{"id":8855,"date":"2024-03-23T00:25:11","date_gmt":"2024-03-22T23:25:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.believerspray.com\/?p=8855"},"modified":"2024-03-23T00:25:11","modified_gmt":"2024-03-22T23:25:11","slug":"how-do-you-repent-in-christianity","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.believerspray.com\/how-do-you-repent-in-christianity\/","title":{"rendered":"How Do You Repent In Christianity"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Repentance is essential in Christianity, but it’s a concept often misunderstood. It’s not just feeling sorry or paying your dues. Although repentance has a deep spiritual component, it’s such a vital element of a Christian’s life, and it’s so key to understanding the Bible, that understanding repentance is essential to comprehending Christianity.<\/p>\n

Simply put, repentance means “to turn” or “to turn away” from the life of sin, the life without a relationship with Jesus. Repentance is a crucial part of Christianity’s message of hope and rescue, because it joins belief to behavior, faith to works, words to acceptance of the sacrifice made in order for us to freely receive salvation. <\/p>\n

The Bible talks about repentance a great deal. In the old Testament, the word ‘Teshuvah’ in Hebrew is often used and translated to ‘repentance’ in English (of which there are many variations). The New Testament speaks of repentance and bearing fruit that lasts, mostly in the Gospels, which capture Jesus’ teaching about reversal and transformation.<\/p>\n

Repentance is seen in the telling of the parables, where sinners ‘go away different’, and it’s seen in the way Jesus questions and challenges us. It’s also seen in the many conversions and stories of redemption. In Christian Scripture, we’re told to repent “of our sins, and turn to God, so that our sins may be wiped away” (Acts 3:19).<\/p>\n