果冻视频

Amy Hauptman

Why We Don鈥檛 Have to Fear Repentance

folded white paper that stands up and says "you are invited" in red letters

I really, really did not like the word repentance.

I associated it with psychopath preachers who wielded 鈥淩epent!鈥 like a baseball bat, determined to beat the sin out of anyone within earshot.

Today, I feel very differently toward the word. In fact, I now consider the call to repent to be one of Jesus鈥 most endearing invitations.

That鈥檚 right.

鈥淩epent鈥 is a beautiful and sacred invitation to me. Not a command. Not a warning. And definitely not a form of punishment or condemnation, meant to shame me into feeling bad or remorseful about my many sins.

So what changed?

Now I understand that Jesus鈥 call to repent is actually an invitation to experience his transformation. And from personal experience, I know that the transformation Jesus offers is a gift. It is good. It is healing, gentle, powerful. And, yes鈥攊t can also be corrective.

When Jesus preached about repentance (; ; ), he was inviting us humans to allow our hearts and minds to be pliable and sensitive to God鈥檚 Spirit. He was inviting us to cultivate an attitude of humility, so that our hearts remain soft instead of becoming prideful and hardened against what God wants us to understand.

And he invites because he can鈥檛 force us to keep our hearts attuned to his Spirit. We have to be willing participants in the process of God鈥檚 transformation.

The truth is that often we鈥檙e not.

In Richard Rohr鈥檚 book Falling Upward, he writes:

Although Jesus鈥 first preached message is 鈥渃hange!鈥 (as in and ), where he told his listeners to 鈥渞epent,鈥 which literally means to 鈥渃hange your mind,鈥 it did not strongly influence Christian history. This resistance to change is so common, in fact, that it is almost what we expect from religious people.

Spiritual change is hard. Resisting change can become our modus operandi.

But in Isaiah 55:8, God offers the reason why we need to be people of repentance when he says, 鈥淔or my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways.鈥

We have to unlearn (repent) as we follow Jesus, and we have to continue to learn from Jesus (鈥渢he way, the truth, and the life鈥). We are disciples who are learning and unlearning at the same time. We are learning God鈥檚 ways, and we are unlearning our own.

The good news is that Jesus doesn鈥檛 just initiate spiritual change with an invitation (鈥渞epent and believe鈥); he also ultimately makes our transformation possible through the cross (鈥渋t is finished!鈥).

Do you remember the last time that Jesus invited you to repent or 鈥渃hange your mind鈥? Did you see it as an invitation, or as condemnation?

One way that I often experience Jesus鈥 transformation is through retreats of silence and solitude. These retreats help me be present to God鈥檚 Spirit and to .

Another way I鈥檝e learned to embrace repentance is through knowing other humble, faithful Christians who embody God鈥檚 kindness (which naturally 鈥渓eads us to repentance鈥 [see ]).

Also, certain spiritual disciplines like centering prayer have helped me understand the goodness of consenting to the presence and action of God within us (i.e., repentance). At a recent retreat, I learned a short and simple prayer that is meant to help usher in repentance in our hearts in a refreshing new way.

The prayer is, 鈥淵es. Amen.鈥

The simple prayer of 鈥測es鈥 communicates my consent to God鈥檚 presence and action within me. And the 鈥淎men鈥 literally means 鈥渓et it be so鈥 or 鈥渟o be it.鈥

Repentance is an invitation from God borne out of his vast, deep, deep love for us. And when we embrace this invitation, we invite God to give us new hearts () and restore our souls ().

May you experience the goodness of consenting to the presence and action of God in your life this week. Amen.

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Amy Hauptman worked for 果冻视频 for a number of years, first as a campus staff member at the University of CaliforniaDavis, the University of Nevada鈥揜eno, and Truckee Meadows Community College, and then as a writer on the communications team, based in Madison, Wisconsin. She now lives and works back in the warmth of her native state, California. The three driving forces in her life, besides her love for coffee, are to see, learn, and enjoy as much as possible. She also blogs at .

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