John 3:1-21 · Jesus Teaches Nicodemus
The Law of the Serpent
John 3:14-21
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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That which bites you can also heal you. God’s ultimate promise is to heal an ailing creation. Yet there is no healing without hurting. To experience God’s salvation, we must first experience “sinsation.” The very word, “salvation” comes from the word “salve” meaning health. In Jesus’ salvation, God restores his sin-sick creation to perfect health. He does so by first embracing death.

What the first “Adam” spoiled, Jesus, the “second Adam” will heal. The first Adam in his soiling of God’s perfect environment essentially inaugurated time, space, aging, and an expiration date for all things, organic and inorganic.

Jesus, the second Adam, will restore the world and reverse death and erosion, offering a gift of eternal life and eternal kingdom with his gift of redemption and salvation.

If the first human was “Adam Transient,” Jesus shines forth as “Adam Eternal.”

This configuration of opposites: dark and light, death and life, sin and salve, change and permanence, mortality and eternity, even humanity and divinity pervade the story of the gospels, as well as the earlier Hebrew scriptures.

Darkness can be changed by the presence of Light. Venom can be eviscerated by Venerative Vision, as we see in the story of Moses’ bronze serpent. Sin can be altered by the presence of Salvation. God can reverse what the human Adam had done by becoming human and changing it back. Everything has its converse. Everything in existence is both dialogic and reversible.

This conversant dialogue is evident from the beginning of time, as God voices everything into Being, and into relationship. Things appear because of a vibration of opposites.[1] If something throws another thing off kilter, something else must act as a corrective. The universe is a relational balancing act. We understand it in physics. And we understand it in scripture. In this sense, science and religion are not only also dialogic but brilliantly linked. 

The prophecy of the coming messiah therefore had to become true. And the dichotomy of the Living God/Living Human Jesus needed to be the kind of Messiah who could undo our current reality caused by our will to see, know, control, and be through His own descent into darkness and the chaos of death. We achieve life through death, as Jesus explained to Nicodemus about being “born again.”

Want to be a true Christian? You must be willing to undergo “soul sacrifice,” to allow God to operate on your heart, jumpstart your spirit, and point it in a new trajectory. We say it all the time. The scriptures tell us this. You need to “be changed” to be a true follower of Jesus. You must “die to self” in order to experience eternal life. You must be willing to take up your cross and follow Jesus if you want to enter into the kingdom of heaven.

This “dialogue of opposites” defines our faith.

But do we really believe it? And will we really adhere to it? Will you allow Jesus, the Surgeon of Hearts, to operate on you?

It’s a risk few of us truly want to take. Cause we like things the way they are.

This is the real sin of the human spirit, the truth that keeps us from God’s truth.

If the world is in motion, then sin is stasis. And we as a people love, love, love stasis.

Our scriptures for today give us a taste of how difficult it is for humans to trust God and put our lives into Jesus’ hands. Let’s read it again.

“Just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up, that whoever believes in him may have eternal life.”

“Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.”

“This is the judgment, that the light has come into the world, and people loved darkness rather than light because their deeds were evil. For all who do evil hate the light and do not come to the light, so that their deeds may not be exposed. But those who do what is true come to the light, so that it may be clearly seen that their deeds have been done in God.”

We are a people who love darkness, who love to hide, as Adam and Eve did the first time God sought them after they had eaten of the forbidden tree. We are afraid of being seen. Afraid of being authentic. Afraid of being vulnerable. Afraid of Truth and exposing the untruths within ourselves, even if it means we can be healed. We are a people who love the status quo.

But those who step into the light, who are unashamed to be seen in all of their weakness, illness, sinfulness, incompleteness, will in turn be healed by God, saved by Jesus, restored, and made whole.

To follow Jesus is to do the exact opposite of what our humanness might cause us to want to do –to hide ourselves, to keep things the way they are, to seek security in stasis, to avoid risk. And yet by avoiding risk, we take the greatest risk of all –we risk our very lives, and condemn ourselves to an eternity of darkness, sin, and ultimate death.

One of the most brilliant minds in economics, Joseph Schumpeter, realized that all great innovations emerge from the destruction of old systems. He called his principle, “creative destruction.” To create anew for the future, you must first eliminate that which holds you in stasis to the present.

The gospel gives us this same message. When we truly put our faith in Jesus, we allow him to remake us new. We ask him to help us sacrifice our current “self” in hope that he will reconstruct us into a new Being, a saved, whole, healthy, restored Human Being, a Human Being made in God’s image.

If anything, this needs to be our focus in this time of Lent. For as Jesus in God’s own self-sacrificial act moves closer and closer to the cross, to embrace death so that he can re-create life, we too are asked to take up a cross and follow him there.

Lent is time when we think of ourselves in darkness but commit ourselves to moving into the Light. It’s a time of ultimate repentance. It’s a time of supreme commitment, trust, faith, and hope in an unseen future, an eternal tomorrow.

Because we know that the moment when we appear to sacrifice our freedom, that’s the moment we begin to be truly freed through the gift of Jesus.

Our God is a God who exists in a universe of opposites.

Want to live? You must first die.

Want to be saved? You must first realize you are ill.

Want to follow Jesus into the eternal kingdom? You must first take up your cross and follow him into the pit.

As Christians we already know the secret of this trajectory.

And as Lent moves closer and closer to Easter morning, you know more and more surely that death always results in Life. This is the Law of the Serpent.

As this Lenten season continues to unfold, may God bless you in your dying and welcome you in your living.


[1] See www.physicsclassroom.com and Hans Andeweg, “Everything is Energy, Everything is One, Everything is Possible,” April 21, 2016, www.turnerpublishing.com.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner