Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - If I repent of a sin and then do it again, can I repent of the same sin? : follow HIM Favorites
Episode Date: January 17, 2022The followHIM Favorites episodes now entail Hank Smith and John Bytheway answering Come, Follow Me study questions from the youth....
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Hello everyone, welcome to Follow Him Favorites. My name is Hank Smith. I'm here with the wonderful
John. By the way, we are the co-host of a podcast called Follow Him. This year, our Follow Him Favorites
is taking on a specific question given to us from youth, the YSA, someone younger who's just
has a question about the gospel, and we're going to answer that specific question. And the question we received this week, John, is this idea of if I repent of something and then
do it again, can I repent of the same sin basically over and over? Is that allowed?
Right. What does God think about that? I've received that question before from students who feel like
or young people who feel like, man, I'm no good at repenting. Right? Because here I'm repenting,
but I'm repenting for the same thing.
What would you say?
Oh, man, that's a good question.
I think I had it as a kid, but I think one of my favorite
synonyms for repentance to turn, one of the things that I find
fascinating, Stephen Covey talked about it once is that an
airplane is off course about 90% of the time.
You fly across the Pacific Ocean, New York to London or
something, you are off course 90% of the time. You fly across the Pacific Ocean, New York to London or something. You are off course 90% of the time.
But the airplane just keeps turning. Turning back. The autopilot just keeps...
Kind of crosses the curve. Yeah, it just keeps turning back to on course. Finally, lands on the numbers, pulls up to the gate, and you walk out the jetway.
Exactly where you're supposed to be, which is incredible. You can be off course 90% of the time
and get where you're going,
yeah, because you keep on turning.
And that's why I like that synonym of repent is to turn.
I like that.
And that's a daily, that's a daily process.
It's just like a journey, like a flight is a journey.
There's a scripture in the doctrine,
Covenants that confuses people, sometimes John,
it's Section 82 verse 7, where the Lord says, but under the soul, the soul who sineth
shall the former sins return, say, at the Lord your God.
And we've taken that to mean, oh, well, if you repent of a sin and then do it again,
it's like you've never repented and now you're guilty of all those sins, which that's
not really what the Lord says in that verse
We're kind of implying some things it reminds me of a great parable Jesus told
Where he said listen if there is a if a man casts an evil spirit out of his house
He said really out he meant his life if he man casts an evil spirit or a sin out of his life
But then he doesn't do anything else. He doesn't fill his house. That evil
spirit or that sin is going to come back and he's going to find a vacant house, right? He hasn't
filled his life with anything. And so he's going to invite him, this sin back, and six of his evil
spirit friends. So he said, and now that that man is worse off than he was when he started. I think
that's what the Lord is referring to here in section 82 is the idea of like, if you sin
and you repent and get rid of that sin and you don't do anything else, you don't fill that spot,
that void in your life, then something else is going to come and that sin is going to come back
and return back to your life.
So I would say to anyone who is worried about this, keep repenting of that same sin, keep
casting that spirit out.
But also put good things into your life.
Start inserting more scripture study, more temple attendance, more prayer, right? All these basics, insert them into your life, so
those former sins can't return. That's how I read that verse anyway. And I found it to be a little
more empowering than discouraging for students. Yeah, you know, you know, it's also encouraging to
me, Hank, is that Jesus would tell, I mean, when disciples are like, hey, how many times do I
have to forgive my brother? And seven times is that enough? And he's like, well, actually, and hyperbole is what?
Seven times 70, whatever. And yeah, 400 and 70. So, so keep it tall. He'd take a little notebook with
you. No, that's not what he meant. He just kind of meant always. And I think if the Lord's going to
ask that of us, he's probably, he's equally forgiving.
And he knows that we're gonna need to keep course
correcting a lot.
So that gives me a lot of hope and hopefully it's helpful.
In fact, John, you pretty much quoted the book of Mormon
there, Mosiah 2630, the Lord says,
Yeh as often as my people repent,
well, I forgive them their trespasses against me?
So how often can, how many times can you repent?
It seems that when the Lord says,
as often as my people repent, meaning he knows,
we're gonna need to repent often.
He's saying, oh, this isn't a one time thing.
This is a daily thing.
It's often as my people repent, will I forgive them? We have a very
merciful Lord. Yeah, and it's gotta be real. It's sincere, really is repentance.
And I think you'll you'll you'll make progress when you keep repenting and
that those sins will become less enticing to you. That's an important point is to
say that just because you return to a sin, doesn't
mean that first repentance wasn't sincere. It was. It was sincere. And you just keep
trying. Wasn't it, wasn't it Brad, our friend Brad, brother Wilcox, who said, listen,
worthiness is not flawless. That was the title of his talk. And it was, it's called
being a disciple, discipline, discipline disciple same word that you keep
getting back on track. Now you don't plan to send. No, that's not what we're after. But
you're trying. You're sincerely trying. And that's also what Brad said. You're not
trying to hide it. You're seeing your bishop. You know, you are trying and make to make
those course corrections. John, what you just said reminded me of something that Elder
Renland said in the April 2015 General Conference, he said, quote,
even if we've been a conscious deliberate sinner or have repeatedly
faced failure and disappointment, the moment we decide to try again, the
atonement of Christ can help us.
This is the idea of the Lord understands
even the deliberate sinner. You know, oh, I made a mistake. It's the no idea of I actually
willfully went after this sin. Now I don't, I'm sad I did that. I want to turn it around.
The moment we decide to try that, the Atonement of Christ steps in. We tap into that power. That's why I like that it's
turned. Just keep getting back on course and you'll get to your destination with the help
of the Savior, but you've got to keep getting back on course. The idea is I just won't stop trying.
I can't say I'm never going to commit a sin again, but I can commit that I won't stop trying
to become like him and do what he wants me to do. And I'm honest in that, I won't stop trying.
And over time, you know, Joseph Smith says we can eventually, we lose desire for sin,
but he said, it's a station to which no one ever arrived in a moment.
So it's a, it's a, that's a life-long process.
Just keep trying and hopefully and prayerfully that sin will become less appealing to you
and less and less and you'll start,
you'll taste the bitter and no to price the good
as we learned in Moses six.
Doesn't happen in a moment.
It doesn't happen in a moment and that's okay.
The Lord, the Lord understands you.
He gets you.
He knows why you do what you do.
He's not disgusted by you.
He's not what, what were you thinking, right? He gets you. He knows why you do what you do. He's not disgusted by you. He's not what
were you thinking, right? He gets you. He understands your childhood, your personality,
your DNA, your genetics. He understands all of it. So go to him. The one who understands
you. Well, John, let's take on another question next week. That's great. We hope all of you
will join us for follow him favorites. you