Chapter 17—Nicodemus
      
      
        This chapter is based on
      
      
         John 3:1-17
      
      
        .
      
      
        Nicodemus held a high position of trust in the Jewish nation. He
      
      
        was highly educated, and possessed talents of no ordinary character,
      
      
        and he was an honored member of the national council. With others,
      
      
        he had been stirred by the teaching of Jesus. Though rich, learned, and
      
      
        honored, he had been strangely attracted by the humble Nazarene. The
      
      
        lessons that had fallen from the Saviour’s lips had greatly impressed
      
      
        him, and he desired to learn more of these wonderful truths.
      
      
        Christ’s exercise of authority in the cleansing of the temple had
      
      
        roused the determined hatred of the priests and rulers. They feared
      
      
        the power of this stranger. Such boldness on the part of an obscure
      
      
        Galilean was not to be tolerated. They were bent on putting an end
      
      
        to His work. But not all were agreed in this purpose. There were
      
      
        some that feared to oppose One who was so evidently moved upon by
      
      
        the Spirit of God. They remembered how prophets had been slain for
      
      
        rebuking the sins of the leaders in Israel. They knew that the bondage
      
      
        of the Jews to a heathen nation was the result of their stubbornness
      
      
        in rejecting reproofs from God. They feared that in plotting against
      
      
        Jesus the priests and rulers were following in the steps of their fathers,
      
      
        and would bring fresh calamities upon the nation. Nicodemus shared
      
      
        these feelings. In a council of the Sanhedrin, when the course to be
      
      
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        pursued toward Jesus was considered, Nicodemus advised caution and
      
      
        moderation. He urged that if Jesus was really invested with authority
      
      
        from God, it would be perilous to reject His warnings. The priests
      
      
        dared not disregard this counsel, and for the time they took no open
      
      
        measures against the Saviour.
      
      
        Since hearing Jesus, Nicodemus had anxiously studied the prophe-
      
      
        cies relating to the Messiah; and the more he searched, the stronger
      
      
        was his conviction that this was the One who was to come. With many
      
      
        others in Israel he had been greatly distressed by the profanation of
      
      
        the temple. He was a witness of the scene when Jesus drove out the
      
      
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