Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sat Jan 08, 2022 1:00 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 08, 2022 12:58 am
Could you explain what you understand the word to mean?
There are at least two quite different precise theological definitions, plus some more informal, colloquial alternatives; so I have to ask
It is likely that in my case the definition I'd provide is similar -- in its colloquialness -- to what I
already offered. Whether the word is repentance or penance, connected with a sort of moral self-examination, superficial or profound, the important thing (in my view) is the nature of the experience, the nature of the process.
Oh. Well, the Catholic thing called "penance" is associated with repentance, but is not itself repentance, and is not a Biblical concept, whereas "repentance" is both an Old Testament and a New Testament mainstay.
Obviously, these words do have precise theological definitions, and the one one believes is right will I gather depend on what Christian school one is associated with. In the Bible stories, naturally, "Repent for the Kingdom of Heaven is near" of John the Baptist has led to this definition, but what I have chosen to quote is from a very modern Evangelical site:
The Greek word for repent is μετάνοια, said metanoia. The closest literal English meaning of the word is to have a change of mind, but might be better said, “to think differently afterwards” or “changing your mind after being with,” according to the HELPS word study and Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance.
To repent means to be convinced of another way, to change your mind or convictions. And in response to be convinced in your mind and heart, to change your actions. Repentance means turning from going your own way to going God’s way.
The two main theological definitions are both included above. They are somewhat different, you can note, but they're both represented. Absent from that account is any mention of "penance," however.
"Penance" is a human attempt to "make up for" evil one has done by trying to do a counterbalancing amount of "good" or "reparations." It's a works-based way of trying to buy one's way out of judgment and to offset evil so as to counterbalance the scales of justice. And "penance" is prescribed by a priest, who tells one what, and how much, one must do in order to be forgiven for one's trespasses.
But the Bible says that sin doesn't work that way. You don't "buy back" credits to excuse evil you've done, by doing something "good" afterward; and certainly not at the arbitrary declaration of some "priest." Good deeds are not "weighed off" against bad ones, in some scale that allows for a certain amount of evil, so long as sufficient good is found afterward. Rather, in the eyes of a perfectly righteous
HaShem, no evil can be countenanced at all; and the goods that men do are not excuses for their evil. This is why the prophet Isaiah writes,
"Yet shall we be saved?
For all of us have become like one who is unclean,
And all our righteous deeds are like a filthy garment;
And all of us wither like a leaf,
And our wrongdoings, like the wind, take us away." (Isaiah 64:5-6)
Our "righteous deeds" are not credit against our wickedness: here, we see that our wickedness will make even our righteous deeds no more than "filthy rags" in God's sight. The problem will not be the good deeds themselves; the problem will remain the dirty hands that did all those deeds, whatever they were.
And this theme, of course, is explicitly taken up in Romans 3 in the New Testament, of course, quoting this Isaiah passage explicitly. So in neither Testament is "repentance" interpreted as "penance." Rather, it has the two aspects you see in your definition above: first, a "change of mind," a mental reconditioning in which one's whole assessment of things is changed, one's perspective on and interpretation of the world is renewed to likemindedness to God's assessment, and then one's actions are engaged to reverse course, reject one's old path, and turn toward God.
This is repentance. Anything less is not. One needs both a new mind and a new way. And one's sins are not consquently "offset" against one's former deeds (which have all been "filthy rags" anyway), but rather one is
forgiven for those sins, and they are removed from the account against you, by the grace of God. And how is this to be done? Not by appeal to one's own righteousness, but by appeal to the sacrifice God has provided to take away sins...a concept you will find everywhere in both Torah and the New Testament, as I'm sure you are aware.
As I said I think the topic of repentance is a very interesting one. I suppose one reason is because it must, in my view, involve a genuine *contact* if you will with invisible, spiritual power. If when one describes repentance as *regret* without a reference to something higher, and metaphysical, one likely has a somewhat atheistic position.
This is an extremely astute insight on your part, Alexis.
You are absolutely right. The conventional (or, to use your term, atheistic) view of "repentance" is that it's something a human being does
on his own -- if he has reason to want to do it at all (which under atheism, I can see no reason he does). Biblical repentance is an actual interaction between God and man. To create a genuine "metanoia" is something no human being can do on his own -- first, because without reference to God, he has no correct standard of righteousness to which to refer and no direction to turn, but secondly, because real repentance takes an actual (shall I say "chemical"?) change of mind that human beings are incapable of achieving alone. It means God actually intervenes to enable the change to take place, and the change depends entirely on the man's repentant relationship to the actual God.
Of course, left to pure Atheism, such a person believes there's no such Entity to which to relate, no objective standard to which to "repent," and not even anything that can be defined as a "problem" to warrant repentance. Even his vague intuitions that something is wrong can only be derived from some visceral, residual feeling pulled from his religious past, but ungrounded and utterly inexplicable within the terms of his Atheism.
I could easily say, and I think it would be fair, to say that my own inner processes of metanoia, be they theologically definable and theologically kosher, as the case may be, does not have a great deal of relevance for me.
Do you mean that you have found them unsatisfactory, or that you don't think repentance is a thing you personally need, or that repentance isn't an important condition of relationship to God, or that it isn't necessary to a "Christian" ethos, or something else?
Lke Q says (
genuflects): Trust the Process!

I made quite a study of that show, and Q was one of the more interesting fixtures in it, from a religious perspective. But I have my reservations about his theology, of course.
