It is important to note the action of repentance because some of us confuse repentance with the emotion of regret. We feel bad about sinning, and we think that we have repented of the sin. This is not what the Bible teaches about turning away from sin. The Scriptures teach that repentance is a renunciation of the ways of the flesh, worldliness, and the devil. When we confuse regret and repentance, we fail to take sin seriously enough. When we fail to take sin seriously, sin has a way of soiling even the best things in
our lives. We then become deaf to the voice of God and blind to his light. Eventually, we find ourselves tripped up and trapped by the "sin that so easily entangles" (Heb 12:2), and we wonder how we have gotten to such a place where we feel so distant from God's will.
The disciple of Jesus must say a firm "NO" to ways that lead us away from Jesus, His cross, His life, His hope, and His resurrection. We must say "NO" to many things, so that we may say "YES" to Jesus.
When Jesus calls us to follow, He invites us to say "YES" to Him, His friendship, His love, His grace, and His life. In the process, we also end up saying "YES" to His cross, to His rejection, and to His sense of being alienated from much of the rest of humanity by his convictions and choices. Strangely, there are a lot of people who claim to follow Jesus who have not embraced the "YES" of the gospel. They have said "NO" to the ways of the world, but offer no visionary, positive hope for their communities or the world.
As Christians, we need to be known more for what we stand for than what we stand against. We need to be more known for what kind of life and hope and attitude we have said yes to than what we are against. I am afraid that too much of the world, their experience of the church of Jesus Christ is a bunch of people wagging their fingers at them and holding up picket signs.
In the book of Revelation, one church is told that it has stood against everything that God is against but that it had lost “its first love” (Revelation 2). Holiness is good. Standing for what is right is commendable. Do those things. But don’t forget “your first love”. Don’t forget the “YES” of the gospel and the mission of Jesus.
One time, in a Bible Study I participated in, we were invited to imagine what our church would look like if we were known as a community that had a reputation for being the "YES" of the gospel. Particularly, in this setting, we were called to dream about what it might look like if we were known as the "forgiving community of Jesus" in our community. What if we were known as a place where anyone could come seeking forgiveness, a place where we believed that no life was hopeless or irredeemable? I thought this kind of vision was thought-provoking and beautiful.
Repent and follow Jesus said to the first disciples. He says the same to us today.
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