Friday, July 20, 2018

Repenting

Repenting from Sin


By Touching Lives 
“‘Now, therefore,’ says the Lord, ‘Turn to Me with all your heart, with fasting, with weeping, and with mourning. So rend your heart, and not your garments; return to the Lord your God.’” Joel 2:12-13

The first word of the first sentence of the first sermon Jesus ever preached on earth was this: “Repent.” Repentance is a key not only of our salvation, but also of continuous victory over sin as we live for Christ each day. Repentance is more than simply acknowledging our sin—knowing that we did something against God. And it’s also more than remorse. We can know we did something wrong and feel bad about it, and still not repent.
Repentance is not a feeling or a regret. Repentance is an action, a sincere and intentional turning away from sin as a result of an understanding that it was wrong. The word repent in the New Testament is the Greek word, metanoia, which is a compound word with two meanings—of time and change, which may be denoted by after and different. So the whole compound means to think differently after. Metanoia is therefore primarily an after-thought that is different from the former-thought. It is a change of mind and change of conduct, or a change of mind and heart.
The Bible’s teaching on repentance is a radical turn from one way of life to another. With our sin, regardless of how we came to repentance, true repentance must result in a definitive change. It may include sorrow, regret, remorse – these feelings are consistent with a heart that desires to turn away from sin – but true repentance is an action. When it comes to sin in your own life, as you discover it, or it is uncovered, do you repent from it? In Christ, you can.

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