Jesusâ shocking statement was far more than Nicodemus had expected. Incredulous, Nicodemus said to Him, âHow can a man be born when he is old? He cannot enter a second time into his motherâs womb and be born, can he?â Certainly, this highly educated Pharisee was not so obtuse as to have misinterpreted Jesusâ words in a simplistically literal sense. He knew our Lord was not talking about being physically reborn, but he replied in the context of the Lordâs analogy. How could he start all over, go back to the beginning? Jesus was telling him that entrance to Godâs salvation was not a matter of adding something to all his efforts, not topping off his religious devotion, but rather canceling everything and starting all over again. At the same time, he clearly could not grasp the full meaning of what that meant. His questions convey his confusion, as he openly wondered at the impossibility of Christâs statement. Jesus was asking for something that was not humanly possible (to be born again); He was making entrance into the kingdom contingent on something that could not be obtained through human effort. But if that was true, what did it mean for Nicodemusâs works-based system? If spiritual rebirth, like physical rebirth, was impossible from a human standpoint, then where did that leave this self-righteous Pharisee? . . .