John 3:5 (NKJV)
Jesus answered, “Most assuredly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.
Does "born of water" means baptism i.e., water being used in that or Jesus mean something else?
Does "born of water" means baptism i.e., water being used in that or Jesus mean something else? |
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Being born of water is accepting the word of God into your heart and totally depending on God's word daily for constant cleansing until you become spiritually matured, conforming to the image of Christ. Our Lord Jesus Christ said,
See also Ephesians 5:26. Our Lord Jesus Christ is the word of God (John 1:1, 14) and Hebrews 4:12 says,
Eternal life is in the word of God and the life of the word (Jesus) is in the blood (John 6:47-58). The word (Jesus) is described as the bread of life, and to eat the bread of life means "to receive Him into your heart and continue in fellowship with Him daily through the help of the Holy Spirit". This is what it means to be born of "water and Spirit". If you are not washed with the water of the word you are still in your sin and dead, totally separated from God eternally. Titus 3:5 says,
You see? The Holy Spirit uses the word of God (Jesus) to wash you constantly until you are regenerated and conform to the image of Christ (Ephesians 4:13) see also John 14:26,16:13-15, this is the actual meaning of salvation - to accept the word of God (Jesus Christ) into your heart and continue in fellowship with Him in the word through the help of the Holy Spirit on daily basis. In this manner you can be sure that you are born of water and the Spirit, thereby saved and able to see and enter the kingdom of God. |
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Being born of Spirit and water John 3:5. The water here doesn't refer to aminiotic fluid because that is of the flesh,Jesus clearly explained that born again is not the flesh but the Spirit .If this just qualifies you to see how much more the one that qualifies you to enter the kingdom of God. The water is the Word of God because in Ephesians 5:26 it says "that He might sanctify her (the church), having cleansed her by the washing of water by the Word. The Word has the cleansing effect of water as the person meditates and act on it continually, washing out your bad habits. While being born born of the Spirit is the regeneration that is brought about by the Holy Spirit. |
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Speaking of "born of water and of the Spirit" in John 3:5, D.A. Carson writes,
Jesus rebuked Nicodemus because he should have been familiar with this kind of thing in the Old Testament. On the view that "water" in John 3:5 refers to some kind of bodily fluid, Carson writes:
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There are two common interpretations of this phrase. One is that "born of water" refers to baptism. This view is typically held by those who adhere to baptismal regeneration. The other view, which I will argue for here, is that it refers to actual physical birth. In this view, the water might allude to amniotic fluid. This view seems far more likely to me as we view the passage in its context:
Notice that after Jesus says that we must be born of "water and the Spirit", he immediately contrasts flesh and Spirit. In the context, Jesus is answering Nicodemus's concern that he must be born "again". In one sentence, he mentions two births: water and Spirit. And in the next sentence, he again mentions two births: flesh and Spirit. The most natural interpretation is that flesh and water are referring to the same birth. In addition, notice that Jesus says "So it is with everyone born of the Spirit". If he were intending to say that everyone must be born of flesh, water (baptism), and Spirit, then it seems that he would have said "So it is with everyone born of water and of Spirit". Water is painted here as the already accomplished (physical) birth. |
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It is referring to Amniotic fluid, at least according to the sermons we hear in our Baptist Church. Being born of water refers to natural birth, which everyone goes through and being born of the spirit refers to the gift of the Holy Spirit imparted at the time of salvation. While this isn't explicitly stated in Scripture, it makes sense in context, where Nicodemus had just asked how he could re-enter is mother's womb to be born again. The idea of natural birth was clearly in the context of the current conversation. And of course, labor begins with the water breaking. |
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