Full Transcript

·YouTLDR

✅Sabbath School Lesson 10 "Repentance and Forgiveness" | Growing in a Relationship (Q2 2026)

44:137,185 words · ~36 min readUrduTranscribed Jun 2, 2026
AI Summary

Repentance is not merely an emotional state of regret, but a physical and mental change of direction (Shuv and Metanoia) back to God. True forgiveness is never cheap; it is God doing justice at His own expense, replacing our stained efforts with the free gift of Christ's righteousness.

This study clarifies the biblical definitions of repentance and grace, demonstrating that God provides the ultimate covering for sin (the wedding garment of Christ's righteousness) which requires us to surrender our self-made righteousness.

Section summaries

0:00-2:14

The Golden Calf & The Invisible God

watch

Sets up the crucial theological contrast between the broken covenant and the second set of tablets.

2:14-5:35

Distraction vs. Rebellion & Joshua's Garments

watch

Provides deep insights on spiritual drift (Martha vs. Mary) and introduces the imagery of clean robes.

5:35-13:24

Hosea's Metaphor, Shuv, and Metanoia

watch

Highly relevant linguistic study of Hebrew and Greek concepts of repentance, as well as Hosea's covenant typology.

13:24-20:06

Real Repentance, Refreshment, and Psalm 51

watch

Discusses David's call for 'bara' (new creation) and how the kindness of God drives repentance.

20:06-26:48

Exodus 34: Divine Character Study

watch

Crucial deep-dive into God's Hebrew titles of mercy, which is highly relevant to historical biblical theology.

26:48-32:23

The Wedding Garment Parable

watch

Explains the crucial soteriological distinction between self-righteousness and imputed righteousness.

32:23-36:51

The Prodigal Son & The Cost of Forgiveness

watch

Synthesizes the concepts of substitutionary atonement and the father's undignified pursuit of the lost.

36:51-43:33

Illustrations, Final Appeals, and Outro

optional

Features practical illustrations and direct personal applications of the theological themes discussed.

Key points

  • Shuv and Metanoia: The Hebrew and Greek of Turning — Repentance is defined by two complementary biblical concepts: the Hebrew 'shub' (a physical U-turn or change of direction) and the Greek 'metanoia' (a transformative change of mind). Together, they show that biblical repentance is an active change of direction rather than an emotional state of remorse or tearful regret.
  • Exodus 34: God's Self-Portrait on Israel's Worst Day — Directly following the golden calf betrayal, God reveals His character to Moses using the terms 'Racham' (instinctive, maternal womb-love), 'Chanun' (stooping grace), and 'Erek apaim' (slow to anger). He proclaims His ultimate mercy at the very moment Israel deserved abandonment, establishing the theological bedrock quoted throughout the Old Testament.
  • The Principle of the Host-Provided Wedding Garment — In the parable of the wedding feast (Matthew 22), the guest without a garment is cast out because he rejected the clean robe provided for free by the king. This robe represents Christ's righteousness; trying to enter the feast in our own clothes (our self-righteousness, which Isaiah terms 'filthy rags') is an act of pride that rejects the Host's terms.
  • The Substitutionary Cost: The Faithful Partner Pays — Forgiveness is never free; the debt is always absorbed by the forgiver. Through the lens of Hosea buying back Gomer and Christ's death on the cross, the faithful partner bears the entire structural and financial cost of bringing the unfaithful spouse home.
That's the core of every idol, taking what God did and giving the credit to something you can control. Presenter
The robe isn't something you weave. It's something you receive. Presenter

AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.

0:00

While God was writing the words, "You

0:01

shall have no other gods before me." on

0:04

a slab of stone with his own finger, the

0:06

people at the bottom of the mountain

0:08

were melting their earrings into a

0:09

golden calf and calling it their god.

0:12

That's the scene in Exodus 32.

0:15

Moses is on Sinai, 40 days. The mountain

0:18

is covered in fire and cloud. God is

0:21

carving the covenant into rock, the

0:23

foundational document of the entire

0:25

relationship between himself and the

0:27

nation he just rescued from slavery.

0:30

These are the people who watched the Red

0:31

Sea split, who ate bread that appeared

0:34

on the ground every morning, who drank

0:36

water from a rock, who followed a pillar

0:38

of fire through the desert night.

0:40

They'd seen more miracles in 3 months

0:42

than most nations see in a millennium.

0:45

And while God writes, they can't wait.

0:48

They go to Aaron, Moses' brother, the

0:50

man who stood before Pharaoh, the man

0:52

who watched the sea split, and they say,

0:54

"Come, make us gods who shall go before

0:57

us. For as for this Moses, the man who

0:59

brought us up out of the land of Egypt,

1:01

we do not know what has become of him."

1:03

Exodus 32:1.

1:06

"The man who brought us up out of

1:07

Egypt." They'd already rewritten the

1:09

story. It wasn't God who brought them

1:11

out, it was Moses. And since Moses was

1:14

gone, they needed a replacement. Not a

1:17

replacement for God, a replacement for

1:19

what they could see.

1:21

Because faith in the invisible had

1:23

already worn thin. The same faith that

1:25

last week's study described, hypostasis,

1:28

standing on what you can't see, had

1:30

collapsed in 40 days.

1:33

Aaron took their jewelry, he fashioned a

1:35

calf, and the people said, "This is your

1:38

god, O Israel, that brought you out of

1:40

the land of Egypt." Exodus 32:4.

1:43

A lump of metal that they built with

1:45

their own hands, and they credited it

1:47

with the work of the almighty.

1:49

That's the core of every idol, taking

1:51

what God did and giving the credit to

1:53

something you can control.

1:55

But the lesson this week isn't about

1:57

fall, it's about what happened after.

2:00

Because the real story of Exodus 32

2:02

through 34 isn't the golden calf, it's

2:05

the second set of tablets.

2:07

God didn't walk away from the people who

2:08

betrayed him before the ink was dry.

2:11

He told Moses to cut two new stones. He

2:13

came down again. He wrote again.

2:16

And in between, he did something that

2:18

has shaped every prayer, every psalm,

2:20

and every prophet that came after.

2:23

He told Moses who he is.

2:25

The memory text this week is 1 John 1:9.

2:29

If we confess our sins, he is faithful

2:31

and just to forgive us our sins and to

2:33

cleanse us from all unrighteousness.

2:36

Two words. Faithful, he keeps his

2:39

promise. Just, he does what's right.

2:42

Forgiveness isn't God looking the other

2:43

way. It's God doing justice at his own

2:46

expense.

2:47

And this week's study walks through what

2:49

it looks like to turn around, come home,

2:51

and find out the door was never locked.

2:54

Last week we studied what sin is,

2:56

anomia, lawlessness, the fracture in the

2:59

relationship.

3:00

This week asks, what do you do after the

3:03

diagnosis?

3:04

The answer is two words, repent and

3:07

receive.

3:08

Saturday's study begins with a reality

3:10

most of us know, but don't want to

3:12

admit.

3:13

The distance between you and God doesn't

3:15

always come from rebellion. Sometimes it

3:17

comes from distraction.

3:19

Luke 10:40 through 42.

3:22

Martha is scrambling in the kitchen

3:24

while Mary sits at Jesus' feet.

3:26

Martha isn't sinning, she's serving,

3:29

she's doing good things, necessary

3:31

things.

3:32

But she's so consumed by the urgent that

3:34

she's missing the important, the person

3:36

in her living room. And when she

3:38

complains about Mary not helping, Jesus

3:40

doesn't rebuke her work ethic. He

3:43

reorients her attention.

3:45

Martha, Martha, you are worried and

3:47

troubled about many things.

3:49

But one thing is needed, and Mary has

3:51

chosen that good part, which will not be

3:53

taken away from her.

3:55

One thing is needed, not 10, not 20.

3:59

One.

4:00

And the one thing is presence, being in

4:02

the room with God. Everything else is

4:05

secondary.

4:06

And the pattern is universal. The week

4:09

fills up, the responsibility stack, the

4:11

urgent consumes the important, and

4:14

before you realize it, the relationship

4:16

with God hasn't received your attention

4:18

in days.

4:19

Not because you stop believing, because

4:21

you stop showing up.

4:23

The distance grew not from a dramatic

4:24

departure, but from a quiet drift. The

4:27

way a boat slips its mooring on a calm

4:29

night.

4:30

No storm, no waves, just a rope that

4:33

loosened while nobody was watching.

4:36

But Saturday study doesn't leave you in

4:37

the drift. It takes you to a scene that

4:40

flips everything. Zechariah 3:1-5.

4:44

Joshua the high priest is standing

4:45

before the angel of the Lord, dressed in

4:47

filthy garments, and Satan is standing

4:50

at his right side accusing him.

4:52

The prosecutor has a case, the evidence

4:54

is real.

4:55

Joshua is dirty, his garments are

4:58

stained, the accusations are accurate.

5:01

This is a courtroom scene, and the

5:03

defendant is guilty. There's no

5:05

cross-examination needed, there's no

5:07

alibi. Joshua's clothes tell the whole

5:09

story.

5:10

He's been living in the filth, and Satan

5:12

is right there, pointing at every stain,

5:14

cataloging every failure, building the

5:17

case for permanent rejection.

5:19

And then God speaks, not to Satan, not

5:22

to the court, to Joshua.

5:24

Remove the filthy garments from him.

5:26

And to Joshua he says, "See, I have

5:29

removed your iniquity from you, and I

5:31

will clothe you with rich robes."

5:33

That's the exchange, your filthy clothes

5:35

for his clean ones, your record for his

5:37

righteousness.

5:39

And the exchange doesn't happen because

5:40

you cleaned yourself up first. It

5:42

happens while you're still standing

5:43

there in the dirt.

5:45

God doesn't say, "Go wash and come

5:47

back." He says, "I'll take those. Here,

5:50

put this on."

5:52

The accuser is silenced, the filth is

5:54

removed, and the rich robes go on

5:56

shoulders that didn't earn them.

5:58

Isaiah 61:10 captures it. "I will

6:01

greatly rejoice in the Lord. My soul

6:03

shall be joyful in my God, for he has

6:05

clothed me with the garments of

6:07

salvation. He has covered me with the

6:09

robe of righteousness, as a bridegroom

6:11

decks himself with ornaments, and as a

6:13

bride adorns herself with her jewels."

6:16

The robe isn't something you weave. It's

6:18

something you receive.

6:19

The only thing required is that you stop

6:21

clutching the filthy clothes and let go.

6:24

That you stop defending your own outfit

6:26

and accept the one being handed to you.

6:28

Sunday study takes us to Hosea 6, and

6:31

this is where repentance gets its

6:33

deepest definition.

6:34

But before we get there, how does the

6:36

turn even start?

6:38

How does a person walking the wrong

6:39

direction realize they need to stop?

6:42

John 16:8. Jesus said the Holy Spirit

6:44

would convict the world of sin and of

6:47

righteousness and of judgment.

6:49

The Spirit convicts, and conviction

6:51

isn't the same as condemnation.

6:54

Condemnation says, "You're hopeless."

6:56

Conviction says, "You're headed the

6:58

wrong direction, and there's still time

7:00

to turn."

7:01

Conviction is the GPS recalculating.

7:04

It's the nudge you feel when something

7:05

isn't right between you and God.

7:08

It's a gift, not a punishment, because

7:10

without it, you'd never know you needed

7:12

to turn.

7:13

And Hosea 6 is what the turn looks like

7:15

when it happens.

7:17

The book of Hosea is built on a metaphor

7:19

so painful that most readers rush past

7:21

it.

7:22

God told Hosea to marry a woman named

7:24

Gomer, knowing she would be unfaithful.

7:27

She was. She left him. She went to other

7:29

men.

7:30

And then God told Hosea to go buy her

7:32

back. Hosea 3:1 and 2.

7:35

"Go again, love a woman who is loved by

7:37

a lover and is committing adultery, just

7:40

like the love of the Lord for the

7:41

children of Israel, who looked to other

7:43

gods.

7:44

Stop there. God didn't say, "Go take her

7:47

back." He said, "Go love her." It's not

7:50

a legal transaction. It's not a duty.

7:52

It's love directed at someone who has

7:55

done everything possible to destroy the

7:57

basis for it.

7:58

And the next verse says Hosea bought her

8:00

back for 15 shekels of silver and one

8:03

and a half homers of barley.

8:05

He paid a price to redeem what was

8:06

already his. The faithful partner

8:08

bearing the cost of reconciliation for

8:10

the unfaithful one.

8:12

That's not just a metaphor. That's the

8:14

gospel in the Old Testament centuries

8:17

before the cross.

8:18

Gomer represents Israel. Israel

8:21

represents us. The marriage represents

8:23

the covenant and the unfaithfulness

8:25

represents every time we've traded the

8:27

real God for something cheaper,

8:29

something shinier, more immediately

8:31

satisfying, less demanding.

8:33

And the price Hosea paid for Gomer

8:35

foreshadows a price that would be paid

8:37

in blood, not silver.

8:39

Hosea 6:1

8:41

"Come, let us return to the Lord, for he

8:43

has torn, but he will heal us. He has

8:46

stricken, but he will bind us up."

8:48

The Hebrew word for return is shub. It's

8:51

the central word in Hosea, appearing

8:53

over two dozen times throughout the

8:55

book, and one of the most important

8:57

verbs in the prophets for understanding

8:58

repentance.

9:00

And it's worth slowing down for because

9:02

the word changes how you think about

9:03

what repentance actually is. Shub is

9:06

physical before it's spiritual. It means

9:08

to turn around, to reverse direction, to

9:11

walk back the way you came.

9:13

Picture someone walking north on a road.

9:15

They realize they're going the wrong

9:16

direction. They stop. They turn around.

9:19

They walk south. That's shub. It's not a

9:22

feeling. It's a direction change. What

9:24

matters isn't how sorry you are. It's

9:27

which way your feet are moving. The

9:29

Greek word for repentance in the New

9:30

Testament, metanoia, carries a slightly

9:33

different emphasis.

9:34

Meta means after or change. Noia comes

9:37

from nous, meaning mind. Metanoia is a

9:40

change of mind, a shift in thinking. The

9:43

Hebrew says, "Turn your feet." The Greek

9:45

says, "Turn your mind." Both are needed.

9:48

The Old Testament gives you the physical

9:50

picture, the U-turn on the road. The New

9:52

Testament gives you the internal

9:54

picture, the transformation of how you

9:55

think.

9:56

True repentance is both. Your mind

9:59

changes direction and your feet follow.

10:01

That distinction matters.

10:03

Because most people think repentance is

10:05

an emotion, guilt, sorrow, regret,

10:08

tears.

10:09

Those can be part of it. But repentance

10:11

in the biblical sense is an action.

10:13

You were walking away from God, you

10:15

stopped, you turned around, you walked

10:17

back.

10:18

The tears might come, the sorrow might

10:20

come.

10:21

But repentance is the turn, not the

10:23

tears.

10:24

You can cry all night and still be

10:25

facing the wrong direction in the

10:27

morning.

10:28

And Hosea 6 raises a question scholars

10:30

have debated for centuries.

10:32

Are the words in verses 1 through 3,

10:34

"Come, let us return to the Lord. After

10:36

2 days he will revive us. On the third

10:39

day he will raise us up."

10:40

Are these words genuine repentance or

10:43

just surface-level regret?

10:45

Because Hosea 6:4 answers immediately.

10:48

"O Ephraim, what shall I do to you? O

10:50

Judah, what shall I do to you?

10:53

For your faithfulness is like a morning

10:54

cloud and like the early dew it goes

10:56

away."

10:57

Morning cloud, early dew, beautiful for

11:00

a moment, gone by noon.

11:02

God is describing a repentance that

11:04

sounds sincere but evaporates the moment

11:06

the pressure lifts.

11:08

Words without roots, sorrow without

11:09

change.

11:11

The difference between genuine shuv and

11:13

what Hosea describes is the difference

11:14

between remorse and repentance.

11:17

Remorse says, "I feel bad about what I

11:19

did." Repentance says, "I'm changing

11:21

direction."

11:23

Remorse is about my discomfort,

11:24

repentance is about the relationship.

11:27

And God can tell the difference.

11:29

He's heard every prayer that was really

11:30

just a request for the consequences to

11:32

stop. And he's seen every U-turn that

11:35

was genuine, messy, tearful, stumbling,

11:38

but real.

11:39

One more detail in Hosea 6:2 that rarely

11:42

gets attention.

11:43

After 2 days, he will revive us. On the

11:45

third day, he will raise us up that we

11:47

may live in his sight.

11:49

In the ancient Near East, a person

11:51

wasn't considered fully dead until 3

11:53

days had passed.

11:55

The body began to decompose and hope for

11:57

revival was gone.

11:59

So, when Hosea says, "On the third day,

12:01

he will raise us up." he's using

12:02

resurrection language. Revival from a

12:05

condition that looks irreversible.

12:07

And 1 Corinthians 15:4 says, "Christ was

12:10

raised on the third day, according to

12:12

the scriptures."

12:13

The scriptures Paul was referring to

12:15

included Hosea. The same God who

12:17

promised to raise dead Israel on the

12:19

third day, raised his son on the third

12:21

day.

12:22

Repentance leads to resurrection, not

12:24

just metaphorically, but historically.

12:27

The power behind forgiveness is the same

12:28

power that opened the tomb.

12:30

And verse 3 adds something beautiful.

12:33

Let us know, let us pursue the knowledge

12:35

of the Lord.

12:36

His going forth is established as the

12:38

morning. He will come to us like the

12:39

rain, like the latter and former rain to

12:42

the earth.

12:43

Hosea connects repentance to knowing

12:45

God, the same theme that is woven

12:47

through this entire quarter.

12:49

You don't just turn around, you walk

12:51

toward someone. And that someone is

12:52

established as the morning, as certain

12:54

as sunrise.

12:56

He will come like the rain, the former

12:58

rain that softens the ground for

12:59

planting, and the latter rain that

13:01

brings the harvest to fullness.

13:03

The repentant heart doesn't return to a

13:05

cold house. It returns to a God whose

13:07

arrival is as certain as weather and as

13:09

life-giving as water on dry ground.

13:12

1 John 1:5-7

13:14

picks up the same thread.

13:16

God is light, and in him is no darkness

13:18

at all.

13:19

If we say that we have fellowship with

13:21

him and walk in darkness, we lie and do

13:23

not practice the truth.

13:25

But if we walk in the light as he is in

13:26

the light, we have fellowship with one

13:28

another, and the blood of Jesus Christ

13:30

his son cleanses us from all sin.

13:32

Walking in the light isn't perfection.

13:35

It's direction.

13:36

It's the choice to face the light

13:38

instead of the darkness.

13:40

And when you face the light, the blood

13:42

of Jesus cleanses you.

13:44

Not once, continuously.

13:47

The Greek tense in 1 John 1:7 is present

13:50

continuous.

13:52

The blood keeps cleansing.

13:54

As long as you keep walking in the

13:55

light, the cleansing keeps flowing.

13:58

Repentance isn't a one-time event. It's

14:00

a daily posture. A constant shub. Always

14:04

turning toward the light. Monday study

14:06

is called real repentance, and it opens

14:09

with a detail most people miss.

14:11

Both John the Baptist and Jesus began

14:13

their public ministry with the same

14:14

word.

14:15

Matthew 3:2, John the Baptist.

14:18

Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at

14:20

hand. Mark 1:15,

14:23

Jesus.

14:24

The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom

14:26

of God is at hand. Repent and believe in

14:29

the gospel. Same message, same urgency,

14:32

same word. Repent. Turn around. The

14:36

kingdom is here. You're facing the wrong

14:38

direction. Shub. And that both of them

14:41

opened with this word tells you

14:42

something about the priority of

14:44

repentance in God's economy.

14:46

Before healing, before teaching, before

14:49

miracles,

14:50

before anything else the kingdom brings,

14:52

the first step is the turn.

14:54

Acts 3:18 and 19 add something most

14:57

people overlook. Peter speaking after

14:59

Pentecost. Repent therefore and be

15:01

converted, that your sins may be blotted

15:04

out, so that times of refreshing may

15:05

come from the presence of the Lord.

15:08

Times of refreshing.

15:09

Repentance doesn't just remove the

15:11

guilt. It opens a door into the presence

15:13

of God. And that presence refreshes.

15:16

The way cold water hits after a long

15:18

walk.

15:19

The The of repentance isn't just the

15:21

removal of something bad. It's the

15:23

arrival of something good.

15:25

You were far away. You came home.

15:28

And home feels like cold water on a day

15:30

that's been too hot for too long.

15:32

Peter uses the phrase times of

15:34

refreshing, plural.

15:36

Not one moment of relief, seasons,

15:39

ongoing.

15:41

The refreshment doesn't come once and

15:42

vanish. It comes in waves as long as you

15:45

stay in the presence.

15:46

Repentance isn't just the entry door.

15:49

It's the posture you maintain inside. A

15:51

daily turning, a daily receiving.

15:54

Romans 2:4 Or do you despise the riches

15:57

of his goodness, forbearance, and

15:59

long-suffering, not knowing that the

16:01

goodness of God leads you to repentance?

16:03

Not the wrath, not the fear, not the

16:06

consequences.

16:07

The goodness.

16:09

It's the kindness that breaks you.

16:11

When you realize how much you've been

16:12

loved despite how far you've wandered,

16:14

the appropriate response isn't terror.

16:17

It's tears.

16:18

And those tears aren't the same as the

16:20

surface-level tears Hosea described.

16:23

These are the tears of someone who

16:24

finally sees the face they've been

16:25

avoiding and finds it full of compassion

16:28

instead of anger.

16:30

2 Peter 3:9 adds the timing.

16:32

The Lord is not slack concerning his

16:34

promise, as some count slackness, but is

16:37

long-suffering toward us, not willing

16:39

that any should perish, but that all

16:41

should come to repentance.

16:43

God's patience with the world isn't

16:44

apathy. It's strategy.

16:47

He's giving time. Time for the goodness

16:49

to reach people. Time for the shove to

16:51

happen.

16:52

Every day the world continues is another

16:54

day God is waiting for someone to turn

16:56

around.

16:57

Genuine repentance has two components.

17:00

First, sincere sorrow for sin.

17:02

Not sorrow for getting caught, not

17:04

sorrow for the consequences, but genuine

17:07

grief over the damage done to the

17:08

relationship.

17:10

Second, an honest decision to abandon

17:12

the sin, to change direction, to walk

17:15

back.

17:16

Sorrow without change is regret. Change

17:19

without sorrow is behavior modification.

17:22

Repentance is both, the heart and the

17:24

feet moving in the same direction.

17:26

If nothing changes, nothing changed.

17:29

That's the test.

17:30

Not the intensity of the emotion, but

17:32

the direction of the life.

17:34

One more thing.

17:36

Genuine repentance produces fruit.

17:38

Matthew 3:8

17:40

John the Baptist told the Pharisees and

17:42

Sadducees, "Bear fruits worthy of

17:44

repentance."

17:45

The fruit is the evidence.

17:47

If someone says they've turned around,

17:49

but they're still walking the same

17:50

direction, the turn didn't happen.

17:53

The words were real, but the feet didn't

17:54

follow.

17:55

And God, who reads hearts, knows the

17:58

difference between a prayer that changes

18:00

direction and a prayer that just changes

18:02

volume. The clearest example of what

18:04

genuine repentance sounds like is Psalm

18:06

51.

18:07

David wrote it after the prophet Nathan

18:09

confronted him about Bathsheba.

18:11

Adultery, deception, and murder arranged

18:14

to cover it all. And when David finally

18:16

breaks, he doesn't make excuses. He

18:18

doesn't deflect. He doesn't compare

18:20

himself to someone worse. He goes

18:22

straight to the fracture.

18:25

Psalm 51:1 and 2

18:27

"Have mercy upon me, O God, according to

18:29

your loving kindness, according to the

18:31

multitude of your tender mercies, blot

18:34

out my transgressions.

18:36

Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity and

18:38

cleanse me from my sin."

18:40

He asks for mercy, not justice, because

18:43

he knows justice would destroy him.

18:45

He asks according to God's loving

18:47

kindness, chesed, covenant loyalty.

18:51

He's not appealing to his own record.

18:53

He's appealing to God's character.

18:55

The same character God proclaimed in

18:57

Exodus 34, rachum, chanun.

19:00

David is reaching back to the mountain

19:02

and claiming the promise.

19:04

Verse 3 and 4 "For I acknowledge my

19:07

transgressions, and my sin is always

19:09

before me.

19:10

Against you, you only, have I sinned and

19:13

done this evil in your sight.

19:15

Against you only.

19:17

David sinned against Bathsheba, against

19:19

Uriah, against the nation.

19:22

But at the core, every sin is against

19:24

God.

19:25

Because God is the one who set the

19:26

standard, established the relationship,

19:29

and defined the boundaries that sin

19:31

crosses.

19:32

When you break the law, you break faith

19:34

with the lawgiver.

19:35

And verse 10, Create in me a clean

19:38

heart, O God, and renew a steadfast

19:40

spirit within me.

19:42

Create. The Hebrew word is bara, the

19:45

same verb used in Genesis 1:1 for

19:47

creation out of nothing.

19:49

David isn't asking for a repair. He's

19:51

asking for a new creation.

19:53

A heart that didn't exist before.

19:56

Because he knows the old one is too

19:57

damaged to patch. It needs to be

19:59

replaced.

20:00

That's real repentance. Not, I'll try

20:03

harder. Not, I'll be more careful.

20:06

Create something new in me, because

20:08

what's in here now can't be fixed by

20:10

effort. It needs your creative power.

20:13

Tuesday study takes us back to the

20:14

mountain. And what happens there is one

20:17

of the most extraordinary scenes in the

20:18

entire Bible.

20:20

Exodus 34.

20:22

The golden calf is behind them. Moses

20:24

broke the first tablets. 3,000 people

20:27

died.

20:28

The covenant seemed irreparably

20:30

shattered. Israel had committed

20:32

spiritual adultery on their honeymoon.

20:34

The ink wasn't dry on the marriage

20:35

certificate, and they'd already broken

20:37

the first vow.

20:39

And before we get to the mountain,

20:40

there's a moment in Exodus 33 that sets

20:42

the stage.

20:44

Moses asks God something audacious.

20:47

Exodus 33:18.

20:50

Please, show me your glory.

20:52

Moses has just spent 40 days in God's

20:54

presence. He's seen the fire on the

20:56

mountain. He's heard the voice from the

20:58

cloud. And he still asks for more.

21:01

Because he knows that what Israel needs,

21:03

what every generation needs, isn't more

21:05

rules. It's more of God.

21:08

And God says yes, but with a condition.

21:11

You cannot see my face, for no man shall

21:14

see me and live.

21:16

Exodus 33:20.

21:18

So, God places Moses in a cleft of the

21:20

rock and covers him with his hand. And

21:22

he passes by.

21:24

And as he passes, he proclaims

21:27

Exodus 34:6 and 7.

21:30

The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and

21:33

gracious, long-suffering, and abounding

21:35

in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for

21:38

thousands, forgiving iniquity and

21:40

transgression and sin, by no means

21:42

clearing the guilty, visiting the

21:44

iniquity of the fathers upon the

21:45

children and the children's children to

21:47

the third and the fourth generation.

21:50

Slow down. This is God's self-portrait,

21:53

not painted by a prophet, not described

21:55

by a psalmist, not interpreted by a

21:57

theologian, spoken by God himself about

22:00

himself.

22:01

To a man standing in a crack in the rock

22:03

after the worst failure in Israel's

22:05

history.

22:06

The timing is everything.

22:08

God doesn't proclaim his character on a

22:10

good day. He proclaims it on the worst

22:12

day.

22:13

After the betrayal, after the idol,

22:15

after the bodies. He stands in the

22:17

aftermath and says, "Let me tell you who

22:20

I am."

22:21

And the words he chose are worth sitting

22:23

with individually.

22:24

Rachum, merciful.

22:27

The root of this word is rechem, which

22:29

means womb.

22:30

God's mercy is womb love.

22:32

The fierce, instinctive, primal

22:34

compassion of a mother for the child she

22:36

carried. It's not calculated. It's not

22:39

conditional. It flows the way blood

22:41

flows to a baby. Automatically,

22:44

constantly, because the connection

22:46

demands it.

22:47

Before the child has done anything to

22:48

earn it, the love is already there.

22:51

That's Rachum. Chanun,

22:53

gracious. The one who stoops down, who

22:57

bends low to help those who can't help

22:59

themselves.

23:00

Grace isn't God standing at the top of

23:02

the mountain waiting for you to climb

23:03

up. It's God coming down the mountain to

23:06

where you are. It's God in the cleft of

23:08

the rock with Moses showing his back

23:10

because the full view of his face would

23:12

overwhelm a human frame.

23:14

Grace accommodates your weakness.

23:17

Erech apaim slow to anger.

23:20

The Hebrew is vivid. It literally means

23:23

long of nostrils.

23:25

In Hebrew, anger was associated with

23:27

flared nostrils, heavy, rapid breathing.

23:31

A person with long nostrils takes a long

23:33

time to get to the point of flaring.

23:35

God breathes slowly. He's patient. He

23:38

doesn't react to your worst moment as

23:40

though it defines you. He holds his

23:42

breath while you figure out how to come

23:44

home.

23:45

This passage is echoed more than any

23:47

other divine self-description in the Old

23:48

Testament. Psalm 86:15,

23:51

Psalm 103:8,

23:53

Psalm 145:8,

23:56

Joel 2:13, Jonah 4:2,

23:59

Nehemiah 9:17,

24:02

Numbers 14:18.

24:04

When the psalmists, prophets, and

24:06

priests needed to remind Israel or

24:08

themselves who God is, they went back to

24:11

Exodus 34 every time.

24:13

Because this is the bedrock.

24:15

Before every other revelation of God's

24:17

character, before every prophecy, before

24:20

every judgment and every rescue, this is

24:23

the foundation.

24:25

God is merciful. God is gracious. God is

24:28

slow to anger. And everything else he

24:31

does flows from that.

24:33

Something striking about the biblical

24:34

writers who quote Exodus 34:6-7,

24:38

they consistently emphasize the mercy

24:40

and grace while shortening or omitting

24:42

the judgment portion.

24:44

Joel 2:13, He is gracious and merciful,

24:47

slow to anger, and of great kindness,

24:50

and he relents from doing harm.

24:52

Jonah 4:2, and Jonah's case is worth

24:55

pausing on because it reveals something

24:58

unexpected about the human heart's

24:59

relationship with God's mercy.

25:01

Jonah ran from God, not because he

25:04

didn't believe, because he did. He knew

25:06

exactly what God was like. And he didn't

25:09

want Nineveh, Israel's brutal enemy, to

25:12

benefit from it.

25:13

When God spared Nineveh after they

25:15

repented, Jonah was furious. And his

25:18

complaint is extraordinary.

25:20

"Was not this what I said when I was

25:21

still in my country? Therefore, I fled

25:24

previously to Tarshish, for I know that

25:26

you are a gracious and merciful God,

25:29

slow to anger and abundant in loving

25:31

kindness, one who relents from doing

25:33

harm."

25:34

Jonah 4:2. He's quoting Exodus 34.

25:38

He's throwing God's own self-description

25:41

back in his face.

25:42

"I knew you'd do this. I knew you'd be

25:45

merciful. That's why I ran."

25:48

Jonah's problem wasn't doubt. It was

25:50

theology.

25:51

He knew God's character too well, and he

25:53

didn't want his enemies to benefit from

25:55

it.

25:56

Because mercy, by definition, goes to

25:58

people who don't deserve it. And the

26:00

human heart instinctively rebels against

26:02

that.

26:03

Until it's your turn to need it.

26:05

Then suddenly mercy is the most

26:07

beautiful word in any language.

26:10

Romans 6:23 holds the tension in a

26:12

single sentence.

26:14

"For the wages of sin is death, but the

26:16

gift of God is eternal life in Christ

26:19

Jesus our Lord."

26:20

Two economies side by side. Wages, what

26:23

you earned. Gift, what you received.

26:27

Justice and mercy in one breath.

26:29

You earned death. He gave life.

26:32

That's chenun.

26:34

That's grace stooping down to someone

26:35

who earned the opposite.

26:37

Romans 5:20 and 21.

26:40

"But where sin abounded, grace abounded

26:42

much more, so that as sin reigned in

26:45

death, even so grace might reign through

26:47

righteousness to eternal life through

26:49

Jesus Christ our Lord."

26:51

Grace doesn't just match sin. It doesn't

26:54

just neutralize it. It overflows. It

26:57

floods the space sin occupied and fills

26:59

it with something better.

27:01

The way light doesn't just push back

27:03

darkness, it replaces it entirely.

27:06

Sin built a wall, grace builds a door

27:08

right through it. There's no residue, no

27:11

shadow left behind, just light.

27:14

Wednesday and Thursday bring us to a

27:16

parable that connects everything.

27:18

Matthew 22 1 through 14.

27:21

A king prepares a wedding feast for his

27:23

son.

27:24

He invites the honored guests. They

27:26

refuse.

27:28

Not busy, not conflicted, they just

27:30

don't want to come.

27:32

Some make excuses, some ignore the

27:34

invitation entirely. And some, verse 6,

27:37

seize the king's servants, treat them

27:39

spitefully, and kill them. The king

27:41

responds with judgment on those who

27:43

murder his servants. And then he does

27:45

something unexpected. He opens the

27:47

invitation to everyone.

27:49

Go into the highways, and as many as you

27:51

find, invite to the wedding, verse 9.

27:55

The servants go out into the roads and

27:56

bring in everyone they can find, both

27:58

bad and good.

28:00

The word both is important. The king

28:03

didn't filter the guest list. He didn't

28:05

screen for worthiness.

28:07

The doors were open to anyone willing to

28:09

come.

28:09

And the banquet hall fills.

28:12

Then the king walks in and sees a man

28:14

without a wedding garment, Matthew 22 11

28:17

through 13.

28:18

But when the king came in to see the

28:20

guests, he saw a man there who did not

28:22

have on a wedding garment. So he said to

28:24

him, "Friend, how did you come in here

28:26

without a wedding garment?"

28:28

And he was speechless.

28:30

Then the king said to the servants,

28:31

"Bind him hand and foot, take him away,

28:34

and cast him into outer darkness. There

28:36

will be weeping and gnashing of teeth."

28:39

That scene has confused readers for

28:41

centuries. It sounds harsh. The man was

28:44

invited, he came, he's at the feast, and

28:46

he's thrown out for a wardrobe problem?

28:49

But here's the detail that changes

28:51

everything.

28:52

Many scholars believe the king provided

28:54

wedding garments for every guest.

28:56

In ancient Near Eastern royal banquets,

28:58

it was common practice for the host to

29:00

lay out clean robes for those attending,

29:02

especially when the guests were pulled

29:04

in from the highways with no time to

29:06

prepare.

29:07

The garment wasn't something you brought

29:08

from home. It was something the king

29:10

gave you at the door.

29:12

Every guest received one.

29:14

This man refused to put it on. He wanted

29:16

the feast on his own terms, his own

29:18

clothes, his own identity.

29:21

He walked into the king's banquet and

29:22

said, in effect, "I'll take the food,

29:25

but I'll keep my outfit."

29:27

And the king asked him one question.

29:29

"How did you get in here without a

29:30

wedding garment?"

29:32

The man was speechless because there was

29:34

no answer. The garment was free. It was

29:36

available. It was right there.

29:38

He just wouldn't wear it.

29:40

And the king calls him friend.

29:42

The Greek word is hetaire, and it's the

29:45

same word Jesus uses when he addresses

29:47

Judas in the garden, Matthew 26:50.

29:51

"Friend, why have you come?"

29:53

It's a word that carries sorrow more

29:55

than anger. The king isn't furious. He's

29:57

grieved

29:59

because the man had everything he needed

30:00

to belong, and he chose to reject it.

30:03

Isaiah 61:10.

30:06

"He has clothed me with the garments of

30:08

salvation. He has covered me with the

30:10

robe of righteousness."

30:11

The garment is Christ's righteousness,

30:14

and you can't come to the feast in your

30:15

own clothes.

30:17

Your best behavior, your most impressive

30:19

spiritual resume, is still insufficient

30:21

for the king's table.

30:23

Isaiah 64:6 puts it bluntly.

30:27

"All our righteousnesses are like filthy

30:29

rags."

30:30

Not our sins, our righteousnesses.

30:33

The best we can produce on our own still

30:35

doesn't meet the standard of the king's

30:36

table.

30:37

But the exchange is free. Take off the

30:40

old, put on the new.

30:42

That's what repentance looks like in

30:43

practice, not just feeling sorry, not

30:46

just saying the right words, actually

30:48

changing clothes, letting go of the

30:50

identity you built for yourself, and

30:52

receiving the one the king provides. It

30:54

costs you nothing but your pride.

30:57

And pride is exactly what the man in the

30:59

parable was holding on to.

31:01

Zechariah 3 and Matthew 22 tell the same

31:04

story from different angles.

31:06

Joshua stands in filthy garments. God

31:08

removes them and provides clean ones.

31:11

The wedding guest stands in his own

31:12

clothes. The king offers a garment and

31:15

the man refuses.

31:16

Same offer, different responses. One

31:19

receives, one refuses.

31:22

And the difference between them isn't

31:23

knowledge or access or invitation. All

31:26

of that was equal.

31:27

The difference is willingness.

31:29

Joshua let go.

31:30

The wedding guest held on.

31:32

And the distance between those two

31:34

choices is the distance between

31:36

salvation and judgment.

31:38

Revelation 7:13 and 14 completes the

31:41

picture.

31:42

John sees a great multitude in white

31:44

robes, and one of the elders asks, "Who

31:47

are these arrayed in white robes, and

31:49

where did they come from?"

31:50

The answer.

31:52

"These are the ones who come out of the

31:53

great tribulation and washed their robes

31:55

and made them white in the blood of the

31:57

lamb."

31:58

The robes are washed in blood. The

32:01

cleansing agent isn't water, it's

32:03

sacrifice.

32:04

The garment is free to you because it

32:06

cost everything to him. Quick word

32:08

before we continue. If this kind of

32:10

study is giving you something real,

32:12

consider becoming a channel member.

32:14

Membership is what makes this research

32:16

and production possible. It keeps every

32:18

study free for anyone, anywhere.

32:21

To the members already supporting this,

32:22

thank you. You're the reason this

32:24

reaches people. Every thread in this

32:27

study converges on the same person.

32:29

Shub, the return, leads to a father who

32:32

is already running toward you. Luke

32:34

15:20. The prodigal son was still a

32:37

great way off when his father saw him

32:39

and ran.

32:40

The father didn't wait at the door. He

32:42

didn't cross his arms. He didn't demand

32:44

an explanation first. He ran.

32:47

In the ancient Near East, a dignified

32:49

man never ran. Running meant lifting

32:52

your robes, exposing your legs. It was

32:54

undignified. And the father didn't care.

32:57

Dignity was the last thing on his mind.

33:00

His son was coming home, and every

33:02

second of distance between them was one

33:04

second too many.

33:05

And he threw his arms around a son who

33:07

still smelled like the pigpen. The robe

33:10

came out. The best robe, the first robe,

33:13

the one reserved for the most honored

33:14

guest. The ring went on. The signet

33:17

ring, the symbol of authority and family

33:19

membership. The sandals were brought

33:22

because servants went barefoot, but sons

33:24

wore shoes.

33:25

Before the son finished his rehearsed

33:27

speech, "Make me like one of your hired

33:29

servants," the father had already

33:31

restored him.

33:32

Full son, full status, full embrace. And

33:36

then the feast was prepared. The older

33:38

brother was furious. He'd been obedient

33:41

the whole time. He'd stayed home. He'd

33:43

done the work. And his response reveals

33:45

the legalism that can hide inside

33:47

outward obedience.

33:49

"I've been serving you all these years,"

33:50

he says. Serving. Not loving, not

33:54

enjoying. Serving. He was in the house

33:57

the whole time, but had the heart of a

33:59

hired servant, not a son.

34:01

The prodigal left home and came back.

34:03

The older brother never left and never

34:05

arrived. Hosea's marriage. The faithful

34:08

partner bearing the cost of

34:10

reconciliation.

34:11

That's the cross. Christ didn't wait for

34:14

us to come to him. Romans 5:8. While we

34:17

were still sinners, Christ died for us.

34:20

The cost of bringing the unfaithful

34:21

spouse home fell entirely on the

34:23

faithful one.

34:24

He paid what we owed. He wore what we

34:26

deserved. He bore what should have

34:28

crushed us.

34:30

Hosea bought Gomer back for 15 shekels

34:32

of silver and a homer and a half of

34:35

barley. Christ bought us back with his

34:37

blood. The currency changed, the

34:39

principle didn't. The faithful always

34:42

bears the cost.

34:43

Exodus 34. God rewrites the covenant

34:46

after the golden calf. And centuries

34:49

later, on the night before the cross,

34:51

Jesus holds a cup and says, "This cup is

34:54

the new covenant in my blood, which is

34:56

shed for you." Luke 22:20.

34:59

New tablets. New covenant, same God,

35:02

same mercy, same rackham, womb love that

35:05

never stops, even when the child has

35:08

wandered as far as a child can wander.

35:10

The golden calf was the worst betrayal

35:12

in Israel's history. The cross absorbed

35:14

the worst betrayal in human history. And

35:17

in both cases, God's response was the

35:19

same, not abandonment, renewal. The

35:22

wedding garment. Christ's righteousness

35:25

covering your nakedness.

35:27

The same God who made garments of skin

35:29

for Adam and Eve in Genesis 3:21, the

35:31

first death in the Bible, an animal

35:33

dying to clothe the people who had just

35:35

broken the only rule they'd been given,

35:37

that God is still providing covering,

35:40

still exchanging your filthy rags for

35:42

his clean robe, still meeting you at the

35:44

door with something better than what you

35:45

walked in wearing. From Eden to Exodus

35:48

to Zechariah to the wedding feast, the

35:50

pattern is identical. God provides the

35:53

covering. You receive it. The cost falls

35:56

on the faithful partner. And the only

35:58

thing that can stop it is your refusal

36:00

to let go of what you're wearing and

36:02

accept what he's offering.

36:04

One detail about forgiveness that most

36:05

people never think about. Forgiveness is

36:08

never free. Someone always pays.

36:11

When you forgive someone who hurt you,

36:13

you absorb the cost of their offense.

36:15

The debt doesn't disappear, it's

36:17

transferred. You choose to carry what

36:19

they owed. And that's exactly what

36:21

happened at the cross. The debt of human

36:24

sin didn't vanish into thin air. It was

36:26

transferred from us to him. He was

36:29

wounded for our transgressions. He was

36:31

bruised for our iniquities. The

36:33

chastisement for our peace was upon him,

36:36

and by his stripes we are healed. Isaiah

36:38

53:5. That's why 1 John 1:9 says God is

36:42

faithful and just to forgive.

36:45

Not just merciful.

36:47

Just. Because the price was paid. The

36:51

debt was settled.

36:53

God can forgive you without violating

36:55

justice because justice was satisfied at

36:57

the cross.

36:59

The mercy you receive is built on a

37:01

foundation of justice.

37:03

And the person who laid that foundation

37:05

is the same one holding the robe waiting

37:08

for you to come home.

37:10

A woman locks herself out of her house.

37:12

It's late. She's been driving for hours,

37:15

long enough that the coffee wore off two

37:16

exits ago.

37:18

The key she normally uses is inside,

37:20

sitting on the counter where she left it

37:22

that morning.

37:23

She tries the front door. Locked. The

37:26

side door. Locked.

37:28

She walks around the house in the dark

37:30

testing each window, each latch.

37:33

Everything secured.

37:35

Then she gets to the back door. The one

37:37

she always forgets about. The one her

37:39

husband installed years ago and she's

37:41

never once remembered to bolt.

37:44

And it's open. Not broken. Not forced.

37:47

Just open.

37:49

The way it's been for months because she

37:51

never remembers to lock it and he never

37:53

reminds her.

37:54

She walks in.

37:56

The kitchen light is on. The one that

37:58

runs on on a timer. The one that's been

38:00

turning on at the same time every night

38:02

whether she's home or not.

38:04

The house is warm. Her slippers are by

38:06

the couch where she left them.

38:08

She drops her bag on the floor, sits

38:10

down, and it hits her.

38:13

She was pulling on locked doors for 20

38:15

minutes, and the whole time there was a

38:17

door that had been open since before she

38:19

left. She just wasn't looking for it in

38:21

the right place.

38:23

Repentance isn't finding a way to break

38:25

back into God's presence. It's not

38:27

picking the lock or forcing the window

38:29

or climbing through the attic. It's

38:31

remembering that there's a door you

38:32

forgot about. One that's been open the

38:35

whole time because God doesn't lock

38:37

people out. He leaves a way in. Always.

38:41

The light has been on the whole time.

38:43

The house has been warm the whole time.

38:46

Your job isn't to force the lock. It's

38:49

to stop trying the doors that don't open

38:51

and walk through the one that does.

38:53

The front door, your own righteousness,

38:56

is locked. It's always been locked. You

38:58

can't earn your way in.

39:00

The side door, your performance, your

39:02

resume, your spiritual track record,

39:05

locked, too.

39:06

But the back door, grace, mercy, the

39:11

robe provided by someone else.

39:13

That door has been open since Eden.

39:15

Since God made garments of skin and

39:17

covered the people who just ruined

39:19

everything.

39:20

Saturday showed us the drift. Martha's

39:23

kitchen. A rope loosening in the dark.

39:25

The distance that grows not from

39:27

defiance but from distraction.

39:29

And God's response. Zechariah 3.

39:33

The accuser silenced. The filthy clothes

39:36

removed. The robe provided.

39:38

While you're still in the dirt, Sunday

39:41

opened the dictionary of repentance.

39:43

Shub, turn your feet. Metanoia, change

39:46

your mind. Hosea's marriage showed us

39:49

the cost of reconciliation falling on

39:51

the faithful partner. And the morning

39:53

dew showed us what repentance looks like

39:55

when it's all words and no roots.

39:58

Monday gave us the model. Psalm 51.

40:01

David, broken, asking not for a repair

40:04

but for a new creation. Bara. And the

40:07

goodness of God as the engine that pulls

40:10

you home. Sorrow and change. Heart and

40:13

feet.

40:14

Tuesday brought us to the mountain where

40:16

God rewrote the tablets and proclaimed

40:18

his own name.

40:20

Racham. Channun.

40:22

Erek appayim.

40:23

Womb love. Stooping grace. Patient

40:27

breath.

40:28

The most echoed self-description of God

40:30

in all of scripture, spoken on the worst

40:32

day, not the best.

40:35

Wednesday and Thursday gave us the

40:36

wedding garment. Free, provided,

40:39

available to every guest.

40:41

The man who refused it wasn't rejected

40:43

for being dirty. He was removed for

40:46

refusing the exchange.

40:48

The robe is Christ's righteousness.

40:50

And accepting it costs you nothing but

40:52

the pride of wearing your own clothes.

40:55

1 John 1:9 one more time. If we confess

40:59

our sins, he is faithful and just to

41:01

forgive us our sins and to cleanse us

41:03

from all unrighteousness.

41:06

Faithful. He keeps his word. He's done

41:08

it before. He'll do it again.

41:11

Just. He does what's right. And what's

41:13

right in God's economy is mercy.

41:17

Because the God who proclaimed his own

41:19

name on that mountain chose Racham as

41:21

the first word.

41:22

Not sovereign. Not powerful. Not judge.

41:26

Merciful.

41:28

That's who he is before he's anything

41:30

else. And everything he does flows from

41:32

that.

41:33

The door is open.

41:35

The light has been on since you left.

41:37

And the father who ran to meet a son who

41:39

still smelled like the pigpen is the

41:42

same father looking down the road right

41:44

now.

41:45

Waiting for you. You don't have to

41:46

rehearse the perfect prayer. You don't

41:48

have to earn the garment. You just have

41:51

to turn around. Shuv.

41:53

One step. Then another. And you'll find

41:56

that the distance you created was never

41:58

too far for the God who stoops down to

42:00

cross.

42:01

He's been waiting since you left. And he

42:03

hasn't turned off the light.

42:05

If you've been drifting, stop.

42:08

Not tomorrow. Now. Name the distance.

42:11

Acknowledge it. Don't dress it up. Don't

42:14

minimize it. Don't compare yourself to

42:16

someone worse. Just say it.

42:19

I've been walking the wrong direction. I

42:21

want to come home.

42:22

And then do the simplest thing in the

42:24

world. Turn around. Shub.

42:27

It doesn't have to be dramatic. It

42:29

doesn't require a church service or a

42:31

special moment or the right music

42:33

playing in the background.

42:35

It just requires a decision, a turn.

42:38

A step back toward the God you stepped

42:40

away from.

42:41

And stop trying to clean yourself up

42:43

before you come.

42:44

That's the lie that keeps more people

42:46

away from God than any theological

42:48

objection ever has.

42:50

The idea that you need to fix yourself

42:51

before God will accept you.

42:53

Zechariah 3 shattered that.

42:56

Joshua was standing in the dirt when God

42:58

took the filthy garments off.

43:00

The cleaning is God's job. Your job is

43:02

to show up. Dirty, honest, facing the

43:06

right direction.

43:07

First John 1:9.

43:09

If we confess our sins, he is faithful

43:11

and just to forgive us our sins and to

43:14

cleanse us from all unrighteousness.

43:16

Confess. That's your part. He's faithful

43:19

and just. That's his part. And his part

43:22

has never failed. Not once.

43:25

Not for Joshua. Not for Israel. Not for

43:28

the prodigal. Not for you.

43:31

And if someone in your life is trying to

43:32

come home, be the unlocked door.

43:35

Be the father on the road. Forgive the

43:37

way you've been forgiven. Not because

43:39

the person deserves it, but because the

43:41

God who forgave you didn't wait for you

43:43

to deserve it, either.

43:45

Ephesians 4:32.

43:47

Be kind to one another, tenderhearted,

43:49

forgiving one another, even as God in

43:52

Christ forgave you.

43:53

If this hits something real in you,

43:55

subscribe so we can keep going. Leave a

43:58

comment. Even a word helps more than you

44:00

think. And if it's the kind of thing

44:01

you'd want someone to send you, send it.

44:04

May the God who wrote his own name as

44:06

mercy, meet you wherever tonight finds

44:09

you. God bless you.

More transcripts

Explore other videos transcribed with YouTLDR.

Get the TLDR of any YouTube video

Transcribe, summarize, and repurpose videos in 125+ languages — free, no signup required.

Try YouTLDR Free