Archive for the ‘Repent With Jesus’ Tag
“Turn To Jesus And Away From The Demonic!”
Part A:
Part B:
Full Message:
Scripture: Acts 2: 29-41
Summary:
In this bold, Spirit-filled sermon, Pastor Timothy Brassell offers a clarifying and convicting look at repentance through the lens of Peter’s sermon in Acts 2:29–41, delivered on the Day of Pentecost. Far from a guilt-driven concept, repentance is portrayed as a joyful, relational, Spirit-empowered turning; not just from sin, but toward Jesus Christ, who is the revelation of God’s love and grace.
The message begins by grounding listeners in the Trinitarian mission of God. Pastor Tim emphasizes that God is not a generic being in the sky, but Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, eternally relational and now present in Jesus. When Peter preached to a crowd of thousands in Jerusalem, he called them to repent and be baptized, not as a way to earn forgiveness, but because forgiveness had already been secured in Christ.
The sermon makes clear that repentance isn’t merely turning from sin, it is turning to God in Christ. That distinction is vital. Many try to repent by cleaning themselves up or breaking habits, but biblical repentance starts by looking to Jesus. Only in His presence do we receive the power to turn. To try repentance apart from Christ is to fall into legalism or self-help religion.
🧲 A Powerful Illustration:
Using a set of bent wrenches and magnets, Pastor Tim gives a vivid picture of repentance. Like warped tools, we are bent out of shape by sin and brokenness. But Jesus, as the magnet, draws us to Himself, even while we’re still crooked. As we stay near Him, our lives begin to realign. Repentance is less about straining and more about staying close to Jesus, the only one who can truly reshape us.
✝️ Repentance: What Jesus Has Done for Us:
One of the most powerful and radical truths proclaimed in this message is that Jesus repented for us. Though God is not a man that He should repent in His eternal being, God became man in Jesus Christ, and in our human flesh, He repented perfectly for us, fulfilling all righteousness.
This truth shocks even the religious mind, just as John the Baptist was shocked when Jesus came to be baptized in a baptism of repentance (Matthew 3:11, 13–17). Yet Jesus insisted, saying it was necessary “to fulfill all righteousness.” Why? Because He took on our sinful nature (though He Himself never sinned), and in it, turned fully to the Father, on behalf of all humanity.
Repentance, then, is not about “doing better”, it’s about joining the One who already did everything perfectly, and who now calls us to participate in His life through the Spirit.
🚨 The Stakes Are Real: Turn to Jesus or Be Turned by the World:
Pastor Tim asks a piercing and urgent question:
“Are you becoming more and more a heavenly creature by turning to Christ or more and more a hellish and devilish creature by turning away from Him?”
Repentance is not optional. It is essential. We are all being shaped, either by Christ’s love or by the powers of darkness that seek to scatter, isolate, and destroy. Repentance is the process of becoming whole, of being reconciled, and of being drawn into God’s eternal love. The enemy seeks to separate and divide; Christ unites and restores. We’re not fighting flesh and blood; we’re resisting demonic forces of disconnection.
The message challenges believers not to settle for religious activity or surface-level faith. Instead, we’re called to embrace the life of repentance, a life of intimacy with Jesus, openness to the Spirit, and childlike trust in the Father’s unshakable love.
💖 A Revelation of God’s Heart:
Ultimately, this sermon reveals that Jesus Christ is not just the means of repentance, He is the message. He is the very image of God, showing that God is:
- Good
- Humble
- Creative
- Lowly
- Loving
- And passionately committed to humanity
Jesus is the living proof that mankind is the object of God’s affection, not His anger. God’s justice does not cancel His mercy, it is fulfilled in love through Jesus, who was crucified and raised for our salvation.
Key Points and Highlights:
1. 🔄 Repentance Is Relational, Not Just Behavioral
- Turning to Jesus is the beginning of true change. We’re called not just to turn from sin, but to turn toward God.
- Discipleship Question: What area of your life needs less striving and more surrender to Jesus?
2. 💌 God’s Grace Comes Before Your Repentance
- Repentance doesn’t earn forgiveness; it receives what’s already been given in Christ.
- Discipleship Question: Are you resting in God’s grace or trying to clean yourself up before receiving it?
3. 🧲 God Reshapes You, Even When You’re Still Bent
- Like broken tools drawn to a magnet, our lives realign only as we stay near Jesus.
- Discipleship Question: Where are you seeing God slowly but faithfully reshaping you right now?
4. ⚔️ Spiritual Opposition Is Real, But So Is Victory
- Behind much of our resistance to repentance is demonic separation. The battle is spiritual.
- Discipleship Question: Are you recognizing the enemy’s tactics in your life or calling them something else?
5. ✝️ Jesus Repented For You. Now Walk With Him
- Jesus, in His humanity, turned fully to the Father on your behalf. Repentance is now participation in His life.
- Discipleship Question: How can you respond to Jesus’ repentance with trust instead of trying harder?
📌 Final Reflection:
“Jesus didn’t come to condemn you, but to turn you back to the Father.”
In repentance, you’re not running from failure, you’re running into grace.
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