REPENT? DOES ANYONE DO THAT ANYMORE TODAY?

WORD FROM THE CENTER: MONDAY, December 8,  2025
Welcome to “Word from The Center” MONDAY, a devotional word from the Center of our faith, Jesus Christ, with reflections on His Word. I’m Gregory Seltz. Today’s passage is Matthew 3:1-2, where the Bible says,  

In those days John the Baptist came, preaching in the wilderness of Judea 2 and saying, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.”

REPENT? DOES ANYONE DO THAT ANYMORE TODAY?

In the Book of Concord, Article XII of the Augsburg Confession says this: “Now, repentance consists properly of these two parts: One is contrition, that is, terrors smiting the conscience through the knowledge of sin; the other is faith, which is born of the Gospel, or of absolution, and believes that for Christ's sake, sins are forgiven, comforts the conscience, and delivers it from terrors. Then good works are bound to follow, which are the fruits of repentance.” That’s pretty straightforward wouldn’t you agree? Repentance causes one to take one’s sins seriously, to know how injurious they are to our lives and to the lives of others. Repentance also causes us to fall at the feet of Jesus asking for the forgiveness of sins only He can grant, and then trusts that His forgiveness does indeed remove those sins as “far as the east is from the west” (Psalm 103:12). A desire to strive for what is right and to do good works follows from such contrition and flows from faith in the Gospel.

 

But there is a problem today with this simple, straightforward, powerful truth. A majority of people do not think that they sin! George Barna of the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University conducted a study which found out that “only 52% of adults see themselves as sinners.”[1] One reason many people don’t take comfort in God’s forgiveness is that they don’t think they actually need it! At times they even take consolation IN THEIR SIN, thinking that God is either unconcerned with their thoughts and actions at worst, or, at best, tolerates whatever WE desire to do. In a Newsweek article way back in 1995, the author noted, “Ninety percent of Americans say that they believe in God. Yet the urgent sense of personal sin has all but disappeared in the current upbeat style of American religion.”[2] It’s much worse today. The number of believers is reported to be falling and the disregard for any notion of our actions being sinful in the eyes of God is on the rise. Just look at what we consume for entertainment today as proof of our callousness to any notion of sin.

 

Here’s the point: John the Baptist’s message is just as relevant today as it was 2,000 years ago. He came into a world that had a “sin problem,” as it still does today. The world back then also had its hedonists, moralists, rationalists, secularists, and pragmatists. Yet this powerful, heart-transforming message still stands: “Repent for the kingdom of heaven has come near” in the person and work of Jesus Christ! There’s plenty of evidence out there that sin remains a big problem with tragic consequences. These include broken marriages, the rise of STDs, the profanity, vulgarity, and callousness of people, the disrespect for authority, the lack of civility, the nihilistic violence, the selfishness and disregard for others, and much more. Such things are headline news virtually every day throughout the world. In response, the message is still the same for you, for me, and for all people. “Repent for the kingdom of heaven has come near” in Jesus Christ. Whenever I think about John the Baptist, I think about the fact that he was an oddity to most of the people in his own day (see Matthew 3:4; 11:7-15). So, it shouldn’t surprise us that his message seems odd today as well. But if you want to receive Jesus, you must take John’s message seriously. You must take your sin seriously and turn to God. Does anyone “repent” today? Yes! The message is still getting through. Let it start with you and me.

PRAYER: Dear Lord Jesus, John the Baptizer was the forerunner to Your work. Let his message sink in to my heart and mind today so that I might receive repentance and renewal by grace through faith in You alone. AMEN

[1] https://www.arizonachristian.edu/2025/09/04/awvi-2025-report-6-americans-views-of-moral-truth-contradictory_unbiblical-copy/

[2] https://www.newsweek.com/what-ever-happened-sin-185180

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