Albert N. Martin argues that repentance represents a critically absent note in contemporary evangelical preaching, constituting the fourth in a series examining deficiencies in modern gospel proclamation. Drawing extensively from the preaching of Christ and the apostolic witness in Acts, Martin establishes that repentance was not peripheral but central to biblical gospel presentation—appearing prominently in Christ's Galilean ministry (Mark 1:15), His redemptive self-understanding (Luke 5:32), and His post-resurrection commission to the apostles (Luke 24:47). The apostles demonstrated faithfulness to this mandate in their evangelistic preaching: Peter at Pentecost (Acts 2:38), Paul's ministry summary in Ephesus (Acts 20:21), and his defense before King Agrippa (Acts 26:20) all inextricably link remission of sins with genuine repentance. Martin defines repentance not merely as intellectual acknowledgment of sin but as comprehensive transformation—a turning from sin unto God affecting mind, affections, and will. This doctrine carries profound consequences for contemporary Christianity: the proliferation of nominal conversions lacking moral transformation, the spiritual bankruptcy of much modern religion despite purported mass conversions, and the necessity for recovering repentance's preaching to arrest spiritual decline in the church and culture. The sermon's significance lies in its Reformed emphasis on the sovereignty of God in granting repentance (Acts 5:31) while maintaining human responsibility to turn and believe, directly challenging antinomian distortions of grace that promise forgiveness divorced from genuine conversion.
“If indeed, as the Scriptures teach, there is no remission, no forgiveness, no pardon, no acceptance with God apart from repentance... the question that ought to be burning in every mind and heart within sound of my voice is this: What in the world does that word repent mean? For if I miss repentance, I miss life. If I miss repentance, I miss pardon.”
“The basic meaning of repentance is simply this: It is a turning from sin unto God. That's the heart, that's the core, that's the distilled essence of the biblical demand of repentance.”
“Much of current religion is rotten to the core for the simple reason that it knows nothing of this repentance... they have dabbled them with untempered mortar... giving people enough religion to make them feel good, but not to make them good.”
“Unless God grants repentance, no sinner will ever forsake his darling idols and turn from them unto God... Repentance, to be sincere, must be perpetual. It's not the act of a moment, but the acquisition of an attitude.”
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