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©FOUNDATION
A MAGAZINE OF BIBLICAL FUNDAMENTALISM
Dennis W. Costella, Editor; Karel Beyer, Production Manager; Matt
Costella,
Copy Editor
M.H. Reynolds, Jr. (1919-1997), Founding Editor
The Blood of Jesus
by The Rev. William Reid, M.A.
"Having therefore, brethren, boldness to enter into the
holiest by the blood of Jesus," Hebrews 10:19
[This is a reprint of a book
published by James Nisbet & Co., London, England, in 1866. Liberty Bell
Press no longer prints this book and has granted permission to the FEA for
reprinting. This resource is available in a booklet from the FEA. Click
here to order].
©FOUNDATION Magazine, July-August 1998
Contents
Preface
Chapter 1: Forgiveness Of Sins Through The Blood Of Jesus
Chapter 2: How Our Sins Are Taken Away By The Blood Of Jesus
Chapter 3: The Blood Of Jesus, Not Conviction Of Sin, The Foundation
Of Our Peace And Joy
Chapter 4: A Letter About The Love Of Jesus
Chapter 5: Salvation Through The Blood Of Jesus, The Gift Of God
Chapter 6: The Blood Of Jesus Our Only Ground Of Peace With God
Chapter 7: Regeneration Through The Blood Of Jesus
Chapter 8: Faith In The Blood Of Jesus Essential To Salvation
Chapter 9: The Blood Of Jesus The Believers Life And Peace
Chapter 10: Faith In The Blood Of Jesus The
Spring Of Holiness <= you are here
Chapter 11: The Blood Of Jesus The Essence Of The Gospel
Chapter 12: The Holy Spirits Testimony To The Blood Of Jesus
Chapter 10
Faith In The Blood Of Jesus The Spring Of Holiness
Topics In This Chapter:
- Living By The Faith Of The Son Of God
- Assurance Essential To Holiness
- The Blood Of Jesus Our Only Plea In Prayer
- Pleading The Blood Of Jesus Insures Revival
IT IS NOTEWORTHY THAT the apostle Paul, who most strenuously upholds justification by
faith in Jesus, always connects it with holy living, and frequently shews that it is the
firm belief of the truth of the doctrine that leads to new obedience in the life. In his
Epistle to Titus, after speaking of "Jesus Christ our Saviour," and "being
justified by His grace," and "made heirs according to the hope of eternal
life," he directs that the doctrine of salvation by free grace alone should be
affirmed constantly in order that believers might maintain good works,
(Titus 3:4-8). And there can never be "good" works but on the principle of being
"justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the law" (Gal.
2:16). We never do good works until we do them because we are saved, not in
order to be so. A lively sense of many sins forgiven will make us love much and shew it
practically, (Luke 7:47). And we should have such a vital connexion with Christ, and such
intimate fellowship with Him, as will exclude all surmisings as to our acceptance. If we
are to render Paul-like service, we must exercise Paul-like faith, and enjoy Paul-like
experience. And this is a record of how he believed and lived: "I am crucified
with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ Iivetli in me: and
the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved
me, and gavel himself for me," (Gal 2:20).
We must be well assured of the love of God in Christ
Jesus, to our own souls in particular, before we will be able to say, "This one
thing, I do: I strive to be holy as God is holy." One of the best of the old writers
has said:
Saving faith," has always a sanctifying and
comforting influence. The true believer does not divide righteousness from
sanctification, nor pardon from purity. Yea, he comes to Christ for the
remission of sins for the right end; and that is, that being freed from the guilt of sin,
we may be freed from the dominion of it. Knowing that there is forgiveness with Him that
He might be feared, he does not believe in remission of sin that he may indulge himself in
the commission of sin. No, no; the blood of Christ, that purges the conscience from the
guilt of sin, does also purge the conscience from dead works, to serve the living God.
They that come to Christ in a scriptural way come to Him for righteousness, that
they may have him also for sanctification; otherwise, the man does not really
desire the favour and enjoyment of God, or to be in friendship with Him who is a holy God.
The true believer employs Christ for making him holy as well as happy, and hence draws
virtue from Him for killing sin, and quickening him in the way of duty. The faith
that can never keep you from sin will never keep you out of hell; and the
faith that cannot carry you to your duty will not carry you to heaven.
Justifying faith is a sanctifying grace. It is true, as it sanctifies it does not justify;
but that faith that justifies does also sanctify. As the sun that enlighteneth hath heat
with it; but it is not the heat of the sun that enlightens, but the light thereof: so that
faith that justifies hath love and sanctity with it; but it is not the love and sanctity
that justify, but faith as closing with Christ.
"If a man hath no faith in the Lord's goodness, no hope
of His favour in Christ, where is his purity and holiness? Nay, it is he that hath this
hope that purifies himself as God is pure. I know not what experience you have, but some
of us know, that when our souls are most comforted and enlarged with the faith of God's
favour through Christ, and with the hope of His goodness, then we have most heart to our
duties; and when, through unbelief, we have harsh thoughts of God as an angry judge, then
we have no heart to duties and religious exercises; and I persuade myself this is the
experience of the saints in all ages.
There is thus an inseparable connection between our
believing the love of God to us in Christ Jesus, holiness, and spiritual comfort. Unless
we "draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith," we cannot
expect to have "our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies
washed with pure water," (Heb. 10:22).
And as the blood of Jesus is our ground of confidence in
coming to God at the first for forgiveness of our sins, our mainstay in trouble, and the
spring of all worthy obedience, so must it be our only plea in approaching our heavenly
Father for all needed spiritual blessings. If we wish to have our own souls quickened and
revived, or a great work of the Spirit achieved throughout the land, and millions of souls
converted, the name of Jesus must be our only plea, as we come to plead for these
blessings at the throne of grace. Another says:
In all true prayer, great stress should be laid on the blood
of Jesus: perhaps no evidence distinguishes a declension in the power and spirituality of
prayer more strongly than an overlooking of this. Where the atoning blood is kept out of
view, not recognised, not pleaded, not made the grand plea, there is a deficiency
of power in prayer. Words are nothing, fluency of expression nothing, niceties of language
and brilliancy of thought nothing, where the blood of Christ - the new and living way of
access to God, the grand plea that moves Omnipotence, that gives, admission within the
holy of holies - is slighted, undervalued, and not made the groundwork of every petition.
Oh, how much is this overlooked in our prayers - how is the atoning blood of Immanuel
slighted! How little mention we hear of it in the sanctuary, in the pulpit, in the social
circle! Whereas it is this that makes prayer what it is with God. All prayer is acceptable
with God, and only so, as it comes up perfumed with the blood of Christ; all prayer is
answered as it urges the blood of Christ as its plea; it is the blood of Christ that
satisfies justice, and meets all the demands of the law against us; it is the blood of
Christ that purchases and brings down every blessing into the soul; it is the blood of
Christ that sues for the fulfilment of His last will and testament, every precious legacy
of which comes to us solely on account of His death; this it is too that gives us boldness
at the throne of grace. How can a poor sinner approach without this? How can he look up -
how can he ask - how can he present himself before a holy God, - but as he brings in the
hand of faith the precious blood of Jesus? Out of Christ, God can hold no communication
with us; - all intercourse is suspended - every avenue of approach is closed - all
blessing is withheld. God has crowned His dearly beloved Son, and He will have us crown
Him too; and never do we place a brighter crown upon His blessed head than when we plead
His finished righteousness as the ground of our acceptance, and His atoning blood as our
great argument for the bestowment of all blessing with God. If, then, dear reader, you
feel yourself to be a poor, vile, unholy sinner -if a backslider, whose feet have
wandered from the Lord, in whose soul the spirit of prayer has declined, and yet
still feel some secret longing to return, and dare not, because so vile, so unholy, so
backsliding; yet you may return, 'having boldness to enter into the holiest by
the blood of Jesus, (Heb. 10:19). Come, for the blood of Jesus pleads; return,
for the blood of Jesus gives you welcome.
"If any man sin, we have an advocate with
the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous," (1 John 2:1). And if you are stirred in
spirit for the souls of the perishing around you that they may be saved, and for the work
of God that it may be revived, make mention of THE BLOOD OF JESUS, and you may rest
satisfied that you "have the petitions, that you "desired of
Him," (1 John 5:15). Jesus has passed His word, that on doing this
you shall obtain the desires of your heart; for He says, "If ye abide in me, and my
words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto
you, "(John 15:7). "Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall ask
the Father in my name, he will give, it you... Ask, and ye shall
receive, that your joy may be full," (John 16: 23, 24). If, then, there be no
great revival of God's work, no great awakening and conversion of perishing souls,
may it not be because this sin lieth at our door, that we have not used the blood of
Jesus as our all-prevailing plea in prayer? Oh! let us no longer employ that
"'precious blood "so sparingly in our pleadings for revival, but let us urge it
as our only and our constant plea, and prove God herewith, whether He will not open to us
the windows of heaven, and pour us out a blessing, that there shall not be room enough to
receive it, (Mal. 3:10).
Continue With: Chapter 11: The Blood Of Jesus The Essence Of The
Gospel
Back to: Chapter 9: The Blood Of Jesus The Believers Life And
Peace
Return to: Table of Contents
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