Devotional
What Does the Bible Say About Second Chances?

Robe, Ring, Sandals
Romans 2:4
"Do you presume on the riches of his kindness and forbearance and patience, not knowing that God's kindness is meant to lead you to repentance?"
The prodigal son came home rehearsing a speech. He had it memorized. "Father, I have sinned against heaven and against you. I am no longer worthy to be called your son. Make me like one of your hired servants."
He never finished it.
The father saw him coming from a long way off. Ran to him. Embraced him. And before the son could get through his groveling, the father was already calling for the robe, the ring, and the sandals.
Not after a probation period. Not after the son proved he'd really changed this time. Immediately. In the road. Before they even made it to the house.
The robe was righteousness. Clothed in the father's identity, not his own failure. The ring was covenant. Restored to the family, full standing, full authority. The sandals were purpose. Slaves went barefoot. Sons wore shoes. The father wasn't just forgiving him. He was commissioning him.
This is what the goodness of God looks like.
We think repentance is about convincing God to stop being angry with us. It's not. God isn't standing at the end of the driveway with his arms crossed, waiting to see if we're sorry enough. He's running down the road to meet us before we even get the apology out.
The goodness of God leads to repentance. Not the judgment. Not the guilt. Not the shame. The goodness.
When you see how eager the Father is to restore you, it makes you want to come home. When you realize he's not keeping score, not holding grudges, not making you earn your way back in, something breaks open inside. That's what real repentance feels like. Not groveling. Homecoming.
You're not auditioning for forgiveness. You already have it.
The robe is waiting. The ring is waiting. The sandals are waiting.
What's keeping you at the end of the driveway?
Hear more on our podcast: How to Feel Forgiven When You Don't Feel Forgiven

Justin Franich
Justin Franich is a Teen Challenge graduate who overcame a meth addiction and has been clean since 2005. He spent over a decade leading Christ‑centered recovery programs and now serves as Executive Director of Shenandoah Valley Adult Teen Challenge, helping families find the right path forward and supporting people as they rebuild life after addiction.
Read my story →If this encouraged you, there's more.
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