Repentance

Are You Repentant?

Are You Repentant?

By Wendy Wood

Do you have a sin that you struggle to mortify and put to death in your life? Is there a recurring sin like gossip, or being irritable, or recurring thoughts that dishonor the Lord in your life? How do we assess our repentance when we continue to struggle with the same sin for months and maybe years? We believe that the power of sin over us has been broken. We are no longer slaves to sin when we are in Christ. Romans 6:6-7 assures us, “​​We know that our old self was crucified with him in order that the body of sin might be brought to nothing, so that we would no longer be enslaved to sin. For one who has died has been set free from sin.” If we are truly free from sin, no longer enslaved to it, how do we think about habitual sin in our lives? Romans 6 tells us that we are slaves to righteousness, but we must choose obedience. Verses 16 - 18 go on, “Do you not know that if you present yourselves to anyone as obedient slaves, you are slaves of the one whom you obey, either of sin, which leads to death, or of obedience, which leads to righteousness? But thanks be to God, that you who were once slaves of sin have become obedient from the heart to the standard of teaching to which you were committed,  and, having been set free from sin, have become slaves of righteousness.” In order for us to be slaves to righteousness, we must truly repent of our sin. To repent means to turn. We turn away from the sinful thoughts, desires, words, and actions and we turn toward God and righteousness and holy. To repent is to live differently, godly, and to  be freed from habitual practices that dishonor God and to serve God’s will by obediently following his commands and precepts.

In this blog let’s look at repentance and what it means to “turn”. Repentance is not just an admission of wrongdoing. Repentance is not a willingness to say you could have done better or differently. Repentance is not being disappointed in  yourself or thinking badly of yourself because you expected better of yourself. Repentance is also not just being upset about the consequences of sinful actions or feeling bad about what your sinful words or actions caused. Repentance is not about you! 

Repentance is about God and His standard of holiness. If we love God and care about his honor and his Name being made great through our lives, we will care deeply when we do not act in a way that honors him. Throughout the New Testament, believers are referred to as saints and holy. As saints and having been counted as holy because of Christ’s righteousness imputed to us, we are to “walk in a manner worthy” of those designations. When we fail to desire, think, speak, and act as we should as saints and holy people, we are not loving God and have not displayed his glory. The heart of a believer is grieved by this. God has called us to “put to death what is earthly in you” and “put to death the deeds of the body”. If we “love the Lord our God with our whole heart, soul, mind, and strength” we care deeply when we do not live up to what it means to be a “little Christ” or “Christian”. 

A clear look at what it truly means to be repentant is found in 2 Corinthians 7:11. “For see what earnestness this godly grief has produced in you, but also what eagerness to clear yourselves, what indignation, what fear, what longing, what zeal, what punishment! At every point you have proved yourselves innocent in the matter.” In this verse there are many descriptions of genuine godly sorrow. Some of them are feelings that happen within a sinner, but there are also specific changes in thoughts and actions that prove the sorrow is truly repentance and not just a bad feeling. 

As you read through this description of godly sorrow that leads to repentance, is this you?

As we look at the description of godly grief, examine yourself. Think about that pesky sin that you keep returning to time and time again. Does this description match how you view your sin before God? Do you have the same view of your sin that God has? Another way to think about that is, “if you could see God standing next to you and reading your thoughts, hearing your words, and seeing your actions, would you still do things the same way?” Have you really repented of this sin?

Paul talks about eagerness being produced by godly sorrow. The Greek word is spoude which means “to make haste” or to make oneself diligent to deal with something quickly. We should “make haste” to deal with our sin when we are first convicted of it. If something is extremely important or a top priority for us, we deal with it in a way that demonstrates that. So think about yourself. What changes have you made to show that dealing with this sin is a priority in your life? How have you demonstrated in your thoughts, words, and actions that you are eager to change? Or, are you nonchalant about sin and not making it a priority in your life to change? Is there something in your thoughts, words, and actions that shows laziness in dealing with sin? Take time to name the specific sin you are eager to deal with. Write a plan to be intentional and proactive in putting this sin to death as a top priority in your life.

Next from 2 Corinthians 7:11 we see an eagerness to clear yourselves. The Greek word here is apologia which means to answer for oneself or to make a defense with reasoned argument or statement. This is not a defense of the sin or explaining the sin or excusing the sin! In an eagerness to clear yourself by demonstrating that you want to change and are different. It might be that you are talking to a mature believer and explaining the changes you have made. You are showing or proving yourself to be different in being able to name the sin and how Christlikeness needs to be put on in its place. Again, examine yourself. Have you talked with another believer and shared how you are changed in thought, word, and action? Have you thought through and implemented what it looks like to honor God in your situation? Or, have you made excuses for your lack of change and continue to repeat the sinful pattern in your life? Maybe you think or say, “no one is perfect” or “I’m not as bad as I used to be” as an excuse for continuing on in the sin. Take time to name the sin that you need to be clear of. Write down how you are making changes in your thoughts, desire, words, and actions and be specific. Share with someone else how you will be working on this change and ask them to pray for you and help you stay accountable.

The next description from 2 Corinthians 7:11 is indignation. The Greek word is 

aganaktesis which means “to be much displeased”. When we are indignant over sin we hate the sin! We think through what God thinks about sin. Scripture clearly states that God hates sin and calls it an abomination before him. Have you thought about how your specific sin is viewed by a holy God? Take time to think about God and his nature. What aspects of God’s holy attributes are you defiling and rebelling against in your sin? Examine yourself. What thoughts reveal that you hate your sin and take it seriously? What reveals that you hate your sinful thoughts, words, or actions? Or, have you downplayed your sin? Have you made excuses or blamed someone else for your sin? Do you try to justify your sin and make it seem like it’s not that bad? An understanding of God’s holiness and how “other” he is is helpful in having a right view of your own sin. Take some time to study God’s holiness.

Fear is the next description listed in what genuine godly sorrow which leads to repentance looks like. The Greek word is phobos which just means to be in fear of. It is a dread or a terror. This can be a fear of remaining in the sin. This is a healthy fear that takes into account the seriousness of sin. To fear being in sin is to recognize that sin separates us from God, that sin will grow if it is not dealt with biblically. To fear the sin is to take God’s honor and glory seriously and not want to displease God. Fear is also the awareness of God’s glory and honor. God is just. God does discipline his children when they are wayward. It is good and right to fear the discipline of the Lord and to fear the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell (Matthew 10:28). If we truly fear our sin, we will take steps to avoid temptation and prepare to take the “way of escape” that God provides (1 Corinthians 10:13). Examine yourself. Do you have a fear of remaining in sin and continuing down the same path? What steps have you taken to avoid temptation and to demonstrate that you don’t want to keep on sinning? Or, are there ways you are still making provision for the flesh? Are you keeping yourself open to be tempted or in a place where you might fall into old patterns? Take time to think through when you have typically sinned in this area. What thoughts, actions, places, people do you need to guard against or remove from your life out of fear of continuing to sin? Make a list and pray that God would help you have a healthy fear of your sin.

Next, Paul talks about having a longing,  or desire regarding holiness and purity. The Greek word is epipothesis which means to greatly desire or earnestly want something. This means that we long or desire to be godly. We desperately want God to change us and make us more holy and more like Christ. This involves praying for God to change us. Not once, but continually confessing and pleading with God to change our hearts, to give us a great love for him, and to work godly thoughts, desires, words, and actions into our souls. This serious longing means that every time we sin in thought, word, or action we confess and repent again. We take thoughts captive to Christ and don’t allow sinful thoughts to continue or go unchecked. Examine yourself. Do you stop and confess every time a sinful thought enters your mind? Do you truly long to be a slave of righteousness and honor God in every moment of the day? Or, do you harbor thoughts that indulge your sin? Are you inwardly content to continue in your sin even if your words say otherwise? Take time to assess your heart. What demonstrates your longing to be changed? Are you diligently praying for God to change you while you actively work to think godly thoughts?

Paul asks, what zeal are you demonstrating that displays your godly sorrow? The Greek word is zelos which means fervent or excitement in the mind, a love of defending, embracing or pursuing something. To be zealous about sin is to want to protect and defend the people who have been hurt and affected by your sin. Having zeal is a demonstrated eagerness to treat others more significant than yourself (Philippians 2:3-4). Rather than justifying or blaming sin on others, zeal openly embraces the other person’s view and actively puts into practice words and actions that demonstrate change has taken place. Zeal, like all the other descriptions of genuine godly sorrow, starts in the heart that hates sin and longs to honor and please God, but it doesn’t stop in the heart. Zeal is noticeable. Zeal is evidence in words and actions that demonstrates change on the inside has happened. Take time to examine yourself. What evidence is there in your outward life that inward change has taken place? Do others see a change in your attitude and demeanor that is explained by a love for God? Or, are you trying to fake change by doing “good deeds”  that don’t match your heart? Are you attempting to cover up sin or make up for sin by being “nice”? I often call this “getting out of the doghouse behavior”. When you know others are unhappy with you because your sin has hurt them, you try extra hard to be nice for a while so the relationship goes back to a more comfortable state. Do not confuse this with zeal for honoring the Lord!

Next, 2 Corinthians 7:11 describes godly sorrow as “what punishment”. Other translations use the word vindication. The Greek is ekdikesis which translates as avenge or revenge. The bible uses this Greek word to mean meting out justice or avenging a wrong. Godly sorrow accepts the consequences of sin without complaint or grumbling. A truly repentant person doesn’t chafe at not being trusted for a while or refuse to accept whatever consequences match the sin. Rather than protecting self, a person with godly sorrow sees the need for justice to be done and patiently handles the consequences of sin. Yes, a believer is forgiven in Christ, but sin still has earthly consequences and a repentant person willingly absorbs the cost of that sin. Restitution is made through repayment and that is not just financial. It may be restitution through great accountability of time, internet use, limited interactions with specific people, or whatever is necessary to begin rebuilding relationships with those who have been hurt. Take time to examine yourself again. Do you invite rebuke when you have sinned? Are you graciously owning your sin and the consequences that have come about as a result of the sin? Do you welcome others to speak into your life and areas where they have concerns? What in your attitude and words demonstrates that you are open to correction? Or, do you defend yourself and grumble when you feel punished for past sins? Do you have an attitude that makes you unapproachable about your sin? Again, think about the specific sin in question. Have you made yourself available to talk with others and receive help?

Paul finishes the list with proving yourself innocent in the matter. The Greek word is hagnos which means holy. It is a desire to prove yourself pure and set apart for God. Proving yourself innocent means that moving  forward, you are eager to honor God and be known as a person who is pursuing a holy life and is genuinely changed by God. Holiness is a pursuit. We are told in Hebrews to pursue holiness. This pursuit is an intentional, specific, life-long determination to be more and more like Christ as God continues works in our lives to bring our justification, sanctification, and glorification to completion. He will complete the work he has started in us (Philippians 1:6)! We do need to use the disciplines of grace made available to us - studying the Word, meditating, sitting under the teaching of God’s word, fellowship, baptism, communion, etc. We need to prove ourselves by taking new actions that reflect Christ. Examine yourself. Do other people see change in you? Would other people characterize you as a person who longs to be holy and innocent of wrongdoing? Or, do others see you continuing to be the same? Would they say you are the same person with the same sin struggles as a year or two ago? What in your life is demonstrating your repentance?

All believers should examine themselves (2 Corinthians 13:5). When we are dealing with a stubborn sin pattern, we must be diligent to pray about it, asking God to change us and work holiness in us. We must be diligent to specifically work through these descriptions of godly sorrow and prayerfully work to hate our sin and long to demonstrate our growing love for God in turning away from sin. Change doesn’t happen in vague terms. Take time to write out your specific sin and pray through this list of descriptions of godly sorrow, seeking God to renew you each day.

The Biblical Heart Part 8

The Biblical Heart Part 8

By Wendy Wood

If you haven’t read The Biblical Heart Part 7, please go back and do that now. This blog is a continuation of the repentance process started in the previous blog.

In the process of repentance and change, only genuine heart change at the level of desires has eternal value. We aren’t after just behavior change. If the change of behavior isn’t coming from a change in what is loved most, the change is temporary and has no eternal value. Only a greater love and fear of God brings genuine, God-glorifying change.

The first step of repentance is contemplation:

How has a holy, holy, holy God thought about their sin? 

What attributes of God have been dismissed or disregarded as your counselee has pursued sin?

What lies have they believed about God in pursuing their sin?

Contemplate:

How has my idol forsaken God?

How has my idol been a broken cistern in my life?

For example, someone who seeks pleasure in pornography or excessive eating, is saying “God’s comfort is not enough, I have to get comfort somewhere else”. This person may be doubting God’s goodness in the circumstances of their life or doubting God’s wisdom as he withholds something that they want.

Someone who sinfully desires control is telling God his sovereignty and plan for the universe isn’t as good as their own plan is! They are doubting God’s power, goodness, faithfulness, wisdom, and love at the very least. 

As our counselees think about what their sin really is revealing about their beliefs about God and how much they distrust Him. This leads to a more complete repentance and a hating of sin.

Then Jeremiah 2 tells us that next our counselees made idols for themselves.  They were leaky, insufficient, unsatisfying and unlasting idols, but that is what they did.  They looked to earthly comforts of social media, food, alcohol, shopping, or even church activities to make them feel good.  They turned to yelling and being harsh in an attempt to gain a false sense of control rather than trust in the God who is sovereign.  We want our counselees to ponder and consider how their idols have been sin against God Himself.

Hopefully after spending time renewing their minds about God, they are seeing more clearly the foolishness of treasuring, desiring, and worshiping anything other than God.  They need to spend time with God confessing their idolatry and asking God for forgiveness and cleansing.

Repentance also needs to include contemplating the thoughts, words, and actions that were sinfully used to try to get their idol.  

Contemplate your sin against others:

What thoughts, words and actions have been sinful as I have sought my idol?

Maybe your counselee has yelled at their family when interrupted from a comfortable evening.  Your counselee needs to see the connection between desiring comfort and being willing to sin against family members to obtain that idol.  

The counselee needs to contemplate how that sin has impacted each family member.  

So maybe on their Ephesians 4:22-24 worksheet that first section looks like this:

What is my idol?

I have loved comfort more than God.


How has this manifested in my life?


I have yelled at my children when they interrupt me.

I have selfishly sat and done my hobbies rather than engage my family. 

I have wasted time that I could have served my friends and family

I have wasted money on food, clothing, games to increase my comfort.

As they have thought through their sin, now they look at their wrong thinking.  In order to “renew their minds”, they need to identify what thoughts they have that don’t line up with Biblical thinking. What are the lies they tell themselves that lead to sinful desires.

 

Wrong thinking/believing:


I deserve a break when I get home from work. I should have time to relax and enjoy myself.


I should not have to repeat myself. My children should just obey!


God has withheld what I need. This isn’t fair.


Once they have their wrong thinking identified, they can begin to renew their mind in truth. You will want to choose scriptures that encourage a high view of God and verses that deal directly with the idol and sin involved.


It may be helpful at this point to have your counselee renew their mind about specific commands and promises of God also. 

If their idol has been approval, it may be helpful to study Proverbs 29:25 and Galatians 1:10 or read about biblical characters who struggled with fear of man and the consequences suffered for their idol. 

It may be helpful to study how God calls us to speak truth in love to others even if the other person becomes upset with us. 

If the idol has been control, it may be helpful for your counselee to study scriptures about trusting God and the practical implications of faith.  

You want them to have “renewed thinking” about God and how He calls them to live out practically the truth He is God and there is None like Him.


Scriptures to Renew Mind:


Assign scriptures that address the idol and specific areas of sin your counselee struggles with.


Psalm 139:16 1 Corinthians 10:31

Job 42:2 Matthew 22:37-39

Proverbs 6:6-11 Philippians 2:3-4

2 Corinthians 1:3-5 Philippians 4:19

John 3:30


Counselees should have a list of 6-10 verses to meditate on. Meditation is its own full teaching so please check out our website for homework assignments and articles on “Thoughts”. 


Our counselees should consider what the verses say about God, themselves and their sin.


We want to guide counselees to grow in their love and fear of God.

We want them to consider how they have failed to live up to God’s standard,

And what specifically they need to change in their lives.


Then they are ready to work on New Thoughts.


I want them to quote what new thoughts they will rehearse in their minds based on the scriptures studied. 


They should also commit a few verses to memory.


New thinking (Quote new thoughts)


God does not promise me an easy, comfortable life. I am called to shepherd my family, even when it’s not convenient.


Conflict in my home is a window into my heart. I will examine my desires when I am tempted to yell at my children.


God’s plan for my life is perfect in his wisdom and timing.


I am called to serve others as Christ humbled himself to serve sinners.


At this point, we want our counselees to plan to act on their growing love for God and the new, biblical thinking they have.


Change won’t happen if it’s not specific. The idea to “be kinder to my family” will not produce much change. The more specific the action can be, the better. This is preparing our counselees for the moment of temptation that will come. It is in that moment that they need to stop and pray, and ask God for help to obey Him and honor Him in their response.


After sin has been contemplated. The sin must be confessed, first to God and then to people who have been sinned against. The offender should be clear about what their sin was, how is was offensive to God and how it affected other person. It is helpful to include how the offender is committing to acting in the future. Confession should end with “will you please forgive me?” Forgiveness is transactional. One person asks for forgiveness, and the other must extend forgiveness.

Let’s use the prodigal son as an example of this change process. He is off in a foreign land working on a pig farm.

The Prodigal son contemplates first. He realizes he has blown all his money. He thinks about how he is feeding pigs and would be better off if he could eat the food himself. Scripture says, “when he came to himself”. He has thought through his sin and is ready to go make a confession of his sin.

The prodigal goes home to confess. He starts with admitting he has sinned against God, then he sinned against his father.

In the prodigal son example, the Prodigal says “Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you. I am no longer worthy to be called your son.” 

Confession will lead to restitution. 

Restitution is making things right in ways you have been wrong before.

The prodigal makes restitution by saying,  “I am no longer worthy to be called your son.” “Treat me as one of your hired servants”

He is saying, “I accept the consequences for my sin. I am willing to pay a price for how I have sinned against you, taken your money, and dishonored you. I will accept the consequences for my sin”

Repentance must include contemplation, confession and change.  

Contemplation should bring remorse and godly sorrow over sin. Confession should lead to restitution and making things right with the people who have been sinned against. The goal is reconciliation as change becomes evident in the life of our counselees. Repentance should be not only the fruit of words and behavior, but of the very heart idol that led to the sinful behavior.

The final step of transformational change is putting on Christlikeness.

New Actions:


I will recite 2 Corinthians 1:3-4 each day and pray that I will trust God’s comfort and I will recite Job 42:2 when tempted to get comfort my own way.


I will not pick up my phone when I walk through the door until my kids go to bed.


I will spend time each day asking my wife and children questions about their day and how they are doing.


I will not buy comfort items impulsively. I will stop and pray about my heart and motive.


I will speak words of encouragement to my children and wife each day.


I will pray with my wife and kids before bed each night.

 

We want our counselees to be prepared with practical ways to apply God’s word and the truths about God they have learned in counseling.  We want them to spend several weeks in counseling putting these action plans into place.  We are helping them form new habits of responding in ways that honor God and their love for God grows.

The goal of repentance is reconciliation. Just as our contemplation of sin and confession to God results in His forgiveness and a reconciled relationship with Him, we want human relationships to be reconciled as well.

The prodigal son goes home and reconciles with his father. The relationship is restored and reconciled as they celebrate a feast together. 

Repenting of idols and sinful behavior will lead to reconciliation with God, both initially and on-going fellowship with God. And, it should lead to on-going Godly relationships with others. We cannot guarantee that human reconciliation will be complete. The older brother in the story of the prodigal son does not welcome his brother home or offer forgiveness. The story ends with the older brother refusing to go into the party and celebrate. Our counselees may ask for forgiveness from those they have sinned against and they may not receive the human forgiveness they are seeking. But our counselees can take comfort in honoring God in their own hearts by repenting and obeying God’s commands.

Some counselees will need to work through several action plans for different idols or patterns of sin in their lives.  They will be ready to graduate when they are consistently making choices to honor God, are quick to repent and seek forgiveness when they stumble back into old ways, and are continuing to pursue a greater love for God on their own and in community with fellow believers.

Our counselees have worshiped their way into their idol and need to worship their way out of their idol. 

Only a greater love for God will replace the love of an idol.


The Biblical Heart Part 7

The Biblical Heart Part 7

By Wendy Wood

In part seven of understanding the biblical heart, we will examine how to help a counselee repent of their heart idols. It is important that the counselee (and the counselor!) repent not only of the actions and words that come as a result of sinning to get the idol, but the actual idol itself. 

Jonah 2:8 says, “Those who cling to worthless idols forfeit the grace that could be theirs”

We are blind to those idols. We must pray, and we must have our counselees pray, 

Psalm 139:23-24 “Search me O God, and know my heart: try me and know my thoughts; and see if there is any grievous way in me and lead me in the way everlasting.”

The struggle journal questions are extremely helpful in determining idols in both your heart and in your counselee’s heart. (See part 6 for these questions).

As you gather data over several weeks, you will see themes under the heading “what were you wanting?” The repetition of “I just wanted a relaxing evening” or “I just wanted things to go as planned” or “I want my ideas to matter” are revealing the heart.  

“I just want a relaxing evening” reveals an idol of comfort.

“I just want things to go my way” reveals an idol of control.

“I just want my ideas to matter” reveals an idol of respect or fear of man.

In order to address the root issues of the heart, we need to see the idols that consistently drive our behavior.

This is the core of biblical counseling. For genuine heart change and life transformation to happen, we must help our counselees identify and repent of their idols.  

The love of comfort, control, power, or approval must be replaced with a greater love for God and His purposes in life.

There are secondary idols that we think of more commonly but they are often rooted in the primary idols.

For example,

For some, the idolatrous desire to be married or be in a relationship may be rooted in the desire of fear of man. The desire to be loved and cherished falls into this category. But for another person, the idolatrous desire to be married or in a relationship could be a status symbol of feeling important because they have a significant other. Yet another person may have an idolatrous desire to be married or in a relationship because it is a comfort to not have to go places alone. These different desire of love, respect, status, and comfort may all manifested by desiring marriage.

For some people, a material thing like a car, a house, or clothes might be rooted in success or achievement. They may feel in control of their life when they have enough money to buy what they desire. For another person, it might be fear of man and wanting to be respected or admired for having the right thing.

For some people, recreation like video games, phone usage, fishing, or reading is probably rooted in comfort. They may like the escape from dealing with work or family and they turn to a hobby for a time of distraction and ease. For another person, recreation may be a way to control something when the rest of life seems out of control. When playing a video game, the person who desires control can restart their game and see immediate results in winning or improving.

We worship our way into sin, by loving our sin. And we worship our way out of sin by loving God and desiring to bring him glory in the way we live.

After using the Struggle Journal and weeks of data gathering, you should have a good idea of what your counslee’s idols are.

Ephesians 4:22-24 shows us how God has ordained transformational change to happen in the lives of His children. Throughout the rest of counseling, you are prayerfully helping them see the futility of continuing to live for their idol, helping them repent and turn from their idol to loving God and wanting to glorify Him more than they want to get their idol. This involves renewing the mind and thinking differently. The transformation is complete when they are consistently living out denying their sinful desire to please God.

“to put off your old self, which belongs to your former manner of life and is corrupt through deceitful desires, and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and to put on the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness”

Here are some steps to work through with your counselee as you address all three stages of change.

Step 1 is putting off old self.

Step 2 is being renewed in the spirit of your mind

Step 3 is putting on Christlike attitude and actions

We worship our way into sin and we worship our way out of sin. Transformation is a change of what you worship from loving worldly, selfish pleasures to loving God with your whole heart.

To begin this transformational change, as early as week one of counseling, begin the mind renewal process. The mind renewal process is thinking rightly about who God is and what He has done. You are working to build a high, accurate view of God Himself.

  1. Have your counselee study the attributes of God.  Use a book or study that guides your counselee to learn about the very nature of God.  Have your counselee meditate on scriptures that describe God’s attributes and ponder and consider what implications these truths have on daily life.  

For example, as your counselee studies God’s wisdom and maybe meditates on Romans 11:33, have your counselee journal what God’s unsearchable ways and judgments have on how your counselee views the circumstances of their own life. How does God being infinitely and holy wise change the way we should think about our circumstances? Work through 15 or so different attributes of God where your counselee is seeing how awesome and worthy of worship and love God is.

  1. Have your counselee study passages of scripture that paint a clear picture of God and His nature and work.  Passages like:

    1. Romans 8

    2. Ephesians 1, 2, and 3

    3. Isaiah 40

    4. Psalm 139

Have your counselee read one of these chapters every day for a week.  Have them meditate on one verse each day. As they meditate on the truth about God revealed in that verse, have them examine what that means to how they think about God and their circumstances.

For example, your counselee reads Isaiah 40 six times during the week. On one of those days, your counselee chooses verse 12 to study.

Who has measured the waters in the hollow of his hand and marked off the heavens with a span, enclosed the dust of the earth in a measure and weighed the mountains in scales and the hills in a balance?” (Isaiah 40:12)

Have your counselee journal what attributes they see about God.  He is immense!  He measures all the waters with ease and is so gigantic compared to the universe the heavens are measured between a figurative thumb and pinky span. He is all-powerful and could pick up the mountains to “weigh” them. As your counselee considers God in this way, how does this change their thinking about God, or remind them how awesome God is. Maybe your counselee has been so consumed with their own problems, God has shrunk down in their thinking to be smaller than the problem! Use scripture to reveal God to your counselees and to correct the wrong, small thinking they have fallen into.

  1. Have your counselees look at what God has accomplished for them in Christ.  Preach the gospel to your counselee.  Remind your counselee of what it means to be justified with God. Use scripture to reaffirm that your counselee was 

    1. Chosen by God before the foundation of the world

    2. Reconciled to God 

    3. Adopted as a child of God

    4. Set from being a slave to sin

    5. God’s wrath has been removed from them

Allow your counselee to be amazed at all God has done for them in Christ by His free gift of grace! Daily have them study what it means to a recipient of God’s grace and mercy and the on-going work of God’s grace in their lives to train them to say no to ungodliness and to say yes to holiness and purity.

  1. You may assign sermons or additional reading to grow your counselee’s love for God by using material that teaches God’s attributes and works.

We should never stop studying God. We can always grow in being awed and amazed by who God is. This is not a concept that will be completed in counseling in a few weeks and then move on. This is a life-long journey of learning to love God more and you study and learn more about him.

Transformational change involves putting off the old self. This putting off is part of the repentance process.  We want our counselees to see their sin first and foremost against God.  Jeremiah 2:11-13 

Has a nation changed its gods, even though they are no gods?

But my people have changed their glory for that which does not profit.

Be appalled, O heavens, at this; be shocked, be utterly desolate, declares the Lord, for my people have committed two evils:

(#1) they have forsaken me, the fountain of living waters, and

(#2) hewed out cisterns for themselves, broken cisterns that can hold no water.

We want our counselees to see that before they clung to their idol of comfort, control or approval, they first had to forsake God. The first step was essentially telling God, “you are not enough”. We want them to understand how offensive that is to God.  As they have studied the Most High God, to forsake God and turn away from His Lordship is grievous sin. Give your counselee time to contemplate their sin before God.

Here is an overview of the process that will help your counselee repent of their sin. I’ll briefly give the steps of  this process and then discuss the steps in more detail in the next blog.

  1. What is the sin?

  2. Bible references:

  3. What do you learn from the scriptures?

  4. How have I failed to live as God commands? Or how has this sin showed up in my life?

  5. What needs to change in my thinking and believing about God and myself?

  6. What specific changes do I need to make? (Being specific is key to really being able to implement change.)

The next blog will continue the process of repentance and change.


Seek a Broken Heart for Sin

By Scott Hubbard

The triumphant, victorious Christian life is marked by a curious feature: it rarely feels triumphant or victorious.

In the kingdom of God, strength comes through weakness (2 Corinthians 12:9–10), greatness through service (Mark 10:43), and wholeness through brokenness (Psalm 147:3). As the classic prayer puts it,

Let me learn by paradox
that the way down is the way up,
that to be low is to be high,
that the broken heart is the healed heart,
that the contrite spirit is the rejoicing spirit.

Many of us would gladly take the latter part of each of the above lines if we could forgo the former. But in the wisdom of God, no saint is highhealed, and rejoicing who is not also lowbroken, and contrite. Samuel Rutherford put it bluntly: “Seek a broken heart for sin, for without that there is no meeting with Christ” (Letters of Samuel Rutherford, 328).

We may achieve much in this world without a broken heart; we may even seem to achieve much in the Christian life without a broken heart. But we cannot commune deeply and sweetly with Christ, for he enters only through the cracks of a broken heart.

Benefits of a Broken Heart

To be sure, dangers attend this pursuit. Some Christians focus with an almost morbid obsession on the wickedness of sin, the evil of our hearts, and the duty of mourning over our remaining corruption. They spend their days wandering the labyrinths of their indwelling sin, scarcely ever lifting their eyes to the Savior who loved them and gave himself for them (Galatians 2:20).

Even worse, seeking a broken heart can easily become a twisted attempt at self-justification. We can imagine, perhaps subconsciously, that we are more accepted by God the worse we feel about ourselves — forgetting, as the hymn goes,

Could my zeal no respite know,
Could my tears forever flow,
These for sin could not atone.
Thou must save, and thou alone.

Brokenness cannot justify us; tears cannot cleanse us. Only blood can (Ephesians 1:7).

And yet, the point still holds: a heart broken over sin opens the door for deeper communion with Christ. For only a broken heart teaches us to hate his rivals, welcome his grace, and hear his song of love and favor.

Hate his rivals.

Communion with Christ, much like communion with a spouse, requires a deeper sentiment than simply, “I choose you over all others.” It requires the sentiment, “I desire you over all others.” A heart unbroken over sin may choose Christ, at least in an outward sort of way, while still cherishing thoughts of another. But a broken heart has come to feel sin as its greatest burden and shame, and therefore resists Christ’s rivals with a force far greater than mere self-control: the force of holy revulsion.

In a sermon on Psalm 51, John Piper notes that, in this psalm of repentance over adultery, David never once asks God for more sexual self-control. “Why isn’t he praying for men to hold him accountable? Why isn’t he praying for protected eyes and sex-free thoughts?” Piper asks. The answer: “He knows that sexual sin is a symptom, not the disease.” Adultery is a symptom of a deeper disease: a heart unbroken over the evil of sin, unravished by the glory of Christ.

“The grace of the Holy One comes only to the lowly ones.”

So instead of merely pleading for self-control — for the power to choose God’s ways — David prays, “Create in me a clean heart, O God” (Psalm 51:10). And a clean heart is, at bottom, a broken heart: “The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not despise” (Psalm 51:17). If David was going to enjoy restored communion with God, he needed more than willpower. He needed a broken heart.

Self-control has its place in the Christian life, of course. But on its own, separated from a deep, abiding hatred of all that would draw us away from Christ, it merely weakens sin in the branches rather than withering it at the root.

Welcome his grace.

A broken heart, then, is never an end in itself. Christ, our good physician, breaks a heart as a surgeon must sometimes break a bone: only so he can heal it better in the end. “He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds” (Psalm 147:3). And the sweetest medicine he gives is called grace.

Though bitter in itself, a broken heart can open our hands to welcome grace in deeper ways than ever before. Only after Isaiah was undone, remember, did he hear the comforting words: “Your guilt is taken away, and your sin atoned for” (Isaiah 6:7). Only as Peter cowered, condemned, did Jesus say to him, “Do not be afraid” (Luke 5:10). And only after Paul cried, “Wretched man that I am!” did he say with equal force, “Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!” (Romans 7:24–25).

If anxious thoughts of God’s love swirl within us, could it be that we are basing his love too much in us? And could it be that what we need most is a fresh breaking of the heart, to the point of despairing in ourselves again? Perhaps then we could hear the words of Horatius Bonar:

Faith is rest, not toil. It is the giving up of all the former weary efforts to do or feel something good, in order to induce God to love and pardon; and the calm reception of the truth so long rejected, that God is not waiting for any such inducements, but loves and pardons of his own goodwill, and is showing that goodwill to any sinner who will come to him on such a footing, casting away his own performances or goodnesses, and relying implicitly on the free love of him who so loved the world that he gave his only-begotten Son.

Some vainly attempt to climb to heaven by a ladder of good deeds and feelings. But the brokenhearted know that we reach heaven only on bended knees. “For thus says the One who is high and lifted up: . . . ‘I dwell in the high and holy place, and also with him who is of a contrite and lowly spirit’” (Isaiah 57:15). The grace of the Holy One comes only to the lowly ones.

Hear his song.

Such grace in itself is a marvel. Yet even more wonderful is the manner in which God gives it. Imagine, if you dare, the God of grace rushing toward you in your brokenness, his mouth open not with censure, but with song.

To the exiles in Jerusalem, God promised, “I will remove from your midst your proudly exultant ones, and you shall no longer be haughty in my holy mountain. But I will leave in your midst a people humble and lowly” (Zephaniah 3:11–12). In other words, he promised to mercifully break his people’s hearts. And then, against all expectation, he says,

The Lord your God is in your midst,
     a mighty one who will save;
he will rejoice over you with gladness;
     he will quiet you by his love;
he will exult over you with loud singing. (Zephaniah 3:17)

“With God, strength comes through weakness, greatness through service, and wholeness through brokenness.”

As with so many of God’s ways, “behind a frowning providence he hides a smiling face.” Perhaps we fear that, after breaking our hearts, God will proceed to placard our sin for all eternity — that he will rub it in our faces, as it were, and make heaven a world of groveling penitence before the Almighty Frown.

Instead, he fills the air with song. For ages and ages, the melody of our forgiving God will display to his once-broken, now-healed people more and more of “the immeasurable riches of his grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus” (Ephesians 2:7). And still the song will go on.

Seek a Broken Heart

Of course, we cannot just up and give ourselves a broken heart. Just as the men of Jerusalem “were cut to the heart” only when touched by a divine dagger (Acts 2:37), so too with us: if our hearts are to be broken at all by sin, God must break them.

Yet we can do something. We can follow Rutherford’s counsel to “seek a broken heart.” We can give up the exhausting effort of concealing our sin and pretending ourselves better than we are. We can pray that God would kindly, lovingly break us. And we can embrace the counterintuitive truth that the Christian life advances by opposites: we rise higher by stooping; we progress by repentance.

In this world, our fullness will come through emptiness, our strength through weakness, our joy through mourning, our exaltation through humility, and our wholeness through a broken and contrite heart.

Scott Hubbard is a graduate of Bethlehem College & Seminary and an editor for desiringGod.org. He and his wife, Bethany, live with their son in Minneapolis.

Posted at: https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/seek-a-broken-heart-for-sin

Guilt Leading to Repentance

By Kyle Gangel

“Guilty!”

So cries our consciences, our hearts, and most importantly, God’s Law. We have all felt the painful reminder of our guilt. Thoughts of regrettable words and actions can keep us awake at night as we recall the past. Despair grows with each painful replay. How do we respond? How do we think biblically about guilt so that we might honor the Lord?

We might be tempted to settle for surface-level answers that distract us from feeling guilty. We might assume the answer is to convince ourselves that we are not quite as guilty as we thought. Not surprisingly, God’s Word has a fuller and, ultimately, a more satisfying answer.

Before we look at guilt as a feeling, we need to first consider it as an objective reality. If you sat on the jury of a murder trial, you would not concern yourself primarily with the feelings, guilty or otherwise, of the defendant. You would examine the evidence and discern whether he had committed the crime of which he has been accused. Likewise, we should first concern ourselves with the forensic aspect of guilt before considering feelings of guilt.

The Objective Reality of Guilt

Guilt is a state of being before it is a state of feeling. Our understanding of guilt should begin with recognizing the universality of sin: “Therefore, just as sin came into the world through one man, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men because all sinned” (Romans 5:12). The first man, Adam, served as the representative of every person. When he sinned, all of mankind was cast into iniquity. Consequently, every person is condemned and deserves to bear the just penalty for sin.

In our sin, we stand guilty before a holy God. This is our greatest problem. The only solution is the good news of Jesus’ coming to rescue sinners from their condemnation. Christ dealt decisively with guilt on the cross by taking the judgment for sin in himself. Now, those who turn from sin and rely on Christ’s substitutionary work are united with him and credited with his righteousness. In other words, if you are in Christ you receive something better than a “not guilty” verdict. You even receive a greater verdict than “Innocent of all charges.” In Christ, you are declared “positively righteous.” This is made clear in 2 Corinthians 5:21, “For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.”

Feelings of Guilt

Feelings arise from our thinking, so, our feelings, like our minds, can be deceptive. Feelings of guilt are no exception. For instance, it is possible to be guilty of breaking God’s commands yet experience no feelings of guilt. (See Leviticus 5:17 as an example of being guilty of sin while having no knowledge, and therefore, no feelings of guilt). It is also possible, through a weak or misinformed conscience, to feel guilty for some act that was not truly sinful. Therefore, feelings of guilt cannot be accepted without suspicion. We ought to consider, perhaps with the help of a wise friend, whether our feelings are a result of wrong thinking or a conscience gone awry.

Though feelings of guilt can certainly be amiss, they can also serve as the first step in genuine repentance. If we correctly discern that we have sinned and acknowledge our sin in light of God’s holiness, we will experience guilty feelings.

Even when we perceive our guilty feelings to accurately reflect our actions, we often do not know what to do with these feelings. We regularly deceive ourselves into thinking that God would have us wallow in the misery of our guilt—after all, this is what we deserve. Nevertheless, feelings of guilt are not God’s mechanism of punishing his children for sin. We can be confident of this truth since Christ took on himself the full punishment for every sin. Instead, these feelings are meant to drive us back to his kind embrace.

Repentance

After discerning our feelings of guilt are according to the truth, we are left with one appropriate response: repentance. Charles Wesley summarized well what repentance looks like:

Now incline me to repent
Let me now my sins lament
Now my foul revolt deplore
Weep, believe, and sin no more

Charles Wesley, Depth of Mercy

Weep. Consider Paul’s teaching on godly sorrow over our sin: “For godly grief produces a repentance that leads to a salvation without regret, whereas worldly grief produces death” (2 Corinthians 7:10). Both Judas and Peter wept upon betraying their Lord. Only one truly repented. There is worldly sorrow, exemplified in Judas, that is self-centered and focuses only on what is lost or denied as a result of being caught in sin. It results in despair, bitterness, and self-pity. However, there is godly sorrow, seen in Peter, that leads to genuine repentance. This is brokenness before God over sin. Peter’s tears proved to be genuine as he turned again to the Lord and served him faithfully.

Believe. Specifically, we believe in the truth of the gospel. We call to mind the work of Christ on the cross and are assured that his love for us is unassailable. He truly delights in our running to him because he died for that very purpose. Dane Ortlund reminds us that Christ “does not get frustrated when we come to him for fresh forgiveness, for renewed pardon, with distress and need and emptiness. That’s the whole point. It’s what he came to heal.” (Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers, page 34). The Good Shepherd delights in bringing back the wayward, in binding up the wounded, and in strengthening the weak (See Ezekiel 34:15-16).

Sin No More. True repentance is a change of mind that leads to a change of action. By the power of the Spirit, we put to death the desires of the flesh and are conformed to the image of Christ. This is the end goal of acknowledging the reality of guilt and feeling its weight. When feelings of guilt arise from a proper acknowledgment of our objective guilt, they are a divine mercy that leads us to repentance and change.

Posted at: https://biblicalcounseling.com/guilt-leading-to-repentance/

Own it! How Repentance and Faith Fuel a Fresh Start

Colin Smith

Often it seems that the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. In Deuteronomy 1, Moses is making this plain when he tells the Israelites that what was in their parents is also in them.

God’s people are on the cusp of entering the Promised Land, and Moses says, “Let me remind you how we got here…” Moses goes back 40 years: “The Lord our God said to us at Horeb, ‘You have stayed long enough at this mountain…’” (1:6), and he tells the story of how the people rebelled against God.

You were unwilling to go up… You rebelled against the Lord… You grumbled in your tents and said ‘The Lord hates us…’ You did not trust in the Lord your God (Deut. 1:26-27, 32).

Why is Moses saying this? Is he blaming the children for the sins of the parents? No! He is teaching the children to learn from their parents. You will face the same temptations, the same struggles they did.

The people of God had refused to trust Him and, instead of entering the Promised Land, they wandered in the desert for 40 years. What defeated them, their children must now overcome in their own lives. What is in them (and us) by nature, that must be overcome?

  • By nature, I rebel against God (Deut. 1:26).

  • By nature, I treat God with contempt (Deut. 1:27).

  • By nature, I blame others (Deut. 1:28).

  • By nature, I resist the truth (Deut. 1:29-31).

  • By nature, I refuse to believe (Deut. 1:32).

  • By nature, I am under the wrath of God (Deut. 1:34).

Moses is saying to God’s people, “Don’t think these natural, sinful impulses stopped with your parents. All of them are also in you.”

By nature, this is our condition today. The sinful human nature crosses all economic and social barriers. By nature, we have no basis on which to enter the land of promise that is full of good things.

When God’s people realized they had messed up in their rebellion and unbelief, they decided to try and put it right. They were sure that they could fix their own problems. They decided to go up to Canaan after all, but God said to them, “Don’t go up because I will not be with you. You will be defeated by your enemies” (Deut. 1:42). They went up anyway and were completely defeated!

Turning over a new leaf doesn’t change us. Trying harder won’t work; it’s never the answer. So, where can we find the power for a fresh start? What hope is there for us to change the future—to get into the “promised land”?

Owning What is Ours Brings Hope

In Deuteronomy 5, Moses summons all of Israel and reminds them: “The Lord our God made a covenant with us at Horeb” (vs. 2). God had made this covenant before they were born, but it is for them.

God made a covenant of grace before we were born, too, and it is for us. He promised to redeem sinners like us through His Son, Jesus Christ. This covenant was not written on tablets of stone; it is sealed in the blood of Jesus Christ. His blood was poured out for us. His body was given for us. Through the shedding of this blood, Jesus sealed a new covenant for the forgiveness of our sins.

Two great events shaped our lives before we were born: What’s in us, by nature, goes all the way back to the Garden of Eden. What can be in us, by grace, goes all the way back to the cross of Jesus Christ. And we change the future through repentance and faith.

Own it: Repentance

We need to own what is in our nature. This is what the Bible calls “repentance.” Knowing what we are up against in living the Christian life, we can pray: “Lord, by nature I’m a rebel who treats your kindness with contempt, blames others, resists your Word, refuses to believe, and deserves to be under Your righteous judgment.

When we tell ourselves what great and good people we are, we will never make progress in the Christian life. Owning what is in us, by nature, is where repentance begins and how it continues.

Own it: Faith

We need to own what is ours, by grace. This is what the Bible calls “faith.” We need to know who we are in Christ. We need to be clear about what our Savior has for us in living the Christian life.

Faith looks at all that the grace of God has done: God has made a covenant for us, He has sent His Son to redeem us, and He has given His Spirit to empower us. Faith says, “All this is mine!” Faith begins when I own what is mine, by grace.

Fresh Start, New Future

Moses was leading a new generation who stood on the verge of change. Would they follow what was in them by nature? Or would they receive what was theirs by grace?

What about us? Will we follow the impulse to hear God’s Word, or will we follow the impulse of unbelief? Will we spend our lives praising God, or will we treat Him with contempt? Will we own what is in us, by nature, or will we spend our lives blaming others and end up under the wrath of God?

Repentance and faith are not only what unbelievers do to become Christians; both are what believers do to live as Christians. God calls us to a life of repentance and faith in which we sustain an ongoing fight against what is in us (our nature) by laying hold of what Christ has for us by His grace. We can lay hold of these gifts:

  • The Son of God loves me and gave Himself for me.

  • The Lord reigns, and nothing happens to me unless it comes through His loving hand first.

  • I don’t understand all that He allows to come into my life. Nor do I expect to, because He is God in heaven and He sees the events of this world from eternity. I am only on the earth in a little capsule of time. But I know that I can trust Him. I know that He is for me.

  • I know that I am forgiven and not under His wrath. I live in His mercy and am never alone, because He walks beside me.

  • By grace, I have come to love Him, to trust Him, and to count Him worthy of the supreme devotion and sacrifice of my life.

This is faith.

My prayer is that God would breathe increased faith into our souls. May we see that, in all our battles and struggles, Christ is for us. We can embrace Him with faith that says, “If God is for me, who can be against me?”

Posted at: https://unlockingthebible.org/2020/09/repentance-faith-fuel-fresh-start/

Can You Repent If You Were Caught?

Three Signs of Godly Sorrow

Article by Chad Ashby

In recent years, we’ve sadly seen some popular Christians fall into ministry-disqualifying sins. Often, the revelation of a double life is followed by a public statement of regret.

It’s hard not to be cynical about the purity of the motives behind such acts of repentance. After all, wouldn’t a truly repentant Christian confess the truth about their sin before being caught? But if we’re honest, I wonder whether what unsettles us most on these occasions is how familiar it all feels — offering rushed apologies in an effort to mitigate sin’s consequences. It’s one of the most worn pages in our own playbook.

Is true repentance even possible when we’ve been caught in the act?

“A repentant sinner pleads guilty to all charges, trusting Jesus Christ the advocate to secure our forgiveness.”

Though we might be jaded by our contemporary experiences, a survey of Scripture finds numerous examples where true repentance followed a sudden exposure of sin. Only after Abigail’s courageous public confrontation did David realize he had let pride nearly drive him to murder (1 Samuel 25:23–35). Later, David remained blinded to his heinous crimes against Bathsheba and Uriah her husband until Nathan raised a pointed finger and pronounced, “You are the man” (2 Samuel 12:7). Both exposures are followed by David’s sincere repentance. Likewise, the city of Nineveh expressed sorrow only after God sent Jonah to bring public outcry against her sin, yet her repentance is lauded by Jesus himself (Matthew 12:41).

Although repentance after the humiliation of uncovered sin may appear contrived, the fact remains that one of God’s patterns in Scripture is to use human agents to expose sin and bring about repentance. The question, then, is not whether true repentance after being caught is possible, but what this true repentance looks like.

True repentance accepts full responsibility.

Repentance is a matter of the heart, and a truly repentant heart turns away from sin not in part but in full. Consider this question: When you have been confronted about sin, do you try to admit the least amount possible, or do you confess it all? In his first epistle, John writes, “God is light, and in him is no darkness at all” (1 John 1:5). When a brother begins to shine a light in a dark corner of your life, is your impulse to confess quickly to get him to turn off the flashlight? Or do you realize it’s all or nothing? A repentant heart will seize the moment to step completely into the light.

Often, the temptation in confrontation is to play the lawyer. We justify ourselves by trying to share the blame with others. For instance, when Samuel confronted Saul for disobeying God’s command to destroy the entire camp of the Amalekites, Saul kicks into blame-shift mode: “I have obeyed the voice of the Lord. . . . But the people took of the spoil, sheep and oxen” (1 Samuel 15:20–21).

“The sin God is seeking to root out and destroy in us is the same sin that drove nails through his Son.”

When we try to defend ourselves, we betray a disbelief in the truth of the gospel. “If anyone does sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous” (1 John 2:1). In the courtroom of God, sinners try to plead their own case on the basis of technicalities, comparison to others, or self-righteousness. However, a repentant sinner pleads guilty to all charges, trusting Jesus Christ the advocate to secure our forgiveness on the basis of his righteousness — not ours. He also admits that his sin has harmed others, and pleads with Christ for mercy and healing for those offended.

When you are confronted about sin in your life, is your response, “Yes, I did it,” or is it, “Yeah, but . . .”? You’ll know immediately if you are willing to take full responsibility.

True repentance relinquishes control.

An unrepentant heart is a savvy politician; it wants to get out in front of the issue so it can control the narrative. Panic, embarrassment, shame, and guilt can cloud our judgment. The pride that blinded us to the dangers of sin is the same pride that wants to remain in control through the repentance process.

This is why true repentance demonstrates a willingness to let go and admit the truth: I do not get to choose the consequences of my sin. We see this attitude modeled once again in David, who, after hearing the consequences of his sin from the prophet Nathan, did not try to negotiate, but simply acknowledged, “I have sinned against the Lord” (2 Samuel 12:13).

Often, we want to manage our sanctification, but that’s not how it works. The sin God is seeking to root out and destroy in us is the same sin that drove nails through his Son. It’s deadly stuff. When God brings a spouse, friend, or church member into your sin, it may be because you don’t take your sin as seriously as you should. You need help. In that moment, true repentance says, “You know what, you are right. I have sinned. What do you think I should do?”

Sanctification is a team effort. Oh the depth of God’s mercy and the liberty of Christ’s love to be able to entrust the care of our souls to others — and not to disinterested parties but to brothers and sisters who seek to love us unconditionally! God is going to use others to root the old man out, if we are willing to relinquish control.

True repentance treasures discipline.

A third sign of repentance in a believer is a proper understanding of God’s discipline. We are reminded in the Scriptures, “The Lord disciplines the one he loves, and chastises every son whom he receives” (Hebrews 12:6). The brokenhearted believer will not seek to escape the discipline of the Lord, but will treasure it as a gift from the Father.

“The brokenhearted believer will not seek to escape the discipline of the Lord.”

The author of Hebrews pulls no punches; discipline “seems painful rather than pleasant” in the moment (Hebrews 12:11). However, a repentant heart trusts that “later it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who have been trained by it” (Hebrews 12:11). Depending on the seriousness of sinful behavior, discipline may mean the loss of a relationship, a career, or a pastorate. It may even involve prison time. The repentant heart receives even these painful consequences as from the merciful hand of God, who by his very discipline spares us from eternal wrath (1 Corinthians 11:32).

Discipline certainly means restitution for past wrongs, but it can also mean training for future righteousness. This means enlisting the help of brothers and sisters who have been solemnly charged to “see to it that no one fails to obtain the grace of God” (Hebrew 12:15). A local church, spouse, and friends are essential in helping to take concrete steps to prevent sin’s temptation in the future. Once again, this may mean difficult life changes or drastic measures. For instance, a convicted sex offender may never be able to walk onto church property without being escorted by a fellow church member, but a repentant believer will receive this discipline as a gift from God.

The Spirit works in this way to cultivate humility, interdependence, and unity in the body of Christ. While you may be helping a brother in one area of weakness, he is helping you in another. While he is confronting you about your sin today, you may be the one confronting him about his tomorrow. In this way, the Spirit empowers the church through true repentance to “[build] itself up in love” as we “bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ” (Ephesians 4:16Galatians 6:1).

Chad Ashby (@Chad_Ashby) is the pastor of College Street Baptist Church in Newberry, South Carolina, where he lives with his wife and three boys. He is a graduate of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, and blogs at After Math.

Posted at: https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/can-you-repent-if-you-were-caught?utm_campaign=Daily+Email&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=83139110&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-9RdXVaG5d2axnYSAyM-hQjSAnAotxApykvWiGRzWC6dIhAzdsNBT1EO9vf99KRbRBwBKF2Cme7R7-7N0LnyJDEjTu_ZA&_hsmi=83139110

How and When God Forgives

Colin Smith

Forgiveness is a fruit of life in Christ. This is a distinguishing mark of all who are in Christ, which is why the Lord teaches us to pray in the Lord’s Prayer: “Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us” (Matthew 6:12).  

With this in mind, think with me for a moment about how and when God forgives. God forgives: 

1. where wrong has been done 
2. when repentance begins 
3. because atonement has been made 

1. God forgives where wrong has been done. 

If I were to say to you, “I forgive you,” you would reasonably say, “Whatever for? I haven’t done anything for you to forgive!” Forgiveness is only appropriate, it is only meaningful, when a wrong has been done.

When God forgives us, it means we’ve wronged Him. Every sin in your life and mine is a personal offence against God. Saul of Tarsus was on a campaign in which he hurt people, and the risen Christ appeared to him on the road to Damascus and said, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?”

Forgiveness can only happen when a wrong has been done. We have wronged God. Thank God, He forgives. 

2. God forgives where wrong has been done, when repentance begins. 

The story of the prodigal son makes this clear. The son goes off on a journey of rebellion, and when he comes to his senses, he says to himself, “I will go to my father.” 

The boy has a change of heart, and he begins the long journey home. Remember what happens: The father sees him from a distance and runs out to meet him. Rather than wait, he runs to him. Why? God embraces us with mercy and forgiveness at the first sign of repentance. 

Repenting is a process that every believer begins, but none of us completes, in this life. Our repentance towards God is at best a small part of what it should be. Thank God, He forgives when our repentance begins, not when it is complete. Without this none of us would ever be forgiven.

But friends, remember this: there is no forgiveness without repentance. 

There is no forgiveness without repentance. God does not forgive unrepentant sinners. He loves them, and that is what He calls us to do, “Love your enemies, pray for those who persecute you.”

Why does he say that? Because that’s the way God loves sinners. God does not say, “Forgive your enemies.” He says, “Love them. Pray for them.” Because that is what God Himself does. He laid down His life for us while we were yet sinners (Romans 5:8). 

“Forgiving the Unrepentant Person” 

You often hear Christians talk about “forgiving the unrepentant person.” They say, “You must do it for your own sake, so your life is not controlled by another person.” 

But in asking you to forgive the unrepentant person, they’re asking you to do something that God Himself never does, and in the process, they’re changing the nature of what repentance is. God’s forgiveness always effects a restored relationship. 

Forgiveness involves the reconciling of two people—one who repents and the other who forgives. I believe, as a pastor, that it is a great mistake to tell people that they must forgive where there is no repentance. 

God forgives at the first sign of our repentance, and where forgiveness and repentance meet a relationship is restored. He does not say to us “Forgive your enemies.” He says to us, “Love your enemies.” 

3. God forgives where wrong has been done, when repentance begins, because atonement has been made. 

There is a sense in which God is the only being in the universe who cannot forgive. For us who are sinners, it is reasonable to be indulgent, lenient, and forgiving towards others whose wrongs may not be very different from our own. 

But God is holy. God sees sin in all the ugliness that it is. God is light and in Him is no darkness at all. Every time someone says, “I know God has forgiven me, but I can’t forgive myself,” I want to ask: “Are you saying that it’s easier for God to forgive you, than it is for you to forgive yourself?” James Denny says: 

If there should turn out, after all, to be such a thing as a Divine forgiveness of sins, we may be sure it will be such a forgiveness as carries the Divine condemnation and destruction of sin at the heart of it. 

That is precisely what we find at the cross. God’s forgiveness flows from the destruction and condemnation of sin in the atoning death of His Son, Jesus Christ, as He bore our sins at Calvary. 

Whenever there is an injury, there will always be something in the human spirit that cries out, “What about justice?” The Christian answer is that justice has been poured out on Jesus. 

The cross makes forgiveness possible. God forgives where wrong has been done, when repentance begins, because atonement has been made. 

How can I get to forgiveness? 

Satan can get us so focused on one sin, one problem, one issue that we want to overcome. How do I get over my fear? How can I prevail over this lust? There you are, standing right next to the hurdle, and you can’t get over from that position. You have to begin further back, so you can get a run at it and get some momentum. 

You can’t begin with forgiving other people, but you have to go back and begin with your own need to be forgiven. How’s that relevant? The very beginning is seeing my own need of forgiveness.

As I began to reflect on what the Bible says about getting to the place where you can forgive, I realized that everything we need to know is brought together in Ephesians 4. 

Posted at: https://unlockingthebible.org/2019/12/how-when-god-forgives/

A Beautiful Scandal

ARTICLE BY WILLIAM BOEKESTEIN

There is a lot to like about the story of John Newton. And Simonetta Carr and Amal tell and illustrate it beautifully (Reformation Heritage Books, 2018). Newton first told the story himself in an 18th century best-seller. A young man with a dead mother and hard-to-please father pursues riches and adventure at sea. After several brushes with death Newton--who married the love of his life--left the sea to pursue poetry and preaching. Along the way he adopted needy relatives, and hosted struggling writers; he even befriended a few domesticated hares. Just months before his death he received news that warmed his soul: the British slave trade, against which he had fought for decades, had been abolished.

But another fact about Newton nearly ruins the story. He himself had been a slave trader. As both captain of a slave ship and later as an investor in the same, Newton profited from the sale of human beings. He willingly participated in the inexcusable degradation of precious lives of people created in the image of God. He is responsible for the misery and death of unknown scores of beautiful people.

Newton, the slave-trader who died as a well-respected minister in the Church of England, is the perfect picture of the kind of person we naturally hate.

The obvious questions flood our minds. How could such a vile person regain the dignity he lost in a dirty trade with the devil? Is it possible that the God who grieved over the death of Newton's victims could ever smile upon that lost, blind, guilty wretch? Could anyone like Newton be spared the eternal consequence of damnation for his sins? How could such a man get a second chance at life? And why should any of us care about his sin-ravaged story?

John Newton had racked up more moral debt than he could ever repay. His only hope was for God's Son to own Newton's sins and give him a righteousness that satisfied divine justice. Newton heard this message of hope in the gospel, the Bible's plainest theme. And by a heaven-sent faith he believed it and received new life in God.

Newton summarized his paradoxical life in his famous hymn"Amazing grace!--how sweet the sound--that saved a wretch like me! I once was lost, but now am found, was blind, but now I see."

Newton's story is a beautiful scandal. Like Paul, he increasingly woke to the nightmare of his sin personified by the beautiful black faces of his victims. But God's grace had introduced a new reality: undeserved pardon. The man who should have died a thousand deaths for his sin died at peace in the hope of new life because of the single death of the Savior Jesus.

That story isn't just good news for Newton. It is the only relief for the rest of us whose sins are not as unlike Newton's as we would have others believe.

Read Simonetta Carr's John NewtonWeep over his sins and yours. And with Newton sing with the hope that God's word secures:

And when this flesh and heart shall fail, and mortal life shall cease, I shall possess within the veil a life of joy and peace.

William Boekestein Pastors Immanuel Fellowship Church in Kalamazoo, MI. His latest book is A Colorful Past: A Coloring Book of Church History.

Posted at: http://www.reformation21.org/featured/a-beautiful-scandal.php

What to Do When a Memory of Sin Paralyzes You

by Jason Meyer

I’ve been married for 19 years, and I have many happy memories with my wife. Cara is my best friend by far. We especially enjoy looking back and reliving some of our favorite dates together.

One treasured memory is the time I found out she once dreamed about being in the Air Force. By that point in our relationship, I had learned to plan dates we would both enjoy rather than dates only I would enjoy—no extra charge for that little piece of advice. One of my close friends was a pilot, and I asked him if he could take us flying. He delivered in a big way. He flew us to a nearby regional airport, I took her to a Mexican restaurant, and he flew us back. I have a picture of Cara and me standing next to the plane, and we both have beaming smiles. I love to look at that picture and relive the date.

Memories can be a precious gift that allow us to enjoy the same event multiple times. But our memories can also be a curse.

Curse of Memory

One of the most painful moments of my life came during premarital counseling. I tearfully told Cara (my fiancée at that time) about some of my past pornography usage. By God’s grace, porn was no longer a problem in my life, but it was an issue in my past. I wanted her to know the truth about my old struggle, and I earnestly desired her forgiveness for that sin. I will never forget seeing the pain etched on her face. She freely forgave me, but it was a heart-wrenching for both of us.

For several days, I struggled to apply the gospel to my situation. I wanted to beat myself up. I remembered the pain on Cara’s face, and I replayed it in my mind over and over. I raked myself over the coals again and again for the bad choices I’d made years before.

Don’t sit in your sin. Take it on a journey all the way back to the cross and see it nailed there.

Our memories can serve as a kind of time machine. The time machine of memory can be a good thing when we go back and replay the good times. It can help us enjoy a pleasant experience in exponential ways. But the time machine of memory becomes twisted when we use it to relive our past failures and punish ourselves multiple times for the same mistake. When we put our sins on repeat mode, we wince and groan over and over again because it triggers sharp pangs of guilt and shame. Our guilt brings past sins into the present and says, “Look, you made a mistake.” Then shame joins the conversation and adds, “Yes, and you are the mistake.”

Why do we torture ourselves by going back to places of failure in our memory banks? Why do we continue to push the play button and experience it all over again? We wish we could go back and erase our failures, but that’s not an option. We can’t seem to get over it, so we go over it in our minds again and again.

Embrace the Full Truth

Here’s the problem with the twisted time machine of memory. We travel back in time under the pretense of a half-truth. Yes, we sinned. No, sin should not be taken lightly. There is appropriate guilt and shame that flow from sin, but as Christians, we know that “Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners” (1 Tim. 1:15). We can’t allow our past shames to cloud the fact that Christ has come.

Discouragement gets stuck in the half-truth that says, “Go back and see for yourself that you failed,” but we can take heart when we realize the full truth that our problem is not that we look back, but that we don’t look all the way back.

Yes, “the wages of sin is death” (Rom. 6:23)—but our debts have been paid. Don’t sit in your sin. Take it on a journey all the way back to the cross and see it nailed there. Then, and only then, will you be ready to move forward in the forgiving love of Christ.

Editors’ note:

This is an adapted excerpt from Don’t Lose Heart: Gospel Hope for the Discouraged Soul, published in partnership with Baker Books.

Posted at: https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/memory-paralyzes-you/