THE PRECIOUS BLOOD OF
CHRIST
Dr. W. A. Criswell
1 Peter 1: 18-19
10-14-73 10:50 a.m.
At these morning hours, the
pastor is preaching through the epistles of Simon Peter; and we're now in the
middle of the first chapter and the text is verses 18, 19, and 20. The
apostle writes, 1 Peter 1:18:
Forasmuch you know that ye
were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain
conversation.—anastrophe, manner of life, behavior, the former way you
used to live—But you're redeemed with the precious blood of Christ, as of a
lamb without blemish, without spot:
Who verily was ordained
before the foundation of the world, but now is manifest unto you…
We are redeemed, bought
back to God, not with corruptible things—not with worldly things as silver and
gold, perishable things—but with eternal preciousness, time, of enduring
cost, of incomparable value; with the time blood, with the precious
blood, of Christ.
It is very easy to fall into the habit of preaching about the gospel, but not
the gospel itself; the habit of preaching about the Bible, but not the Bible
itself; the habit of preaching about salvation, but not salvation itself.
And when we speak and expound a text like this you are riveted to—you are
brought back to—the very heart of the gospel message of Christ. This is
one sure touchstone of the message of the pulpit—whether it is of God or of
men.
In so many areas of the modern liberal Christian world, the preaching of the
blood is offensive: I have been in churches where songs—hymns on the blood—
have been purged from all of the hymnbooks. And the liberal theologian looks
upon it as a religion of the shambles, of the butcher shop. But the
presentation of the whole revelation of God in the Holy Scriptures is ever the
same: There is no remission of sins without the shedding of blood. And from
the beginning in Genesis to the final revelation of “Worthy is the Lamb,” the
whole gospel story is that: That Christ is to come into the world to die for
our sins according to the Scriptures.
We are redeemed not with earthly things—temporal things, corruptible things—
but with the precious blood of Jesus Christ. In these Holy Scriptures God
looks upon blood as always being time, precious. Even the blood of
beasts of animals is precious in His sight. In the ninth chapter the of
the Book of Genesis, God says that you are not to eat the flesh with the life,
and then it explains, "for the life is the blood." You're not
to eat flesh with the life—with the blood—for the blood is precious to
God. It is given on the altar as an atonement for our souls.
In the Mosaic legislation the people were interdicted from eating things
strangled, because the blood was still in the flesh. In God's sight, even
the blood of animals was precious. It was used upon the altar, poured out
at the base of the altar for an atonement for our sins. “The life of the
flesh is in the blood and I have given it to you upon the altar to make
atonement for your souls for it is the blood that maketh atonement for the
soul.” [Leviticus 17:11]
And when the Lord looked
upon the red crimson of life poured out—even though it was that of a bullock or
of a lamb—yet in God's sight it was precious. The blood of the man is
precious in God's sight, this crimson flow in our veins. In the ninth
chapter of that same Book of Genesis, God says that if a man's life is taken,
the man who took his life must pay for it with his own blood. And in the Book
of Numbers God says the shedding of blood by violence, by murder, defiles the
land. It cries unto God, as the blood of Abel cried to the Lord of Heaven:
The blood of a man is precious in God's sight.
If the blood of animals and the blood of men is dear and precious to God, what
shall we say about the blood of God's Son, our redeeming savior? In Acts
20 and 28, the Apostle Paul says that our church was purchased by the blood of
God. That is an amazing and astonishing expression; it is purchased by the
blood of God.
I took a course one time, in
my doctoral work, on the atonement. It was one of the minors of the
study. We studied the atonement for two years, at the end of which I had
to take an oral examination upon it and I tell you verily that at the end of
two years of graduate study on the atonement, the cross of Christ. At the end
of the two years and after the oral examination, I seemed to understand less and
to be able to enter into the mysteries unfathomable of God less, than at the
time when I began.
If there is anything that
defies delineation and description and evaluation, it is the atoning death of
Christ. How does the blood wash away our sins? And what are the
sufferings of Christ into which we can hardly enter? For none of the
ransomed knew the deep waters crossed, nor how dark the night that our Savior
went through, when He won the lamb that was lost.
As I read this text, I am most ready to confess that my finite mind cannot
enter into the mysteries of the atoning grace of God in Christ Jesus. How
blood—the crimson of life—washes sin away. But as I read the Bible, and
study it, and pray over its pages, there are some things that come to my heart
about the blood of our Lord and I named three of them this morning.
One, and first: the blood
of Christ brings to us God's atoning grace. The law says: This do, and
thou shalt live—obey this commandment and thou shall have eternal life—but how
does a man keep the law of God? And how can a man learn to be perfect in all of
his ways? For his every effort is characterized by mistake, and sin, and
falling short.
So the man brings for his sin, a sacrifice. He comes before God with a
bullock, but then he comes back again with another. And he offers before
God an atonement, and he comes back with yet another. The nation offers
at the morning sacrifice a lamb, but the nation has to offer another lamb in
the evening. And so his life is one of continuous and perpetual memory of
his sin and shortcoming; he offers the sacrifice, then he offers it
again. The high priest goes into the Holy of Holies with blood of
expiation, and then he returns again. There is no end! There is no
limit!
What does the blood of Christ do for us? The Apostle Paul writes in
Roman's 10:4: For Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one
that believeth. And he writes again in Romans 5:9: We are now justified by His
blood and saved from wrath through Him. Christ is the end of the law to those
who look in faith to Him, and His blood has redeemed us from the wrath and
judgment of God upon our sins.
Outside of Christ, all our lives, we are slaves to the tyrant of the law.
The law threatens us, and the law curses us, and the law judges us.
There's no man righteous before the law. We all have sinned and come
short of the expectation of God. What does a man do therefore, who finds
himself always a sinner? The blood of Christ brings to us the grace of
God.
Under the shelter of God's
love, and God's mercy, and God's grace; the thunders of Sinai have ceased, and
the fury of its lightning judgments have been placated. The sinner now,
in the presence of God, is like the suppliant who bows in the court. And the
priest enters the Holy of Holies, and there is the Ark of the Covenant in the
sanctuary. In that Ark, at the heart of that covenant, are the Ten
Commandments written on tables of stone. How many of them do we
break? How many of them do we break every day?
The judgments of God upon
our sin—but to the one who has trusted in Christ, the commands on the inside of
that ark are covered over by the hilasterion , the mercy seat. And
the cherubim—always signs and symbols of God's grace—look full upon it; and
there does the high priest sprinkle blood of expiation, appropriation, of
atonement, of grace, and forgiveness. Our victim has been slain; and the
blood has been offered; and God's mercy, and grace, and forgiveness have been
poured out; and we need no longer fear the judgments and the penalties of our
sin.
How was this done: By things earthy? Even by silver and gold?
No! For these corruptible things could only redeem corruptible things, but
we were redeemed by the precious blood of Christ—by a spiritual intervention of
God from heaven!
I do not deny, nor would you,
that silver and gold can redeem some things. If a man in distress pawned
his watch, or if a man in great need of money pawned a diamond or anything
precious, he can redeem it with money; he can buy it back with gold or
silver. There are some things that corruptible things can redeem.
If a man placed his home under mortgage—and what he possesses has against it a
lien—he can buy back the mortgage, or he can take away the lien with
money. But how would you redeem a destroyed soul; and how would you redeem
a ruined life with gold and silver? They can only redeem corruptible
things.
But a man had as well
measure love by the yard, or weigh the Holy Spirit in pounds, as to try to
redeem his soul or his life with things that are possessed. Yet we try to
do that: we try to the further ourselves by affluence; we try to commend
ourselves to God by our own righteousness. And the man thinks, for the
most part, that if he has money—if he has gold and silver and stocks and bonds—he
has secured himself. The man will say, “By my wealth, by my possessions,
by my money,” but God says, “by My grace.” The man says, “…with money and
with price.” God says, “…without money and without price.” The man
says, “Look on the pages of Dun & Bradstreet!” But God says, “Look through
the pages of the Lamb's Book of Life.” For God does not look for stocks,
and bonds, and lands, and possessions: God looks for the blood, and when a man
is saved, he is saved by being under the blood.
What can wash away my sins?
Nothing but the blood of
Jesus;
What can make me whole
again?
Nothing but the blood of
Jesus.
O precious is the flow
That makes me white as
snow;
No other fount I know,
Nothing but the blood of
Jesus.
[“Nothing but
the Blood”; Robert Lowry]
What does the blood of Christ do for us? First, it brings to us God's
atoning grace. That is, the man cannot be saved by his self-righteousness;
he cannot keep the law. But in God's grace, we have forgiveness and entrée into the presence of our
Lord.
And that leads me to the
second thing: it is in the blood of Christ that our sins are washed away.
Not by His miraculous birth are we saved; not by His beautiful life are we
saved. Not by His miracles, that can change the course of nature, are we saved.
Not even by His words of wisdom—though never a man spake like that Man—are we
saved: but we are saved by the blood of the cross.
And the death of Christ is not exemplary. He did not die to teach us an
example; He did not die for our inspiration; but He died for our sins according
to the Scriptures. And the heart of God does not seek in us a response of
example or of inspiration in the death of His Son; but what God seeks in us is
a response of humility, and contrition, and confession, and repentance, and acceptance
that, through the blood of the Son of God, we might have remission of sins. That
we might be cleansed, that we might be acceptable in His sight, that we might
stand in His presence some day and live!
And this is no accident in history, nor is it something ephemeral or peripheral
in the plan of God; for the prophet says with the precious blood of Christ, who
verily was ordained before the foundation of the world, before God flung the
stars and planets out into space, and before He created this earth; Christ died
for our sins according to the foreknowledge and sovereign, elective grace of
God.
It is in the blood of Christ that we are justified; it is in the blood of
Christ that the church is born; it is in the blood of Christ that we have hope
of the forgiveness of sins. And by the blood of Christ, He has quenched
all of the altar fires of the earth.
You know, it is difficult
for us in this modern day to realize that when you read history—back in the day
of the Egyptian, of the Babylonian, of the Assyrian, of the Greek and of the
Roman—when you read of the civilizations of that day, the entire earth was
covered with altars; and the smoke of the fires ascending up into the
heavens. There's not one that burns, that I know of, in the earth
today. Why? The atoning grace of God, in Christ Jesus, quenched all
of the altar fires of the earth. It was in Christ's goodness, and purity,
and love, and forgiveness, and mercy that all of the judgments of God, against
us, have been taken away. There are no more priestly orders, for He is
our high priest, making intercession for us in the sanctuary of God.
By the life of our Lord, He
was obedient to the law for us. In the death of Christ, our Lord, He paid
the penalty of sin for us. In the death of our Lord, He was buried and
He's the scapegoat that carried away the sins of His people. In the
resurrection of our Lord, He was not only thus declared the Son of God—deity—but
He also brought justification to declare us righteous in the presence of the
great throne. And in His coming again—in His return—apart from sin, He is
to bring to us a full-orbed salvation; the complete redemption of the purchased
possession, a resurrected immortalized body as well as a redeemed and
blood-bought soul.
What has the blood of
Christ done for us? It has brought to us not only God's grace, and not
only the forgiveness of our sins, but third: the blood of Christ brings to us
the promise, and the power of a new, glorious, redeemed and regenerated
life. It is a marvelous thing that in the poured-out blood of our Lord,
we have the poured-out blessings of God and of heaven upon us.
In the red crimson that
flowed from His veins, His face, His hands, His side, His feet, and the earth
drank it up—in the crimson of His life that was poured out, all of the
blessings of heaven were poured out upon us. The life of our Lord was
literally poured out into this world; and that love and grace comes even to
us.
When they smote the Son of God—they struck the rock from which flows the
fountain-waters of life. When they pierced His hands and His feet—they
opened therein the resources of grace, and power, and glory from heaven.
And when they pierced His side with that Roman spear, they opened the fountain
of God's love, and grace, and mercy. When the blood of our Lord poured
out into the earth, God's fountain of love and mercy was poured out with it—by
it, through it. Not only that, but in that gift of the love and mercy of
God in the life of His Son, poured out upon us, there came with it that
cleansing, regenerating power that makes us new men, new women, a new creation
in God's sight.
Last Friday night I was speaking to a national convocation in Arlington,
Virginia. It was a meeting of prison chaplains, and the people who support
them. I was surprised at the luster and beauty of the occasion. It
was convened in a beautiful hall: there were present, about 600 men and women
who were resplendently dressed. It is an organization supporting prison
chaplains in America. And seated at the speaker's table, I was beside the
side of an executive leader of the group. And as I sat by him, he would
tell me about this man who is speaking; and about that man who was seated
immediately in front of me; and about that man who is standing up to witness;
and this one who is testifying.
One time, I remember I went
down in the Amazon jungle to see the Auca Indians. Men who, all their lives,
had bathed their hands in human blood; and who had been won to Christ and were
now in the services seated before me, at which I was to preach, who were now
humble faithful disciples of the blessed Jesus. I had that same wonderful
sense of the mercy and grace of God last Friday night as I sat there and looked
upon and listened to those men. Here is a man, as fine a looking man as
you could ever see, and the director will say to me:
This is the chairman of our board. He was
convicted of embezzling in a bank; sent to prison for a long, long
sentence. But in the prison, the grace of God found his heart, changed
his life, and he is now not only a fine businessman, but he's a deacon in his
church. And he's the treasurer of the congregation, this man who had been in
prison for years for embezzlement.
And then this man, do you see him? This man has been convicted time and
again: he's written over forty thousand dollars in bogus checks. This man
is a fine leader, an officer in a national corporation.
And this man
who is standing up to speak, this man has been a murderer and sent to the
penitentiary for shedding man's blood; but there in the pen, did God's grace
change his heart and life, and the governor has bestowed upon him a full
pardon.
And this man,
this man is the hit man,
—first
time I ever heard it called that, “hit man for the Mafia”; that had to be
explained to me. The hit man of the Mafia is the man who is hired to kill for
them—
this man is the hit man of
the Mafia and sentenced for life in the penitentiary. The grace of God
reached his heart, cleansed his soul, and he now has a full pardon from the
government.
And this man,
see him? That man is a man who lost his mind, deranged over a tragedy
that overwhelmed the world in the Second World War, or you remember—the man
says to me—the Nuremberg trial in Germany for the Nazi criminals, the war
criminals? There were four men, from four different nations assigned for
the execution, and this man was the American representative of the four: He
himself hanged 22 men. And he said as the days passed, the oppression of that
assignment unbalanced his mind, and he turned to alcohol and finally to
drugs. And, as such, was sent to the penitentiary. But there,
through a prison chaplain of Jesus Christ, did the Lord heal his mind and heal
his soul, and make him a new man. And here he is, a stalwart Christian of
the faith.
And this man,
right in front of you, do you see him? Sentenced to 40 years; this man
has not only been pardoned, not only is he a great Christian, but he speaks to
groups all over this eastern part of the United States—warning young men in
schools and colleges of the terror of the evil way of life, and the blessings
and glory of the life in Christ.
Why when you sit, and look,
and see, and hear, the marvelous grace of God that has come down from heaven in
Christ, you think, “O dear God, how could such a thing be?” The marvelous,
incomparable, indescribable blessings that God has shed out upon us, poured out
upon us, in the atoning grace of our blessed Lord; the precious blood that buys
us—redeems us—from judgment.
Then you know, coming back
just this afternoon, I began to think about us—and of course, about the service
today. And you know, it was pressed upon my heart again and anew—we
categorize sins. “You see that man over there? He's a violent
sinner. You see that one over there? He's the dregs and drugs of
the earth. And you see this one here? He's the dirt, and the mud,
and the filth.”
And then we have a tendency
to gather our righteous skirts around us and say, “These are so sinful, and
these are so vile, these are so wicked, but I…” And then we think, “Do you
suppose he's a sinner and I'm not? Do you suppose he is vile and I'm
not? Do you suppose he needs God and I need Him not?” Then we
remember the Word of the Lord: “For all have sinned.” All! All of
us have sinned! All of us! All of us who are alike, God has
concluded, under judgment—all of us.
“There's not one of
us righteous, no not one!” And this man may have sinned in this category;
and this one has sinned in that category; and this one in another—but I have
also sinned in my categories. My life is full of blemish and wrong, and I
need to be saved just as he does. I need to cast myself upon the mercies
of God, “Lord, be merciful to me a sinner!”
And praise God! The same
loving grace that was extended to these men is extended to me. Under the
blood we all are saved—all of us! “When I see the blood, I will pass over
you and the avenging angel will sheath his sword; there's no more condemnation
to them who are in Christ Jesus.” We are free! We are washed!
We are redeemed! We are justified by the blood of the Crucified One!
And that is the invitation we make to your heart and to your soul today.
“For they overcame him—God's saints—by the blood of the Lamb and the word of
their testimony.” [Revelation 12:11] And in loving gratitude to God, “in
believing His grace and mercy can extend even to me, I come openly, publicly,
unashamedly, confessing my faith in the Son of Glory: overcoming by the blood
of the Lamb; by the atoning grace of Christ; and ‘by the word of their
testimony’—by my public confession of acceptance—opening my heart to the
presence, and the power, and the promise of God.” Will you do that?
A family to come, a couple
you or just one somebody you—on the first note, of that first stanza, “Here I
am, Pastor. I make the decision now and I'm walking down that stairway.” Or,
“I'm coming down that aisle, I give you my hand. I've given my heart to
the Lord.” Putting your life in the church or opening your heart to the grace,
and love, and mercy, and forgiveness of Jesus. Come, do it now, make it now,
while we stand and while we sing…
Putting your life in the
church or opening your heart to the grace, and love, and mercy, and forgiveness
of Jesus. Come, do it now! Make it now—while we stand and while we
sing.
Copyright © 2008 The W. A. Criswell Foundation. All Rights
Reserved.