Nicodemus and the New Birth St. John iii. 1 - 15 by C. M. S. Mason How good to know that house where Nicodemus Found the Lord in the night ! Had pious soul Bidden Him occupy a prophet's chamber ? We please ourselves with picture of the scene :--- How, late at night, a cautious knock was heard, And he admitted to the Master's presence ; How slender wick in oil obscured the room, But lit up that one Face of all the world, That figure, seated in tranquillity --- A King gave audience in that upper room !--- How Nicodemus sat in the obscure, And took, unknowing, cognisance of Him Before whom the world is judged ! So may we dream : We know that, courteous, Nicodemus spake, And frank, as one convinced on certain points,--- "Rabbi, Thou art a teacher come from God, We know, how else were done the works we see ? No man can do these signs save God be with him." Thus, friendly, opened midnight conference : Nor spake the ruler for himself alone ; "We know," his word, including those who sent him. 132 133 The mournful interest of occasion lost, Belongs it to the rulers of the people ? Was this the moment of the open mind When they, too, had been saved had they so willed? And Jesus answered, filling that hiatus 'Twixt spoken word and the unspoken thought, So baffles the poor speech of man with man : He knew what image blinded this man's heart --- Messias, come to rule, a King, defiant, Before whom Roman legions flee as the chaff !--- "Hast thou, then, with Messiah ought to do? Art sent, a prophet, to foretell His coming?" Such unspoke questions, knowing, Jesus answered :--- "Thou wouldst know of the kingdom, but I tell thee, No man can see the kingdom, be it come, Save he be born again. God's kingdom comes With signs thou wot'st not of : with observation Come kingdoms of the earth ; magnificence Of kings takes every eye. The kingdom of God No man can see, but has been born anew : For such as thou, there shall be nought to see." The ruler, baffled, vexed, scoffs out reply :--- "What talk is this --- a grown man born again ! Again to enter in his mother's womb, Come forth a babe once more, all life forgot, 134 All habits, thoughts, controlling circumstance? Such talk flies wide of possibility, And shows Thou know'st not life, the ways of men ! (Is't possible, we ask to-day, to change A man from all he was born and has become?) The Lord repeats His word, but adds thereto. "In truth, in very truth, I say to thee, Except a man, of water and the Spirit, Be born again, he cannot enter in. Here be the only means to that new birth Whereby a man can come into the kingdom." Water, the ruler knew, for every Rabbi, Whose teaching differed by a jot from the rest, Baptized his following. Why not this Jesus ? But the Spirit --- that means power --- here, a new thing ! Nor testing of the power without the sign ; (Sign, and thing signified, HE joins together); Outward profession, first, for such as he, Who came to Christ by night, ere any power ! "What is this that he saith --- born of the Spirit ? I know not what he saith !" the puzzled man, Not baffled by the word, but by the truth Come on him unprepared, said in his heart ; To whom Christ gave, as His wont, a principle To guide him through a thousand intricate ways ; 135 To guide us through that conflict of our age, --- Shall one law govern matter, govern mind ? "Nothing I see," the man of science cries, "Which makes me apprehend Power you name God !" "Nay," saith the Master, "thou hast spoken truth; Nothing thou seest reveals to thee the kingdom ; To see that must thou the new birth undergo ; Born of water and the Spirit, shalt thou see ! That which is born of flesh, no more than flesh ; Spirit is born of Spirit, and hath vision. Then marvel not that what is born of woman Discern not mysteries of that other world, The world of the Spirit ; lo, two kingdoms these, With each it's several law ! Wouldst keep within Dominion of the flesh ? It is enough, That what he see and prove a man believe. Wouldst enter that dominion of the Spirit Which is God's kingdom ? Ye must be born anew. 'Where find this realm, suppose a man would enter ?' Thou wouldst ask : nay, none may track the way The Spirit takes to reach the heart of a man To whom He brings new birth ; free as the wind, That bloweth where it listeth, is that Wind, That breath of God, engenders the new life ; Thou knowest not whence it comes, nor whither goes ; 136 Its voice thou hear'st,--- the moaning cry of souls, Distressed, as trees in the wind, crying for God ! That, when thou hear'st it, know the voice of the Spirit ; But think not thou to measure what He doth By rule that metes out things of sight and touch ; There be two kingdoms with two several laws, Both of the Father, governed by His word ; But law of one ruleth not things of the other." And "Marvel not at this," saith Christ ; to-day, Hint of the mystery transpires to our searching :--- A man conceives a pure love for a maid, Or notes a new star in the firmament, Or thinks to traverse space some untried way ;--- What has he now to do with things of flesh ? His greed, his lust, fall from him as a slough ; All thoughts revolve around that engrossing thought ; The tissues of his mortal brain take shape From thoughts that run among them, none knows how ; Behold, a new man, new thoughts, new hopes, desires ! --- A man may oft lay finger on the place Where new thought seized him, made him painter, poet. So God has made us, that for every man Are many chances of being born anew 137 Into a life still higher than the first : What if were one great chance for every soul Of highest birth creature of dust may know ? what if were some amazing thought, compelling, That no man could pass by were it once brought Within the focus of his narrowed vision ; A thought for wise and foolish, vile and pure, That sudden, certain, should transform a man, give him new birth, within an air unbreathed In all his grovelling days ! Why, here a lever, With arm to lift the world to higher plane ! To make this weary, travel stained, poor earth A place for angels to go to and fro, A paradise of God ! With Nicodemus, What hath all this to do ? Practical man, He knew and paid all dues of his religion, All tithes of mint and anise, ceremonious rites : What was all of this, of rustling in the heart Stirr'ed by the breath of the Lord and Giver of Life ? No word of Christ's has penetrated him, Good honest man, but dense to things of the Spirit ; "How then can these things be ? What meanest Thou By talk of wind, the Spirit, some new birth ?" Christ labours not to make His meaning plain, Already put in simplest speech. He chides Him rather. "Art thou a teacher in Israel 138 And understandest not? What teachest thou ? Of prophets, moved by Holy Ghost to speak ? Of mighty men, on whom the Spirit came, Raised to deliver Israel ? Perceivest not, That I but tell thee of these self-same things ? Verily, verily, is My word to thee, We speak that we do know ; that we have seen, We testify and tell of ; as for you, this is your condemnation, ye receive Not the truth when ye hear it." "We" and "ye"--- Here, first, in the history of the yet infant Church, Appears the dividing line that separates the world, so multitudinous, so strong and wise, From that poor two or three gathered in His Name ; The Church, grown great, is known by the same sign Her Lord announced of her in infancy ;--- She, through whatever mark she would impose In pride of separate life, is known by this :--- She discerneth things of the Spirit, as at first. The world, how sensible, righteous soe'er, Calls still, with Nicodemus, "Foolishness," The spiritual things a plain man would away with ! Again, that "teacher come from God," his very words, 139 Of wind and the Spirit, and that new birth takes place Before your eyes on any common day : What if I were to speak of heavenly things !" An, lo, that man caught up to the seventh heaven, Who saw there things not lawful to be uttered --- For none could comprehend speech of those things, --- Helps the dim searching soul, with single eye, To range that vista of the heavenly things ! "But no man hath ascended into heaven, None knows the length and breadth, the depth and height Of riches unsearchable that be in God, Save He, the Son of Man, from heaven descended, Who, walking here with men, abides in heaven." And now to Nicodemus, slow of heart, (Never the Son of Man chooseth His hearers, Recipients of those pearls that be His words !) to that dull Nicodemus tells He out That secret the old earth had travailed with Through many ages, now, to bring to birth ! that secret of the spell should lift the world, Nor fail in power to raise one soul of man ! "Thou knowest how Moses lifted up the serpent, And every dying wretch who looked was healed? 140 So must the Son of Man be lifted up : All men shall look upon Him ; and whoso looks, Seeing the Son with eye that comprehends, And knowing Him, believes, is born again, (This is the new birth I told thee of but now), and is, in Him, eternally alive ! "Aye, lifted up," murmurs the vexed ruler In his heart, below his light word of farewell ; "He means the throne of Israel, but there is, methinks, Another way of lifting the presumptuous --- An eminence all men should curse, not praise !" And Nicodemus went into the night : But ever, he being honest, in his heart Echoed the words he could not comprehend --- "Ye must be born again," "I. lifted up !"