Lent: Repentance
and Penitence
Repentance is
about reviewing one's actions and feeling sad regret for our wrongs of the
past!
It involves a
commitment to change our lives and correct our mistakes, resolving to live a
more disciplined and obedient life that honours God and his authority over us.
It includes an
admission of guilt, a promise not to repeat these sins and an attempt to make
restitution for the consequences of what we did wrong, or in some or other way
reverse the harmful effects of our sins.
Penitence
emphasizes the regret for one's wrongdoing. Everyone makes mistakes, but not
everyone feels bad (or sad) about it afterward, and if you have regretted
something you did, that sorrowful feeling was penitence.
The word
Penitence shares the same root as the verb repent, which means “to express
regret.” It is also connected to the word penitentiary, another word for prison
and has a strong association with the expectation to be judged, found guilty
and to be condemned.
Sometimes
penitence is so painful you might think you deserve to be in prison or you feel
that you are imprisoned by shame and remorse.
Romans 8: 1 – 4
address our fear of condemnation.
“Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who
are in Christ Jesus, because through
Christ Jesus... the Spirit who gives
life, has set you free from the bondage
of sin and death.”
Those who are “in Christ Jesus” are released from the prison of guilt and the
judgment of God. Those who are “in Christ”
are “out of prison and condemnation”!
During
Lent we are set free of blame and receive forgiveness when God responds to our
repentance, our penitence, with mercy, grace, forgiveness and the restoration
of our lives through the work of the Holy Spirit.
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