Repentance: What it Means to Repent and Why We Must Do So

· Aneko Press
4.9
44 reviews
Ebook
64
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

Except you repent, you will all likewise perish. – Luke 13:5

It is indifference that leaves people alone and allows them to go their own way. It is love, tender love, that warns them and raises the cry of alarm. The cry of “Fire! Fire!” at midnight might sometimes rudely, harshly, and unpleasantly startle a person out of his sleep, but who would complain if that cry was the means of saving his life? The words Except you repent, you will all likewise perish might at first seem stern and severe, but they are words of love, and they could be the means of delivering precious souls from hell.

1.      The nature of repentance: What is it?

2.      The necessity of repentance: Why is repentance needful?

3.      The encouragements to repentance: What is there to lead people to repent?

Ratings and reviews

4.9
44 reviews
Euro Consulting
September 1, 2023
A wonderful book. I am so happy today to have read this wonderful book! It changed my previous conception on how to repent. It tells us: All the great work is done by the Lord. All He wants from us is the willingness to repent!
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Zaria Kenney
August 22, 2023
For those who say, "repentance is not needed for salvation, " desperately need to read this book. I loved when Ryle points out the encouragements to repent found in scripture!! soooo good!
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Kiera Ervin
March 19, 2023
Before reading, I was comfortable in my sin, after a few pages this changed. I thank God for speaking through this book, to give me understanding & helping me break chains needed. I will be a sinner till the day I die, but I will be a repenting sinner striving not to be the same sinner as yesterday.
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About the author

John Charles Ryle (1816-1900) graduated from Eton and Oxford and then pursued a career in politics, but due to lack of funds, he entered the clergy of the Church of England. He was a contemporary of Spurgeon, Moody, Mueller, and Taylor and read the great theologians like Wesley, Bunyan, Knox, Calvin, and Luther. These all influenced Ryle’s understanding and theology. Ryle began his writing career with a tract following the Great Yarmouth suspension bridge tragedy, where more than a hundred people drowned. He gained a reputation for straightforward preaching and evangelism. He travelled, preached, and wrote more than 300 pamphlets, tracts, and books, including Expository Thoughts on the Gospels, Principles for Churchmen, and Christian Leaders of the Eighteenth Century. Ryle used the royalties from his writing to pay his father’s debts, but he also felt indebted to that ruin for changing the direction of his life. He was recommended by Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli to be Bishop of Liverpool where he ended his career in 1900.

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