Get on the Road to Recovery

Psalm 51:11-13

In this sermon, Pastor Colin Smith discusses the challenges Christians face in fully grasping what God has done for them through Jesus Christ. He emphasises the struggle to understand the diagnosis of human sinfulness, which includes transgression, sin, and iniquity, and how God addresses these through justice, cleansing, and transformation. Pastor Colin uses the analogy of the Amoco Cadiz disaster to illustrate the multifaceted nature of sin’s problems and God’s comprehensive solution.

The sermon explores the concept of repentance, distinguishing it from mere sorrow for sin. Pastor Colin explains true repentance as a turning towards God, characterised by a desire to return to His presence and experience the joy of salvation. He highlights biblical examples such as King David’s heartfelt cry in Psalm 51 and distinguishes between sorrow that leads to despair, like Judas, and sorrow that leads to restoration, like Peter.

Pastor Colin also addresses common misconceptions about repentance, clarifying that it is not an act of penance or mere emotional remorse. Instead, it is a positive, sustained turning to God marked by a joyful anticipation of transformation. He concludes by encouraging believers to view repentance as a joyful and ongoing process throughout their lives, where God progressively renews and restores them into His image.

1 00:00:00,000 –> 00:00:08,120 You’re listening to a sermon from Pastor Colin Smith of Open The Bible to contact us 2 00:00:08,120 –> 00:00:17,120 call us at 1-877-OPEN-365 or visit our website openthebible.org Let’s get to the message, 3 00:00:17,120 –> 00:00:22,639 here is Pastor Colin One of the hardest things in life for any 4 00:00:23,320 –> 00:00:32,119 Christian is to really grasp the full scale of what God has done for us in Jesus Christ. 5 00:00:32,119 –> 00:00:37,200 It’s difficult for us, at the beginning, to really understand the full diagnosis of our 6 00:00:37,200 –> 00:00:42,060 problem. It’s hard for us to really grasp the full 7 00:00:42,060 –> 00:00:48,880 extent of the treatment that is needed. And we don’t find it easy, even as Christians, 8 00:00:48,880 –> 00:00:55,580 to really appreciate what would have been, if it had not been for the grace and mercy 9 00:00:55,580 –> 00:01:02,540 and the work of God in our lives. So often, we live at the level of grumbling 10 00:01:02,540 –> 00:01:08,680 about the frustrations and difficulties of our Christian lives, when if we could only 11 00:01:08,680 –> 00:01:16,519 grasp what God has done for us in Christ there would be a new filling of gratitude, and a 12 00:01:16,519 –> 00:01:22,879 new note of praise. David knew about this, it was one of the great discoveries of his 13 00:01:22,879 –> 00:01:30,400 life. You remember in Psalm 103, he says, Bless the Lord, O my soul and do not forget 14 00:01:30,400 –> 00:01:39,000 all his benefits. And first among them, David says, he forgives all your sins. 15 00:01:39,000 –> 00:01:44,559 That is what this series on Sunday mornings has been about. We started with diagnosis. 16 00:01:44,559 –> 00:01:50,680 Calculate the problem. And we saw from Psalm 51 that there is the problem of transgression, 17 00:01:50,680 –> 00:01:56,480 that is our breaking of God’s law, the problem of sin, that is our falling short of God’s 18 00:01:56,480 –> 00:02:01,199 standard, and the reason for these two things lies in the third problem which the Bible 19 00:02:01,199 –> 00:02:06,639 calls iniquity, that is the twistedness within our very nature that gives rise to our sin 20 00:02:06,639 –> 00:02:13,320 and our transgression. Then last Sunday morning, we thought about the effects of this problem. 21 00:02:13,320 –> 00:02:24,160 We thought about the picture of the Amoco Cadiz, that supertanker with its 233,000 tons 22 00:02:24,160 –> 00:02:29,899 of crude oil running aground off the shore of Brittany. And we saw that as a result, 23 00:02:29,899 –> 00:02:36,300 there was a problem in the courts. There is a problem on the beaches. And with that amount 24 00:02:36,300 –> 00:02:42,619 of crude inside the container, there is also still a problem in the hull. The problem in 25 00:02:42,639 –> 00:02:49,220 the courts is the issue of justice. There’s a price to be paid for this disaster. The 26 00:02:49,220 –> 00:02:54,240 problem on the beaches is the problem of pollution. There is a cleanup job that has to be done, 27 00:02:54,240 –> 00:03:01,580 and it is not easy. The problem in the hull is that if we do not deal with the source 28 00:03:01,580 –> 00:03:08,160 of this leaking crude, then the problem will only get worse in the future. And we have 29 00:03:08,279 –> 00:03:14,979 seen that when we come as sinners to God, he deals with us at each of these levels. 30 00:03:14,979 –> 00:03:21,960 Christ died so that when it comes to the justice of God in His court you should be forgiven 31 00:03:21,960 –> 00:03:28,960 with no price to pay. But Christ died so that when it comes to your heart and mind and conscience 32 00:03:30,020 –> 00:03:35,960 you should be cleansed and washed and made clean. And Christ died so that by the power 33 00:03:36,020 –> 00:03:41,000 of his Spirit you should become different so that the very source of the problem, the 34 00:03:41,000 –> 00:03:47,300 heart itself, should be progressively renewed throughout the course of the Christian life. 35 00:03:47,300 –> 00:03:52,880 And we saw that God never addresses one without at the same time addressing the other two. 36 00:03:52,880 –> 00:03:59,199 There is no such thing as forgiveness for a man or a woman who wants to continue in 37 00:03:59,940 –> 00:04:00,880 their sin. 38 00:04:00,880 –> 00:04:03,600 But here is the prescription. 39 00:04:03,600 –> 00:04:11,199 There is a great physician and in the Gospel he says to us, you need the mercy of Christ, 40 00:04:11,199 –> 00:04:18,820 you need the cleansing of his blood, you need the surgery of the Spirit in your heart. 41 00:04:18,820 –> 00:04:24,399 So we’ve thought about diagnosis, we’ve talked about prescription and this morning I want 42 00:04:24,399 –> 00:04:31,779 us to think in the last of these three about the process of recovery. 43 00:04:31,779 –> 00:04:37,640 What does this thing we call repentance look like? 44 00:04:37,640 –> 00:04:44,799 What would be the recognizable marks of a recovering sinner? 45 00:04:44,799 –> 00:04:51,880 Before we get into Psalm 51 this morning, I want to clear away the two most common misunderstandings 46 00:04:51,880 –> 00:04:54,359 of this subject. 47 00:04:54,440 –> 00:04:57,160 What does recovery look like? 48 00:04:57,160 –> 00:05:03,380 Misunderstanding number one, often repeated throughout the history of the church, is this. 49 00:05:03,380 –> 00:05:10,339 Recovery, some have said, is doing penance. 50 00:05:10,339 –> 00:05:14,820 This was one of the earliest errors that ever crept into the Christian church. 51 00:05:14,820 –> 00:05:22,739 It happened because early on in church history there was a widely used Latin translation 52 00:05:22,820 –> 00:05:25,100 of the Greek New Testament. 53 00:05:25,100 –> 00:05:29,059 It was called the Vulgate, and it became very popular. 54 00:05:29,059 –> 00:05:36,660 It included a disastrous translation of the Greek word used in the original manuscript 55 00:05:36,660 –> 00:05:38,540 for repentance. 56 00:05:38,540 –> 00:05:44,579 The Vulgate translation was do-penance. 57 00:05:44,579 –> 00:05:51,040 And so over the years, working from that translation, theological writers developed a teaching that 58 00:05:51,100 –> 00:05:52,579 basically said this. 59 00:05:52,579 –> 00:05:58,799 When you do something wrong, what has to happen is that you will do something good by way 60 00:05:58,799 –> 00:06:03,399 of a discipline in order to put it right. 61 00:06:03,399 –> 00:06:08,679 Through the course of history, the medieval church developed a whole system, or process, 62 00:06:08,679 –> 00:06:11,359 for dealing with this subject of sin. 63 00:06:11,359 –> 00:06:13,239 There were four parts. 64 00:06:13,239 –> 00:06:15,399 The first, they said, is confession. 65 00:06:15,399 –> 00:06:17,940 You must admit to what you have done wrong. 66 00:06:17,940 –> 00:06:20,559 The second, they said, is contrition. 67 00:06:20,559 –> 00:06:23,720 There must be genuine sorrow for what you have done wrong. 68 00:06:23,720 –> 00:06:29,619 Third, they said, there will be absolution, that is, forgiveness. 69 00:06:29,619 –> 00:06:39,260 But it will be on condition of a fourth thing, the completion of works of satisfaction. 70 00:06:39,260 –> 00:06:43,059 So really the system was a little bit like what happens sometimes in school if you’re 71 00:06:43,059 –> 00:06:45,299 late with an assignment. 72 00:06:45,299 –> 00:06:47,260 And the teacher says to you, you’re late with the assignment. 73 00:06:47,260 –> 00:06:48,899 That’s not good. 74 00:06:48,899 –> 00:06:57,100 However, we will not charge it against your grade, on condition that you do hand in the 75 00:06:57,100 –> 00:07:02,420 completed assignment properly done, and in addition, that you do an extra piece of makeup 76 00:07:02,420 –> 00:07:07,700 work, which will help to teach you not to hand in an assignment late again. 77 00:07:07,700 –> 00:07:13,679 Now that may work very well in the school, but it is altogether another thing when it 78 00:07:13,679 –> 00:07:17,959 comes to our standing before God. 79 00:07:18,059 –> 00:07:27,000 What works can we offer that would make up for what we have done wrong? 80 00:07:27,000 –> 00:07:32,959 You see this problem very clearly in the story of Martin Luther, his very wonderful testimony. 81 00:07:32,980 –> 00:07:34,660 Most of you will know this story. 82 00:07:34,679 –> 00:07:40,440 Martin Luther was a young monk in the 16th century, a man with a sensitive conscience 83 00:07:40,440 –> 00:07:43,559 who wanted to be right with God. 84 00:07:43,559 –> 00:07:47,600 He tried, therefore, to confess all of his sins. 85 00:07:47,600 –> 00:07:53,019 He scoured his memory to try and make sure that he had called them all to mind. 86 00:07:53,019 –> 00:07:56,799 Under the system in which he was brought up, there were works that were assigned to him 87 00:07:56,799 –> 00:08:01,140 in order to make up for the things that he’d done wrong, but he says in effect this was 88 00:08:01,140 –> 00:08:02,700 the problem. 89 00:08:02,700 –> 00:08:06,700 In the middle of doing penance for some things that I’d done wrong, there were all kinds 90 00:08:06,700 –> 00:08:11,200 of other things that occurred in my mind that were wrong also. 91 00:08:11,200 –> 00:08:20,679 And so he found himself being sucked into the swamp, deeper and deeper, a swamp of guilt 92 00:08:20,679 –> 00:08:22,859 and of condemnation. 93 00:08:22,859 –> 00:08:30,739 His attempts to do penance never led him to peace of conscience. 94 00:08:30,739 –> 00:08:38,299 Penance he found an impossible mountain to climb. 95 00:08:38,299 –> 00:08:43,299 By the way if you ever want to stop someone from changing, the first way to do it is just 96 00:08:43,299 –> 00:08:45,419 to set an impossible standard. 97 00:08:45,419 –> 00:08:51,099 You don’t want a person to jump, just set the bar way to high. 98 00:08:51,099 –> 00:08:54,599 But then there’s a second great misunderstanding. 99 00:08:54,599 –> 00:08:58,539 See some Christians in some churches have come along in reaction to all of this and 100 00:08:58,539 –> 00:09:01,400 they’ve said, Oh we don’t find works of satisfaction in the Bible. 101 00:09:01,400 –> 00:09:03,940 No, the Bible is very simple they say. 102 00:09:03,940 –> 00:09:11,679 God is only looking for one thing, one thing only from a sinner that he’s sorry, really 103 00:09:11,679 –> 00:09:12,679 sorry. 104 00:09:12,679 –> 00:09:17,200 In fact this view of recovery is often stated this way. 105 00:09:17,200 –> 00:09:20,280 Repentance is being sorry for your sins. 106 00:09:20,280 –> 00:09:26,380 So sorry that you’ll never do them again. 107 00:09:26,380 –> 00:09:29,679 Now if you’ve been following over these last two weeks you should very quickly see the 108 00:09:29,679 –> 00:09:31,880 problem with that. 109 00:09:31,880 –> 00:09:37,520 Being sorry will never change the source problem in my heart. 110 00:09:37,520 –> 00:09:44,000 Being sorry is not a big enough thing to change the direction of a man’s life. 111 00:09:44,000 –> 00:09:52,340 Being sorry doesn’t begin to address the hidden springs within from which our behavior arises. 112 00:09:52,340 –> 00:10:00,239 It is an inadequate solution to the scale of the problem that we’ve been talking about. 113 00:10:00,400 –> 00:10:07,239 If due penance is the error into which the Roman Catholic Church has often fallen, 114 00:10:07,239 –> 00:10:15,500 then be sorry is the error into which evangelical churches have often fallen. 115 00:10:15,500 –> 00:10:20,880 I find it helpful to think of these as two opposite errors. 116 00:10:20,880 –> 00:10:26,059 On the one side you have the mountain of impossible demands, 117 00:10:26,940 –> 00:10:33,419 and on the other side you have the swamp of inadequate solutions. 118 00:10:33,419 –> 00:10:38,500 Now I want to suggest this morning as we open our Bibles now that right through 119 00:10:38,500 –> 00:10:41,239 the middle there is a highway, 120 00:10:41,239 –> 00:10:45,599 a clearly marked road on which God calls all his people to travel. 121 00:10:45,599 –> 00:10:49,559 It is called the high way off repentance, 122 00:10:50,479 –> 00:10:56,460 and if you’ll open your Bibles at Psalm 51, I want us to look together at its characteristics. 123 00:10:56,460 –> 00:11:00,520 What does repentance look like? 124 00:11:00,520 –> 00:11:07,400 We’re going to see three things from Psalm 51 beginning with verse eleven this morning. 125 00:11:07,400 –> 00:11:10,020 The first of these is this, 126 00:11:10,020 –> 00:11:16,760 true repentance is always a turning to God. 127 00:11:16,840 –> 00:11:21,619 True repentance is always a turning to God. 128 00:11:21,619 –> 00:11:24,359 Notice how David puts it in verse eleven. 129 00:11:24,359 –> 00:11:34,200 Do not cast me from your presence, or take your Holy Spirit from me. 130 00:11:34,200 –> 00:11:38,760 Here’s his starting point as he works through this confession of sin. 131 00:11:38,760 –> 00:11:46,500 A deep passionate longing for God. 132 00:11:46,539 –> 00:11:52,679 The new testament tells us a story of two men who were sorry for their sins. 133 00:11:52,679 –> 00:11:53,820 First one was Peter. 134 00:11:53,820 –> 00:11:59,640 You remember that he denied Christ and after he denied Christ he was very sorry. 135 00:11:59,640 –> 00:12:04,179 He went out the bible tells us and he wept bitterly. 136 00:12:04,179 –> 00:12:07,119 The second was a man named Judas. 137 00:12:07,119 –> 00:12:10,239 He betrayed Christ for thirty pieces of silver. 138 00:12:10,239 –> 00:12:15,700 I don’t know what he thought would happen, but clearly when he heard the news that Jesus 139 00:12:15,739 –> 00:12:20,679 was condemned to death, he became quite desperate over all that he had done. 140 00:12:20,679 –> 00:12:25,679 He went, the bible tells us, to the chief priest who’d given him the money and he takes 141 00:12:25,679 –> 00:12:29,000 the bag of silver and he throws it on the floor at their feet. 142 00:12:29,000 –> 00:12:30,739 He doesn’t want it. 143 00:12:30,739 –> 00:12:37,739 Two men, who both are desperately sorry about what they have done. 144 00:12:37,820 –> 00:12:44,539 But, of course, there was a great difference in the outcome. 145 00:12:44,539 –> 00:12:47,200 Peter was restored by our Lord Jesus Christ. 146 00:12:47,200 –> 00:12:51,200 Judas, the bible tells us went and hanged himself. 147 00:12:51,200 –> 00:12:57,479 It’s interesting that the bible makes it very clear that there will be sorrow over 148 00:12:57,479 –> 00:13:00,479 sin in hell. 149 00:13:00,479 –> 00:13:02,479 Remember what Jesus said? 150 00:13:02,479 –> 00:13:03,479 It’s very graphic. 151 00:13:03,479 –> 00:13:12,840 He said, there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth, but the bible never suggests that 152 00:13:12,840 –> 00:13:16,260 there will be repentance in hell. 153 00:13:16,260 –> 00:13:20,239 The two are different things. 154 00:13:20,239 –> 00:13:24,719 Repentance is much more than sorrow for sin. 155 00:13:24,719 –> 00:13:28,679 That is made very clear in the scripture reading that we had earlier, from 2 Corinthians, 156 00:13:28,679 –> 00:13:30,080 Chapter 7 and verse 10. 157 00:13:30,080 –> 00:13:32,119 Did you notice it there? 158 00:13:32,640 –> 00:13:40,619 That worldly sorrow brings repentance, it leads us into repentance that leads to salvation 159 00:13:40,619 –> 00:13:42,659 and leaves no regret. 160 00:13:42,659 –> 00:13:47,479 But worldly sorrow brings death. 161 00:13:47,479 –> 00:13:54,059 Think of sorrow like this, its like a large foyer. 162 00:13:54,059 –> 00:14:00,280 And as you come into this foyer, there are two doors ahead of you. 163 00:14:00,440 –> 00:14:04,479 One door is marked with the name repentance. 164 00:14:04,479 –> 00:14:09,479 The other door is marked with the name despair. 165 00:14:09,479 –> 00:14:16,359 And as you come into this foyer of sorrow for sin, you have the choice as to where that 166 00:14:16,359 –> 00:14:24,679 sorrow takes you, which door you enter beyond your sorrow. 167 00:14:24,679 –> 00:14:30,280 If you go through the door that is marked repentance, you will find beyond that door 168 00:14:30,280 –> 00:14:34,000 there is a room that is filled with light. 169 00:14:34,000 –> 00:14:37,739 The presence of God is there. 170 00:14:37,739 –> 00:14:43,159 But if you choose to go through the door of despair, you will enter a room in which there 171 00:14:43,159 –> 00:14:45,119 is only darkness. 172 00:14:45,119 –> 00:14:53,020 Now I want to speak for just one moment now very directly and very pasturally to those 173 00:14:53,200 –> 00:15:01,840 in our congregation this morning who are experiencing sorrow over their sins. 174 00:15:01,840 –> 00:15:04,780 You’re standing in the foyer. 175 00:15:04,780 –> 00:15:07,520 It’s where you are today. 176 00:15:07,520 –> 00:15:10,640 You’re sorry. 177 00:15:10,640 –> 00:15:14,440 My question for you is this, which door are you going to go through? 178 00:15:14,440 –> 00:15:21,940 Where are you going to take that sorrow? 179 00:15:21,940 –> 00:15:27,460 Judas chose the door of despair and went into darkness. 180 00:15:27,460 –> 00:15:35,039 But Peter chose the door of repentance and was restored to the light of the presence 181 00:15:35,039 –> 00:15:36,340 of Christ. 182 00:15:36,340 –> 00:15:42,059 True repentance, you see, is always a turning to God. 183 00:15:42,059 –> 00:15:46,940 It is a choosing that my sorrow will not lead to the darkness of despair, but that I will 184 00:15:46,979 –> 00:15:52,280 take my sorrow through that door that leads me into the presence of God, and that’s what 185 00:15:52,280 –> 00:15:58,640 David is saying here, verse 11, do not cast me from your presence. 186 00:15:58,640 –> 00:16:02,979 Do not exclude me from that room of repentance. 187 00:16:02,979 –> 00:16:06,700 Do not take your Holy Spirit from me. 188 00:16:06,700 –> 00:16:10,419 Do not shut me out from your plans. 189 00:16:10,580 –> 00:16:15,380 Do not mark your work in my life as something that is a discontinued line. 190 00:16:15,380 –> 00:16:22,059 Of course, in David’s mind, I guess there must have been the story of his predecessor. 191 00:16:22,059 –> 00:16:23,460 David was the second king of Israel. 192 00:16:23,460 –> 00:16:26,700 The first, as you know, was King Saul. 193 00:16:26,700 –> 00:16:28,979 He had had the Holy Spirit of God. 194 00:16:28,979 –> 00:16:30,539 He had the anointing. 195 00:16:30,539 –> 00:16:33,780 God had made him king. 196 00:16:33,780 –> 00:16:39,539 Yet when things went wrong in his life like Judas, he chose the path of despair and he 197 00:16:39,659 –> 00:16:44,320 was replaced in the purposes of God for the people. 198 00:16:44,320 –> 00:16:47,780 David says, please don’t do that for me. 199 00:16:47,780 –> 00:16:50,619 Do not cast me from your presence. 200 00:16:50,619 –> 00:16:57,619 I’m sorry, but where I want to come with that sorrow is to you. 201 00:16:59,219 –> 00:17:04,199 Open the door for me. 202 00:17:04,199 –> 00:17:08,359 David’s first concern is not with his position. 203 00:17:08,359 –> 00:17:12,160 His first concern is not with his money. 204 00:17:12,160 –> 00:17:19,260 You don’t find him here saying, God, please don’t allow any consequences of my sin to 205 00:17:19,260 –> 00:17:21,619 occur in my life. 206 00:17:21,619 –> 00:17:26,119 You know, all he says is this. 207 00:17:26,119 –> 00:17:30,900 God, please don’t give up on me. 208 00:17:30,900 –> 00:17:35,400 Please don’t put me on the shelf. 209 00:17:35,400 –> 00:17:38,319 Please do not separate yourself from me. 210 00:17:38,560 –> 00:17:43,380 For that I cannot bear, for in my heart of hearts I have a hunger, a thirst, a passion 211 00:17:44,119 –> 00:17:45,160 after you. 212 00:17:45,160 –> 00:17:50,000 That is repentance. 213 00:17:50,000 –> 00:17:52,699 What does it look like? 214 00:17:52,699 –> 00:17:54,819 A genuine hunger after God. 215 00:17:54,819 –> 00:18:03,439 For repentance is a reorientation of life around the God from whom we had departed. 216 00:18:03,439 –> 00:18:06,459 It is a movement towards God. 217 00:18:06,459 –> 00:18:07,459 Think of it this way. 218 00:18:07,560 –> 00:18:13,439 In Jesus’ wonderful story about the prodigal son, it could have had a different ending, 219 00:18:13,439 –> 00:18:14,439 couldn’t it? 220 00:18:14,439 –> 00:18:20,140 I mean, it could have gone that he wasted all his money, and he ended up among the pigs 221 00:18:20,140 –> 00:18:27,339 and so forth, but then eventually, he came to himself and gradually rebuilt his life 222 00:18:27,339 –> 00:18:31,020 and recovered his dignity and met a nice lady. 223 00:18:31,540 –> 00:18:40,319 He married, he found a good job, and continued to live a life in which he found much fulfillment. 224 00:18:40,319 –> 00:18:44,099 That’s a conceivable ending to the story. 225 00:18:44,099 –> 00:18:48,060 We all know people who do that. 226 00:18:48,060 –> 00:18:52,040 But that’s not the ending of Jesus’ story because that’s not repentance. 227 00:18:52,040 –> 00:19:00,500 The ending of Jesus’ story is, he came back to the Father. 228 00:19:00,500 –> 00:19:03,619 That’s repentance. 229 00:19:03,619 –> 00:19:09,500 It is the choice to draw near again to the God from whom we have become distanced. 230 00:19:09,500 –> 00:19:20,599 So, I ask you this morning, is this your desire, to come to God? 231 00:19:20,599 –> 00:19:23,739 Or are you just sorry? 232 00:19:23,739 –> 00:19:27,520 True repentance is always a turning to God. 233 00:19:28,000 –> 00:19:32,819 I want you to notice here in verse 12 the true repentance is always positive. 234 00:19:32,819 –> 00:19:41,260 Verse 12, David prays, restore to me the joy of your salvation. 235 00:19:41,260 –> 00:19:46,500 Now, it seems strange to us, perhaps, that David should be talking about joy in the middle 236 00:19:46,500 –> 00:19:48,780 of a prayer of repentance. 237 00:19:48,780 –> 00:19:54,660 We tend to think of repentance as a kind of long-faced exercise, probably associated, 238 00:19:54,660 –> 00:19:57,760 at least in the Old Testament, with sackcloth and with ashes. 239 00:19:57,760 –> 00:20:05,219 When we think of the image from our Scottish schools from years ago, they had various forms 240 00:20:05,219 –> 00:20:06,560 of discipline. 241 00:20:06,560 –> 00:20:12,739 But one of the less creative was to make a small boy who had misbehaved stand in the 242 00:20:12,739 –> 00:20:18,739 corner, and you’d be sent to stand in the corner for 15 minutes. 243 00:20:18,739 –> 00:20:24,959 And you would stand there examining the cracks in the plaster, conscious that the penalty 244 00:20:24,959 –> 00:20:30,060 for your offense was that the rest of your classmates were not even to see the light 245 00:20:30,060 –> 00:20:34,420 of your face for a full 15 minutes. 246 00:20:34,420 –> 00:20:38,260 And you would stand there with this long face until you returned to the fold. 247 00:20:38,260 –> 00:20:41,300 Is that how you think of repentance? 248 00:20:41,300 –> 00:20:45,420 David talks about joy. 249 00:20:45,420 –> 00:20:47,800 Not just once, you see it there in verse eight. 250 00:20:48,199 –> 00:20:51,979 Let me hear joy and gladness. 251 00:20:51,979 –> 00:20:55,079 Let the bones that you have crushed rejoice. 252 00:20:55,079 –> 00:21:01,719 You see, repentance never leaves us looking backwards at our sin. 253 00:21:01,719 –> 00:21:06,619 It is always the process by which God turns us around so that we’re able to look forwards 254 00:21:06,619 –> 00:21:08,859 into the future that is in His hand. 255 00:21:08,859 –> 00:21:11,280 That’s why it’s such a wonderful thing. 256 00:21:12,180 –> 00:21:18,160 It’s very interesting that in Matthew’s Gospel, the very first recorded word of the public 257 00:21:18,160 –> 00:21:24,760 ministry of Jesus, Matthew 4 in verse 17, is the word repent. 258 00:21:24,760 –> 00:21:25,839 Jesus came preaching. 259 00:21:25,839 –> 00:21:26,839 Repent. 260 00:21:26,839 –> 00:21:30,219 That’s how important it is. 261 00:21:30,219 –> 00:21:35,140 But do you remember the reason that Jesus gave for repentance? 262 00:21:35,140 –> 00:21:38,920 Repent, He said. 263 00:21:39,140 –> 00:21:44,479 For the kingdom of heaven is at hand. 264 00:21:44,479 –> 00:21:51,640 You see, the first thing that Jesus emphasized in His ministry was not condemnation for the 265 00:21:51,640 –> 00:21:58,640 past, but the possibility of happiness in the presence of God. 266 00:21:58,640 –> 00:22:06,880 He didn’t come saying repent so that you will avoid something terrible. 267 00:22:06,880 –> 00:22:14,359 He came and He said repent so that you may participate in something wonderful. 268 00:22:14,359 –> 00:22:18,219 The call of the gospel of Christ is always positive. 269 00:22:18,219 –> 00:22:24,000 He didn’t come to those first disciples and say follow me and I’ll save you from condemnation, 270 00:22:24,000 –> 00:22:25,959 though He could have said that. 271 00:22:25,959 –> 00:22:28,579 It’s wonderfully true. 272 00:22:28,579 –> 00:22:37,020 But what He did say to them was this, follow me and I will make something of your life, 273 00:22:37,020 –> 00:22:41,500 I will make you fishers of men. 274 00:22:41,500 –> 00:22:47,439 And you sense as David begins to turn towards the future in the mercy of God that he’s already 275 00:22:47,439 –> 00:22:49,459 apprehending that God can use him. 276 00:22:49,459 –> 00:22:55,520 Do you see it there in verse 13, the product of repentance, then He says, I will teach 277 00:22:55,920 –> 00:23:01,839 transgressors your ways and sinners will turn back to you. 278 00:23:01,839 –> 00:23:08,660 Repentance is a movement towards God because we have grasped what He can do in us, and 279 00:23:08,660 –> 00:23:12,839 what He can do with us. 280 00:23:12,839 –> 00:23:18,180 I’ve enjoyed reading a great book on the subject of repentance by William Chamberlain, and 281 00:23:18,180 –> 00:23:22,739 in that he talks about the philosopher Soren Kierkegaard. 282 00:23:22,859 –> 00:23:28,780 Kierkegaard was a man who took the sins of his youth so seriously that he regarded it 283 00:23:28,780 –> 00:23:37,400 as his duty, he says, to spend the rest of his life mourning over the sins of his youth. 284 00:23:37,400 –> 00:23:39,339 And Chamberlain has this brilliant comment. 285 00:23:39,339 –> 00:23:48,579 He says, Kierkegaard never realized that when God has removed our sins as far as the east 286 00:23:49,060 –> 00:23:57,000 is from the west, they should cease to be the primary occupation of our life. 287 00:23:57,000 –> 00:24:07,420 It’s never the purpose of God that you spend the rest of your time looking back in regret. 288 00:24:07,420 –> 00:24:12,540 No repentance turns a man or woman around. 289 00:24:12,540 –> 00:24:18,380 And in the grace of God, he says to us, look what you can participate in. 290 00:24:18,380 –> 00:24:21,300 Look what I can do with you. 291 00:24:21,300 –> 00:24:24,420 Is there someone who’s got stuck just at this point this morning? 292 00:24:24,420 –> 00:24:29,420 You’re conscious of your sin, and it’s a good thing that you’ve taken it seriously. 293 00:24:29,420 –> 00:24:33,420 But you’ve never moved beyond that. 294 00:24:33,420 –> 00:24:36,000 You go over and over and over it again. 295 00:24:36,000 –> 00:24:40,719 Rather like one of these old gramophone records where the needle got stuck in one groove and 296 00:24:40,719 –> 00:24:44,420 you just get the same three bars of music and it goes round and round and round until 297 00:24:44,420 –> 00:24:46,900 it drives you absolutely crazy. 298 00:24:46,900 –> 00:24:53,119 Oh it’s regret that leaves a person looking backwards. 299 00:24:53,119 –> 00:24:57,619 Repentance releases us to move forwards. 300 00:24:57,619 –> 00:24:59,859 That is why it is such a wonderful thing. 301 00:24:59,859 –> 00:25:01,760 It is always positive. 302 00:25:01,760 –> 00:25:07,640 Restore to me the joy of my salvation. 303 00:25:07,640 –> 00:25:13,140 If you were to write a piece of music that was expressive of repentance, what key would 304 00:25:13,140 –> 00:25:15,800 you choose? 305 00:25:15,800 –> 00:25:20,719 You’d probably begin by writing some music in the minor key. 306 00:25:20,719 –> 00:25:24,599 If you’ve really understood this doctrine of repentance we’ve been trying to explore 307 00:25:24,599 –> 00:25:33,660 together, you would have to end your piece of composition in the major key with a thundering 308 00:25:33,660 –> 00:25:40,359 and resounding triumphant note of praise. 309 00:25:40,359 –> 00:25:47,359 Paul looked at his heart and at his own failings and he said, Oh, wretched man that I am, who 310 00:25:47,359 –> 00:25:50,020 shall deliver me from this body of death”. 311 00:25:50,020 –> 00:25:54,079 Well, that’s pretty minor key stuff, isn’t it? 312 00:25:54,079 –> 00:26:02,560 But then he goes on straightaway to say, Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord. 313 00:26:02,560 –> 00:26:06,979 You can’t play that in the minor key. 314 00:26:06,979 –> 00:26:12,540 Repentance is always turning to God and it is always positive. 315 00:26:12,540 –> 00:26:15,540 Becomes a matter of joy. 316 00:26:15,540 –> 00:26:19,979 And finally this, true repentance is always sustained. 317 00:26:19,979 –> 00:26:22,640 Do you see that in verse 12? 318 00:26:22,640 –> 00:26:26,739 Grace me, David prays, a willing spirit? 319 00:26:26,739 –> 00:26:27,739 Why? 320 00:26:27,739 –> 00:26:32,060 To sustain me, to sustain me. 321 00:26:32,060 –> 00:26:35,119 Here’s a question. 322 00:26:35,280 –> 00:26:41,300 Do you tend to think of repentance more like the extraction of a tooth or the raising of 323 00:26:41,300 –> 00:26:43,300 the Titanic? 324 00:26:43,300 –> 00:26:47,520 You say, frankly, I’ve never thought of repentance as like either of these two things. 325 00:26:47,520 –> 00:26:50,900 Well think about it with me for a moment. 326 00:26:50,900 –> 00:26:53,800 There is a sense in which both pictures are helpful. 327 00:26:53,800 –> 00:26:58,739 Suppose you have a rotten tooth and you go to the dentist and he says, oh there’s a problem 328 00:26:58,739 –> 00:26:59,739 with this. 329 00:26:59,739 –> 00:27:02,280 If that one’s left in there’s going to be nothing but trouble there’s only one answer 330 00:27:02,280 –> 00:27:03,280 for it. 331 00:27:03,280 –> 00:27:04,280 Take it out. 332 00:27:04,439 –> 00:27:06,119 And he takes out your tooth. 333 00:27:06,119 –> 00:27:09,560 Now the Bible speaks of repentance like that. 334 00:27:09,560 –> 00:27:16,099 There must be a decisive break with what is rotten in our lives which is what John means 335 00:27:16,099 –> 00:27:20,020 in his letter when he says, no one who is born of God continues in sin. 336 00:27:20,020 –> 00:27:23,020 You don’t just leave what’s corrupting you there. 337 00:27:23,020 –> 00:27:26,680 No, there must be a decisive break. 338 00:27:26,680 –> 00:27:32,140 Paul writes to the Corinthians and he says in 1 Corinthians 6 the wicked will not inherit 339 00:27:32,140 –> 00:27:33,300 the kingdom of God. 340 00:27:33,560 –> 00:27:37,339 And then he lists acts of wickedness. 341 00:27:37,339 –> 00:27:42,880 He talks about the sexually immoral idolaters, male prostitutes, homosexual offenders, thieves, 342 00:27:42,880 –> 00:27:45,520 greedy, drunkard, slanderers, swindlers. 343 00:27:45,520 –> 00:27:47,540 He said they won’t inherit the kingdom of God. 344 00:27:47,540 –> 00:27:48,540 And then he says. 345 00:27:48,540 –> 00:27:54,660 Imagine saying this to a Christian congregation, he says, and that’s what some of you were. 346 00:27:54,660 –> 00:28:00,400 In this congregation in Corinth Paul is saying, as I read out that wretched list of behavior, 347 00:28:00,400 –> 00:28:03,680 there was someone in the congregation who could stand up and say that’s what I used 348 00:28:03,680 –> 00:28:04,680 to be. 349 00:28:04,680 –> 00:28:08,400 But it’s not what you are now says Paul, because you were washed. 350 00:28:08,400 –> 00:28:09,800 You were sanctified. 351 00:28:09,800 –> 00:28:14,459 There’s been a decisive break, and the wonderful story of the church is the change of behavior 352 00:28:14,459 –> 00:28:20,280 that has been seen in so many lives. 353 00:28:20,339 –> 00:28:31,719 But there is also a sense in which this business of repentance is like raising the Titanic. 354 00:28:31,719 –> 00:28:38,319 That process, if it were ever done, raising and then restoring that great ship to its 355 00:28:38,319 –> 00:28:47,359 original glory, would cost a fortune and it would take a lifetime. 356 00:28:47,359 –> 00:28:53,319 The process of restoring the image of God in the lives of fallen sinners costs more 357 00:28:53,319 –> 00:28:54,760 than a fortune. 358 00:28:54,760 –> 00:29:03,040 It costs the blood of Christ and it takes every day of a lifetime. 359 00:29:03,040 –> 00:29:09,680 The work of God in you will not be complete this side of heaven. 360 00:29:09,680 –> 00:29:13,520 So that when Paul wrote to the Christians in Galatia, he didn’t say it’s a wonderful 361 00:29:14,520 –> 00:29:18,400 all been converted, and so the same thing’s sorted out in your life. 362 00:29:18,400 –> 00:29:27,400 No, he said, I’m in the pains of travail, he said until Christ be formed in you. 363 00:29:27,400 –> 00:29:33,800 Most of us have heard of Martin Luther’s Ninety-Five Thesis that were nailed to the church door 364 00:29:33,800 –> 00:29:38,599 in Whittenberg, sparked off the Reformation. 365 00:29:38,680 –> 00:29:44,880 And did you know what the first of the Ninety-Five Thesis says? 366 00:29:44,880 –> 00:29:54,880 When our Lord Jesus Christ said repent, he willed that the whole life of believers should 367 00:29:54,880 –> 00:29:58,459 be repentance. 368 00:29:58,459 –> 00:30:05,680 And the reason Luther said that was that he understood the diagnosis. 369 00:30:05,680 –> 00:30:10,619 He realized that sin was not like barnacles on the outside of the ship, you know, an external 370 00:30:10,619 –> 00:30:13,160 thing that’s fairly easily scraped off. 371 00:30:13,160 –> 00:30:20,339 No, he understood it goes to the very wellsprings of our behavior and that it takes a lifetime 372 00:30:20,339 –> 00:30:24,140 for the image of God to be restored in a believing man or a woman. 373 00:30:24,140 –> 00:30:30,540 So if you have imagined that repentance is something that happens when you first come 374 00:30:30,660 –> 00:30:36,040 to Christ and then perhaps only occasionally when you go badly wrong through the rest of 375 00:30:36,040 –> 00:30:42,640 your Christian life, you have not really understood the Bible’s teaching on the subject. 376 00:30:42,640 –> 00:30:49,920 See how David puts it, grant me a willing spirit to sustain me. 377 00:30:49,920 –> 00:30:57,119 Lord, I do not want this repentance to be a passing phase in my life. 378 00:30:57,119 –> 00:31:04,300 So that after the pain of these moments has receded, I just slip back into my usual complacency. 379 00:31:04,300 –> 00:31:13,079 I want this joyful turning to You, oh God, to be this sustained pattern of my life. 380 00:31:13,079 –> 00:31:18,599 Dr. Jim Packer has a quite brilliant definition of repentance and if any of you are writing 381 00:31:18,599 –> 00:31:22,180 notes this is the best bit to write down. 382 00:31:22,180 –> 00:31:26,619 Helped me so much when I discovered it some years ago and it stayed with me ever since. 383 00:31:26,619 –> 00:31:37,359 Packer says, repentance is turning from as much as you know of sin with as much as you 384 00:31:37,359 –> 00:31:44,939 know of yourself to as much as you know of God. 385 00:31:44,939 –> 00:31:53,660 Repentance is turning from as much as you know of sin with as much as you know of yourself 386 00:31:53,660 –> 00:31:56,780 two as much as you know of God. 387 00:31:56,780 –> 00:32:01,359 And of course his point is this, that as you get to know more of what sin is, more of who 388 00:32:01,359 –> 00:32:07,420 you are and more of who God is, your repentance goes on getting deeper throughout the entire 389 00:32:07,420 –> 00:32:11,380 course of your christian life. 390 00:32:11,380 –> 00:32:15,780 See when you were a child, you knew what sin was, at least you thought you did. 391 00:32:15,780 –> 00:32:20,219 Stealing pencils biting your sister’s ear. 392 00:32:20,339 –> 00:32:24,900 But when you get into adult life, you understand more about sin. 393 00:32:24,900 –> 00:32:31,319 You begin to see the subtlety of pride, the creeping power of greed. 394 00:32:31,319 –> 00:32:37,739 And as we discover more of what sin is, our repentance becomes deeper. 395 00:32:37,739 –> 00:32:41,319 Have you ever been sound asleep on a dark morning? 396 00:32:41,319 –> 00:32:44,920 I mean really, right out. 397 00:32:44,920 –> 00:32:49,239 And some thoughtless person comes into the bedroom and sticks all the lights on full 398 00:32:49,280 –> 00:32:53,619 power, and you kind of screw up your eyes, and oh, put the lights off, turn them down 399 00:32:53,619 –> 00:32:56,180 a bit. 400 00:32:56,180 –> 00:32:59,219 Because you can only take so much light when you’ve been in darkness. 401 00:32:59,219 –> 00:33:07,619 You know, if God were to show you or me all of our sins in its full extent at one time, 402 00:33:07,619 –> 00:33:09,060 we would be completely blown away. 403 00:33:09,060 –> 00:33:11,739 We wouldn’t be able to bear it. 404 00:33:11,739 –> 00:33:16,500 So what God does when he brings the light into our lives is he exposes things gradually. 405 00:33:16,500 –> 00:33:18,319 It’s like a torch. 406 00:33:18,359 –> 00:33:20,500 As he begins to shine it into different corners. 407 00:33:20,500 –> 00:33:25,640 Ten years down the Christian path, I see something in my life that I didn’t really see before, 408 00:33:25,640 –> 00:33:30,939 but now I know it needs to be changed. 409 00:33:30,939 –> 00:33:33,140 God is turning up the light. 410 00:33:33,160 –> 00:33:36,420 That’s why sometimes a young Christian thinks, you know, I’ve come to Christ, I seem to be 411 00:33:36,439 –> 00:33:37,439 getting worse. 412 00:33:37,439 –> 00:33:41,140 No, you’re not getting worse, your conscience is becoming more sensitive, and that’s how 413 00:33:41,140 –> 00:33:44,400 it should be. 414 00:33:44,400 –> 00:33:46,680 And you turn with as much as you know of yourself. 415 00:33:47,000 –> 00:33:51,140 You come to Christ and you say, oh, this is straightforward, I’m committed to Christ! 416 00:33:51,140 –> 00:33:56,020 And then the Lord begins to say, hey you’ve got a mind, I want you to start thinking about 417 00:33:56,020 –> 00:34:00,459 what it will mean to be a Christian in your sphere of work. 418 00:34:00,459 –> 00:34:05,619 You’ve got a heart, I want you to learn to worship, not just to sit in the pews. 419 00:34:05,619 –> 00:34:10,419 You have resources, I want you to learn to give for the cause of my kingdom. 420 00:34:10,419 –> 00:34:14,820 You have a home, I want you to develop ministry for the people who are lonely. 421 00:34:15,020 –> 00:34:20,500 Then God begins to show us what it means to give our whole selves more and more to him. 422 00:34:20,500 –> 00:34:27,260 And the more I come to know God, te more I see how much he hates sin, the more I see 423 00:34:27,260 –> 00:34:32,620 that this was why Christ went to the cross. 424 00:34:32,620 –> 00:34:37,780 We’ve ended each of these messages with a simple question. 425 00:34:37,780 –> 00:34:42,340 The first was are you interested in Diagnosis? 426 00:34:42,419 –> 00:34:48,080 Some people don’t want to know their real problem but that is the height of folly. 427 00:34:48,080 –> 00:34:51,280 Then we asked last week are you ready for the prescription? 428 00:34:51,280 –> 00:34:57,879 Do you want to place yourself wholly in the hands of this great Physician? 429 00:34:57,879 –> 00:35:02,659 This morning I asked this question, are you showing the signs of recovery? 430 00:35:02,659 –> 00:35:11,760 A joyful, sustained turning to God. 431 00:35:11,760 –> 00:35:16,159 Last time I was at Heathrow Airport it was a disastrous mess, they are rebuilding the 432 00:35:16,159 –> 00:35:17,919 terminals. 433 00:35:17,919 –> 00:35:23,919 And rather than coming to the usual area for d-plaining we were taken to a large waiting 434 00:35:23,919 –> 00:35:28,159 area on the tarmac, came out, were ushered on to a bus that went round what seemed to 435 00:35:28,159 –> 00:35:33,600 be like a rabbit warn of back roads and streets and service alleys, eventually we were tipped 436 00:35:33,600 –> 00:35:39,080 out it seemed at the bottom off an emergency exit door through the steel door up some stairs 437 00:35:39,080 –> 00:35:40,699 that seemed some stairs that seemed to go nowhere. 438 00:35:40,699 –> 00:35:44,939 The corridors that were lined with hanging sheets of plastic, no ceiling on the top, 439 00:35:44,939 –> 00:35:50,020 it went on and on and on it seemed like endless confusion and very frustrating. 440 00:35:50,020 –> 00:36:02,379 But behind all of that apparent chaos there was the master plan of an architect who while 441 00:36:03,280 –> 00:36:12,479 was going on in the terminal, was pulling down an old construction that needed to go 442 00:36:12,479 –> 00:36:20,820 and at the same time putting up a new construction that when it’s finished will be magnificent. 443 00:36:20,820 –> 00:36:23,979 That is what God does in our lives. 444 00:36:23,979 –> 00:36:35,139 In the process of life going on, He is taking down the old and He is building the new and 445 00:36:35,139 –> 00:36:40,820 it will be complete on the day when He receives us into glory. 446 00:36:40,820 –> 00:36:42,219 That’s repentance. 447 00:36:42,219 –> 00:36:43,879 Sometimes hard. 448 00:36:43,879 –> 00:36:46,219 Sometimes frustrating. 449 00:36:46,219 –> 00:36:51,860 Sometimes it is as you were saying, why does it have to be so difficult? 450 00:36:52,260 –> 00:37:02,899 But when God has finished His work, you will be so glad he began and rather than some dull 451 00:37:02,899 –> 00:37:12,239 doctrine to be avoided, you will think of repentance as His greatest good gift in your 452 00:37:12,239 –> 00:37:14,620 life. 453 00:37:14,620 –> 00:37:16,659 Finish then your new creation. 454 00:37:16,659 –> 00:37:19,580 Pure and spotless, let us be. 455 00:37:19,580 –> 00:37:26,179 Let us see Your great salvation perfectly restored in Thee, changed from glory into 456 00:37:26,179 –> 00:37:34,800 glory, till in heaven we take our place, till we cast our crowns before Thee, lost in wonder 457 00:37:34,800 –> 00:37:39,879 and love and praise. 458 00:37:39,879 –> 00:37:43,500 You’ve been listening to a sermon with Pastor Colin Smith of Open the Bible. 459 00:37:43,500 –> 00:37:51,939 To contact us, call us at 1-877-Open-365, or visit our website, openthebible.org.

Details

Sermon Series
Date
Primary Audience

Monthly Offer

Get a FREE copy of ‘The Incomparable Christ’ by John Stott, when you set up a direct debit of at least £5, or give a one-off gift of at least £60…

Donate

Colin Smith

Trustee / Founder and Teaching Pastor

Colin Smith is the Senior Pastor of The Orchard Evangelical Free Church in the northwest suburbs of Chicago. He has authored a number of books, including Heaven, How I Got Here and Heaven, So Near – So Far. Colin is the Founder and Teaching Pastor for Open the Bible. Follow him on X formerly Twitter.

Linked resources

No linked resources found.

New! Graphic Novel

A man of crime. A ruthless empire. A fellow prisoner. A promise of Paradise. 

Discover the story of the thief on the cross, and his life-changing encounter with Jesus, in this brand new full colour graphic novel version of Colin S Smith’s Heaven, How I Got Here: The Story of the Thief on the Cross.

Search

Search

Header Submit Search