ATS Bible Dictionary
RepentanceA change of mind, accompanied with regret and sorrow for something done, and an earnest wish that it was undone. Such was the repentance of Juda, Matthew 27:3; and so it is said that Esau found "no place of repentance" in his father Isaac, although he sought it with tears, Hebrews 12:17; that is, Isaac would not change what he had done, and revoke the blessing given to Jacob, Genesis 27:1-46. God is sometimes said to "repent" of something he had done, Genesis 6:6 Jonah 3:9,10; not that he could wish it undone, but that in his providence such a change of course took place as among men would be ascribed to a change of mind. But the true gospel repentance, or "repentance unto life," is sorrow for sin, grief for having committed it, and a turning away from it with abhorrence, accompanied with sincere endeavors, in reliance on God's grace and the influences of the Holy Spirit, to live in humble and holy obedience to the commands and will of God. This is that repentance which always accompanies true faith, and to which is promised the free forgiveness of sin through the merits of Jesus Christ, Matthew 4:17 Acts 3:19 11:18 20:12.
Easton's Bible Dictionary
There are three Greek words used in the New Testament to denote repentance.
(1.) The verb metamelomai is used of a change of mind, such as to produce regret or even remorse on account of sin, but not necessarily a change of heart. This word is used with reference to the repentance of Judas (Matthew 27:3).
(2.) Metanoeo, meaning to change one's mind and purpose, as the result of after knowledge. This verb, with (3) the cognate noun metanoia, is used of true repentance, a change of mind and purpose and life, to which remission of sin is promised.
Evangelical repentance consists of (1) a true sense of one's own guilt and sinfulness; (2) an apprehension of God's mercy in Christ; (3) an actual hatred of sin (Psalm 119:128; Job 42:5, 6; 2 Corinthians 7:10) and turning from it to God; and (4) a persistent endeavour after a holy life in a walking with God in the way of his commandments.
The true penitent is conscious of guilt (Psalm 51:4, 9), of pollution (51:5, 7, 10), and of helplessness (51:11; 109:21, 22). Thus he apprehends himself to be just what God has always seen him to be and declares him to be. But repentance comprehends not only such a sense of sin, but also an apprehension of mercy, without which there can be no true repentance (Psalm 51:1; 130:4).
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
(
n.) The act of turning around an improper behavior; sorrow for what one has done; especially, contrition for sin.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
REPENTANCEre-pen'-tans:
I. OLD TESTAMENT TERMS
1. To Repent-"to Pant," "to Sigh"
2. To Repent-"to Turn" or "Return"
II. NEW TESTAMENT TERMS
1. Repent-"to Care," "Be Concerned"
2. Repent-"to Change the Mind"
3. Repent-"to Turn Over," "to Turn Upon," "to Turn Unto"
III. THE PSYCHOLOGICAL ELEMENTS
1. The Intellectual Element
2. The Emotional Element
3. The Volitional Element
LITERATURE
To get an accurate idea of the precise New Testament meaning of this highly important word it is necessary to consider its approximate synonyms in the original Hebrew and Greek The psychological elements of repentance should be considered in the light of the general teaching of Scripture.
I. Old Testament Terms.
1. To Repent-"to Pant," "to Sigh":
The Hebrew word naham, is an onomatopoetic term which implies difficulty in breathing, hence, "to pant," "to sigh," "to groan." Naturally it came to signify "to lament" or "to grieve," and when the emotion was produced by the desire of good for others, it merged into compassion and sympathy, and when incited by a consideration of one's own character and deeds it means "to rue," "to repent." To adapt language to our understanding, God is represented as repenting when delayed penalties are at last to be inflicted, or when threatened evils have been averted by genuine reformation (Genesis 6:6 Jonah 3:10). This word is translated "repent" about 40 times in the Old Testament, and in nearly all cases it refers to God. The principal idea is not personal relation to sin, either in its experience of grief or in turning from an evil course. Yet the results of sin are manifest in its use. God's heart is grieved at man's iniquity, and in love He bestows His grace, or in justice He terminates His mercy. It indicates the aroused emotions of God which prompt Him to a different course of dealing with the people. Similarly when used with reference to man, only in this case the consciousness of personal transgression is evident. This distinction in the application of the word is intended by such declarations as God "is not a man, that he should repent" (1 Samuel 15:29 Job 42:6 Jeremiah 8:6).
2. To Repent-"to Turn" or "Return":
The term shubh, is most generally employed to express the Scriptural idea of genuine repentance. It is used extensively by the prophets, and makes prominent the idea of a radical change in one's attitude toward sin and God. It implies a conscious, moral separation, and a personal decision to forsake sin and to enter into fellowship with God. It is employed extensively with reference to man's turning away from sin to righteousness (Deuteronomy 4:30 Nehemiah 1:9 Psalm 7:12 Jeremiah 3:14). It quite often refers to God in His relation to man (Exodus 32:12 Joshua 7:26). It is employed to indicate the thorough spiritual change which God alone can effect (Psalm 85:4). When the term is translated by "return" it has reference either to man, to God, or to God and man (1 Samuel 7:3 Psalm 90:13 (both terms, nacham and shubh; Isaiah 21:12; Isaiah 55:7). Both terms are also sometimes employed when the twofold idea of grief and altered relation is expressed, and are translated by "repent" and "return" (Ezekiel 14:6 Hosea 12:6 Jonah 3:8).
II. New Testament Terms.
1. Repent-"to Care," "Be Concerned":
The term metamelomai, literally signifies to have a feeling or care, concern or regret; like nacham, it expresses the emotional aspect of repentance. The feeling indicated by the word may issue in genuine repentance, or it may degenerate into mere remorse (Matthew 21:29, 32; Matthew 27:3). Judas repented only in the sense of regret, remorse, and not in the sense of the abandonment of sin. The word is used with reference to Paul's feeling concerning a certain course of conduct, and with reference to God in His attitude toward His purposes of grace (2 Corinthians 7:8 the King James Version; Hebrews 7:21).
2. Repent-"to Change the Mind":
The word metanoeo, expresses the true New Testament idea of the spiritual change implied in a sinner's return to God. The term signifies "to have another mind," to change the opinion or purpose with regard to sin. It is equivalent to the Old Testament word "turn." Thus, it is employed by John the Baptist, Jesus, and the apostles (Matthew 3:2 Mark 1:15 Acts 2:38). The idea expressed by the word is intimately associated with different aspects of spiritual transformation and of Christian life, with the process in which the agency of man is prominent, as faith (Acts 20:21), and as conversion (Acts 3:19); also with those experiences and blessings of which God alone is the author, as remission and forgiveness of sin (Luke 24:47 Acts 5:31). It is sometimes conjoined with baptism, which as an overt public act proclaims a changed relation to sin and God (Mark 1:4 Luke 3:3 Acts 13:24; Acts 19:4). As a vital experience, repentance is to manifest its reality by producing good fruits appropriate to the new spiritual life (Matthew 3:8).
3. Repent-"to Turn Over," "to Turn Upon," "to Turn Unto":
The word epistrepho, is used to bring out more clearly the distinct change wrought in repentance. It is employed quite frequently in Acts to express the positive side of a change involved in New Testament repentance, or to indicate the return to God of which the turning from sin is the negative aspect. The two conceptions are inseparable and complementary. The word is used to express the spiritual transition from sin to God (Acts 9:35 1 Thessalonians 1:9); to strengthen the idea of faith (Acts 11:21); and to complete and emphasize the change required by New Testament repentance (Acts 26:20).
There is great difficulty in expressing the true idea of a change of thought with reference to sin when we translate the New Testament "repentance" into other languages. The Latin version renders it "exercise penitence" (poenitentiam agere). But "penitence" etymologically signifies pain, grief, distress, rather than a change of thought and purpose. Thus Latin Christianity has been corrupted by the pernicious error of presenting grief over sin rather than abandonment of sin as the primary idea of New Testament repentance. It was easy to make the transition from penitence to penance, consequently the Romanists represent Jesus and the apostles as urging people to do penance (poenitentiam agite). The English word "repent" is derived from the Latin repoenitere, and inherits the fault of the Latin, making grief the principal idea and keeping it in the background, if not altogether out of sight, the fundamental New Testament conception of a change of mind with reference to sin. But the exhortations of the ancient prophets, of Jesus, and of the apostles show that the change of mind is the dominant idea of the words employed, while the accompanying grief and consequent reformation enter into one's experience from the very nature of the case.
III. The Psychological Elements.
1. The Intellectual Element:
Repentance is that change of a sinner's mind which leads him to turn from his evil ways and live. The change wrought in repentance is so deep and radical as to affect the whole spiritual nature and to involve the entire personality. The intellect must function, the emotions must be aroused, and the will must act. Psychology shows repentance to be profound, personal and all-pervasive. The intellectual element is manifest from the nature of man as an intelligent being, and from the demands of God who desires only rational service. Man must apprehend sin as unutterably heinous, the divine law as perfect and inexorable, and himself as coming short or falling below the requirements of a holy God (Job 42:5, 6 Psalm 51:3 Romans 3:20).
2. The Emotional Element:
There may be a knowledge of sin without turning from it as an awful thing which dishonors God and ruins man. The change of view may lead only to a dread of punishment and not to the hatred and abandonment of sin (Exodus 9:27 Numbers 22:34 Joshua 7:20 1 Samuel 15:24 Matthew 27:4). An emotional element is necessarily involved in repentance. While feeling is not the equivalent of repentance, it nevertheless may be a powerful impulse to a genuine turning from sin. A penitent cannot from the nature of the case be stolid and indifferent. The emotional attitude must be altered if New Testament repentance be experienced. There is a type of grief that issues in repentance and another which plunges into remorse. There is a godly sorrow and also a sorrow of the world. The former brings life; the latter, death (Matthew 27:3 Luke 18:23 2 Corinthians 7:9, 10). There must be a consciousness of sin in its effect on man and in its relation to God before there can be a hearty turning away from unrighteousness. The feeling naturally accompanying repentance implies a conviction of personal sin and sinfulness and an earnest appeal to God to forgive according to His mercy (Psalm 51:1, 2, 10-14).
3. The Volitional Element:
The most prominent element in the psychology of repentance is the voluntary, or volitional. This aspect of the penitent's experience is expressed in the Old Testament by "turn", or "return," and in the New Testament by "repent" or "turn." The words employed in the Hebrew and Greek place chief emphasis on the will, the change of mind, or of purpose, because a complete and sincere turning to God involves both the apprehension of the nature of sin and the consciousness of personal guilt (Jeremiah 25:5 Mark 1:15 Acts 2:38 2 Corinthians 7:9, 10). The demand for repentance implies free will and individual responsibility. That men are called upon to repent there can be no doubt, and that God is represented as taking the initiative in repentance is equally clear. The solution of the problem belongs to the spiritual sphere. The psychical phenomena have their origin in the mysterious relations of the human and the divine personalities. There can be no external substitute for the internal change. Sackcloth for the body and remorse for the soul are not to be confused with a determined abandonment of sin and return to God. Not material sacrifice, but a spiritual change, is the inexorable demand of God in both dispensations (Psalm 51:17 Isaiah 1:11 Jeremiah 6:20 Hosea 6:6).
Repentance is only a condition of salvation and not its meritorious ground. The motives for repentance are chiefly found in the goodness of God, in divine love, in the pleading desire to have sinners saved, in the inevitable consequences of sin, in the universal demands of the gospel, and in the hope of spiritual life and membership in the kingdom of heaven (Ezekiel 33:11 Mark 1:15 Luke 13:1-5 John 3:16 Acts 17:30 Romans 2:4 1 Timothy 2:4). The first four beatitudes (Matthew 5:3-6) form a heavenly ladder by which penitent souls pass from the dominion of Satan into the Kingdom of God. A consciousness of spiritual poverty dethroning pride, a sense of personal unworthiness producing grief, a willingness to surrender to God in genuine humility, and a strong spiritual desire developing into hunger and thirst, enter into the experience of one who wholly abandons sin and heartily turns to Him who grants repentance unto life.
LITERATURE.
Various theological works and commentaries Note especially Strong, Systematic Theology, III, 832-36; Broadus on Matthew 3:2, American Comm.; article "Busse" (Penance). Hauck-Herzog, Realencyklopadie fur protestantische Theologie und Kirche.
Byron H. Dement
Greek
3341. metanoia -- change of mind, repentance ... change of mind,
repentance. Part of Speech: Noun, Feminine Transliteration: metanoia
Phonetic Spelling: (met-an'-oy-ah) Short Definition:
repentance, a change
... //strongsnumbers.com/greek2/3341.htm - 7k278. ametameletos -- not repented of
... without regret. From a (as a negative particle) and a presumed derivative of
metamellomai; irrevocable -- without repentance, not to be repented of. see GREEK ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/278.htm - 7k
908. baptisma -- (the result of) a dipping or sinking
... of baptism. Cognate: 908 -- (note the - suffix, emphasizing it is a , ie
of sincere repentance.) 908 () indicates (, ). Word Origin ...
//strongsnumbers.com/greek2/908.htm - 6k
Strong's Hebrew
5164. nocham -- sorrow, repentance... 5163, 5164. nocham. 5165 . sorrow,
repentance. Transliteration: nocham Phonetic
Spelling: (no'-kham) Short Definition: compassion.
... repentance.
... /hebrew/5164.htm - 6k 7729. shubah -- retirement, withdrawal
... 7728, 7729. shubah. 7730 . retirement, withdrawal. Transliteration: shubah
Phonetic Spelling: (shoo-baw') Short Definition: repentance. ...
/hebrew/7729.htm - 6k
Library
On Repentance
On Repentance. <. On Repentance Tertullian. Translated by Rev. S. Thelwall
Table of Contents. Title Page. Chapter I.--Of Heathen Repentance. ...
//christianbookshelf.org/tertullian/on repentance/
Repentance
... 4. THE WAY OF SALVATION 4.2 Repentance. Then has God also to the Gentiles
granted repentance unto life.' Acts 11:18. Repentance seems ...
//christianbookshelf.org/watson/the ten commandments/4 2 repentance.htm
Repentance,
... CHAPTER I. REPENTANCE,. ... People generally are all at sea oh this subject, as though
insisting that repentance were an arbitrary arrangement on the part of God. ...
//christianbookshelf.org/booth/godliness/chapter i repentance.htm
Threefold Repentance
... JONAH THREEFOLD REPENTANCE. 'And the word ... ver.10). We might almost call these
three the repentance of Jonah, of Nineveh, and of God. The ...
/.../maclaren/expositions of holy scripture a/threefold repentance.htm
Repentance and victory
... THE FIRST BOOK OF SAMUEL REPENTANCE AND VICTORY. 'And ... 12). I. We have first
the preparation for victory in repentance and return. ...
/.../maclaren/expositions of holy scripture f/repentance and victory.htm
John the Preacher of Repentance
... VOLUME I: ST. LUKE Chaps. I to XII JOHN THE PREACHER OF REPENTANCE. 'Now, in
the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Cesar, Pontius ...
/.../maclaren/expositions of holy scripture e/john the preacher of repentance.htm
On Admonition and Repentance.
... On Admonition and Repentance. 1. Not of compulsion is the doctrine; of
free-will is the word of life. Whoso is willing to hear the ...
/.../hymns and homilies of ephraim the syrian/on admonition and repentance.htm
Of Repentance.
... Article XII: Of Repentance. Of Repentance they teach that for those who have
fallen after Baptism there is remission of sins whenever ...
/.../various/the augsburg confession of faith/article xii of repentance.htm
Of Repentance.
... Theophilus to Autolycus: Book III. Chapter XI."Of Repentance. And when
the people transgressed the law which had been given to ...
/.../theophilus/theophilus to autolycus/chapter xi of repentance.htm
On Repentance
... DISPUTATION 17 ON REPENTANCE. RESPONDENT: HENRY NIELLUIS As in succeeding
Disputations are discussed Faith, and Justification through ...
/.../arminius/the works of james arminius vol 1/disputation 17 on repentance.htm
Thesaurus
Repentance (28 Occurrences)... There are three Greek words used in the New Testament to denote
repentance.
... This
word is used with reference to the
repentance of Judas (Matthew 27:3).
.../r/repentance.htm - 31kLeads (64 Occurrences)
... They extolled the goodness of God, and said, "So, then, to the Gentiles also
God has given the repentance which leads to Life." (WEY NAS). ...
/l/leads.htm - 23k
Remission (18 Occurrences)
... (WEB KJV WEY ASV DBY WBS YLT). Mark 1:4 John did baptize in the wilderness, and
preach the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins. ...
/r/remission.htm - 13k
Righteous (407 Occurrences)
... Matthew 9:13 But you go and learn what this means:'I desire mercy, and not sacrifice,'
for I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance. ...
/r/righteous.htm - 36k
Goodness (83 Occurrences)
... goodness" (Romans 2:4; Romans 11:22, thrice); of chrestos ("useful," "benign,"
"kind," in Luke 6:35); "The goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance" (Romans ...
/g/goodness.htm - 35k
Baptize (19 Occurrences)
... Matthew 3:11 I indeed baptize you in water for repentance, but he who comes after
me is mightier than I, whose shoes I am not worthy to carry. ...
/b/baptize.htm - 12k
Contrition (1 Occurrence)
... 2. (n.) The state of being contrite; deep sorrow and repentance for sin, because
sin is displeasing to God; humble penitence; through repentance. Int. ...
/c/contrition.htm - 8k
Sinners (132 Occurrences)
... Matthew 9:13 But you go and learn what this means:'I desire mercy, and not sacrifice,'
for I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance. ...
/s/sinners.htm - 35k
Worthy (92 Occurrences)
... Multi-Version Concordance Worthy (92 Occurrences). Matthew 3:8 Therefore
bring forth fruit worthy of repentance! (WEB ASV DBY YLT). ...
/w/worthy.htm - 35k
Preached (75 Occurrences)
... NIV). Mark 1:4 John came, who baptized in the wilderness and preached the
baptism of repentance unto remission of sins. (ASV). Mark ...
/p/preached.htm - 28k
Resources
What is repentance and is it necessary for salvation? | GotQuestions.orgWhat does the Bible say about repentance? What does it mean to repent? | GotQuestions.orgIs repentance a change of mind or a turning from sin? | GotQuestions.orgRepentance: Dictionary and Thesaurus | Clyx.comBible Concordance •
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