Pastor Mike Impact Ministries

Michael L Grooms
Pastor Mike Impact Ministries Podcast

A daily chat with Pastor Mike and other resources to encourage listeners to connect with the Word of God and grow in their faith.

  1. Luke 3:21-23 - "While He Prayed, The Heaven Was Opened"

    1 DAY AGO

    Luke 3:21-23 - "While He Prayed, The Heaven Was Opened"

    I started my chat today thinking we would finish Luke 3, but as you will see I won’t get past verse 22. Several things have caught my attention in verses 21-22 that I would like to highlight today.   When Jesus came to be baptized by His cousin John in the Jordan River, no doubt there was a great crowd of hundreds of people from all over Israel there listening to John preach his message of repentance. I imagine that John would then give an invitation and for the people who came under conviction and wanted to be baptized to get into orderly line. As a very long line of people formed, it appears that Jesus has been there in the back of the crowd, and He gets into the back of the line.   I assume this because verse 21 says, “When all the people were baptized, it came to pass that Jesus also was baptized…”. Jesus waited all day at the back of the line! He didn’t show up and force His way through the crowd telling everyone that He was the Messiah and to stand back while He makes His first public appearance. Remember Luke is presenting Jesus to us at the perfect “Son of Man” who identifies with us sinners.   Paul would later write in Philippians 2:5-8, “Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus, who, being in the form of God, did not consider it robbery to be equal with God, but made Himself of no reputation, taking the form of a bondservant, and coming in the likeness of men. And being found in appearance as a man, He humbled Himself and became obedient to the point of death, even the death of the cross.”   Our first picture of Jesus and the beginning of His ministry is one of humility and obedience. Jesus humbly takes His place with sinful men and submits in obedience to a baptism of repentance. The great lesson for us to learn from this is that if we are to have a ministry like Jesus that pleases our Father in heaven, we must humble ourselves and be willing to get in the back of the line where we are not noticed and present ourselves as servants. And we also should be obedient to the Lord and His Word. We have often said over the years that baptism is the first act of obedience in believer’s life!   Next verse 21 says, “and while He prayed, the heaven was opened.”  Again, only Luke tells us that at this point that Jesus prayed as He comes up out of the waters of baptism. Do you want to open the windows of heaven pouring out the Father’s blessings on your life and ministry? I see three necessary things here. Humility, obedience and prayer. Prayer is an indication of a heart that is totally dependent upon God’s grace for everything I need in my life to love and serve Him in a way that impacts the world of broken people all around me!   It was then that the Holy Spirit visibly appeared and came upon Jesus and the Father spoke from heaven and said, "You are My beloved Son; in You I am well pleased." Here you have the evidence of the Trinity, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. The Scripture teaches that now my body is the temple of God: “…For you are the temple of the living God” (2 Corinthians 6:16). That Christ dwells in me: “To them God willed to make known what are the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles: which is Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27). And my body is also the temple of the Holy Spirit: “Or do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and you are not your own?” (1 Corinthians 6:19). How awesome it that? Is there evidence of the Trinity dwelling in you as a believer!   The Father has a ministry for you today! Will you humble yourself, live in obedience to His Word, and begin every day of ministry with prayer receiving instructions from your Father? It is then that you will experience the fulness of the Trinity, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, guiding and directing your life. And you will quietly hear the voice of the Father say

    5 min
  2. Luke 3:19-23 - "Jesus Himself Began His Ministry"

    2 DAYS AGO

    Luke 3:19-23 - "Jesus Himself Began His Ministry"

    You can imagine the excitement that must have been in the air in Israel during this time. God has been silent for four-hundred years after speaking to the nation and rebuking them through Malachi the prophet. Sure, they were back in the Promise Land but they were under the thumb of the Romans. The promise of a Messiah only seemed to be a dream. But then Herod the Great rebuilt the temple in Jerusalem and once again the observance of the sacrifices and feast days like Passover were allowed to be observed. Stories of a special baby being born in Bethlehem with wise men from the east visiting Him, had circulated throughout the land. And now a colorful prophet shows up with a powerful message that “the kingdom of heaven is at hand”. God appears to be speaking to His people once again and they respond by the thousands coming to the Jordan River to be baptized by this prophet, John the Baptist!   John was faithful in his ministry by first preparing the hearts of the people for the coming Messiah. He clearly preached and proclaimed that Jesus was "the Lord" (Luke 3:4) and the “Son of God” (John 1:34). John begins his message by exposing the hypocrisy of the religious leaders. Next, he addressed the people and the soldiers and gave them specific instructions on what it meant to repent and the terrible consequences if they refused. And now in our verses today, because John rebuked Herod Antipas for his adulterous marriage to Herodias and other evils that he had done, he was imprisoned by the king and eventually beheaded some ten months later. However, John had faithfully finished his God-given assignment and prepared the people to meet the Messiah, the Son of God.   Luke now tells us that one day, after all the others had been baptized, Jesus presented Himself for baptism at the Jordan by John. Matthew’s Gospel informs us that at first John refused to comply (Matt. 3:13-15). He knew that Jesus of Nazareth was the perfect Son of God who had no need to repent of sin. Jesus responded, "Permit it to be so now, for thus it is fitting for Us to fulfill all righteousness" (Matthew 3:15). Then John baptized Him. Why then was the sinless Son of God baptized?   To begin with, in His baptism Jesus identified with the sinners that He came to save. Also, His baptism was the official start of His ministry (Acts 1:21-22; 10:37-38), and Luke states that He was "about thirty years of age" (Luke 3:23). It is also interesting to note that Joseph was thirty when Pharaoh elevated him to the seat of power in Egypt.   But our Lord's words tell us the main reason for His baptism: "for in this way it is fitting for Us to fulfill all righteousness" (Matt. 3:15). In what way? In the way pictured by His baptism in the Jordan. Many Bible scholars agree that New Testament baptism was by immersion, which is a picture of death, burial, and resurrection. Our Lords baptism in water was a picture of His work of redemption (Matt. 20:22; Luke 12:50). It was through His baptism of suffering on the cross that God "fulfilled all righteousness." (The "Us" in Matthew 3:15 does not mean John and Jesus. It means the Father, the Son, and the Spirit.)   When our Lord came up from the water, the Father spoke from heaven and identified Him as the beloved Son of God, and the Spirit visibly came upon Jesus in the form of a dove. Those who deny the Trinity have a difficult time explaining this event. This is the first of three recorded occasions when the Father spoke from heaven. The second was when Jesus was transfigured (Luke 9:28-36), and the third was during His last week before the cross (John 12:28).   Only Luke mentions that Jesus was praying at His baptism, and this was only one of many occasions (Luke 5:16; 6:12; 9:18, 28-29; 11:1; 23:34, 46). As the perfect Son of man, Jesus depended on His Father to meet His needs, and that was why He prayed.   Are you praying and depending upon our Father in heaven to meet your needs today?   God bless

    5 min
  3. Luke 3:15-18 - "One Mightier Than I is Coming"

    3 DAYS AGO

    Luke 3:15-18 - "One Mightier Than I is Coming"

    Jesus and His cousin John the Baptist came on the public scene at about the same time. John showed up first with a spectacular ministry of preaching down by the Jordan River in a wilderness area not far from the north end of the Dead Sea. Thousands of people came to see him and upon hearing him they repented of their sins and were baptized by him. It was there that Jesus came from Galilee to be baptized by John.   John's voice rang out, and its echoes filled the Promised Land. The people of Israel were under the rule and oppression of the Romans and lived in expectation of the coming of the Messiah to deliver them. I can imagine that over the past thirty years the stories of the birth of Jesus by the shepherds, the appearance of the wise men, Herod killing all the boys under two years of age in Bethlehem, and the appearance of Jesus at the temple astounding the religious leaders, had spread across the land and when John showed up preaching, “The kingdom of heaven is at hand” (Matthew 3:1-2), must have caused that expectation of the Messiah’s coming to rise even higher!   Luke tells in verses 15, that the people “were in expectation” and some people were confused by his crusade and wondered if maybe he was the Messiah. No doubt, the authorities were afraid of his influence with the multitudes, who believed him to be a prophet. Although he performed no miracles, his voice had an Elijah-like ring and his message had an unmistakable authority. As the days passed, more and more people even speculated that he might be the very Messiah Himself. In verses 16-18, John did his best to put a stop to their thinking this as he described the difference between his ministry and the ministry of Jesus.   John said, “He indeed baptized with water”, because it was the seal of repentance that he required of his converts. But there was more to it than mere baptism in water. That was all well and good for a ministry of repentance. But he was there to announce the coming of One who would baptize with the Holy Spirit and with fire (3:16).   Between John and Jesus was a great gulf. John was a voice; Jesus was the Word. John had come in the spirit and power of Elijah; Jesus would come in the spirit and power of Jehovah. John's baptism related to repentance; Jesus' baptism related to regeneration (John 3:3-7).   Had the nation responded to the ministry of John and the Messiahship of Jesus, then the baptism of the Holy Spirit would have been for Israel. As it was, that side of things was postponed for some two thousand years, and the Gentiles came into the blessing that the Jews had spurned.   The baptism that John foretold took place on the Day of Pentecost when a small nucleus of believers were baptized by the Holy Spirit into the church, the mystical body of Christ (Acts 1:4-8; 1 Cor. 12:12-27; especially v. 13). John, of course, like all of the Old Testament prophets, knew nothing of the mystical body of Christ which we know as the church. All he discerned was that if Israel missed the baptism of the Spirit, they would be faced with a baptism of fire, which would be a judgment of fire.   John made this clear in verse 17: “His winnowing fan is in His hand, and He will thoroughly clean out His threshing floor, and gather the wheat into His barn; but the chaff He will burn with unquenchable fire." Yes, my friend, Jesus and His angels will gather “the wheat”, the genuine believer, into His dwelling place in heaven one day as He promised in John 14:2-3: “In My Father's house are many mansions; if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive you to Myself; that where I am, there you may be also.” But if you reject Jesus and His salvation, like the “chaff” you will face the judgement of “unquenchable fire”!   To reject or receive Jesus is your choice! May the Lord help you to make the right one toda

    5 min
  4. Luke 3:7-14 - "What Shall We Do?"

    4 DAYS AGO

    Luke 3:7-14 - "What Shall We Do?"

    John the Baptist came preaching a message of judgement and repentance. It appears that there was a movement of the Spirit of God across the land of Israel and when people heard about this wilderness preacher, they started coming by the thousands to hear him and many were willing to repent and be baptized. As we said yesterday, John first addressed the religious crowd that came to hear him, trying to find out why all the country seemed to be flocking to hear him. They were not interested in his message of repentance. They were blindly satisfied with their religious rituals and ceremonies.   So, John addressed them first and called them a “brood of vipers”. A bunch of poisonous snakes! He warned them of the judgment of the “wrath to come”. That they needed to repent like everyone else and just being a Jew wasn’t enough! John went on to say, that already the axe is laid to the root of the trees, which meant that the Messiah was here, and judgement by being thrown into the fire, was sure if they rejected Him.   Then it appears that John has a message for three different groups of people. In verse 10, “the people”, which would be the multitudes of common people that were there. In verse 12, “the tax collectors” that came to be baptized. And in verse 14, the Roman soldiers possibly were there to keep order because of the crowds. They were coming under conviction by John’s powerful preaching!   It is interesting that each of these groups all ask the same question upon getting baptized and now wanting to bear fruits that gave evidence of their repentance. Their question was, “What shall we do?” This sounds like a familiar question that was often asked in the Book of Acts. On the day of Pentecost after Peter preached his powerful message about the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus, in Acts 2:37, the people listening “were cut to the heart, and said to Peter and the rest of the apostles, "Men and brethren, what shall we do?"   In Acts 9:6, we see the Apostle Paul’s response when he met Jesus on the road to Damascus. After he acknowledged that it was Jesus speaking to him, he asked, "Lord, what do You want me to do?” After the earthquake and the jail doors opened in Acts 16:30, the Philippian jailer asked Paul and Silas, “Sirs, what must I do to be saved?”   What a great question! It is a sign of truly coming under the convicting power of the Holy Spirit and wonderful evidence of genuine repentance! And John had an application for each of these groups. To the people he said, “that whoever has two coats, let him give to him that hath none; and he that has food, let him to likewise" (Luke 3:10, 11). The message for the people was mercy and charity. This indirectly exposed the sin of the people, namely, selfishness.   To the tax collectors he said, “collect no more than that which is appointed you?" (Luke 3:12, 13). John the Baptist did not hesitate to deal with sin. The publicans, who were the tax collectors, were notorious for overcharging people for taxes. And to the soldiers, John the Baptist gave a threefold answer. First, “do not intimidate anyone.” Soldiers have the means to do violence to people. Secondly, “do not accuse falsely." Soldiers could be very evil to people by bringing false accusations. Roman courts readily accepted the testimony of a soldier. And thirdly, “be content with your wages”. Contentment with wages reflects an attitude that is not poisoned by materialism.   What is the Holy Spirit speaking to you about today? Will you respond, “Lord, what will you have me to do?”   God bless!

    5 min
  5. Luke 3:7-9 - "Therefore Bear Fruits Worthy of Repentance"

    5 DAYS AGO

    Luke 3:7-9 - "Therefore Bear Fruits Worthy of Repentance"

    Remember we are told in Luke 3:23 that Jesus begin His ministry when He was about thirty years of age. This means that John the Baptist, who was born six months before the birth of Jesus, would have also been about thirty years old. Matthew’s Gospel tells us in Matthew 3; “In those days John the Baptist came preaching in the wilderness of Judea!” And what a preacher he was! He didn’t come explaining, he came preaching! He didn’t come tickling people’s ears trying to make them feel better about themselves.   When you think about the background of John the Baptist, you will remember that he was the son of a priest, which means he would have grown up around Jerusalem and the temple. He saw and observed all the ceremonies, rituals and sacrifices being performed by the priest and the religious establishment. And what he saw was a dead religion full of corruption as the priests took advantage of the people buying sacrificial animals and other worship items when they arrived at the temple, by getting kickbacks from the sellers they allow to sell their ware there. He saw the hypocrisy of the priest and the religious leaders, and he was turned off to it. And as soon as he was old enough, he fled to the wilderness.   We are told that John most likely joined the Essenes who were down by the Dead Sea living in a small, very exclusive commune of hermit like men dedicated to making copies of the Old Testament Scriptures. You can imagine how John would have poured over the prophesies of Isaiah as the Spirit of God began to reveal to him that he was that voice that was “to cry in the wilderness and prepare the way of the Lord”. No doubt, as a boy he had been told by his father Zacharias and his mother Elizabeth about the miraculous birth of his cousin Jesus six months after he was born. And now he puts it all together and hears the call of God to go down by the Jordan River and preach!   Please get this picture as John begins to preach and the word begins to spread across the land and up to Jerusalem about this prophet wearing animal skins, eating locus and wild honey, preaching and baptizing lots of people. He was a sight to see and had a message that was changing lives. Even when people came out of curiosity, they came under conviction of their sins and entered the river to be baptized! And as more and more people came “the multitudes” began to show up, and with them came the religious leaders of Jerusalem trying to figure him out.   When the religious leaders show up, John first addresses them in his message and calls them “a brood of vipers”. Now for sure this group did not come to hear about their sins and their hypocrisy. They didn’t think they had anything to repent of. They thought their religion was enough to save them. Even Jesus would later say, “I didn’t come to call the righteous, but the sinners to repentance” (Mark 2:17).   John was not afraid to call these religious leaders out first and expose them for their hypocrisy! I am convinced even today that the problem is not in the pew of our churches but in the pulpit. A pulpit full of preachers who are tickling people’s ears, scratching people’s backs, trying to explain the Bible so the people can feel like because they know the Bible they will also be in good standing with God.   But my friend, you can know the Bible from cover to cover and yet not be right with God. You can say that you have faith in all the right things found in the Bible, but James makes it clear in James 2:17-20; “Thus also faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead. .... This is John’s message! True faith will “bear fruits worthy of repentance”. John tells these religious people that just because they are Jews and have been born into the right family will not matter in the day of judgment. One day, “they will be cut down like a tree and be cast into the fire”.   Today are you sure you are saved? Are the fruits of righteousn

    5 min
  6. Luke 3:1-6 - “The Voice of One Crying…”

    6 DAYS AGO

    Luke 3:1-6 - “The Voice of One Crying…”

    Luke tells us that John is the fulfilment the “voice” found in Isaiah 40:3-5. It was there that Isaiah prophesied some seven-hundred years before the events in the Gospels these words: “The voice of one crying in the wilderness: "Prepare the way of the LORD; Make straight in the desert A highway for our God. Every valley shall be exalted And every mountain and hill brought low; The crooked places shall be made straight And the rough places smooth; The glory of the LORD shall be revealed, And all flesh shall see it together; For the mouth of the LORD has spoken."   The Apostle John in his Gospel tells us: “Now this is the testimony of John, when the Jews sent priests and Levites from Jerusalem to ask him, "Who are you?" He confessed, and did not deny, but confessed, "I am not the Christ." And they asked him, "What then? Are you Elijah?" He said, "I am not." "Are you the Prophet?" And he answered, "No." Then they said to him, "Who are you, that we may give an answer to those who sent us? What do you say about yourself?" He said: "I am 'The voice of one crying in the wilderness: "Make straight the way of the LORD," ' as the prophet Isaiah said" (John 1:19-23).   John the Baptist knew clearly that he was that “voice” that Isaiah prophesied about. He knew what his mission was in preparing the way of the LORD! In fulfillment of that prophecy, John is that voice, a clear distinct voice, a loud voice, an articulate one! John cries, 'Prepare the way of the LORD; Make His paths straight. John's business is to make way for the receiving of the gospel in the hearts of the people.  To bring them into such a frame and temper of mind so that Christ might be welcome to them, and they would welcome to Christ.   Luke goes further on with the quotation than Matthew and Mark had done and applies the following words likewise to John's ministry (v. 5,6), “Every valley shall be exalted or filled”. It seems that this means the gospel of Christ will fill the low valleys of people’s hearts. In other words, the humble will be filled and enriched with grace and be exalted.   “And every mountain and hill brought low”. Speaks how the Gospel will humble the proud and bring them down. How the self-confident that stand upon their own wisdom, and how the self-conceited that lift up their own selves, will have contempt put upon them. If they repent, they are brought to the dust, but if not, they will be taken to the lowest hell.   “The crooked places shall be made straight And the rough ways smooth”. Indicates that sinners shall be converted to God. Their crooked ways and their crooked spirits will be made straight. Man can’t do this himself as it says in Ecclesiastes 7:13: “Consider the work of God; For who can make straight what He has made crooked?”  Only God by his grace can make that straight which sin hath made crooked.   “And the rough ways smooth”. Only the Holy Spirit and the Gospel can deal with and remove the difficulties that hinder and discourage us in finding the way to heaven. Yes the Scripture teaches us that they that love God's law shall have great peace, and nothing shall offend them (Psalm 119:165). The gospel has made the way to heaven plain and easy to be found, smooth and easy to be walked in.   “And all flesh shall see the salvation of God." God’s great salvation through Christ shall be more fully discovered than ever, and the discovery of it shall spread to all flesh!  Not the Jews only, but also the Gentiles. Yes, everyone shall see this salvation of God in the cross of Jesus Christ. It is set before them and offered to them!  Anyone and everyone are invited to enjoy it and receive the benefit of it.   God sometimes has to break up our cold proud hard stony hearts with trials and problems and brings us low so that we might open our hearts in repentance to receive His grace, hope, peace and comfort for our weary souls!   God bless!

    5 min
  7. Luke 3:1-6 - The Baptism of Repentance

    21 SEPT

    Luke 3:1-6 - The Baptism of Repentance

    Exactly what was the meaning of “baptism of repentance” and the importance of it? Though today the word baptism generally evokes thoughts of identifying with Christ’s death, burial, and resurrection, baptism did not begin with Christians. You do not find baptism mentioned in the Old Testament. For years before Christ, the Jews had used baptism in ritual cleansing ceremonies of Gentile proselytes. Also ritual cleaning by water was require by the priest in the Old Testament and for anyone who would enter the tabernacle or temple.   Each time I have visited Israel we always go to place called Qumran located on the west side Dead Sea just south of the Jordan River and in an area called the wilderness where John began his ministry. This is where the Essenes lived. The Essenes were copyists. It is believed that they were the ones who wrote and hid the Dead Sea Scrolls in the caves near their dwellings. At these ruins you will find their cleansing baths that were very elaborate. It is believed that John the Baptist was with this group for a period of time. It may be where the God revealed to him to begin what would be known as the “baptism of repentance”.   John the Baptist took baptism and applied it to the Jews themselves, because it wasn’t just the Gentiles who needed cleansing. Many believed John’s message and were baptized by him (Matthew 3:5–6). The baptisms John performed had a specific purpose. In Matthew 3:11, John the Baptist mentions the purpose of his baptisms: “I baptize you with water for repentance.” Paul affirms this in Acts 19:4: “John’s baptism was a baptism of repentance. He told the people to believe in the one coming after him, that is, in Jesus.”   John’s baptism had to do with repentance. It was a symbolic representation of changing one’s mind and going in a new direction. “Confessing their sins, they were baptized by him in the Jordan River” (Matthew 3:6). Being baptized by John demonstrated a recognition of one’s sin, a desire for spiritual cleansing, and a commitment to follow God’s law in anticipation of the Messiah’s arrival.   There were some, like the Pharisees, who came to the Jordan to observe John’s ministry but who had no desire to step into the water themselves. John rebuked them sternly: “When he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees coming to where he was baptizing, he said to them: ‘You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath? Produce fruit in keeping with repentance’” (Matthew 3:7–8). Even the religious leaders needed to repent of their sin, although they saw no need of it.   Christian baptism today also symbolizes repentance, cleansing, and commitment, but Jesus has given it a different emphasis. When Jesus was baptized by John it was not for repentance because He never sinned. But to “fulfill all righteousness”, Jesus was baptized as the Sinless One to identify with the sinner who needed forgiveness. Christian baptism is a mark of one’s identification with the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ.   Baptism for the new believer is an act of obedience and is representative of a cleansing that is complete and a commitment that is the natural response of one who has been made new. Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross completely washes away our sins, and we are raised to new life empowered by the Holy Spirit (2 Corinthians 5:17–21; Romans 6:1–11). With John’s baptism, a person repented of sin and was therefore ready to place his faith in Jesus Christ. John’s baptism foreshadowed what Jesus would accomplish, much as the Old Testament sacrificial system did.   In this way John prepared the way for Christ by calling people to acknowledge their sin and their need for salvation. His baptism was a purification ceremony meant to ready the peoples’ hearts to receive their Savior.   Have you identified with the Lord Jesus since you have given your heart to Him and received His forgivenes

    5 min
  8. Luke 3:1-6 - The Message of Repentance

    20 SEPT

    Luke 3:1-6 - The Message of Repentance

    After the birth of John the Baptist, in Luke 1:76-80, Zacharias, the father of John the Baptist, had prophesied about his son’s future with these words: “And you, child, will be called the prophet of the Highest; For you will go before the face of the Lord to prepare His ways, To give knowledge of salvation to His people By the remission of their sins, Through the tender mercy of our God, With which the Dayspring from on high has visited us; To give light to those who sit in darkness and the shadow of death, To guide our feet into the way of peace." So the child grew and became strong in spirit, and was in the deserts till the day of his manifestation to Israel.”   Now here in Luke 3:1-6, some thirty years later we are reading of the fulfilment of Zacharias’s prophecy as John came preaching a message of repentance. To me this is interesting, and we should ask the question, “Why a message of repentance”? We should also point out that Matthew’s Gospel also gives us this same description of John: “In those days John the Baptist came preaching in the wilderness of Judea, and saying, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!" (Matthew 3:1-2).   Matthew also informs us that the very first words that Jesus preached after His baptism and forty days of temptation in the wilderness were: “From that time Jesus began to preach and to say, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand" (Matthew 4:17).   Why is repentance so important? Why is repentance the prelude to the coming ministry of Jesus the Messiah? Well, think about it. Later John would say, the Messiah, the Lamb of God, Jesus Christ, has come to do what? To take away the sins of the world. The ministry of Jesus the Messiah is to atone for sin, to provide the way for the forgiveness of sin, and to provide a just and righteous basis whereby our loving heavenly Father can forgive us of sin.   What could possibly keep us from receiving this glorious message of forgiveness? The answer is obvious! Not adequately appreciating that we need to be forgiven of sin. You can't be forgiven of sin if you don't believe that you have sinned and need forgiveness. Repentance is the recognition of our need for forgiveness of sin, and therefore it is necessary for the forgiveness of sin. Not because repentance brings about or causes forgiveness. We could repent until the cows come home, and apart from the saving work of Jesus Christ it would not forgive our sins.   But John makes it clear that it is necessary for forgiveness because we need to recognize our need for forgiveness before we are in a position of receiving forgiveness and trusting in the One who has purchased us forgiveness before His heavenly Father. And so, repentance is absolutely vital, and Luke summarizes John the Baptist's ministry in terms of his preaching of repentance.   Some people feel regret when they are suffering the consequences of their sin. But that is only mental. They admit that they are sorry, but usually that only means they are sorry they got caught or that their sin has hurt someone else. Then there are others who feel remorse for their sin. They shed tears as they emotionally response to their sin and ask for forgiveness. But then they never change and continue to do the same things.   Thank the Lord for true and genuine repentance! It happens when the Holy Spirit so convicts us of our sin against a Holy God that we not only feel regret and remorse but that we turn from our sin and see the full consequence of it falling on the Lord Jesus Christ on the cross! We then experience the regeneration of the Holy Spirt as we are forgiven of all our sins and by His grace we never want to sin again!   Have you ever genuinely repented of your sin! If not, why not right now ask the Lord to give you that heart of repentance and accept the Lord as your only hope of forgiveness and salvation!   God bless!

    5 min

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A daily chat with Pastor Mike and other resources to encourage listeners to connect with the Word of God and grow in their faith.

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