PASTOR JOHN COLLINS, EVANGELIST: REPENTANCE
desperate prayer, Google images |
Repent. What does the word “repent” truly mean? John the
Baptist made it his clarion call as he prepared the way for Jesus
Christ to make it on the scene over 2000 years ago. The Old Testament has
many passages about repentance before Jesus Christ
came. God
wants us to truly feel sorry for our sinful natures and ask for forgiveness
because God
truly wants His children to come home to Him.
Guilt is a useful tool that helps us recognize that we are in the wrong
before God, writes Pastor John Collins of
Love That Cross Ministries.
Until we feel genuine remorse for
the actions that we have done that offend God, we cannot find salvation nor can
we expect to make our way to heaven. Heaven
is not a guarantee just because we say we are Christian,
just saying we are sorry and saying we are Christian isn’t
going to get us anywhere if we don’t change how our hearts act. Actions speak louder than words, and God knows exactly
what we really feel and how we really are.
There’s three steps to repentance:
- To repent is to recognize that we have offended God by not following His commandments. Sin. Repentance means to feel genuinely sorry for our actions.
- Seek forgiveness. We will sin every day because we are human. Ask for forgiveness through Jesus Christ and mean it from the heart.
- Make an effort every day to become a better person, seeking to become Christ-like, acting in compassion and caring for others. This is a life long journey, the race that Paul refers to.
It really is as easy as that, Pastor John Collins preaches.
The problem with the word “repent” is that it sounds offensive. Street hawkers of “repent and be saved” who
stand on the corners waving a
Bible spouting Bible
verses of doom and hell are threatening and drive more people away from God
and the Word
of the Gospel. Shoving
religion in the public’s face in a manner that is threatening is no way to win
souls for God. It certainly wasn’t the way Jesus did
it. Teaching the Gospel with sincerity
and candor, with a nonjudgmental
approach will draw attention of people, and those people when drawn will come
to listen, and in listening will come to understand the concept of
repentance. Pastor
John Collins is an evangelist
who preaches the truth,
reaches the heart,
and draws
listeners closer to God.
“I don’t believe that there is a true understanding by most people of what repentance is. Repentance is recognizing your sin and the wrongs that you have committed against God and being sorry about it. It is knowing that you need forgiveness and that what your actions, feelings, thoughts and words have reaped is worthy of sending you to hell. This is an acceptance of God’s law in your heart and soul and it produces a genuinely contrite heart. This will then produce the desire within you to stop those sinful behaviors and to seek to obey the laws of God.” Pastor John Collins, Love That Cross Ministries (April, 2018).
Pastor
John Collins began preaching over a decade ago, and more recently
began a revival of hope and trust in God.
As the head pastor of Love
That Cross Ministries and John Collins Ministries,
Pastor
John Collins reaches congregations around the United States,
bringing God back to those who hear him.
As an evangelist, Pastor John Collins
has a passion and love for the Cross that is unwavering. So many people have been disillusioned by
churches, the false doctrines of pastors who are looking for nothing more than
money in their pocket and bodies in the pews to fill the offering plates, or
the prestige of being on a pulpit but not practicing what is preached. Pastor
John Collins is determined to bring faith in God back for the
people, recognizing that the Gospel of Jesus Christ has been watered down like
so much Kool-Aid to fit the need of the people in the pulpit, not the needs of
souls in the seats. The Gospel needs to
be redeemed says Pastor
John Collins, it needs to be made clear and understandable so that
people can find their way to God.
Pastor John Collins writes:
“The beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of
God. As it is written in the Prophets: ‘Behold, I send My messenger before Your
face, Who will prepare Your way before You.’ ‘The voice of one crying in the
wilderness: Prepare the way of the Lord; Make His paths straight.’ John came
baptizing in the wilderness and preaching a baptism of repentance for the
remission of sins.” Mark 1:1-4 (NKJV).
John the Baptist preached repentance, Jesus preached
repentance and His Apostles preached repentance, even the Prophets preached
repentance.
I don’t believe that there is a true understanding by most
people of what repentance is. Repentance is recognizing your sin and the wrongs
that you have committed against God and being sorry about it. It is knowing
that you need forgiveness and that what your actions, feelings, thoughts and
words have reaped is worthy of sending you to hell. This is an acceptance of
God’s law in your heart and soul and it produces a genuinely contrite heart.
This will then produce the desire within you to stop those sinful behaviors and
to seek to obey the laws of God.
Now, how is it possible to feel these feelings with a
genuine heart and not just give a mental nod followed by lip service? You must
agree with God. That is where true faith, repentance and forgiveness begin. You
must agree that God and His laws are right and that it is for you to obey them.
If you don’t agree with God, you will never truly submit to Him, repent of
anything nor claim true salvation.
If you don’t agree with God, you will find ways to justify
your point of view and to excuse yourself for your sin. Every human sins and
every human has an opportunity to have a relationship with Jesus. If you see
the laws of God as antiquated and therefore don’t agree with them and choose to
disregard them, even if you come to know Jesus and seek forgiveness for your
past sins, your heart will not genuinely be remorseful. Imagine a man who
cheats on his wife and she never finds out about it. He sees it as hurting no
one. He goes to church and claims Jesus as His Savior. In his old age, his
cheating stops and he does ask for forgiveness. But his heart does not really
feel sorry because he feels that what his wife never knew never hurt her and it
really was not any big deal. His heart is unable to feel the remorse required
to be forgiven.
Just because we ask for forgiveness does not mean that it is
given. We have to mean it. We show that we mean it by choosing to live lives
that do not embrace sin. Like Paul says, if you stole, steal no more. We are to
quit the sinful behavior and seek to alter our actions, words, thoughts and
feelings. We begin to make these right choices when we agree with God. That is
why to be friends with the world is to be enemies with God.
“From that time Jesus began to preach and to say, ‘Repent,
for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.’” Matthew 4:17 (NKJV).
Love That Cross, Pastor John Collins
Our hearts have to come to know what our sinful behaviors
are. Repenting, being truly and honestly
sorry for our actions is the beginning of changing our lives, here and
eternally. The right choices will take
us along the road back to God, home to heaven, and those actions are a daily
commitment to changing. Allowing Jesus
into our lives is the key to changing our hearts. Asking forgiveness means we
believe we are indeed guilty, and we have the humility to admit it. No one of us is free of sin; no one of us
will be able to make it to heaven without Jesus.
Pastor
John Collins can be heard at 1000 am Mountain Time weekly on Sunday
on Heaven’s Country Radio with Marty Smith. You can listen via the Internet at www.heavenscountry.com. Other sermons, recordings, blogs, interviews,
Youtube clips, and other media of Pastor John Collins
can be found by clicking on the links within this post. Pastor John Collins
is available for prayer, discussion and ministry-not to debate-at jc65777@yahoo.com. If you want Pastor John Collins
to come to speak to your church or group, contact can be made through the same
personal email. Pastor John Collins
is in it to win it for God.
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