Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
Where are you looking to see that Jesus told Nicodemus "to be" born again? I have never seen that.Yes, since Jesus told Nicodemus to be born again. Seems pretty plain to me.
"I will...."Ezekiel 36:25 Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be clean: from all your filthiness, and from all your idols, will I cleanse you.
26 A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh.
27 And I will put my spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments, and do them.
If God could do this nationally, I see no reason why He could not do this individually as well.
John 3:7--"Marvel not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born again."Where are you looking to see that Jesus told Nicodemus "to be" born again? I have never seen that.
He said "you must be"John 3:7--"Marvel not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born again."
I don't believe either of those would be accurate.....It all depends on what you mean by "born again."
... someone who has the indwelling presence of the Holy Spirit?
if persons knew God, were empowered to obedience, experienced grace, and received eternal life....
....as far as I know there is no passage in Scripture which presents the new birth as a New Covenant distinctive.....
Paul and the identity of "true Israel," the children of the Promise....
Good point, James. Regardless of whether or not we agree on definitions, for any communication to take place we need to know how we are defining terms.I think 98% of the last thread on this issue of "born again prior to Pentecost" was everybody talking past everybody, and almost everybody taking for granted that everyone was defining the terms the same way.
This one may be no different.
I'm firmly convinced that if "born again" is defined biblically, there can be no way to misunderstand that Hebrews 9-10 absolutely portray it as a New Covenant distinctive
I believe regeneration is being alive spiritually. There can be no doubt the New Covenant bestows greater benefits than the Old Covenant, but both Old and New Covenant saints were/are spiritually alive.What is your definition?
my understanding is that born again is a cleansing. A removal of the infirmity of sin. Washed, purified, forever perfected. Without spot or wrinkle. Unblemished. Healed. A holy bath, if you will.What is your definition?
There are similarities in our definitions, James. I understand God to have forgiven sins in the OT outside of the atonement of Christ based on obedience in faith looking towards that atonement (that perfect sacrifice). The OT sacrificial system was perfect in that it accomplished its goal (foreshadowing Christ), but it was not a complete cleansing, so to speak. God’s forgiveness in the OT covered sins but did not account for man’s sinfulness (the curse, fallen nature). This reconciliation (of humanity) is accomplished through the work of redemption (from the Incarnation to the Resurrection as a whole). With the Resurrection came the reconciliation of mankind as Jesus became the Firstborn of many brethren.my understanding is that born again is a cleansing. A removal of the infirmity of sin. Washed, purified, forever perfected. Without spot or wrinkle. Unblemished. Healed. A holy bath, if you will.
a new creation, not just a new demeanor.
And the new creation comes about in two stages, inner man and outer man. Spirit and Body
The spirit is cleansed upon enlightenment and faith, conversion
The body will be cleansed in the resurrection.
Born again is an issue of our substance being made anew without sin.
Jesus used the Greek verb dei, as Tom Cassidy has pointed out: "It is necessary...." Then He used the aorist passive infinitive of "born," so "to be born," followed by anothen, "again." So you are wrong, Jesus did say "be born again."He said "you must be"
Then added "unless you are ______, then you cannot _____."
Jesus never said "be born again", this was all in response to Nicodemus' initial statement. Maybe some paraphrasing might help drive my point.
Come on, this is not rocket science. It wasn't out of left field at all to Nicodemus, because John preached the Kingdom of God and then Jesus did (Matt. 3:2, Mark 1:15, etc.). Nicodemus would have known this with no problems or confusion about it.Nic: We know you're from God, we saw your miracles
Jesus: you can't perceive the Kingdom of God unless you're born again.
Then that begs a few questions:
What has "Kingdom of God" anything to do with the miracles Nic saw?
Or does "Kingdom of God" relate to "we know you're from God" ?
What is "Kingdom of God" anyway? Sounds like Jesus came out of left field.
But it's not out of left field if Paul is to be believed as to what is "Kingdom of God" (Romans 14:17)
I see these as the highlights of your post, and I agree there is a substantial amount of agreement.There are similarities in our definitions....
...that there is a marked difference between the covenants. The Old Covenant dealt with man’s sins and the New with man’s sinfulness.
...They were, however, God’s covenant people and in a right standing under that covenant (the Abrahamic covenant) by God’s grace through faith. So I also see a difference between believers under the Old and New Covenants, but I believe that these are both under the covenant God made with Abraham.
...From what I can tell our main differences here are, as you indicated, a matter of definitions.
Yes, since Jesus told Nicodemus to be born again. Seems pretty plain to me.