Catholic “Penance” Versus Bible Repentance

By Daniel H. King

A very real and necessary aspect of New Testament Christianity is that Bible doctrine known as repentance. Yet it has been misunderstood and misrepresented by many religious people to the point that the scriptural definition and intention cannot be identified for all the “stuff” that, at first purposed to explain and facilitate it, in the end has obscured and perverted the concept.

Pious fraud. There is no facet of theological thought that better fits this particular description any more suitably than that doctrine of the Roman church known as penance. The idea has a long history and fits well into the veritable maze of false theories and twisted notions that Catholic canon law has built up for herself and her millions of adherents in the long ages of apostasy and departure from God that has been her lot.

The idea started very innocently in the days of the persecution of the early church. Many Christians in the ancient church during those troubled times either disavowed their faith publicly and explicitly or else eluded their duty of profession by dishonest means. At that point the question arose among the faithful as to how they were to be treated. No universal answer appears to have been formulated as to how to treat the so-called “lapsed” until the third century – the fiery days of the Decian and Valerian persecutions when their numbers decidedly increased.

By this time the power of the monarchial bishopric had grown to the point that between 251 and 325 a complete system of penitential rules was elaborated by the bishops. This public Penance was looked upon as a `second Baptism’ and was extended to several sins (at first), especially idolatry, adultery, and murder, and had reference to the scandal given to the church and the necessity of its taking part in the readmission. After the sinner, voluntarily or under threat of excommunication, had asked the Bishop for Penance, he was enrolled in the order of the penitents, excluded from communion, and committed to a severe course of prayer, fasting, and almsgiving. At the end of a period of time (determined by the gravity of the transgression) the sinner was reconciled and rejoined the congregation of the faithful. Two things were forbidden him for life: he could not be a soldier and he could not marry. This could only be undergone once in a lifetime. On account of its terrible regimen, most postponed it until the eve of death. For obvious reasons this system was relaxed from the fourth century on.

A new approach was introduced in the eleventh century by Anglo-Saxon monks in their “Penitential Books.” Confession of the details of the sin were private and absolution was granted at the end of the arduous period of Penance. This private penance received its charter at the Fourth Lateran Council of 1215, which required every Catholic to confess his sins in Penance at least once a year. Furthermore, it came to be described as a “sacrament” of the church.

Under this requirement, all grave sins were to be confessed to the priest, who was to pronounce forgiveness and impose a fitting satisfaction. According to the contemporary theologians that priestly absolution remitted the guilt and the eternal punishment of sin, but there still remained a temporal punishment which must be worked off through these satisfactions. For any satisfaction not made in this life, the suffering of Purgatory was conjured up by the thinkers. And, for those who could afford to pay for it, the suffering of Purgatory could be avoided by means of the program of Indulgences which were auctioned off by Catholic salesmen. Moreover the “Treasury of Merit” was at the heart of this practice. In every sense this is a system wherein it requires one false doctrine to support another. It all reminds me of a liar who is forced to tell half a dozen more lies in order to cover up for the first one he told!

The word Penance comes from the Latin word peons which means “punishment.” The theory behind the system of Penance is that sins must be atoned for, in part at least, by the punishment of the sinner, on the ground that it was better to endure the punishment in this world than in the next. Sometimes this punishment consisted of fasts, continence, and pilgrimages – but occasionally even floggings and imprisonment were imposed. And, I would suppose that it is improper to speak of such in the past tense. For, although today most penance consists of saying “Hail Mary’s” and “Our Father’s,” still it would seem that these practices do prevail in some places even at the present. For example, by a group known as the Penitentes in northern New Mexico (related to the Third Order of St. Francis and founded in thirteenth-century Italy) as recently as 1971, self-flagellation, carrying of heavy wooden crosses, and even bloody, simulated crucifixions have been practiced in their intense belief that penance is the most direct path to salvation.

In an article by Russell Chandler which appeared in Liberty, he quotes Lorenzo W. Brown as recalling Holy Week penance among these people in the 1920’s and 1930’s:

The most common form was flagellation with a scourge or disciplina plaited from the razor-edged fibers of the yucca plant, and the dragging of heavy wooden crosses known as maderos. These crosses were dragged from the morada to the village church and back, and to a cross set up some distance from the morada to represent Mt. Calvary where Christ was crucified (Vol. 73, No. 3, May-June, 1978, p. 23).

Brown remembers other penances: binding of cactus to the body with tightly drawn horsehair ropes, kneeling for hours on end in silent meditation or prayer on a floor strewn with fine flinty pebbles gathered from ant hills and binding heavy timbers to arms stretched out straight from the shoulders during long hours of penitential procession. Most believe that these same activities are still being carried out in privacy by the Penitentes.

The erroneous views of the Roman church on these matters, if taken to their logical conclusion, are at fault for these perverse and sadistic activities even though most Catholics would today decry this sort of thing. Several false doctrines are at the heart of the matter:

1. The doctrine that the church has the right to make laws about penance or anything else is fundamental to this doctrinal travesty. The scriptures are the authority in every respect – not the church – since they gain their authority from Christ and his apostles (Mt. 4:4, 7, 10; Rom. 10:17; 2 Tim. 3:15-17; 1 Cor. 4:6). Churches, on the other hand, can be and often are influenced by human traditions rather than apostolic ones (Col. 2:8; 2 Thess. 2:15; 3:6-7, 14).

2. The doctrine which limits the atonement of Christ to sins which were committed before baptism is foolish and unscriptural. When John discussed the Christian life and made allusion to the reality of sins in the lives Li us all, he made it abundantly clear that Christ’s blood is sufficient to cleanse us of sin when we repent and pray and confess those wrongs (1 Jn. 1:5-10). Those are God’s only preconditions of forgiveness.

3. The doctrine which says that we must be punished for our sins flies in the face of the Bible teaching that Jesus came to “bear the sin of many” (Isa. 53:12) and the scriptural fact that “he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all (Isa. 53:5-6). Catholic doctrine would have men suffer for that which Christ suffered in our place! What an unbelievable heresy!

4. The incredible theory that our suffering for our own sins will actually make some sort of atonement for them is monstrous. If man could have received remission of sins by works of righteousness, then there would have been no need for a Savior. The Bible says we are saved by God’s grace through faith in the atoning power of the blood of Jesus; not any works that we do or’ blood that we spill will atone for a single sin that we have ever sinned. Only the blood of the sinless Son of God can or ever will do that (Eph. 2:5-9; Rom. 3:21-26; 5:1-11). He is the Lamb of God that takes away the sin of the world (Jn. 1:29). Acts of Penance may make satisfaction to the Catholic church but not to the God of Heaven.

5. The influence of the Latin in this whole matter as it motivated Catholic thought and brought this whole horrid situation about must not be underestimated. The Latin version rendered the New Testament terms for “repentance” as poenitentiam agere or “exercise penitence.” But “penitence” etymologically signified pain, grief, distress, etc. rather than a change of thought and purpose as the original did. Thus, the Catholic theologians, influenced by the Latin mistranslation and the consequent misconception that emerged, have consistently and constantly represented grief over sin rather than abandonment of sin as being the true teaching of the scripture in the matter. Nothing could be further from the truth as a645simple perusal of any Greek lexicon under the terms metamelomai, metanoeo and epistrepho will show. The fundamental idea present in all of these terms has to do with a “change of mind with reference to sin.” Grief may move us to repentance – but grief is not repentance: “Ye were made sorry unto repentance” (2 Cor. 7:9).

It is truly sad that so many have been led astray by this pernicious and Babylonish system. Lord, help us to snatch as many of them as we can out of the fire (Jude 23)!

Truth Magazine XXIII: 40, pp. 645-646
October 11, 1979

The Origin Of The Gospel

By Mike Willis

No story is quite so absorbing to the human mind as the gospel.- To understand fully the gospel, we must remember God’s creation of man and man’s fall into sin which left him doomed to Hell. Jehovah God immediately began to unfold His plan to redeem fallen man. The Old Testament records His selection of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob as the ones through whom the seed should come. The divine plan was to bless all nations of the earth through Abraham’s descendants (Gen. 12:3).

In the fulness of time (Gal. 4:4; Mk. 1:14-15), God sent His Son to this world. For three years, He traveled about Judea and Galilee doing good and teaching the people the way to salvation. The popularity of Jesus among the common people was a threat to the religious leaders; consequently, they plotted His death. Little did they know that they were accomplishing the will of God (Acts 2:22-23) in crucifying the Lord of glory (1 Cor. 2:8).

The death of Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God, was an atonement for the sins of man. His blood was shed to redeem man from sin (1 Pet. 1:18-19). He suffered in our place; He bore the punishment for sin which was due to fall on us. The vicarious suffering of Christ was foretold by Isaiah seven hundred years before Christ was born; he wrote,

Surely he hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows: yet we did esteem him stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted. But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all . . . . Yet it pleased the Lord to bruise him; he hath put him to grief: when thou shalt make his soul an offering for sin . . . . He shall see the travail of his soul, and shall be satisfied . . . . for he shall bear their iniquities (53:4-6, 10-11).

The inspired evangelists also wrote of salvation through faith in the crucified Savior. Paul wrote,

For scarcely for a righteous man will one die: yet peradventure for a good man some would even dare to die. But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. Much more then, being now justified by his blood, we shall be saved from wrath through him (Rom. 5:7-9).

The good news of the gospel was that salvation from sin was available to man through faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.

Opposition To The Gospel

Not everybody received the good news gladly. Indeed, there was opposition to the gospel from several sources, including both Jews and Gentiles. The Gentiles considered the gospel foolishness (1 Cor. 1:23); the Jews stumbled over a crucified Messiah. Hence, they opposed the gospel. Other attacks against the gospel arose from the ranks of Christians. One of the major threats of the first century arose from Jewish Christians who sought to impose obedience to tile Law of Moses on Gentile converts. Nearly every opponent of the gospel, both then and now, attacks the origin (source) of the gospel.

The gospel claims to be a revelation of God. Those who deny the gospel obviously are unwilling to admit this claim. They are compelled to explain the origin of the gospel on a purely natural or material basis. The defenses made by Paul of His gospel are sufficient answers to most of these theories even today.

The Gospel Came Through Revelation

in answer to Jewish critics of his gospel, Paul wrote,

But I certify you, brethren, that the gospel which was preached of me is not after man. For 1 neither received it of man, neither was I taught it, but by revelation of Jesus Christ (Gal. 1:11-12).

Notice the replies of Paul: (a) The gospel is not after man; (b) the gospel was not received from man; (c) the gospel was not taught by man. Rather, it came by revelation. Notice these points individually.

1. Paul’s gospel was not “after man. ” “After man” is the AV translation of kata anthropon – “according to man.” This phrase appears in several places in the Scriptures (1 Cor. 3:3; Gal. 3:15; Rom. 3:5; 1 Cor. 9:8); it means “after the manner of a man.” The gospel is contrary to anything man would have ever thought of divising. Who would have ever thought of preaching that eternal life could be obtained through One who died on the cross, the crucifixion of the Lord of Glory (1 Cor. 2:8), and the salvation of mankind through One who did not save Himself from death on a cross?

But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty; and base things of the world, and things which are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not, to bring to nought things that are: that no flesh should glory in his presence (1 Cor. 1:27-29).

Everything associated with eternal redemption through Christ is contrary to man’s method of thinking. Hence, the gospel cannot be explained to have originated from man’s thinking because it is so contrary to the thoughts of man.

2. The gospel was not received from man. Paul is concerned to show that the gospel which he preached to the Galatians did not originate from man or through human instrumentality. The fountain from which the gospel originated must go further back than some mere man.

In Paul’s case, he demonstrated that his gospel did not originate with man by his life prior to his conversion (Gal. 1:13-14). He was a persecutor of the church. He became converted to Christ without human instrumentality; his knowledge of the resurrected Lord – the gospel which he preached – did not come from or through any man.

3. Paul was not taught the gospel which he preached. Paul necessarily had to show his apostleship to lie equal with that of the other apostles. Hence, he must show that His source of information for what he taught was none other than Jesus Christ. Consequently, he made a statement which non-apostles cannot make; we learn the gospel through teaching (Mt. 28:18-20).

Yet, the gospel did not originate in this manner. Some smart man did not devise the gospel and send out instructors to teach it. No, the gospel began through revelation.

The Gospel: The Revelation of Jesus Christ

The source of the gospel is revelation – God unfolding His will to man through Jesus Christ. The gospel originated through revelation. The gospel is not a “cunningly devised fable” (2 Pet. 1:16); it is a revelation of the will of God.

The explanations of infidels regarding the origin of the gospel are sufficient to account for the various elements of the gospel. For example, Jesus was a rejected Messiah who died on Calvary’s cross. Yet popular opinion was that the Messiah would be a ruling monarch over an earthly kingdom. If the gospel originated from first century Judaism, why is its hero so contrary to first century Messianic hope?

We are forced right back to the conclusion that the gospel came to man through divine revelation, as asserted by the apostles. The gospel, my friends and brethren, originated in the mind of God and was revealed to man. It did not originate in the mind of some devilish man bent on deceiving the general public. It came from God. This is the origin of the gospel.

Truth Magazine XXIII: 40, pp. 643-644
October 11, 1979

Beginning At The Wrong Point

By Dennis L. Shaver

For when for the time ye ought to be teachers, ye have need that one teach you again which be the first principles of the oracles of God; and are become such as have need of milk, and not of strong meat. For every one that useth milk is unskillful in the word or righteousness; for he is a babe. But strong meat belongeth to them that are of full age, even those who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil (Heb. 5:12-14).

There is no doubt that every child of God should be able to teach the saving gospel to another. We know that after the first persecution of the Lord’s church that those who were scattered want everywhere proclaiming the life saving message of Christ. According to the writer of the book of Hebrews a teacher must know more than first principles. Every individual is aware that a teacher who has less knowledge than his student is inviting trouble. Such is the case with many of God’s children. We are trying to teach when we have not yet gotten over the hurdle of first principles. Yes brethren we need to know more than that old stand-by, “He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved” (Mark 16:16). After all, we learned that before we were even Christians.

I might suggest that in teaching the gospel to the lost it is first easier to try and reach those with whom you are acquainted. Talk with your relatives, friends, fellowworkers, etc. and show an interest in them personally. Take the time to invite them to public worship assemblies with you and your family. Go out of your way to talk with them daily about some aspect of the Lord. God has done so much for us, and we limit our teaching to nothing, or a repeat of Mark 16:16. Can you not speak of the wonderful physical creation which our God has given for our earthly existence? The Bible does! Are you not aware of the care of our Lord in our daily lives? The Bible is! Is it possible for you to talk about God’s command that we should obey those who have the rule over us? The Bible addresses itself to this matter! Do you know God’s will on current issues of the day: war, peace, homosexuality, taxes, racial discord, union and management disagreements, etc.? The Bible teaches on each of these areas! Perhaps if we knew more than Mark 16:16 we could speak to others daily on the will of God concerning their total lives.

Yes, we need to teach Mark 16:16 and baptism is necessary for entering into Christ and salvation. However this is not all the Bible teaches, nor is it always the place to begin a study of the Scriptures or a discussion of the Lord. Study your New Testaments and notice the times Paul, Peter, and other New Testament Christians taught. How many times did they begin with “He that believeth and is baptized”? If they did not, Why do we? We do because of our complete lack of knowledge about God and our indoctrination on the subject of baptism!

It is my opinion that we fail to convert many to the Lord because we try so hard to “Baptize” and do not spend any time trying to “convert”! Many has been the time I have seen Christians become discouraged because “so and so” would not be baptized. Consider this: if you had tried. to convert them to the Lord rather than “get’em baptized” they might this day be a child of God. There is no need to go “loaded” when you teach with every argument in the world that proves baptism is necessary and that it must be immersion. When you have taught Christ, if one believes he will not argue with you about baptism. And, if he does not believe; persuading him to be baptized with argumentation will not bring him to the Lord.

Brethren, many times we fail to bring the lost to the Lord because we began our teaching at the wrong point. It is not necessary to begin a religious discussion with the doctrine of baptism, because many are not yet ready to understand, much less act on this basic principle of Christianity. However, you can teach about God’s laws concerning homosexuality, adulterers, job relations, race relations, etc. and from this point convert them to the Lord. Yes, brethren, it is good, and it is necessary that we bring the gospel of our Lord to a lost world . . . but there is more to the gospel than the words of Mark 16:16, even if it is the only passage you have memorized.

Let us teach others, daily. But more importantly, let us begin at the proper point. You must live a life that reflects Christianity that others may desire to be a child of God. As Paul stated: “I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me” (Gal. 2:20). To teach others this is our beginning point – my life!

Truth Magazine XXIII: 40, p. 642
October 11, 1979

Everlasting Friend

By: Myrtle Webb Williams

As I look over my life,

From beginning to end,

The most important gift

I ever received came from God,

Who gave me Jesus.

He is my everlasting friend.

From what other source

Could I receive salvation,

Blessings and love,

An eternal home

In mansions above;

But from Jesus,

My everlasting friend.

He came teaching

The council, scribes, Pharisees,

Elders, Chief Priests and the Jews,

His disciples and the multitudes.

He healed the sick

To show he came from

His Father above,

Such power was

The badge of approval

That distinguished

Him as God’s only begotten Son,

In whom His Father

Was well pleased;

For He came to

Do the will of His Father,

And He is the Son

Of my one and only God.

He gave up His life.

Upon the cross

That I might have

Mine in the giving.

Holy is the Spirit

That spoke the word,

Food from the bread of life,

Drink from the living water

By which my soul is growing.

He arose on the first day of the week

And that is when we Christians meet

To sing and make melody in our hearts

Teaching and admonishing one another

In Psalms and Hymns and spiritual songs,

Giving thanks to God,

Through Jesus, His Son,

Doing all in the name of the Lord Jesus.

In Colossians 3:16 and Ephesians 5:19 we read

And follow the example, the word, the seed.

He is our Head.

Members of His Body are we;

The church, the bride,

Named for Her Spouse;

The Kingdom that come in 33 A.D.

He sits on the

Right hand of God.

Do you believe?

For your sins He died,

A sacrifice one for all.

Water He gave for your baptism

That you might be planted

Into the likeness of His death,

Where you are buried with Him

And meet the cleansing

Washing of His blood

As it flows over

And leaves you spotlessly clean.

Did you say, “Yes,

I believe that Jesus

Is the Son of God.

Before men,

I shall confess.”

And you have

Repented of your sins?

Why wait then,

Obey, arise and wash

Away your sins.

That is what Brother Saul did

In Acts 22:16.

Be baptized this very day.

The Lord will

Add you to HIS CHURCH.

On this you can depend,

He will for certain then

Be your everlasting friend.

Truth Magazine XXIII: 39, p. 636
October 4, 1979