What did he say or write that was not in line with the Bible?
He has an angry God behind a loving Jesus,a God who is all too easily offended and who we must appease before He will accept us. That theology overlooks any consideration of the Trinity, and totally and always harmonious unity.
God is not divisible. We cannot separate God's love from God's holiness, or play one off against the other. Or the Father against the Son The NT revelation of God being Love, means that Love will always do what is right and best, and that entails only purity, gentleness, mercy, holiness etc. Holiness is thus an expression of that love.
We only know the Father in and through Jesus. We see Jesus living with sinners (in this world), eating with them, teaching them, seeking them, healing them, accepting them in spite of ongoing failures. He never demanded holiness before He related to people -... while we were yet enemies...'
Repentance come from seeing thing differently (literally a change of mind)
That comes only from the illumination of the Holy Spirit. We require the HS before we can truly repent.
Here is something rather more in line with NT teaching.
[FONT="]Lets talk about what the gospel means by repentance toward God.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]The first mistake in trying to understand what it means is to go to an English dictionary for a definition of the word
repent. Contemporary dictionaries tell us how words have come to be understood at the time the dictionary was compiled. But a modern English dictionary does not tell us what was in the mind of a person who was writing 2,000 years ago in Greek about things that were first spoken in Aramaic, for example.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]Websters Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary[/FONT][FONT="] says this of the word repent: 1) to turn from sin and dedicate oneself to the amendment of ones life; 2a) to feel regret or contrition; 2b) to change ones mind.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]Websters first definition is exactly what most religious people believe Jesus was talking about when he said, "Repent and believe." They believe that Jesus means that only people who repent, that is, stop sinning and change their ways, will be in the kingdom of God. But the fact is, that is precisely what Jesus was
not saying.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]It is a common mistake for Christians to think of repentance as ceasing to sin. "If you had really repented, you wouldnt have done it again" is a refrain many tormented souls have heard from well-meaning, law-upholding spiritual counselors. We are told that repentance is to "turn around and go the other way," and it is explained in the context of turning away from sin and turning toward a life of obedience to Gods law.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]With that idea firmly in mind, Christians set out with the best of intentions to change their ways. But along the way, some ways change, and some ways seem to stick like super-glue. And even the ways that change have a nasty way of cropping up again.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]Is God satisfied with such mediocrity, such hit-and-miss obedience? "No, he is not!" the preacher exhorts, and the vicious, gospel-crippling cycle of commitment, failure and despair takes another spin around the going-nowhere rat-racetrack of futility.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]And just when we are feeling frustrated and depressed about our failure to measure up to the high standards of God, we hear another sermon or read another article about "real repentance" and "deep repentance" and how such repentance results in a complete turning away from sin.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]So, we crank up the commitment jalopy and go at it again, with the same, miserable, predictable results. And our frustration and despair deepens, because we realize that our turning away from sin is anything but "complete."[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]We can only assume we have not "really repented." Our repentance was not "deep" enough, or "heartfelt" enough or "true" enough. And if we have not really repented, then we must not really have faith. Which means we must not really have the Holy Spirit. Which means we must not really be saved.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]Finally, we either get used to living like that, or, as many have done, we finally throw in the towel and walk away from the whole medicine show people call Christianity.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]Repent and believe the gospel," Jesus declares in Mark 1:15. Repentance and faith mark the beginning of our new life in the kingdom of God. They dont mark it because we did the right thing. They mark it because that is when the scales fall off our darkened eyes and we at last see in Jesus Christ the glorious light of the liberty of the sons of God.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]Everything that ever needed to be done for human forgiveness and salvation has already been done through the death and resurrection of the Son of God. There was a time when we were in the dark about that. We couldnt enjoy it or rest in it because we were blind to it.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]We thought we had to make our own way in this world, and we spent all our effort and time plowing as straight a furrow in our little corner of life as we could manage.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]Then one day, for no other reason than that he wanted to, God let us in on the way things actually are. The world is his, and we are his.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]Not[/FONT][FONT="]
about morals[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]Repentance is not about morals. It is not about good behavior. It is not about "doing better."[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]Repentance is putting your trust in God instead of in yourself, your wits, your friends, your country, your government, your guns, your money, your authority, your prestige, your reputation, your car, your house, your job, your family heritage, your color, your sex, your success, your looks, your clothes, your titles, your degrees, your church, your spouse, your muscles, your leaders, your IQ, your accent, your accomplishments, your charity work, your donations, your kindness, your compassion, your self-control, your chastity, your honesty, your obedience, your devotion, your spiritual disciplines or anything else you can come up with of yours or associated with you that I left out of this long sentence.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]Repentance is putting all your eggs in one baskethis basket. Its getting on his side, believing what he says, throwing in your lot with him, giving him your allegiance.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
[FONT="]Repentance is not about promises to be good. It is not about teeth-clenched straining to "put sin out of your life." It is trusting God to have mercy on you. It is trusting God to fix your evil heart. It is trusting God to be who he says he isCreator, Savior, Redeemer, Teacher, Lord and Sanctifier. And it is dying, dying to your need to be thought of as right and good.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
He turns the totally completed covenant made between Father and Son into an incomplete contract between humanity and God. That totally undermines what Jesus has achieved on our behalf. We are to live
out off our established relationship with Christ (referred to so many times in the NT as "in Christ" or "in Him") and not on the basis "God won't until or unless I do." That in effect is a limited atonement.
John
NZ