NUNCA te enseñaron qué significa arrepentirte

You were NEVER taught what repentance means—and that explains why so many believers have spent years promising to change… and ending up right back where they started. The word Jesus used as the first calling of his ministry doesn’t mean what most people preach. In this video, we explore what repentance means according to the original Greek of the New Testament, why metanoia and remorse are completely different things, and what changes in your life when you understand the difference. — What you'll learn: • The true meaning of μετάνοια (metanoia) in first-century Greek • Why Judas Iscariot felt remorse but didn't repent — according to the Greek text • The crucial difference between metanoia and metamelomai, two words no one ever explained to you • Why Jesus launched his ministry in Galilee with this word as his first message • How your approach to relapse changes when you understand true biblical repentance — — — ⏱ SUMMARY: 00:00 — What if your church preaches repentance incompletely? 01:22 — What metanoia really means in first-century Greek 01:35 — Mark 1:15: Jesus' first words in the original text 07:35 — The case of Judas: remorse without metanoia 08:10 — Metanoia vs. Metamelomai — The Distinction That Changes Everything 09:44 — Three Concrete Things That Change in Your Life Today 12:22 — The Sailor and the Rudder: The Final Image — — — How many times have you promised to change at the altar and weeks later found yourself back where you started? Tell me in the comments — I'm interested to know if what we discussed today changed your understanding of it. If this type of study of the original text is helpful to you, subscribe and turn on notifications 🔔 — each week a Greek word that transforms your faith. — — — 📌 This video is educational material on biblical theology. The analysis presented is based on the linguistic and historical study of the Greek text of the New Testament. It does not represent an attack on any church or denomination. #metanoia #RealRepentance #BiblicalTheology