Lesson Thirteen – Repentance – check
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The purpose of this page is to check back into
the text of the doctrine after you take the test
and check your answers. The test questions and answers are derived from
the doctrine presented
in this lesson. In the table below you will
see the number of the question and to the right a link
to the paragraph of the doctrine where the question and answer originated.
| 1. see 1] | 2. see 3] | 3. see 3] | 4. see 4] | 5. see 5] | 6. see 5] |
| 7. see 6] | 8. see 6] | 9. see 7] | 10. see 8] | 11. see 9] | 12. see 10] |
| 13. see 12-14 | 14. see 15] | 15. see 17] | 16. see 18] | 17. see 19] | 18. see 20] |
| 19. see 20] | 20. see 21] | 21. see 22] | 22. see 23] | 23. see 24] | 24. see 24] |
| 25. see 25] | 26. see 26] |
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DOCTRINAL OVERVIEW 1] Repentance is the act of acknowledging one's sins and resolving to fully obey God. To repent means to change one's overall attitude from wanting to go his own way to wanting to go God's way. It begins when God opens one's mind to see himself in comparison with God and His law. True repentance is the first step toward reconciliation with God, and thereby toward ultimate salvation.back to top back to answers DOCTRINAL OVERVIEW
2] Repentance signals the start of a changed and godly
life. It involves a fully conscious recognition of one's sinful, lawless
way of life, a way of life that is antagonistic toward God and His law,
accompanied by a firm conviction to make a total change and to begin to
live in full accord with God's way of life as described in the Bible.
3] True repentance can occur only when God Himself
opens one's eyes to see his past sinfulness by granting repentance
(Acts 11:18; II Tim. 2:25). But repentance is much more than a
recognition of personal sins. Repentance, rather is the process through
which God leads us so that we can become progressively more like Him,
thereby proceeding toward salvation as sons and daughters in His divine
family which is God's ultimate desire for all humanity. As such,
repentance should include the positive, joyful realization of the fact
that it is God who grants repentance, that this repentance is
"unto life" (Acts 11:18), and that all who are so called shall "come to
know the truth" (II Tim. 2:25).
4] True repentance is a complex and deeply personal
phenomenon that can only be understood, in the final analysis, by
experiencing it. The first component is the realization that there is a
vast difference, a great gulf, between God and oneself (e.g. Job 42).
The next aspect is an all-consuming desire to close that gap, to become
more like God in character, thought and behavior, though the capacity to
accomplish this is far beyond human power alone and requires the active
involvement of God's Holy Spirit.
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5] One who is coming to repentance must first
understand that sin is the transgression of God's law (I John. 3:4), the
penalty for which is death (Rom. 6:23). Added to this theoretical
definition of sin must be the deep personal realization that one has
indeed sinned and that his whole frame of mind and attitude of approach
is oriented against God's law (Rom. 8:7). But the deceitfulness of sin
blinds one to seeing his sinfulness unless God opens his mind to
reality, to recognize that one indeed is a sinner. Genuine repentance,
therefore, must come from God Himself, and man cannot claim credit for
it, though he has a part in it. His part is to acknowledge the truth
about himself which God has shown him and then to act upon it.
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6] In the process of seeing himself, a person comes to
realize that the human "heart is deceitful above all things and
desperately wicked" (Jer. 17:9). Since sin is ultimately of the mind, he
also begins to understand that even his own righteousness, which in an
unconverted person is invariably motivated by selfishness, is only a
"dirty rag," as it were, in God's sight (Is. 64:6). When an individual
repents, he must compare his righteousness to God's righteousness and
not to that of other human beings. When man compares himself to God—and
with God's help sees himself as he really is—he is astonished at his own
sinfulness and inadequacy.
7] Confronted with this reality, the person nearing
repentance comes to appreciate that man is incapable of leading a godly
life without God's direct help and intervention through His Spirit. "O
Lord, I know that the way of man is not in himself: it is not in man
that walketh to direct his steps" (Jer. 10:23). While man's intentions
are often the best—he may want to do good—he nevertheless
finds himself caught in a struggle between them and his natural
inclination toward evil. Romans 7 describes this struggle: "For that
which I do I allow not: for what I would, that do I not; but what I
hate, that do I . . . For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh,)
dwelleth no good thing: for to will is present with me; but how to
perform that which is good I find not" (vs. 15-18). A person in an
attitude of repentance feels a strong need for help in this spiritual
dilemma and reaches out to God for aid through His Holy Spirit. Thus,
Paul admitted that the only relief from this eternal conflict between
the good of God and the evil of our own nature is "through Jesus Christ"
(v. 25).
8] In his natural state without God's Spirit, man is
cut off from God and indeed at enmity with God (Rom. 8:7; Is. 59:1-2).
The story of Adam and Eve is an example of how this spiritual enmity has
occurred in man (Rom. 5:12). The Genesis account indicates that Adam and
Eve were born morally neutral, with the ability to do good or
evil, right or wrong, but without an actual inclination toward either.
God nonetheless instructed them in His law and explained to them right
from wrong. They had no reason to doubt God or to disobey until Satan,
symbolized (and/or materialized) in Genesis 2 as a serpent, tempted them
by saying God was both holding back knowledge from them and lying about
death as the penalty for disobedience. Adam and Eve chose to obey Satan
rather than God and so ate of the forbidden fruit. The effects of this
sin cut them off from God as is evidenced by His thrusting them from the
garden. It also caused a rationalization of, or a blinding to, the sin,
as shown by Adam's attempt at justifying himself. Likewise, their act of
stepping from the realm of moral neutrality to that of sinfulness
through the initiation of this one sin caused deep and profound mental
changes in Adam and Eve. They were no longer morally neutral but became
evilly oriented in much the same way as was—and is—Satan, since Satan's
attitude of mind had now influenced their own.
9] All human beings are, like Adam and Eve, born
morally neutral. Yet living in Satan's world, surrounded by an ungodly
environment, all persons soon sin, as did Adam and Eve. (To ask at what
age or to try to discern the demarcation line between moral neutrality
and sin is not practical.) Thus, sin has the same consequences in us as
it did in Adam and Eve. It cuts us off from God, it blinds us to our own
sinfulness and it changes our minds from neutrality to enmity against
God (Rom. 8:7).
11] Although repentance involves seeing the sinful
side of oneself, thus generating negative personal feelings, it
nevertheless has extremely positive aspects. Upon true repentance and
baptism, one is forgiven of sin. The psalmist said, "Blessed is the man
to whom sin is not imputed" (Ps. 32:2). The sheer joy of having one's
sins forgiven is the sure knowledge of being right and clean before God.
King David bore testimony to the positive, uplifting nature of
repentance when he prayed "Make me to hear joy and gladness; that the
bones which though hast broken [as a result of my sin] may rejoice" (Ps.
51:8). One who has repented can rejoice at the impending forgiveness of
his sins, joy indeed.
12] The most profound evocation of real repentance in
the Bible must truly be this heartfelt prayer of David in Psalm 51. The
occasion was Nathan the prophet's coming to him about his sin with
Bathsheba. The prayer shows the important basic components of godly
repentance: an attitude of abject wretchedness and contrite humility
before God; a deep recognition of all one's sins, which are "ever before
me"; the conviction that God can and will forgive all one's iniquities
and cleanse him from all his sins; and the sure knowledge that God can
and will create in a truly repentant individual "a clean heart" and put
"a new and right spirit" in him, restoring "the joy of your salvation."
13] "Have mercy on me, 0 God, according to thy
steadfast love; according to thy abundant mercy blot out my
transgressions. Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity, and cleanse me from
my sin! For I know my transgressions, and my sin is ever before me.
Against thee, thee only, have I sinned, and done that which is evil in
thy sight, so that thou art justified in thy sentence and blameless in
thy judgment" (Ps. 51:1-4).
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14] "Hide thy face from my sins, and blot out all my
iniquities. Create in me a clean heart, O God, and put a new and right
spirit within me. Cast me not away from thy presence, and take not thy
Holy Spirit from me. Restore to me the joy of thy salvation, and uphold
me with a willing spirit" (Ps. 51:9-12).
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back to answers 15] Godly repentance must, of course, be accompanied by "godly sorrow." Godly sorrow reflects a profound awareness that one has sinned against God. It is a sorrow that is felt because sin hurts |