
“It is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul,”
(Leviticus 17:11).
“There I will meet with thee, and I will commune with thee from above the
mercy-seat,” (Exodus 25: 22).
READER! Have you ever felt
your need of salvation! Have you ever sought it, as one who must obtain it—or
perish?
When a sinner is first
brought to feel sin to be a burden—when he feels wrath abiding upon his soul,
and that his whole past life has been a life without God—his question is, “What
must I do to be saved?” “Is it possible that my sin can ever be forgiven by a
God who is angry with the wicked every day?” The awakened publican’s cry is, “O
God, be merciful to me!” And this cry finds God in the very attitude of grace,
proclaiming his name. “The Lord, the Lord God merciful,” and pointing to the
Savior on the throne of grace, where we may obtain mercy.
In Old Testament times,
the Lord set forth our condition on the one hand, and His respect toward us in
the other, in one part of the furniture of the Tabernacle. He did this in the
mercy-seat. This name is given to that part of the ark, in the holy of holies,
whereon the blood used to be sprinkled on the day of atonement. The mercy-seat
was the lid of the ark, as broad and long as the ark itself, and made of the
same precious material; and the lid, or mercy-seat, being sprinkled with blood
seven times, set forth to us the blood of Jesus Christ, which cleanseth from all
sin.
Now, it is where the blood
is, that mercy for sinners is to be found. For they deserve to die; and their
deserved doom must be exhibited, and exacted at the hands of another, if they
themselves are to escape. Therefore, the place where mercy can be found, is the
place where the blood is. No other place, O sinner, in the wide world for you!
But to that place you may come—nay, must come, if you would escape the wrath of
God.
(1)
You must come as a sinner. You must come with nothing but sin. On the day of
atonement, the priest in
At length it is done. But
what does it discover? He has laid down his whole soul there—his very self; but
in all this there has been nothing but sin for him to leave there! No holiness
is laid down on that blood, for it is from all sin that the blood cleanses.
You come, therefore,
wholly as a sinner. Nothing can be more deeply solemnizing than this. To have
such a burden to lay down there—to have nothing else than a burden of this kind,
and to lay all this on the Lord Jesus Christ! How humbling, how fitted to lay
the sinner in the dust, is the view this gives of his utter guilt and vileness!
And yet nothing is more inviting, for it is with sin he comes, and as a sinner;
and the Lord Jesus meets the sin and the sinner. Is there, then, any room for
delay? any ground for excuse for hesitating to come at once?
Reader! Have you ever laid to heart that this is
the truth,
as to the state in which a sinner comes to the mercy-seat for pardon? Is it true
that the greatness of your sins need be no hindrance to your acceptance, if only
you are now willing, with all your heart, to turn from sin to God? Yes; it is
true. It was for sinners, the mercy-seat was made. It was for sinners the blood
was shed. “This is My blood of the new testament, which is shed for many, for
the remission of sins,” (Matthew 26:28). “They that be whole need not a
physician, but they that are sick . . . I am not come to call the righteous, but
sinners to repentance,” (Matthew 9:12, 13).
When, at any time, you
have heard Christ in all His fullness pressed upon your acceptance—when you have
been invited, without delay, to draw near with a true heart, in full assurance
of faith—is it not true that secretly you may have been raising some such
difficulty as this. “Oh, but I am such a sinner—I cannot expect to be received
just as I am. I must wait till I have mended my life, and then I will come. I
must wait till I have prayed longer, and then I will come. I must wait till I
have had deeper convictions of sin, and then I may hope that the Lord will
receive me if I come”
Is this your view of the
way of salvation? If it be, you are surely all in the wrong. Is it not just as
if you were to say, “I cannot go to God just now, for I am a poor, vile, guilty
sinner, with no good thing about me at all—a poor beggar, who has nothing to
give for salvation. But I shall wait till I have something to recommend me, and
then I shall go.” Dear reader, would this be a free salvation? You want to pay
for salvation; but God offers you salvation without money and without price.
“Ho! every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he that hath no money,
come ye, buy and eat; yea, come, buy wine and milk without money and without
price,” (Is. 55:1). “Whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely,”
(Rev. 22:17).
But, moreover, supposing
it had been required that you should bring some good thing with you when you
came to the mercy-seat, how vain would have been your hopes? He, who for a
moment, cherishes such a thought has evidently never been brought to feel the
total and utter depravity of his nature—that in him, that is, in his flesh,
dwelleth no good thing, (Rom. 7:18). When a sinner is once truly awakened by the
Spirit of God to see the awful ruin of his condition, he then feels that, so far
from its being a comfort to him, the very thing that is the likeliest to drive
him to despair would be to tell him that he must wait till he find some good
thing in him to recommend him before he could hope for pardon from an angry God.
The Lord shows us a more
excellent way. Glorious truth! spoken of Jesus by those who were stumbled by its
very glory— “This man receiveth sinners,” (Luke 15:2). In the Gospel-call, so
far as any ground of acceptance is concerned, the Lord has no respect to the
sinner’s state at all, as to whether it be better? or whether it be worse. The
only question is, Art thou willing? The invitation is, “Whosoever will.”
(2) The sinner who comes
in faith to the mercy-seat is immediately received. The priest who thus
confessed and spread out his sin, found God at that spot where the seven-times
sprinkled blood lay, waiting to be gracious. There never was seen the flash of
angry lightning over the mercy-seat. There never was heard one faint murmur of
Sinai-thunder there. There was, on the contrary, the bright and glorious cloud
that cast its mild rays, sweeter than ever did setting sun, over the sinner who
had on that spot spoken out his soul’s guilt, and left it on the blood.
God looked on the atoning
blood, and pointing to it, seemed to say, “I am well pleased therein; and
therefore, spare this sinner.” He saw His justice satisfied, because fully met
by that setting forth of death for the guilty. Bending over it, it was as if He
bent over His beloved Son, in whom He is ever well pleased.
The
sinner, too, fixed his eye on the same atonement that lay on that mercy-seat;
and after having so confessed his sinfulness, stood gazing on the blood, as if
to say, “Lord, there is my death for each sin; there is my satisfaction; there
is my propitiation; there is Thy law’s demand; I do not seek aught inconsistent
with Thy perfect righteousness!” And this is the position of a believing soul.
His eye is on Jesus. His ear hears the testimony, that because of the blood, God
has given us eternal life, (1 John 5:11). His soul says, “Christ is the end of
the law for righteousness to me.” He is told, “Him hath God set forth to be a
propitiation,” (
Reader! have you ever laid to heart that this is
the truth
concerning the blood of Christ—that there is immediate pardon for every sinner
believing in it, and resting upon it? The broken law proclaims that the wages of
sin is death. The sinner’s hope is not a hope procured upon any other terms. If
it were so, where. or when for a moment, would the sinner be safe? It would be
but a saying, “Peace, peace,” while the law said there was no peace. No.
Salvation is not an unrighteous compromise between the law and the Gospel. The
law’s terms to the sinner are, “The wages of sin is death.” And the law’s terms
to the sinner’s Surety are, “The wages of sin is death.” God does not take the
believer’s five talents for the hundred which he owed, and call them a hundred,
in order that his saving love might reach him. But for the hundred talents which
he owed, Christ has paid a hundred—paid the uttermost farthing. The law required
perfect obedience, and blood. Christ, as the sinner’s Surety, has rendered
perfect obedience, and blood.
“Do
we, then, make void the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the
law,” (
Here is peace for the
guilty, rest for the weary. Behold this blood! Behold, in what it has done in
all generations, the power of that blood to bring far off sinners nigh! Behold
that mercy-seat, where the precious atonement-blood is sprinkled? There God is
waiting to be gracious—waiting to meet you! There, and there only, the Holy One
can meet with the guilty, and be reconciled. There is salvation to the
uttermost, to all who will draw near. That blood offers immediate forgiveness.
It is the plea which God Himself, with whom we have to do, has furnished to the
perishing sinner. Will He not accept His own plea?— “the precious blood of
Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot, who verily was
foreordained before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last
times for you, who by Him who do believe in God, that raised Him up from the
dead and gave Him glory, that your faith and hope might be in God,” (1 Pet.
1:21). Will He not recognize the preciousness and power of the blood of His
beloved Son, when it is held up in faith by the believing soul? (Read 1 John
1:7; Col. 1:12-15; Eph. 2:12-15; Heb. 12:24).
(3) Is a sinner’s appeal
to the blood of Jesus his only ground of acceptance? Yes, the one and only
ground. The great thing that has created a difference between the soul now
believing, and other souls still in sin, is that the eye of the believing one
has been fixed upon the atonement. Others see not the power of the blood, and so
have no plea with God.
There is nothing else on
which the Holy Ghost fixes a sinner’s eye, when it is He who is guiding us to
God. The world sends us to qualities in ourselves, and to efforts of our own;
and Satan approves of the world’s way, as being a part of the way of death. But
the Holy Ghost, who testifies of Christ, guides none to peace and salvation, but
by fixing their eye on the blood alone. He never turns a sinner’s eye in on
himself as a means of confidence, He never bids a sinner see his own character,
and so draw encouragement. No! the Lord’s way ever has been to “glorify Christ,”
in order to give confidence to a sinner.
The seven-times sprinkled
blood on the mercy-seat is enough to give us boldness to draw near—enough to
give us full assurance. Believer! why do you live with anything less than full
assurance of your acceptance? Why cast suspicion on the fullness of Christ? Why
raise doubts concerning the truth of God’ s testimony? Why act as if you feared
that Christ’s death and resurrection were not the sinner’s all-sufficient
warrant? Why tremble, as if the Rock of Ages were giving way?
And yet, how many, even
among the people of God, live as if they believed that a sinner might find hope
in resting his soul upon the blood of Christ, but that assurance of salvation
were not to be looked for till after many days. Does it not seem as if it were
not till something they fancy they can do, or be, or suffer, or attain to, is
reached, that they think they can presume to look for a joyful assurance of
salvation? Are not souls often met with, inquiring the way of salvation, and
perhaps, evidencing their sincerity with many tears, who say that as yet they
have no comfort, but that they are trying all they can, and they hope soon to
attain to it. May there not in all this be a looking, perhaps an unconscious
looking, towards something else, for present acceptance and a present joyful
assurance of salvation, besides the finished work of Christ? Is it not to be
feared that a dimness of perception, in this respect, is the cause of much of
the darkness and bondage in which many, even of the true children of God, are
held so long? Is there not in this a practical denial that Christ’s work
finished for sinners, and that finished work alone, is ground sufficient to
warrant a believing sinner’s present hope and full assurance of salvation? Is
there not in this a confounding of the Spirit’s work in the sinner with Christ’s
work for the sinner, as the ground of his acceptance with God? Does it not tend
toward the Popish delusion, that it is for our work accepted for Christ’s sake,
and not for Christ’s sake alone, that we are accepted? Is it not just a going
about, in a more subtle form, to establish a righteousness of our own, and a
refusing to submit ourselves to the righteousness of God? Is it not just the
voice of the same deceiver who said of the terms of the old covenant, “Ye shall
not surely die!” now saying of the terms of the new, “Ye shall not surely live?”
Dear reader, we
affectionately urge this matter upon you; for we believe it nearly concerns your
own salvation—your own peace and holiness. If my warrant to be assured of
salvation depended upon the measure of my attainments, how could I ever be
assured of salvation? How could I ever be assured that I had attained such a
measure as would secure my acceptance, and my deliverance from the hand of my
enemies, that I might serve God without fear, in holiness and righteousness
before Him, all the days of my life? How could the jailer have been safe in
rejoicing in Christ, the same hour of the night? How could the eunuch have been
warranted in going on his way rejoicing?
But, “My thoughts are not
your thoughts, neither are your ways My ways, saith the Lord.” Blessed be God,
it is not a peradventure, left in uncertainty until after death or judgment, on
which I am pleaded with to rest my eternal all. It is a work devised for
sinners, undertaken for sinners, wrought out for sinners, finished for sinners,
and accepted by God for sinners, whereof He hath given assurance unto all men,
in that He hath raised Him from the dead. And we have not to go to the uttermost
parts of the earth to seek it. O reader! that finished work, that immediate
acceptance and salvation, is nigh thee—in thy hand—in thy mouth—in thy heart!
“Hearken unto Me, ye stout-hearted, that are far from righteousness; behold! I
bring near My righteousness!,” (Is. 46:12, 13). “Believe on the Lord Jesus
Christ, and thou shalt be saved,” (Acts 16:31).
But is there, then, no
hope that we are in Christ unless we possess this full assurance? We do not say
so, though we believe that this question has often been used as a refuge from
the guilt of not resting with full confidence on the blood of Christ. By reason
of the weakness of their faith, and the strength of corruption within, the
holiest of men are often found walking in darkness; but what we plead for is
this, that if a child of God be not kept in peace as regards his acceptance, it
is not for the want of something in Christ, but because of his own want of
faith, to take freely what has been so freely given; and that all such doubts
and fears regarding the fullness of Christ—whatever be the humbled and exercised
look they may assume—while they are the believer’s misery, are no less truly the
believer’s sin.
And this is the true way
of holiness. The same apostle who proclaims salvation “to him that worketh not,
but believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly,” beseeches us, by those very
mercies of God, to present our bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto
God. The same sprinkled blood which speaks peace to the sinner, proclaims to
that sinner continually, “Ye are not your own, for ye are bought with a price;
therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God’s,” (1
Cor. 6:20).
How precious, then, this
way of acceptance! We need no more than this, for immediate and present pardon.
The crucified and risen Jesus, and nothing else, brings us nigh to God. The
crucified and risen Jesus, apart from all besides, reconciles us to God. The
crucified and risen Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one
that believeth. He has borne an awful testimony that the wages of sin is death,
and has thus opened the way of salvation for the very chief of sinners, the very
basest and vilest of men.
Reader! have you ever felt
this blood of Christ to be precious blood? Have you been convinced of sin, and
convinced of righteousness? Have you ever felt God’s holy justice in requiring
such a sacrifice, and His holy love in providing it, not sparing His only
begotten Son? Have you ever felt the necessity for that blood being shed, and
sprinkled upon your soul before you could be pardoned? It is the blood, and the
blood alone, which maketh atonement for the soul. It was to this blood of
Christ, seen by faith through the types of the ceremonial law, that David was
looking in the Fifty-first Psalm, when, in bitterness for his guilt, he cried,
Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than
snow,” (Ps. 51:7). Has the insupportable burden of sin ever thus fixed your eye
upon that blood whence alone pardon and relief can come?
Or are you yet easy-minded
about the state of your soul? Does your conscience tell you that it would make
no material difference to you, if you were to be told that now there was to be
no longer any access to the mercy-seat for you? Dear reader, think what you are
doing. Is sin a fancy? Is the wrath of God a vain imagination? If these were
matters of little consequence, if they were as small matters as you now think
them, would God have given His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on
Him should not perish, but have everlasting life?
You do not deny that you
are a sinner—by nature “dead in trespasses and sins,” a child of wrath, even as
others, (Eph. 2:1, 3). How, then, do you expect to be saved? Are you not
neglecting the great and the only salvation? How shall you escape? (Heb. 2:3).
He that despised Moses’ law died without mercy under two or three witnesses; of
how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who hath
trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of the covenant,
wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing, and hath done despite unto the
Spirit of grace,” (Heb. 10:28, 29)?
The blood was always upon
the mercy-seat. It was there, night and day, summer and winter, year after year.
So Jesus is. He is never unable or unwilling to receive one coming sinner. Do
you ask, Who are they who would be welcome? He answers, “Him that cometh,” (John
6:37). Every sinner, of every kind and character. Great and small, young and
old, are welcome. Nicodemus came to Jesus by night—and he was welcome. The woman
that feared to be seen touched Him—and was cured. All the publicans and sinners
drew near to Him—and He stood in the midst. “Him that cometh,” said He, “I will
in no wise cast out.”
And who must come? All
that would not perish for ever. For, “There is none other name under heaven
given among men, whereby we must be saved,” (Acts 4:12). No other mercy-seat, no
other throne of grace, no other key to open the door, no other way into the
Holiest, no other plea that the Advocate will use at the great assize, no other
advocate, no other propitiation held forth by God, no other cord of mercy flung
out, in view of that wide, endless eternity.
“Having, therefore,
boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus, by a new and living
way which He hath consecrated for us, through the veil, that is to say, His
flesh; and having an High Priest over the house of God; let us draw near with a
true heart, in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil
conscience, and our bodies washed with pure water,” (Heb. 10:19-22). Seek ye the
Lord, while He may be found. “Come now, and let us reason together, saith the
Lord; though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though
they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool,” (Is. 1:18).
And, O reader, there is no
other time but “Now.”
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