Was Jesus Born Again?
By Goodreads Author Eli Kittim
Jesusâ Baptism in the Holy Spirit
In discussing Jesusâ baptism in the Holy Spirit, Iâm not referring to John the Baptistâs water baptism. Rather, Iâm referring to a Spirit baptism or a conversion experience where Jesus had a personal encounter with the power of God. Many Christian denominations emphasize that without such a âborn-againâ experience no one can enter the kingdom of God (Jn 3.5). From the outset, scripture emphasizes the need for a baptism of the Spirit (Mt. 3.11 NRSV):
âHe will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and
fire.â
In Mk. 16.16-17, itâs not merely by faith alone but by spirit âbaptismâ that salvation is accomplished! Given that the born-again Christians âwill speak with new tongues,â itâs clear that the text isnât referring to a symbolic immersion in water but rather to a baptism of the Holy Spirit! And although Baptism is defined as a rite of admission into Christianityââby immersing in waterââthis ritual is *symbolic* of being cleansed from sin (1 Jn 1.7) by the death of the self. First Peter 3.21 (NIV) reads:
and this water symbolizes baptism that now
saves you alsoânot the removal of dirt from
the body but the pledge of a clear
conscience toward God.
In Rom. 6.3-4, Paul talks of a baptism Into Jesusâ death! Itâs a believerâs participation in the death of Christ to allow them to âwalk in newness of life.â Itâs part of the same regeneration process which comprises the death of the old self & the rebirth of the new one (Eph. 4.22-24). The best example of Spirit baptism is in Acts 2.1-4! Colossians 2.12 (NIV) similarly says:
having been buried with him in baptism, in
which you were also raised with him through
your faith in the working of God.
Keep in mind that, in the gospel story, Jesus didnât start his ministry prior to his regeneration. Nor was Jesus revealed prior to his rebirth. Mt. 3.16-17 (NRSV) suggests that Jesusâ regeneration began with Johnâs baptism and was followed thereafter by his encounter with the devil in the wilderness:
And when Jesus had been baptized, just as
he came up from the water, suddenly the
heavens were opened to him and he saw
the Spirit of God descending like a dove and
alighting on him. And a voice from heaven
said, âThis is my Son, the Beloved, with
whom I am well pleased.â
This is a symbolic account of his rebirth. Notice that it was Jesus *alone* who saw (ΔጶΎΔΜ), presumably for the first time, the Spirit of God (cf. Jn. 3.3) who would later indwell him. If Jesus already had the Holy Spirit, there would have been no need for a temptation in the desert. Jesus already had the fullness of the Deity within him in bodily form (Col. 2.9) but, being innocent, he still had to receive the Holy Spirit in order to energize it and be transformed. The next verse says (Mt. 4.1 NRSV):
Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the
wilderness to be tempted by the devil.
This is a continuation of the earlier baptism motif in the previous chapter. If â âJohnâs baptism was a baptism of repentanceâ â (Acts 19.4 NIV), as âPaul said,â then Jesus would have had to necessarily confront his sin nature at some point. For those who object to the notion that Jesus had a sin nature, how could he have been âlike His brothers in every wayâ (Heb. 2.17), fully human, if he were unable to be tempted? Not to mention that it would also render the temptation pericope ipso facto meaningless because how could the devil tempt someone who is unable to be tempted by sin? Thatâs why scripture says that âGod made him who had no sin to be sin for usâ (2 Cor. 5.21 NIV)!
So, as part of his rebirth experience, Jesus had to confront the devil. Thatâs why the text emphasizes that he didnât do it on his own. Rather, âhe was led up [áŒÎœÎźÏΞη] by the Spirit.â Jesus then confronts the devil head on. He is persistently tempted in order that he may prove his loyalty to God. He faces various temptations and is put to the test. He experiences what the German Protestant theologian Rudolf Otto (1869â1937) calls the âmysterium tremendumâ:
A great or profound mystery, especially the
mystery of God or of existence; the
overwhelming awe felt by a person
contemplating such a mystery (Oxford
English Dictionary).
The text shows that, by the end of his temptation experience, Jesus had been reborn in God by following the same principle as the one found in James 4.7 (NRSV):
Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist
the devil, and he will flee from you.
Jesus does precisely that. Notice that the spirit of God and the angels did not minister to him prior to his rejection of Satan (Mt. 4.10-11 NIV):
Jesus said to him, âAway from me, Satan!
For it is written: âWorship the Lord your God,
and serve him only.â âThen the devil left him,
and angels came and attended him.
This is a clear demonstration that even Jesus himself had to be reborn in order to both see & enter the kingdom of God (Jn. 3.3, 5). Given that heâs fully human (Heb. 2.17), heâs not exempt from the regeneration process, which is the necessary means by which a human being can become united with God.
This concept creates an obvious oxymoron. For example, if Christ was purportedly born-again, does this mean that Jesus got saved? Or that Jesus became a Christian? This is the kind of paradox that such an experience can suggest. In a certain sense, the answer is yes. Think about it. Being fully human, even Christ has to undergo a dangerous temptation in order to encounter God. But if thatâs the case, then it means that there was a time when Jesus didnât know God; a time when he didnât have a personal and intimate relationship with him. Lk. 2.52 (NRSV) says:
Jesus increased in wisdom and in years,
and in divine and human favor.
If âJesus increased in wisdom,â then this means that there was a time when he didnât have much wisdom. The above verse also suggests that the divine favor towards him increased as Jesus got older. All these passages clearly show that Jesus grew up as a normal human being who underwent all of the spiritual experiences for regeneration and rebirth that we all encounter. He was not exempt from any of them, including that of regeneration & rebirth!
Conclusion
Scripture, then, shows that in being fully human, Jesus had to go through everything that we also face, including suffering, pain, depression, rejection, and so forth. Yet there are some pastors who teach that Jesus didnât have a sin nature, never sinned, could not be tempted, was not reborn, and the like. Remember Isa. 53.3 (NLT)?:
He was despised and rejectedâ a
man of sorrows, acquainted with deepest
grief.
Yet in response to a Christian talk-show host, a famous preacher who heads a megachurch in Redding, California argued that Christ âwasnât born again the way weâre born again.â Specifically, the Christian talk-show host posed the following question: So, âhe [Christ] wasnât born again the way weâre born againâ? To which Christian minister and evangelist, Bill Johnson, replied: âNo, goodness no, no. I have to be born again; heâs already God, so, absolutely not.â So much for pastoral care!














