".. that they should repent, turn to God and do works befitting repentance." (Acts 26:20).
"Testifying to Jews, and also to Greeks repentance toward God and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ." (Acts 20:21).
"Therefore, bear fruits worthy of repentance." (Matt. 3:8).
"He who covers his sins will not prosper, But whoever confesses and forsakes them will have mercy." (Prov. 28:13).
"Repent, and turn from all your transgressions, so that iniquity will not be your ruin." (Ezek.18:30).
God had warned Cain: "Sin wants to destroy you but don't let it!" (Gen. 4:7). God always precedes judgment with a warning. There might come a time when we seek repentance with tears and it is hard to come by as in the case of Esau. We must heed the warning and take it seriously and know there is a time to repent! Today is the day of salvation! Also, we can never look upon repentance as a finished work but should as an ongoing, continuing solution. Just like we "keep" the faith, we "renew" our repentance. We cannot ever say that we "had" faith if we do not "keep" the faith! Likewise, we are not just "filled with the Spirit" once but continually! God gives us a regular time to reflect on our sins when we partake of the Lord's Supper and we should take it seriously and not tolerate our pet sins. Paul urges us to "examine ourselves" as a form of assurance of our salvation.
We must realize that sin is spitting in God's face, offending his holiness, insulting his person, rejecting his truth, contradicting his truth, repudiating his justice, resisting his grace, nullifying his grace, contradicting his wisdom, and outright rebellion against His authority. We need to "listen up" when God speaks to our hearts lest we turn a deaf ear to his voice and become spiritually hard of hearing. We cannot excuse ourselves or rationalize our sins to justify ourselves. This is a time as Socrates said, "The unexamined life is not worth living." If we do not know ourselves, how can we know God! Also as the Greeks said, "Know thyself!"
We cannot alter the truth of God to make ourselves look better or to blame others for our problems or sins. We are all culpable and accountable to God and shall give an account of ourselves at the Judgment Seat of Christ for how we lived according to the grace given us. We must not water down the gospel message or dumb down it either to exclude the call to repent! There will come a time when we violate even doing something when we know better and our own conscience judges us. God is patient with us not willing any should perish and this means our salvation! If we got what we deserved, we would be in hell!
Now, Paul had a unique view of weakness: he would boast of his weakness so that the power of Christ would rest on him. God's power is made perfect through our weakness. The more we acknowledge our weakness and the more we depend upon the grace of God, the more glory we bring to God. Weakness to God is letting him get things done through us and depending upon him to use us. Our righteousness is God's gift to us, not our gift to him. The problem is that most people will not admit their weaknesses and give a sham they are strong or masquerade as mighty in the faith when it is weak. We need to be strong in faith not in self-confidence. We don't need self-esteem as much as God-esteem. It is also not how big our faith is, but how big our God is. Obedience must be viewed as the measure of faith: "By faith Abraham obeyed..."
We need to fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith as God said, "Look unto Me and be saved...." Our focus is on him when we admit our weakness and need for him but many people are so self-confident and think they are so righteous they see no need for God. Remember how Peter began to sink in the water when he got his eyes off Jesus? Well, we must focus on our Lord and give him authority over our lives and see things from his perspective.
Now, I have mentioned but not defined or expounded on repentance itself. First, is it granted by grace when we believe (they go together as in believing repentance and penitent faith) according to Acts 20:21. They are linked just as works of repentance must follow to prove its genuineness. (Acts 26:20). It is a complete and radical change of mind, will, and emotions toward our sin; not just a change of heart of opinion. We must renounce our sins and begin a new life with Christ at the helm. We must turn from our sin and towards a walk with God. It is the missing ingredient to our faith because most preachers shy away from preaching on this topic. It is more than just feeling sorry but actual control and change of direction.
We must become radicalized for God! We must see the seriousness of our sin: rebellion, independence, faithlessness, lovelessness, and irresponsibility. We do a complete turnaround, about-face, or a 180 and this is more than a New Year's resolution, AA pledge, or turning over a new leaf! There can be no genuine repentance without saving faith! They go hand in hand or they do not save! That is what Judas lacked though he was sorry for what he had done and betrayed innocent blood! Soli Deo Gloria!
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