of our disease of death never-ending.  Soon, He will direct 
His Apostles to disciple others by baptizing and teaching (Matthew 28:19-20).  
Why? 

Well, if Jesus leaves us scratching our heads, the Apostle Paul doesn’t.  To 
the congregation at Rome, he asks a rhetorical question.  “Don’t you realize 
those who are baptized into Christ Jesus are baptized into his death?”  Well, 
yeah, every Christian believes this!  So, they are reminded, once again, 
through baptism, about God the Holy Spirit connecting them to Christ’s death.  

Ah, so when Jesus mentions the “water and Spirit” in the same conversation as 
His crucifixion, He’s joining them together.  For baptism unites you to Jesus’ 
death—but also more.  “Therefore, we are buried with Him by baptism into death. 
 So, as Christ rose from death by the glory of the Father, we too may walk in 
newness of life.”  Yes, because baptism not only links us to our Lord’s death 
but also to His resurrection.  No wonder Scripture makes much of baptism!

More than 500 years ago, a baby boy, the son of Hans and Margaret Luther, 
became a child of God.  On November 11, 1483, the baptismal water with the 
sanctifying Spirit came to grace young Martin.  Later, as a man, he came to 
treasure the gift of salvation, which came to him in his baptism.  Whenever sin 
and Satan tempted him, he grew defiant, “I am baptized!”  Why such a response?  
Here’s why.  For if you die with Jesus, you also will rise with Him.

The water and Spirit also attached you to Christ, which means Jesus now lives 
in you.  Not “lived” but “lives,” a reality taking place now, making “you were 
baptized” to now become “you are baptized.”  For you can only ascend to this 
new life, as Jesus did, if you are, not were, tethered to Him.  

So, remain and live in your baptism, for your future is certain.  The redeeming 
Son will pull you with Him from death, to walk in risen life.  This came to you 
in the cleansing water where the life-breathing Spirit gave you birth from 
above.  Believe this for such is true, since “you are baptized!”

Conclusion
Death, you cannot end my gladness: I am baptized into Christ!  When I die, I 
leave all sadness to inherit paradise!  Though I lie in dust and ashes faith’s 
assurance brightly flashes: Baptism has the strength divine to make life 
immortal mine.  Amen.
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