Luke 24:44-53 ?Repentance for the forgiveness of sins that they taught had a quality that began with John the Baptist in Luke 3. John?s repentance was not for personal, private, individual sins. John called his listeners to a repentance for community sins, social and political choices, that were not only making the most marginalized vulnerable to harm, but also being the conduits of that harm as well. The elite, the powerful, propertied, and privileged, had become complicit with the Roman empire's exploitation and extraction of the masses in Galilee, Samaria, and Judea. John then came, echoing the Hebrew prophets, calling for national repentance for national sins in the hopes that the people would experience national forgiveness. In the Hebrew scriptures, forgiveness did not mean being allowed to go to heaven when one dies. It meant liberation from oppression here on earth, violence being replaced with safety and peace, and injustice giving way to compassion and equity. It meant social healing, not private, personal, individual benefit that was separate from everyone else. That forgiveness isn?t connected to a post mortem destination later, but to healing of their land in this life. A more vernacular way of describing the ?healing of the land? today would be to speak of societal healing for societal sins being committed right now.?For more go to renewedheartministries.com