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HOW REPENTANCE IS
GIVEN
by Charles Spurgeon
O RETURN to the grand text:
"Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour, for
to give
repentance to Israel, and forgiveness of sins." Our Lord Jesus Christ has
gone up that grace may come down. His glory is employed to give greater
currency to His grace. The Lord has not taken a step upward except with the
design of bearing believing sinners upward with Him. He is exalted to give
repentance; and this we shall see if we remember a few great truths.
The work which our Lord Jesus has done has made
repentance possible, available, and acceptable. The law makes no mention of
repentance, but says plainly, "The soul that sinneth, it shall die." If the
Lord Jesus had not died and risen again and gone unto the Father, what would
your repenting or mine be worth? We might feel remorse with its horrors, but
never repentance with its hopes. Repentance, as a natural feeling, is a
common duty deserving no great praise: indeed, it is so generally mingled
with a selfish fear of punishment, that the kindliest estimate makes but
little of it. Had not Jesus interposed and wrought out a wealth of merit,
our tears of repentance would have been so much water spilled upon the
ground. Jesus is exalted on high, that through the virtue of His
intercession repentance may have a place before God. In this respect He
gives us repentance, because He puts repentance into a position of
acceptance, which otherwise it could never have occupied.
When Jesus was exalted on high, the Spirit of God
was poured out to work in us all needful graces. The Holy Ghost creates
repentance in us by supernaturally renewing our nature, and taking away the
heart of stone out of our flesh. Oh, sit not down straining those eyes of
yours to fetch out impossible tears! Repentance comes not from unwilling
nature, but from free and sovereign grace. Get not to your chamber to smite
your breast in order to fetch from a heart of stone feelings which are not
there. But go to Calvary and see how Jesus died. Look upward to the hills
whence comes your help...
Remember, too, that when our Lord Jesus was exalted,
He not only gave us repentance by sending forth the Holy Spirit, but by
consecrating all the works of nature and of providence to the great ends of
our salvation, so that any one of them may call us to repentance, whether it
crow like Peter's cock, or shake the prison like the jailer's earthquake.
From the right hand of God our Lord Jesus rules all things here below, and
makes them work together for the salvation of His redeemed. He uses both
bitters and sweets, trials and joys, that He may produce in sinners a better
mind toward their God. Be thankful for the providence which has made you
poor, or sick, or sad ; for by all this Jesus works the life of your spirit
and turns you to Himself. The Lord's mercy often rides to the door of our
hearts on the black horse of affliction. Jesus uses the whole range of our
experience to wean us from earth and woo us to Heaven. Christ is exalted to
the throne of Heaven and earth in order that, by all the processes of His
providence, He may subdue hard hearts unto the gracious softening of
repentance.
Besides, He is at work at this hour by all His
whispers in the conscience, by His inspired Book, by those of us who speak
out of that Book, and by praying friends and earnest hearts. He can send a
word to you which shall strike your rocky heart as with the rod of Moses,
and cause streams of repentance to flow forth. He can bring to your mind
some heart-breaking text out of Holy Scripture which shall conquer you right
speedily. He can mysteriously soften you, and cause a holy frame of mind to
steal over you when you least look for it. Be sure of this, that He who is
gone into His glory, raised into all the splendor and majesty of God, has
abundant ways of working repentance in those to whom He grants forgiveness.
He is even now waiting to give repentance to you. Ask Him for it at once.
Observe with much comfort that the Lord Jesus Christ
gives this repentance to the most unlikely people in the world. He is
exalted to give repentance to Israel. To Israel! In the days when the
apostles thus spoke, Israel was the nation which had most grossly sinned
against light and love, by daring to say, "His blood be on us and on our
children." Yet Jesus is exalted to give them repentance! What a marvel of
grace! If you have been brought up in the brightest of Christian light, and
yet have rejected it, there is still hope. If you have sinned against
conscience, and against the Holy Spirit, and against the love of Jesus,
there is yet space for repentance. Though you may be as hard as unbelieving
Israel of old, softening may yet come to you, since Jesus is exalted, and
clothed with boundless power. For those who went the furthest in iniquity,
and sinned with special aggravation, the Lord Jesus is exalted to give to
them repentance and forgiveness of sins. Happy am I to have so full a gospel
to proclaim! Happy are you to be allowed to read it!
The hearts of the children of Israel had grown hard
as an adamant stone. Luther used to think it impossible to convert a Jew. We
are far from agreeing with him, and yet we must admit that the seed of
Israel have been exceedingly obstinate in their rejection of the Saviour
during these many centuries. Truly did the Lord say, "Israel would none of
me." "He came to his own and his own received him not." Yet on behalf of
Israel our Lord Jesus is exalted for the giving of repentance and remission.
Probably my reader is a Gentile; but yet he may have a very stubborn heart,
which has stood out against the Lord Jesus for many years; and yet in him
our Lord can work repentance. It may be that you will yet feel compelled to
write as William Hone did when he yielded to divine love. He was the author
of those most entertaining volumes called the " Everyday Book," but he was
once a stout-hearted infidel. When subdued by sovereign grace, he wrote:
The proudest heart that ever beat
Hath been subdued in me;
The wildest will that ever rose
To scorn Thy cause and aid Thy foes
Is quell'd my Lord, by Thee
Thy will, and not my will be done,
My heart be ever Thine;
Confessing Thee the mighty Word,
My Saviour Christ, my God, my Lord,
Thy cross shall be my sign.
The Lord can give repentance to the most unlikely,
turning lions into lambs, and ravens into doves. Let us look to Him that
this great change may be wrought in us. Assuredly the contemplation of the
death of Christ is one of the surest and speediest methods of gaining
repentance. Do not sit down and try to pump up repentance from the dry well
of corrupt nature. It is contrary to the laws of mind to suppose that you
can force your soul into that gracious state. Take your heart in prayer to
Him who understands it, and say, "Lord, cleanse it. Lord, renew it. Lord,
work repentance in it." The more you try to produce penitent emotions in
yourself, the more you will be disappointed; but if you believingly think of
Jesus dying for you, repentance will burst forth. Meditate on the Lord's
shedding His heart's blood out of love to you. Set before your mind's eye
the agony and bloody sweat, the cross and passion; and, as you do this, He
who was the bearer of all this grief will look at you, and with that look He
will do for you what He did for Peter, so that you also will go out and weep
bitterly. He who died for you can, by His gracious Spirit, make you die to
sin; and He who has gone into glory on your behalf can draw your soul after
Him, away from evil, and toward holiness.
I shall be content if I leave this one thought with
you; look not beneath the ice to find fire, neither hope in your own natural
heart to find repentance. Look to the Living One for life. Look to Jesus for
all you need between Hell Gate and Heaven Gate. Never seek elsewhere for any
part of that which Jesus loves to bestow; but remember,
Christ is all.
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