Born of Water and the Spirit

Last updated: June 10, 2026

Share This Page Copy, email, or post the link
Facebook Email
← Back to Library

Learning Objectives

By the close of this lesson the hearer should be able to:

  1. Identify the kingdom of God in this text as the church, a present spiritual kingdom.
  2. Explain the new birth as begettal by the Spirit through the word and delivery in baptism.
  3. Refuse the false readings of "born of water" and show the new birth modeled on Pentecost.

Thesis

To enter the kingdom a man must be born again — begotten by the Spirit through the word and delivered through the water of baptism; "born of water and the Spirit" is not natural birth and not a direct, wordless work of the Spirit, but the gospel new birth pictured on Pentecost.

Burden

Jesus told a religious, moral, respected man that none of it was enough: "unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God." That word still offends, because it levels everyone. It tells the upright Nicodemus and the open sinner the same thing — you must be born anew. The confusion that has gathered around this verse has let many people explain the new birth away until it costs them nothing. We will let Jesus define His own terms, and we will not soften the door He set on His kingdom.

Introduction

Entrance into the kingdom requires such a change that Jesus calls it a birth. "Unless one is born of water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God" (John 3:5). Boles works the text in four steps: what the kingdom is, what "born again" means, what a birth actually involves, and an example of this birth in Acts.

I. The Kingdom of God Is the Church — a Present, Spiritual Kingdom (Col. 1:13)

The kingdom Jesus speaks of is His church, and it is spiritual through and through. It has a spiritual King reigning now (Acts 2:30-36), spiritual laws, a spiritual realm, spiritual forces, and spiritual subjects. It is not a political kingdom postponed to some future age; it is entered now, by the new birth, and those who obey the gospel are even now "transferred... to the kingdom of His beloved Son" (Col. 1:13). Christ reigns and His kingdom stands today. The question of the new birth is therefore not academic — it is the question of how a person gets in.

II. What "Born Again" Means (Acts 6:7; Col. 1:13)

Scripture describes this entrance several ways, and the synonyms interpret each other:

To be "born anew, of water and the Spirit," then, is not a mystical event detached from obedience; it is what happens when a person obeys the gospel. Three false readings must be set aside:

  1. "Born of water" means natural (physical) birth. This makes Jesus say a man must be physically born to be saved — a pointless thing to tell Nicodemus, and it adds a meaningless birth.
  2. "Born of water" means baptism, but "born of the Spirit" waits until the resurrection. This tears one birth into two events separated by a lifetime; Jesus speaks of one entrance into the kingdom now.
  3. A direct, immediate operation of the Holy Spirit apart from the word. Scripture will not allow it: God begets by His Spirit through the word, not around it (next point). The Spirit and the water belong to one birth, accomplished through the gospel.

III. What a Birth Actually Is (1 Pet. 1:23; John 3:5)

Every birth has two necessary actions: begettal and delivery. The new birth follows the same pattern.

IV. The New Birth Modeled on Pentecost (Acts 2)

The order is not theory; Acts 2 shows it happen. No one could be born of the Spirit until the Spirit came; the Spirit came on Pentecost. There the people heard the word, believed it (begotten by the Spirit through the gospel), were cut to the heart, repented, and were baptized (delivered through the water) — and they were saved and added (Acts 2:37-41, 47). That is the new birth in action: born of water and the Spirit, brought into the kingdom. What happened in Jerusalem is the pattern for entering the kingdom still.

Application

Measure your own entrance by the Lord's door, not by a substitute. Were you begotten by the word — did you hear and believe the gospel? And were you delivered through the water — baptized into Christ? A faith that was never delivered in baptism is a child begotten but never born; a baptism without the begetting word is a body without life. Refuse the comfortable redefinitions that let a man claim the kingdom without the birth Jesus named. And if you have been born of water and the Spirit, live as one transferred into a new kingdom under a present King.

Conclusion

Jesus set one door on His kingdom and named it plainly: born of water and the Spirit. It is the Spirit's word that begets faith, and the water of baptism that delivers the believer into the kingdom of the reigning Christ. Not natural birth, not a wordless inner zap, not a birth split across a lifetime — one new birth, modeled at Pentecost, offered to you now.

Invitation

You must be born again, and the Lord has told you how. Hear the gospel and believe it; let it cut you to the heart; repent of your sins; confess that Jesus is the Christ; and be baptized for the remission of your sins, that you may be delivered into His kingdom (John 3:5; Acts 2:38). The Spirit's word is sounding now. Be born again today. Come while we sing.

Word Study

Scripture Interlock Table

Theme Boles' Outline Supporting Scripture
Kingdom = present church, entered now I Col. 1:13; Acts 2:30-36
"Born again" = obeying the gospel II Matt. 18:3; Acts 6:7; 2 Thess. 1:8
Begotten by the Spirit through the word III 1 Pet. 1:23; Luke 8:11; James 1:18; 1 Cor. 4:15
Begotten when one believes III John 1:12; 1 John 5:1
Delivered in baptism III John 3:5; Titus 3:5
The new birth at Pentecost IV Acts 2:37-41, 47
Ed Rangel

Author

Ed Rangel

Ed Rangel is a gospel preacher and Bible teacher. His work focuses on plain Scripture, biblical authority, the gospel of Christ, and faithful Christian living.

More teachings from Ed Rangel
Ask a Question About This Page Send a question, correction, or study request

Question or Comment

Ask a Question About This Page

If this raised a Bible question, send it here. Keep it honest, direct, and tied to the subject.