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Either sin must drown in the tears of repentance—or the soul must burn in hell.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Upon our turning to God, we have more restored to us in Christ—than ever was lost in Adam. God says to the repenting soul, “I will clothe you with the robe of righteousness; I will enrich you with the jewels and graces of my Spirit. I will bestow my love upon you! I will give you a kingdom! Son, all I have is yours!
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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As our sin is ever before us, so God’s promise must be ever before us. As we much feel our sting, so we must look up to Christ, our “brazen serpent” (Num 21:8-9).
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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It is in fashion nowadays to go to hell.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Godly sorrow goes deep, like a vein which bleeds inwardly. The heart bleeds for sin: “they were pricked in their heart” (Act 2:37). As the heart bears a chief part in sinning, so it must in sorrowing.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Hence I infer that where there is no sight of sin, there can be no repentance. Many who can spy faults in others see none in themselves. They cry that they have good hearts. Is it not strange that two should live together, and eat and drink together, yet not know each other? Such is the case of a sinner. His body and soul live together, work together, yet he is unacquainted with himself. He knows not his own heart, nor what a hell he carries about him. Under a veil, a deformed face is hid. Persons are veiled over with ignorance and self-love; therefore they see not what deformed souls they have.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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The Nature of True Repentance, Part 1 I shall next show what Gospel repentance is. Repentance is a grace of God’s Spirit whereby a sinner is inwardly humbled and visibly reformed. For a further amplification, know that repentance is a spiritual medicine made up of six special ingredients: 1. Sight of sin 2. Sorrow for sin 3. Confession of sin 4. Shame for sin 5. Hatred for sin 6. Turning from sin If any one is left out, it loses its virtue.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Let it not be said that repentance is difficult. Things that are excellent deserve labour. Will not a man dig for gold in the ore though it makes him sweat? It is better to go with difficulty to heaven, than with ease to hell.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance (Puritan Paperbacks))
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Carnal Protestants, who are strangers to godly sorrow. They cannot endure a serious thought, nor do they love to trouble their heads about sin. Paracelsus[34] spoke of a frenzy some have which will make them die dancing. Likewise, sinners spend their days in mirth; they fling away sorrow and go dancing to damnation. Some have lived many years, yet never put a drop in God’s bottle, nor do they know what a broken heart means. They weep and wring their hands as if they were undone when their estates are gone, but have no agony of soul for sin.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Ingredient 2: Sorrow for Sin “I will be sorry for my sin” (Psa 38:18). Ambrose calls sorrow the embittering of the soul. The Hebrew word “to be sorrowful” signifies “to have the soul, as it were, crucified.” This must be in true repentance: “They shall look upon me whom they have pierced, and they shall mourn” (Zec 12:10), as if they did feel the nails of the cross sticking in their sides. A woman may as well expect to have a child without pangs as one can have repentance without sorrow. He that can believe without doubting, suspect his faith; and he that can repent without sorrowing, suspect his repentance. Martyrs shed blood for Christ, and penitents shed tears for sin: “she…stood at his [Jesus’] feet…weeping” (Luk 7:38). See how this limbeck[19] dropped. The sorrow of her heart ran out at her eye…
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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It is better that men should reproach you for repenting than that God should damn you for not repenting.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance (Puritan Paperbacks))
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Let it not be said that repentance is difficult. Things that are excellent deserve labour. Will not a man dig for gold in the ore though it makes him sweat? It is better to go with difficulty to heaven than with ease to hell.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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How welcome is a surgeon to a man who is bleeding from his wounds!
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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The eye is for both seeing and weeping. Sin must first be seen before it can be wept for.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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So dear is sin to a man that he will rather part with a child than with a lust
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Men begin by sinning against the light of conscience, and proceed gradually to despiting the Spirit of grace.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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The more work we do for God, the more willing we shall be to die, and the sweater death will be.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Compare sin with hell, and you shall see that sin is worse. Torment has it emphasis in hell, yet nothing there is as bad as sin. Hell is of God's making, but sin is none of His making. Sin is the devil's creature. The torments of hell are a burden only to the sinner, but sin is a burden to God: (Amos 2:13) In the torments of hell there is something that is good, namely, the execution of divine justice. There is justice to be found in hell, but sin is a piece of the highest injustice. It would rob God of His glory, Christ of His purchase, the soul of its happiness.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Affliction only reaches the body, but sin goes further: it poisons the fancy, disorders the affections. Affliction is but corrective; sin is destructive. Affliction can but take away the life; sin takes away the soul.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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What a vast difference is there between the first covenant and the second! In the first covenant it was, if you commit sin you die; in the second it is, if you confess sin you shall have mercy.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Conscience is a bosom-preacher. Sometimes it convinces, sometimes it reproves.. But men imprison this preacher, and God says to conscience, Preach no more: "he which is filthy, let him be filthy still!" (Rev 22:11). This is a fatal sign that a man's day of grace has past.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Our sins are worser than the sins of the devils: the lapsed angels never sinned against Christ's blood. Chris died not for them.The medicine of his merit was never intended to heal them. But we have affronted and disparaged his blood by unbelief.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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When men have hearts of stone and foreheads of brass—it is a sign that the devil has taken full possession of them.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Self-love raises a sickbed vow, and love of sin will prevail against it. Trust not to a passionate resolution; it is raised in a storm and will die in a calm.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Christ is never loved—until sin is loathed.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Sin robs God of his glory, Christ of his purchase, and the soul of its happiness
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance: A Closer Look at This Essential Element of True Christianity [Updated and Annotated])
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A hard heart is a vessel for Satan. Just as God has two places he dwells in: heaven and a humble heart, so the devil has two places he dwells in: hell and a hard heart.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance: A Closer Look at This Essential Element of True Christianity [Updated and Annotated])
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We are never more precious in gods eyes than when we are lepers in our own.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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What is the reason the word works so differently? It is because the Spirit of God carries the word to the conscience of one and not another. One has receive the divine unction and not the other.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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It was a witty fiction of the poets, that when Mercury had cast Argus into a sleep and with an enchanted wand closed his eyes, he then killed him. When Satan has by his witcheries lulled men asleep in sloth, then he destroys them. Some report that while the crocodile sleeps with its mouth open, the Indian rat gets into its belly and eats up its entrails. So while men sleep in security they are devoured.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance)
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Morality shoots short of heaven. It is only nature refined. A moral man is but old Adam dressed in fine clothes. The king's image counterfeited and stamped upon brass will not go current.
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Thomas Watson (The Doctrine of Repentance (Puritan Paperbacks))