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repentance
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English Dictionary: Repentance by the DICT Development Group
3 results for Repentance
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
repentance
n
  1. remorse for your past conduct [syn: repentance, penitence, penance]
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Repentance \Re*pent"ance\ (r[esl]*p[ecr]nt"[ait]ns), n. [F.
      repentance.]
      The act of repenting, or the state of being penitent; sorrow
      for what one has done or omitted to do; especially,
      contrition for sin. --Chaucer.
  
               Godly sorrow worketh repentance to salvation. --2. Cor.
                                                                              vii. 20.
  
               Repentance is a change of mind, or a conversion from
               sin to God.                                             --Hammond.
  
               Repentance is the relinquishment of any practice from
               the conviction that it has offended God. Sorrow, fear,
               and anxiety are properly not parts, but adjuncts, of
               repentance; yet they are too closely connected with it
               to be easily separated.                           --Rambler.
  
      Syn: Contrition; regret; penitence; contriteness;
               compunction. See {Contrition}.

From Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary [easton]:
   Repentance
      There are three Greek words used in the New Testament to denote
      repentance. (1.) The verb _metamelomai_ is used of a change of
      mind, such as to produce regret or even remorse on account of
      sin, but not necessarily a change of heart. This word is used
      with reference to the repentance of Judas (Matt. 27:3).
     
         (2.) Metanoeo, meaning to change one's mind and purpose, as
      the result of after knowledge. This verb, with (3) the cognate
      noun _metanoia_, is used of true repentance, a change of mind
      and purpose and life, to which remission of sin is promised.
     
         Evangelical repentance consists of (1) a true sense of one's
      own guilt and sinfulness; (2) an apprehension of God's mercy in
      Christ; (3) an actual hatred of sin (Ps. 119:128; Job 42:5, 6; 2
      Cor. 7:10) and turning from it to God; and (4) a persistent
      endeavour after a holy life in a walking with God in the way of
      his commandments.
     
         The true penitent is conscious of guilt (Ps. 51:4, 9), of
      pollution (51:5, 7, 10), and of helplessness (51:11; 109:21,
      22). Thus he apprehends himself to be just what God has always
      seen him to be and declares him to be. But repentance
      comprehends not only such a sense of sin, but also an
      apprehension of mercy, without which there can be no true
      repentance (Ps. 51:1; 130:4).
     
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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