Let’s play a word association game.
What comes into your mind when you see or hear the word
“repent”?
You might think of a street preacher wearing sandwich sign blazoned
with “Turn or Burn.”
Perhaps you think of hell. Maybe the familiar illustrations
of doing a U-turn or an about-face come to mind.
While any of these associations are understandable, none of
them quite hit the biblical mark. If the only thing we think about when it
comes to repentance is escaping hell or changing our ways, we’re still missing
the most important part of repentance.
We’re still missing Jesus.
For repentance is not merely turning from sin. Repentance is also turning to the crucified and risen Savior. And if we miss this, we will
fall into the “worldly grief” that “produces death,” that Paul describes 2
Corinthians 7:10.
There is a kind of sadness over sin that doesn’t lead to
Jesus, doesn’t produce joy, and doesn’t end in life. But that kind of grief
over sin is not genuine gospel repentance.
Theologians from an older generation distinguished between
legal repentance and evangelical repentance. By legal repentance they meant a
kind of repentance that had its eye on the law and its condemnation. But this
is sharply different from evangelical, or gospel, repentance. Gospel repentance
fixes its gazes less on broken laws and threatened judgments and more on the
weeping, wounded, sin-bearing Savior.
Calvin said that in evangelical repentance, “the sinner,
though grievously downcast in himself, yet looks up and sees in Christ the cure
of his wound, the solace of his terror; the haven of rest from his misery.”[1]
St. Bernard’s old hymn beautifully captures the ethos of
gospel repentance:
What
Thou, my Lord, hast suffered, was all for sinners’ gain;
Mine,
mine was the transgression, but Thine the deadly pain.
Lo,
here I fall, my Savior! ’Tis I deserve Thy place;
Look
on me with Thy favor, vouchsafe to me Thy grace.
What
language shall I borrow to thank Thee, dearest friend,
For
this Thy dying sorrow, Thy pity without end?
O
make me Thine forever, and should I fainting be,
Lord,
let me never, never outlive my love to Thee.[2]
Gospel repentance, you see, is the reflex of our hearts
when, captivated by the dying love of Jesus, we throw ourselves whole-heartedly
into the embrace of his mercy and grace.
Gospel repentance is Peter back on the boat following the
week of Jesus’ passion, toiling again with the old nets. But, suddenly aware
that Jesus stands on Galilee’s shore waiting for him, he jumps head first into
the water and swims with all his might for land.
Gospel repentance is the prodigal son with the smell of pigs
lingering on his clothes and the taste of husks still in his mouth, astonished
at the joyous indignity of his father running to meet him and squelching his
well-rehearsed confession with kisses, tears, and a bear hug.
I wonder if the negative
associations we make with the word repentance are because we too often think of
repentance in terms of escaping the consequences of sin, and too seldom in
terms of returning to the outstretched arms of our welcoming Father in heaven?
Yes, there is certainly a place for
self-examination. We should all pray with the Psalmist,
Search
me, O God, and know my heart!
Try
me and know my thoughts!
And
see if there be any grievous way in me,
and
lead me in the way everlasting![3]
But introspection also has its hazards. We should especially
beware of so fixating on our sins that we lose sight of the Savior himself.[4]
This post was originally written for Gospel Connections, the blog of Tim Merwin. Be sure to check it out.
Notes
[1] John Calvin, Institutes
of the Christian Religion (III.3.4). Translated by Henry Beveridge.
Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software.
[2] “O Sacred Head Now Wounded,” Attributed to Bernard of
Clairvaux, 1153 (Salve caput cruentatum);
translated from Latin to German by Paul Gerhardt, 1656 (O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden), and from Latin to English James W.
Alexander, 1830.
[3] The Holy Bible:
English Standard Version. 2001 (Ps 139:23–24). Wheaton: Standard Bible
Society.
[4] For more on gospel repentance, see the helpful Tim
Keller’s helpful essay, “All of Life is Repentance,” (http://download.redeemer.com/pdf/learn/resources/All_of_Life_Is_Repentance-Keller.pdf.)
and “Don’t Seek Repentance or Faith as Such; Seek Christ
“ in John C. Miller’s The Heart of a Servant Leader: Letters from Jack Miller (p. 244). (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 2004) p. 244.
“ in John C. Miller’s The Heart of a Servant Leader: Letters from Jack Miller (p. 244). (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 2004) p. 244.
1 comment:
Excellent article Brian (from Dan S in India)
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