Article

It’s OK to Preach Repentance

In fact, that’s what preaching is all about.

Rick Warren's preaching has a purpose. He expects people to turn from their old ways. Here are some of his principles on preaching for life change:

1. All behavior is based on belief. If somebody gets a divorce it is because they have a belief behind that: "I think I'll be happier" or whatever.

2. Behind every sin is a lie of unbelieving. You think you are doing what's best for you, but you have been deceived. The Bible tells us that Satan deceives us.

3. Change always starts in the mind. "Be transformed by the renewing of your mind" (Rom. 12:2). The Bible teaches clearly that the way we think affects the way we feel, and the way we feel affects the way we act.

4. Change beliefs first. Trying to change behavior without changing beliefs is a waste of time. Say I have a boat on auto pilot headed north. If I want it to head south, I have two options: I could wrestle the steering wheel or (the better way) change the auto pilot.

5. I don't change people's minds, God's Word does. "We speak words given to us by the Spirit using the Spirit's word to explain spiritual truth" (1 Cor. 2:13 NLT). Both Word and Spirit elements are in preaching, and often we leave out the Spirit element. Spiritual warfare is tearing down mental strongholds. Our weapons have power, pulling down every argument, every pretension.

6. Changing the way people act is the fruit of repentance. Repentance is not behavioral change; it results in behavioral change. Repentance happens in your mind. That 's why John the Baptist says to produce fruit in keeping with repentance. "I preach that they should repent and turn to God and prove their repentance by their deeds" (Acts 26:20).

7. The deepest preaching, bar none, is preaching for repentance. Many preachers are great at interpretation, good at application, but not willing to call for repentance. I preach repentance every Sunday. I talk about "changing your mind" and "paradigm shift." But every message comes down to two words: Will you? "Will you change the way you're thinking?" If you are not preaching repentance, you're not preaching.

Excerpted from Preaching magazine. Rick Warren is pastor of Saddleback Community Church in Lake Forest, California.

With the DVD release of Finding Nemo (Disney, 2003) came a flood of illustrations from this poignant tale of a father fish's search for his prodigal son of the sea.

Starts at 0:18:27, 4.5 minutes
Marlin and Dory land in a 12-step meeting of sharks. The sharks recite: "I am a nice shark, not a mindless eating machine." The sharks confess how long since they last ate a fish (three weeks for Bruce). At his turn, Marlin says, "I don't have a problem.

Starts at 0:58:30, 1.5 minutes
Little Nemo, trapped in an aquarium, fears his father has forgotten him. A pelican arrives with news of the dad's heroic rescue efforts. "What a great Daddy!" Nemo cries.

Starts at 1:09:14, 4 minutes
Trapped in a whale's mouth, Marlin learns the risk of faith when he and Dory trust the whale to release them, not eat them. "Everything's gonna be all right," Dory says.

"How do you know?"

"I don't," she answers honestly.

Finding Video

Nemo Swimming in Preachable Scenes

Denial & Transformation

The Father's Search

The Risk of Faith

Submitted by Winn Collier, Seneca, South Carolina, and David Slagle, Wilmore, Kentucky

Copyright © 2004 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal. Click here for reprint information onLeadership Journal.

Posted January 1, 2004

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