Devotion for April 13, 2026

For the Christian, life has a strong theme of repentance. I want to share how this gift of repentance, given by Jesus at the start of His ministry, is far more than just a simple action. It’s more like a gracious work that reaches deeper than just behavior. This gift turns us toward Jesus and then back out to serve in the world.

Repentance brings incredible, transforming, and eternal healing.

There are moments we wish we could take back. Words we replay, choices we revisit, scenes that we run again and again in our minds, hoping that somehow this time, the ending could change. That’s regret. Regret has a way of pressing the rewind button. It keeps us looking backward. It keeps us rehearsing what we should have said, what we should have done, what we failed to see in the moment.

For many, this replay doesn’t come from pride or rebellion. It comes from sorrow, from pain, from the deep desire that things could have been different.

Scripture speaks directly into the struggle. Paul writes, “For godly grief produces a repentance that leads to salvation without regret, whereas worldly grief produces death.”(2 Corinthians 7:10)

Here Paul names two kinds of sorrow.

One kind of grief keeps circling the past. It asks the same questions again and again. It carries the weight alone, and over time, it doesn’t bring life. It actually brings exhaustion and despair.

But there is another kind of grief. A grief that does not deny the pain. A grief that does not minimize the wrong, a grief that leads somewhere — godly grief.

Godly grief produces repentance, and repentance does something regret cannot do. It plays the story forward.

Repentance does not erase the past. It does not pretend that the moment never happened. It doesn’t silence the sorrow. Instead, repentance places the past into the hands of Christ. Where regret keeps asking, “What if I had done something different?,” repentance asks, “What is Christ doing with this now?”

This matters deeply for those who feel stuck in replay. Sometimes the mind keeps returning to the past because it’s still trying to protect us. Trying to make sense of the harm, trying to prevent future pain.

But repentance gently shifts the burden. It reminds us that redemption does not depend on a better past, but rather on a faithful Savior. Christ does not stand outside our regret, waiting for us to resolve it. He steps into it. He carries it, redeems it.

This is why Paul can say that repentance leads to salvation without regret. Not because the past no longer matters, but because the past no longer has the final word.

In repentance, the story moves forward; in you, and through you in the compassion of Jesus. Again, we did not figure that out. It’s not because we finally said the perfect words, but because Christ has entered even that moment with His mercy.

If you find yourself stuck in replay, unable to stop revisiting what has already happened, repentance offers something better than just erasing that past. It offers redemption. It offers movement. It offers life.

Prayer

If you’re stuck in a Satan infused loop of living in guilt and regret and want to play it forward, pray continually:

Lord, I confess that I keep replaying the past, carrying regret and sorrow as if I could still change what has already happened. I bring to You my grief, my self-blame, and the moments I cannot undo, trusting that You have entered even these places through Jesus. I place my past into Your hands. Lead me forward in the redemption and life You promise in Christ. Amen.

Pray, praise, give thanks, and stay encouraged!

Pastor Mike

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