In the sermon "Not Without Blood," Gary Shepard addresses the central theme of Christ's sacrificial atonement through His shed blood, emphasizing its necessity for redemption, justification, and reconciliation. Shepard argues that the High Priest of the Old Testament, though gloriously robed, could not enter the Holy of Holies without blood, symbolizing the unwavering divine requirement for atonement. He references Hebrews 9:6-7 and Leviticus 17:11 to illustrate that life is in the blood and that without shedding blood, there is no remission of sins. Ultimately, Shepard asserts that true salvation is not contingent on human effort but solely on Christ's accomplished work, encapsulating the essence of Reformed doctrine where grace and justification by faith alone stand paramount in understanding the implications of Christ's blood in the life of believers.
“There is only one way that sin can be put away. That is through a sacrificial death, and that death is the death of His Son.”
“The soul that sins shall surely die. Nothing is ever satisfactory to God as a just God except what He requires, that is the price of sin, which is death.”
“We were not redeemed with corruptible things... but with the precious blood of Christ.”
“Where remission of these is, there is no more offering for sin.”
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