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Repentance
Alan Redpath

Alan Redpath (1907 - 1989). British pastor, author, and evangelist born in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. Raised in a Christian home, he trained as a chartered accountant and worked in business until a 1936 conversion at London’s Hinde Street Methodist Church led him to ministry. Studying at Chester Diocesan Theological College, he was ordained in 1939, pastoring Duke Street Baptist Church in Richmond, London, during World War II. From 1953 to 1962, he led Moody Church in Chicago, growing its influence, then returned to Charlotte Chapel, Edinburgh, until 1966. Redpath authored books like Victorious Christian Living (1955), emphasizing holiness and surrender, with thousands sold globally. A Keswick Convention speaker, he preached across North America and Asia, impacting evangelical leaders like Billy Graham. Married to Marjorie Welch in 1935, they had two daughters. His warm, practical sermons addressed modern struggles, urging believers to “rest in Christ’s victory.” Despite a stroke in 1964 limiting his later years, Redpath’s writings and recordings remain influential in Reformed and Baptist circles. His focus on spiritual renewal shaped 20th-century evangelicalism.
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Sermon Summary
In this sermon, the speaker discusses the distinguishing factor of a Christian and what sets them apart from unbelievers. He emphasizes the importance of repentance and changing one's mind about God. The speaker shares a personal story about a minister in Scotland and his talkative son. The sermon also references John the Baptist's preaching about repentance and the need to produce good fruit in one's life. The speaker concludes by mentioning the importance of generosity and helping those in need.
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I'd just like to know what I'm speaking in terms to start with, anyway. I'm sure it would take much more than a visit of one week to turn you a pastor into an Englishman. It's made a good beginning that way. I should explain that an English waffle and an American waffle are entirely different, and I much prefer the American waffle. I hope that's what we're having tonight. An English waffle is simply a visit. When you visit with people, you waffle with them. And I'm thankful that an American waffle is something you eat. Something which I've fallen for in a big way. Now let's read the word together. A portion, I think, in Luke chapter 3, which would clear an acre of ground, as it were, for us. Luke chapter 3. I'm going to read tonight in the paraphrase of the English, the Living Bible. Always must remember when you read from the English, from the Living Bible, you're reading a paraphrase and not a translation. There's a big difference. If you want to know what it is, ask your pastor. But this I like to use from time to time. And to avoid these long words, we'll begin with verse 3. Then John went from place to place on both sides of the Jordan River, preaching that people should be baptized to show that they had turned to God and away from their sins in order to be forgiven. In the words of Isaiah the prophet, John was a voice shouting from the barren wilderness. Prepare a road for the Lord to travel in. Widen the pathway before him. Level the mountains. Fill up the valleys. Straighten the curves. Smooth out the roads. And then all mankind shall see the Savior sent from God. Here's a sample of John's preaching to the crowd that came for baptism. You brood of snakes. You're trying to escape hell without truly turning to God. That is why you want to be baptized. First, go and prove by the way you live that you really have repented. And don't think you're safe because you're descendants of Abraham. That isn't enough. God can produce children of Abraham from these dead stones. The axe of his judgment is poised over you, ready to sever your roots and cut you down. Yes, every tree that does not produce good fruit will be chopped down and thrown into the fire. The crowd replied, what do you want us to do? If you have two coats, he replied, give one to the poor. If you have extra food, give it away to those who are hungry. Even tax collectors, notorious for their corruption, came to be baptized and asked, how shall we prove to you that we have abandoned our sins? By your honesty, he replied. Make sure you collect no more taxes than the Roman government requires you to. And us, ask some soldiers, what about us? He and John replied, don't extort money by threats and violence. Don't accuse anyone of what you know he didn't do. And be content with your pay. Everyone was expecting the Messiah to come soon, and eager to know whether or not John was he. This was the question of the hour, and was being discussed everywhere. Jesus answered the question by saying, I baptize only with water. But someone is coming soon, who has far higher authority than mine. In fact, I am not even worthy of being his slave. He will baptize you with fire, with the Holy Spirit. He will separate chaff from grain, and burn up the chaff with eternal fire, and store away the grain. He used many such warnings as he announced the good news to the people. Now just a word of prayer together. Would you echo in your heart the prayer which I offer on your behalf and on my own? Speak, Lord, for thy servant heareth. Speak just now. Some message to meet my need, which thou only shouldst know. Speak now through thy holy word, and make me see some wonderful truth thou hast to show to me. For Jesus' sake, Amen. Would you just for a minute allow me a moment of recapitulation concerning this morning. We were talking together about how a Christian gives himself away. By his reactions, based on the fact that he's living a supernatural life in the power of the indwelling spirit of God. I want this evening to say a few words to you about what lies at the root of that experience, and what is the explanation for it. What do you think is the most distinguishing factor about a Christian? What is it that makes the difference between him and an unbeliever? What is it that is absolutely at the root of the Christian experience of every one of us, if we're genuine, here tonight? The theological word is the word repentance. Repentance. A Christian is a broken man. A repentant man. Acts 17 and verse 30, taken from the sermon of the apostle Paul at Athens, says, The times of ignorance God overlooked. But now he commands all men everywhere to repent. Because he has fixed a day on which he will judge the world in righteousness by a man whom he appointed. And of this he has given assurance to all men by raising him from the dead. God commands all men everywhere now to repent. Now this city, in these days of this particular year, indeed this country, is embarking upon this tremendous key project. A wonderful thing to do, but unless it has this word of repentance right at the heart of it. It means nothing. Over and over again for generations, this and other countries have engaged in mass evangelism. And the country has been left practically the same after it was all over. You can never win a city to Christ by mass evangelism. Now please, please don't get a postcard out and write a letter to Billy Graham and saying I was having a crack at it. That wouldn't be true. I happen to be, I trust, a good friend of his. He certainly isn't mine. And I pray for him regularly and thank the Lord for his ministry. But in 1962 we had a Billy Graham crusade in Chicago. Quite tremendous it was. The vice chairman of the committee planning that crusade. A thing for which I got raked over the coals. I just rolled up my sleeves and went to it. I'll do it again if ever I had the opportunity. And at the end of that crusade we had about, I think it was 48 referrals to us at Moody Church. We were all thrilled and many, many ministers could have said exactly the same. I think there were about 8,000 who professed conversion. That was quite tremendous. But you know, supposing, supposing every member of Moody Church had led one individual to Christ in that one whole year. How many people do you think we'd have added? 2,600. The difference you see is that you'll never, never do it. If the church was doing its job, I'd be out at work. But how does the church do its job? I mean, is it by a program? It may be to some extent necessary. Or is it by some strange, strange motivation that comes to a life of a Christian who has really, really repented? I believe, I believe that evangelism is based on this word repentance. A word which we really haven't understood in our own experience. As a matter of fact, this word has become to mean to me as a Christian, the most wonderful word in New Testament teaching. So may I just take one moment to be quite sure that you don't think I'm sort of, I'm, just have a line on this. Let me take a moment to show you the tremendous prominence this word takes in the New Testament. I was amazed as I really made a study of this to find that this is the prominent word. For instance, in Matthew's Gospel at the third chapter in the second verse, you have the similar account to that which I have just read of the opening of the ministry of John the Baptist. Incidentally, this is in brackets. There are many things in the Bible I don't understand. I used to think I knew all the answers, but now I don't. Lots of things I don't understand. So what I've done with them is, I've put them down in a little book. And I'm taking that book up to heaven with me, in order that I might really get the answers. As a matter of fact, probably on the way up I shall lose it. In any case, I suppose I'll know the answers when I get there. But listen, do you know, do you know the answer to this one? Why did Jesus allow John the Baptist to be the head? What an amazing disciple he would have been. Tremendous. After all, our Lord saved Peter from the same fate. He could easily have saved John the Baptist, but he didn't choose to. But you see, when I don't understand anything in the Bible, I don't make it the basis of unbelief. But I make it the basis of worship. For if I understood all the answers, I'd be God. So I just don't understand. This man, who was to be the one who would usher in the ministry of the Lord Jesus Christ, began his ministry by saying, repent ye for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. Matthew 3 and verse 2. And then our Lord himself, after 30 years of preparation, for 3 years of ministry, and again in brackets, just a moment, we've reversed all that. We have 3 years of preparation for 30 years and more of ministry. After 30 years of preparation, our Lord comes from the privacy of Nazareth, out to the Jordan. And there, heaven opens upon him, and a voice speaks which says, this is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. The Father's approval of the life of his dear Son for all those years. And then, as Mark tells us, he was driven by the Spirit into the wilderness. For a face-to-face combat, when God's perfect man encountered the greatest rebel in the universe. And Jesus came out from that encounter unscathed and began to preach. As I think of that, I want to curl up. I've finished preaching almost, with ever having known an encounter like that. But Jesus, after an encounter with Satan, came in the authority and power of the Spirit, and said, repent ye, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. Matthew 4 and verse 17. And this then became the first word of the gospel. And then after he had risen from the dead, he got around him a little group of people who had committed their lives to him. 12 of them, 11. By the way, that should silence, should silence forever, the idea that the success of a ministry depends on results. If that was true, he was a hopeless failure. 12 convicts, one of them a traitor. And gathering them around him, he says in Luke chapter 24 and verse 46. Thus it behoved the Son of Man to suffer, to be killed, to rise from the dead, and that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all nations. Then, Peter, on that day of Pentecost, the man who must have thought that his ministry was finished, yet the chosen spokesman of heaven for the most strategic sermon ever preached in history, stood up and preached the word with such power, that the congregation said to him, men and brethren, what shall we do? I wish that people said that today more than they do after our sermon, it's not their fault, it's ours. The same authority was in our pulpit, the same conviction would be in the congregation. But with tremendous sense of conviction, the crowd said, oh, what shall we do? And Peter's answer immediately was, repent and be baptized, every one of you, for the remission of sins. And then Paul takes up the same theme. And in Acts 26, giving his testimony before King Agrippa about his conversion, he says, wherefore, King Agrippa, I was not disobedient to the heavenly vision, but proclaimed to all in Damascus, Jerusalem, Judea, Jews, and Gentiles, that they should repent and turn to God, and bring forth fruit, meat for repentance. And you remember, to crown it all, in the seven letters to the churches in Asia Minor, to five of them, the Lord said, repent or else. This then, I suggest to you, is the dominant word in New Testament experience. And yet, it's the neglected chord in the evangelical symphony today. Today, and for a generation, it's been, believe, believe, believe, believe. And heaven comes thundering back at us and says, no, repent, repent, repent. For faith in Christ, which is not based upon repentance and followed by obedience, is invalid. Absolutely invalid and meaningless. I hope, therefore, I've said enough to establish the fact that this is not a clear idea that I've got hold of. But this is the main emphasis of New Testament teaching. Change your mind, change your actions, repent. Now then, let's just take a minute to ask ourselves what this word means. What does it mean? I think maybe, maybe I could describe what it means by telling you what it doesn't mean. For instance, it doesn't mean doing penance, as with the greatest respect and love in the Roman Catholic view. When the Greek word for repentance was translated into Latin, it became the word penitentia. And that word has two shades of meaning. The one meaning repentance as we know it, and I'll describe it to you in a moment. The other meaning doing penance. And consequently, through history, we have this word which led to absolution, confession, doing penance, and the priesthood. But you know, the New Testament won't stand for that. Because the Lord Jesus Christ at Calvary did a perfect work to which we can add nothing for the salvation and forgiveness of our sins. Have you ever allowed yourselves to be absolutely thrilled by the language of Hebrews chapter 10 and verses 12 to 14? You can look them up if you wish, but I'll give you what they say. Every priest, daily, oftentimes, sacrifices, offering sacrifices, the same sacrifices which can never take away sin. Every priest, standard, daily, offering, oftentimes, the same sacrifices which can never take away sin. That's the most monotonous version of the Bible. But this man, when he had offered one sacrifice for sin forever, sat down at the right hand of God. That's how thrilling it was. See, in the tabernacle, there was all sorts of bits of furniture. There was a table, there was a lamp stand, there was an altar, but there wasn't any chair. Poor fellow, he could never sit down. At it, day and night, constantly on duty, daily ministering, oftentimes, the same sacrifice which could never take away sin, and never finished. But this man, when he had offered one sacrifice for sin forever, sat down on the right hand of God. Jesus, our Lord. So repentance does not mean doing penance. And repentance does not mean remorse, at least only in part. Remorse means that I'm sorry for the consequences I've done, of sin I've done. Not for sin itself. Sorry because I've lost face in the sight of other people as a result of what I've done. You see, remorse follows the breaking of the eleventh commandment. Perhaps you thought there were only ten. There aren't really, there are eleven. And the eleventh is, thou shalt not be found out. In a permissive society, everything is okay if you're not such a fool as to be caught. You have, in these days, that tremendous statement, it's alright when you have situational ethics. Everything is okay, no longer any standard of right and wrong. That's all gone now. And remorse follows the fact that you've been caught and found out and your sin has been discovered in the eyes of other people you've lost face. Your reputation has suffered. You have that in the Bible, an example of it, for instance, in 1 Samuel chapter 15 and verse 30 where Saul is talking to Samuel and says to him, I've sinned. And the next breath he says, honour me before the people. That's not repentance. I've sinned. Yes, but honour me before the people. Sorry for the consequences of what he'd done, but not sorry for the thing itself. That's not repentance. The Bible says in 2 Corinthians chapter 7, there is a godly sorrow and a sorrow of the world. There's all the difference between the two. If I'm only sorry for the consequences of what I've done and the ignominy of being found out, I just perpetuate the situation because I leave myself at the centre of the picture, understood? Strutting round in my own little kingdom. But repentance, when it hits me, gets me right out of that situation altogether. So let me say, having said what repentance is not, what it is. The word for repentance is the word metanoia. Two words really. It means a change of mind leading to a change of behaviour. Meta means after. Noia to think. Think again. Remember the Lord Jesus told us the story about the man who had two sons. And said to them, go work today in my vineyard. And one of them said, I will not. But afterward he repented and went. So repentance means a change of mind leading to a change of behaviour, change of action. Now then, what do I change my mind about? Well, when I repent, I change my mind about God, to start with. There are some strange ideas about God going around today in the theological climate. He's a sort of policeman. Someone we mustn't get too near. Someone who's snipping around to take all the kicks out of life. He's our enemy. But you know, when I find and meet God in Jesus Christ, I discover something wonderful. He's not against me, he's for me. He's on my side. When I meet him in Jesus, I change my mind about God. I have a friend who is a minister in the church in Scotland. He's a Presbyterian. And he has four children. And one weekend recently, his wife said to him, look, I'm going away for a weekend. And I can't take these kids any longer. They're just getting me down. One especially. She said, I'll take away three, but I'll leave that boy with you. I really can't cope any longer. Because he was always talking. Like turning on a tap. He'd never stop. They couldn't keep him quiet. Nothing would keep him quiet. So she said, I'll take away the three and leave the one with you. So my friend was a preacher. He said, well, all right. But I'll have to decide on some strategy in this. So he decided that he'd go to bed at 8 o'clock on a Saturday night. Together with a boy. Bring a little boy's bed in and put it in his room. And then go to bed. And get him fast asleep and get up again about 4 o'clock in the morning. And continue his preparation for the next day. Well, that boy went on talking all that Saturday. And at 8 o'clock at night, he got him to bed. Now he said, son, shut up. Not another word. For 10 minutes there was silence. Then suddenly in the darkness, having put out the light, suddenly there was a voice that said, Daddy. Oh, he's at it again. What is it, son? Daddy, is your face turned this way? Yes, son, it is. Thank you, Daddy. And not another word. The boy went sound asleep. And, my friend, if I didn't say another word to you, it would be worth coming to Tyler, Texas, to tell you that God's face is always turned your way. He's never against you. A man or a girl, fellow woman, could go to the end of a skid row, but God is still for them. He's against their sin, but he's for them. And when I realize that God in Jesus has made provision for the forgiveness of all my past through the cross of Calvary, and ensured the potential for all my future by the power of Christ indwelling my life, then everything makes sense. Nothing means anything to me about religion until I understand it. I've got hold of it. When you see it, that there at the cross, God makes provision to forgive all my past, and he makes provision to fulfill my maximum potential in the power of his Spirit in my heart every day. God is not against me. He is for me. I change my mind about God. Some years ago in Chicago, I had better be careful, I don't want to get in the hot water or skate on thin ice. But I was at a seminary, not as a student, where the program for the seminary for the year was being given to them by the president. And you know, it sent a chill down my spine. Or it was put much more ably than I could ever put it, but it boiled down to this. Achieve your maximum potential. Major in the things in which you succeeded. And, this was not the language, but this was the message. Be a big shot. Be a big shot. Just that week, I'd received a telephone call from a church in New Jersey, which were without a minister. And the chairman of the board was on the phone, and he called me and said, Pastor Redpath, we're without a pastor. Do you know anybody in the Chicago area who might come and help us? Well, I named one or two, three or four men, and I discussed with him the qualification, the degrees. He asked me all these questions, the seminaries they'd been at, etc., etc., etc. It took about three quarters of an hour. I didn't mind, it was his call. But we went on and on and on and on, and then I shall never forget how he finished. He said, thank you so much, thank you so much. That's kind of him. But he said, frankly, I'm going to stop it. You know, I said to him, Sir, are you quite sure you don't mean they're not small enough? God reduces a man to a minimum that he might do through him his maximum. That's the whole principle of evangelism, the whole principle of Christian service. And unless we realize that, we'll have our big schemes and our big projects and our big ideas. But I tell you, we'll get nowhere. Oh, we haven't learned that without me, said Jesus, I changed my mind about God. And, of course, this inevitably means I changed my mind about myself, for never been. You know, most of us think, let's be honest, most of us think we're a decent sort of people. And we're all so conceited that we put self at the center of the picture. The basic problem I find today in preaching is not telling people the truth, it's getting them to unlearn error. Things we've learned in the wrong way. The trouble is not that we don't know enough, but we've learned so much and absorbed so many ideas like blotting paper without ever sitting them out or thinking them through. The prodigal thought he was a fine fellow when he left home, but his repentance began when he came to himself. And the mental mechanism that we've all got butters us up, make us think we're great people. But it's a tremendous moment when I come to terms with God's verdict concerning what I am. You see, when sin came into the world, how did it come? It didn't come because man or woman ate of the fruit. That was sin in action. Sin came into the world when man believed the devil's lie that he could be man without God. And he went into love. But disastrous consequences ever since. I think it's Major Thomas who says that ever since that day, man, though never anything more than man, man has been strutting around as though he was never anything less than God. And when Jesus came into the world, he came, he came. Never anything less than God to live and behave as never anything more than man. Man as God intended him to be. And repentance begins, begins at the moment when I exchange my independence from God for my dependence upon him. That's repentance. In other words, I get off the throne and I put Jesus on it. No longer do I seek to live my life with self in control, but I begin to live a life in dependence upon the Lord. I wonder if we've seen the significance of this in my life. You know, you parents here, you and I. You remember the day when you held in your arms the first little child that God gave you? And you said, looking very sentimentally at your wife or your husband, isn't he or she an angel? He wasn't around more than three months before you discovered there was something other than an angel there. My word. Yes. To do wrong, you always have to teach it to do right. My daughter, my elder daughter, who wouldn't like me to tell you this, but she's a long way in Africa now, so it's all right. When she was about eight, she had a boyfriend. It was her first love affair. Very sweet. He was nine. Lived next door. Every morning they had a date. Never failed. Seven days a week, a date. At 8.30. And he used to come into our garden, jump on the garden gate, and swing on the gate. And she would be there to meet him and they'd swing on the gate together. Rather sweet, really. But this particular morning, she went out at the appointed time and he didn't appear. Never came. So he swung. He didn't arrive. That he was in for a bad time. You can always tell what a girl thinks of by looking at her back. Presently in about half an hour, this boy arrived late. Thinked it didn't matter. Just jumped on the gate beside her. And she took her elbow and gave him a terrific push and he slipped and fell right on his back and his head in the path. Now no Englishman takes that from a lady lying down. And so he got up and slapped her. I heard the crack through the window. The window, excuse me. And you know, what was my amazement, because that daughter of mine had always been one of the placid variety. You know, the type. When I saw her get hold of that boy by the scruff of the neck and shake him like a rat. And they both fell off the gate. Both fell onto the path. Well, I had to go and rescue him. Poor fellow. He was having an awful time with nails and teeth and all that a girl uses when she's really, really blowing her top. What do you think that was caused by? Just two people who were selfish. Just two people who were jealous. Just two people who didn't get on together. Just two people who thought, well, now the only answer to all of this is a stand-up fight. What do you think causes unhappy marriage? What do you think causes breakdown on home level? Just exactly the same thing. Two people who haven't learned to live together. Two people who want their own way. Very soon jealousy, envy come in. And we find ourselves overwhelmed. I changed my mind about myself. A self in me, which amazing to say, in spite of years of Christian profession and experience, hits back at me. In ordinary, nitty-gritty situations of life. Changed my mind about myself. I love the Roman, the Living Bible paraphrase of Romans 7, 18. Here it is. I know I am rotten through and through. As far as my old sinful nature is concerned. No matter which way I turn, I can't make myself do right. I want to, but I can't. That's coming to terms with the Lord's view on me. Rotten through and through. Have I ever admitted it? But the cross of Jesus Christ leaves me without a leg to stand on. I changed my mind about myself. Another thing, I changed my mind about other people. Until I've repented, I'm always thinking about what others should do for me. And so I live selfishly. But when repentance comes, I begin to love people, love my neighbor. Look on him not as a rival, but a partner. Somebody to whom I give the same attention as myself. 2 Corinthians 5, 16, Paul says, Henceforth I know no man after the flesh. In other words, I'm not going to allow my likes and dislikes to be governed by race, color, background. That's repentance. I have traveled 35 years on mission fields. Do you know what's done the most harm in every mission field in the world? The imagined superiority of the white race. We don't seem able to get it out of our system. We're the bosses. I stood in the country of Zaire not so long ago, Congo, in the midst of a tribe of pygmies. I was introduced to the chief. I could just reach him. He was three feet high. He stretched up his hand. We shook hands. The missionary who introduced us said, well, that's amazing. I said, what do you mean? He said, you both said exactly the same thing. What did we say? Good morning, brother. Brother? Well, he's three feet, I'm six feet too. He's black, I'm white. He had his birthday suit on. But brother? Oh, my friend, that's the church. And if we understood that, we'd teach each other a little differently. We wouldn't always be hiding off and forming our own Bible-believing independent church. We'd need another of those like we need a hole in the head. I tell you we wouldn't. We'd grieve the Holy Spirit. We'd find ourselves loving each other and disagreeing agreeably and keeping rank and worship instead of disagreeing disagreeably and breaking up. I changed my mind about other people. And there's nothing the Church of Christ in America needs today than a baptism of love. Holy Spirit love. One thing that'll see Key Project 73 right off the ground, love. Christians who may disagree on some matters of theology but are bound together by the love of Christ that's a church. Now may I ask you just a moment before we stop. How's this going to work out in my life? Well, listen. It means that I'm prepared to put right the past. You remember little Zacchaeus? Many, many people in the Bible have said I've sinned and made confessions. Pharaoh said that but he went on sinning. Balaam said it but he didn't blame on other people. Judas, but he committed suicide. But little Zacchaeus that Incan Jack Skellington up his little sycamore tree heard a shout from Christ and he came down with a thump. And he said, Lord, half my goods I give to the poor. In other words, I get straight with my neighbor. If I've taken from anything anything from anyone falsely I restore him fourfold. The past. May I say very lovingly to you but with deep conviction that nobody has repented if they're still living in a relationship in a broken relationship which they have never attempted to repair. May I say that again? Nobody has truly repented. If you are living with a broken relationship which you've made no attempt to repair. I almost tremble to suggest it but is there somebody in Tyler or anywhere else for that matter who would never come to you who isn't a bit impressed by your witness and by your church going and by your fellowship and all that you're doing would never darken a church door because they're bearing the scars of a wound that you or I have afflicted bearing the scars of a wound that you or I have afflicted and we've never had the grace to go and say I'm sorry get right back into the past have I begun repenting? I'm not truly repenting unless like Judas I abandon the fruit of my sin. Many people haven't gone so far as he did in our pockets but repentance has a future reference I notice in that passage which I read to you this evening when people came to John the Baptist and said Lord what do we do? Bring forth fruits, meat for repentance was his answer and I noticed that all fruits for repentance were in the realm of money property and a man who brings his life into line in the law of God in repentance does so in his home and the way he gets his money and spends it and the way he does his job and the way he keeps his standards and in every relationship with friends and you see the thing that's come to mean so much to me in this word is this, that this isn't something that happens when I'm converted and I'm finished with it and I'm conscious and stop doing them oh no it's not that it's the beginning of a process when my mind is lit up by the Holy Spirit on renewed areas of the word of God and there isn't a day there isn't a day when God doesn't call upon me for some fresh repentance on some new truth and say somebody might be saying to me but listen didn't you once write a book called Don't you believe it anymore you say oh yes I believe it of course I do but if I wrote that book again I'd like to add a chapter on repentance Dear Dr. Tozer that man of God who such a helped me in Chicago days writes in his book In Pursuit of God this to omit repentance from Christian experience is to invite another Pearl Harbor into spiritual warfare the life of the redeemed ought to be a constant attitude of repentance it must get into every relationship of life home, church, husband family, wife, friends as soon as we cease repenting we lose our peace and you see basically it just means this that every time I take a step out of the will of God I have to take a step back into it that's repentance have you done that recently dear friend how's your repentance getting on is it up to date up to date before you can ever speak to touch Tyler with a real real touch of Holy Spirit power and life and authority oh God God never gives the power of his spirit to a man who hasn't been broken at the cross have you repented there's a promise there's a letter to be written there's a phone call to be made have you and I forgotten how to say we're sorry I'm wrong you're right have you forgotten how to say that get off the throne kneel at the foot of an empty throne and put Jesus on it let's pray together just a moment's quiet prayer maybe the Lord has something in our lives of which we've never repented we've never been broken and during the message tonight it's been brought up to your mind again and again and the Lord waits maybe it's because we haven't repented of that all the joy and all the thrill and all the reality of the Lord Jesus has gone from our hearts and life has become so dry and so stale and we need to pray that with the psalmist that he would restore to us our mighty God our omnipotent Lord how could it ever be that we who have to fulfill in this world such a function on your behalf could ever ever resist such an amazing love could ever challenge your right to sovereignty could ever seek to call the shots ourselves oh Lord bring us to the place of absolute dependence upon yourself if we confess our sin he is faithful and just to forgive us our sin and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness if we walk in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another and the blood of Jesus Christ cleanses us from all sin Lord Jesus may this be a fellowship in which you're well pleased have your way in every life and may there be absolute free happy, open, frank loving fellowship between each other and an ungrieved Holy Spirit on our hearts who maintains fellowship with the risen Lord on the throne of heaven Lord make this real to us we pray for Jesus sake we ask it and all the brethren said Amen in the annex behind we will be having a time of fellowship we trust that all of you can go and you will go for a while and if you would like to get off in some of the rooms to have a time of prayer feel free to do this let's pray much as we move into this time together that we will know this experience of genuine repentance not a superficial thing but a genuine thing in our own lives let me just remind you that each night here at the church there will be a nursery so that you can bring your children here before you go to the auditorium and then you can pick them up here immediately after the service next Sunday will be church membership Sunday for those that would like to unite with the fellowship any other announcement that we need to make let's bow right now while our heads are bowed you sensed the spirit of God speaking and dealing with your own heart and you're just not quite sure whether or not the Lord were to say this is the last hour of your life you're just not sure if you're really prepared to meet him and this message that the Lord has spoken through Dr. Redpath has reached out and gripped your heart and in this moment of integrity this moment of as much honesty as you know you would just simply say by the raising of your hand I do want to make one step here I want to ask that this fellowship will pray for me that repentance from my sin and faith in God in the Lord Jesus and what he's done may be mine I'm just not sure if I'm a Christian I've got doubts I've got a difficulty with a sense of insecurity when I face a lot of things in life and I would appreciate you remembering me in prayer and I'd like to take this step tonight this is not to put any pressure this is just simply that we might know to pray anyone here that would like to just do that with no pressure at all just acting as a thermometer so to speak what's registering within you we want to assist we want to help we do not want to hinder we want you to know that we're available we want to help you on this very important matter would you say pray for me this is not to embarrass you we're not going to come to you or anything like that this is just simply saying I am registering within me a concern and I would appreciate your prayer Blessing Lord we know that repentance tonight is a very very essential matter it's a part of the irreducible minimum we know that this is something that as it happens within our hearts in our lives we have a freedom that we've never had before we worship you as the God who can bring about repentance within us we want to thank you and Lord we certainly want to register before you that we want to repent from all of our sin from the very sin principle itself we want you Christ to have complete sovereignty in and through our life and we are convinced that what has been declared tonight is truth and nothing but it and we just want to thank you for this blessed message and we ask that thou would sanctify it to every one of our hearts for the purpose where unto you sent it so that you might have changed people through which you can express yourself to an unbelieving world that's so hungry and so confused and so in need of help and the peace of our Lord Jesus Christ the thrilling love of God the Father and that wonderful fellowship of the blessed Holy Spirit through the portion of every heart God bless you shake hands meet right across at the Annex
Repentance
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Alan Redpath (1907 - 1989). British pastor, author, and evangelist born in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. Raised in a Christian home, he trained as a chartered accountant and worked in business until a 1936 conversion at London’s Hinde Street Methodist Church led him to ministry. Studying at Chester Diocesan Theological College, he was ordained in 1939, pastoring Duke Street Baptist Church in Richmond, London, during World War II. From 1953 to 1962, he led Moody Church in Chicago, growing its influence, then returned to Charlotte Chapel, Edinburgh, until 1966. Redpath authored books like Victorious Christian Living (1955), emphasizing holiness and surrender, with thousands sold globally. A Keswick Convention speaker, he preached across North America and Asia, impacting evangelical leaders like Billy Graham. Married to Marjorie Welch in 1935, they had two daughters. His warm, practical sermons addressed modern struggles, urging believers to “rest in Christ’s victory.” Despite a stroke in 1964 limiting his later years, Redpath’s writings and recordings remain influential in Reformed and Baptist circles. His focus on spiritual renewal shaped 20th-century evangelicalism.