Born of the Spirit
Monday of the Second Week of Easter John 3:1–8 There’s something wonderfully honest about Nicodemus. He comes to Jesus under the cover of night—curious, cautious, and carrying more questions than answers. He’s a respected teacher, yet he knows there is something about Jesus he cannot ignore. And so he shows up, quietly hoping for clarity. Jesus responds with an invitation rather than an explanation: “You must be born from above.” It’s a phrase that puzzles Nicodemus and, if we’re honest, it puzzles us too. What does it mean to begin again? To be renewed? To let God’s Spirit reshape what we think is already set in stone? Jesus uses the image of the wind—unpredictable, unseen, yet undeniably real. You can’t control it, but you can feel it. You can’t see where it starts or ends, but you know when it moves through your life. That’s how the Spirit works: quietly, persistently, often in ways we don’t expect. Many of us, like Nicodemus, come to Jesus with our own nighttime q...