[forthright] What Is Repentance?

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From: Forthright Magazine <ba@...>
Date: Tue, 12 Oct 2004 14:24:11 -0500
Forthright Magazine
http://www.forthright.net
Straight to the Cross

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Today's prayer: No reason to complain
http://forthright.antville.org/stories/942199/
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COLUMN: Square One

What Is Repentance?
by Richard Mansel

One of the most difficult things in life is to
admit we are wrong. It cedes our authority and
places it out of our control. This is
reprehensible to many humans. Therefore, many
cannot come to Christ because humility pays too
high a price.

Repentance is required because we all have sinned
and need forgiveness (Romans 3:23). However, this
is predicated on our first admitting we have
sinned, which most will not do. Truth, they feel,
is relative because self-esteem is more treasured
than certainty.

The first recorded words of Jesus' public ministry
were, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at
hand" (Matthew 4:17). Paul said, "Truly, these
times of ignorance God overlooked, but now
commands all men everywhere to repent" (Acts
17:30). Jesus was even more blunt, "unless you
repent you will all likewise perish" (Luke 13:3).

Knowing repentance is a command, we must determine
what it means.

Repentance is not just being sorry for our sins or
that we got caught (Matthew 27:3). It is not
simply fear of God (Acts 24:25) nor is it covering
up our sins (Numbers 32:23).

J. W. McGarvey said: "Repentance is something that
stands in between sorrow for sin and the change of
life in which sins are abandoned and a better
course of conduct begins.... When a man is so
thoroughly filled with sorrow and mourning and
self-reproach on account of his sins that his will
is subdued to the will of God, and he says, I will
sin no more, I will hereafter submit to the will
of God, this results in a change of life, and it
is repentance, a change of will in regard to sin."

Repentance is godly sorrow in that we see our sins
as God sees them. God is sinless and cannot be
where sin is (1 John 1:5). Moreover sin put his
Son on the cross. God is pained when we turn away
from him and towards Satan because he sees through
Satan's lies. He knows where we are headed. If we
grow to hate sin as much as he does, we will be
closer to living a life without its pockmarks.

Repentance is also action (Joel 2:12-14). It is a
turning away from sin, but more so, a turn toward
that which is right. We read in Isaiah 35:8 that
the way to God is described as the "Highway of
Holiness." Imagine we are traveling on that road.
Going the other way is the road to Satan. As we
travel toward God we see signs that promise
pleasure and independence on Satan's path. We
consider it and turn around and head to Satan's
home. Conscience, holy words, or the encouragement
of others causes us to repent of our actions. We
turn around and go back toward God. We have
changed our intention, perspective, goal, and path
all in the same action. We no longer intend to run
toward Satan. We are committed to being with
Christ. This is repentance. It is a total change
of direction.

We seek only to return to the arms of the Lord
because we cannot imagine being anywhere else.
Peter said to Christ, "to whom can we go? You have
the words of eternal life" (John 6:68). Daniel A.
Brown said, "Repentance is not something we try
for awhile to see if it works. In repentance, we
voluntarily give up our right to have options."

The beautiful thing is that when we turn our lives
over to Christ, he will make us something greater
than we could ever be on our own.

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