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Todd Nibert

The Sprinkling of the Blood

Exodus 24:1-8
Todd Nibert • January, 30 2008 • Audio
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What does the Bible say about the blood of the covenant?

The Bible teaches that the blood of the covenant is essential for the remission of sins and signifies God's grace towards His people.

The blood of the covenant represents the means by which God's grace is applied to His people. In Exodus 24, we see Moses sprinkling the blood on both the altar and the people, signifying the establishment of a relationship between God and Israel through sacrifice. This act shows us that it is not merely our actions that bring us close to God, but the blood of Christ that allows us to draw near. Hebrews 9:22 emphasizes that without the shedding of blood, there is no remission of sin, highlighting its critical role in our salvation.

Exodus 24:1-8, Hebrews 9:22

How do we know the doctrine of original sin is true?

The doctrine of original sin is affirmed by the acknowledgment of sin's pervasive nature in humanity as seen in Scripture.

The Bible teaches that original sin means that all humans inherit a sinful nature due to Adam's fall. This doctrine reflects the reality that every individual has sinned and falls short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23). The preaching emphasizes that a 'real sinner' is someone who recognizes their inability to be righteous on their own and the necessity of God's grace. Without understanding our state before God, we miss the significance of the blood of Christ as the remedy for our sin. Passages such as Romans 5:12 articulate how sin entered the world through one man, affecting all mankind.

Romans 3:23, Romans 5:12

Why is the sprinkling of blood important in Christian theology?

The sprinkling of blood symbolizes the cleansing from sin and the establishment of a covenant relationship with God.

In Christian theology, the sprinkling of blood signifies a profound truth about atonement and covenant. It represents the application of Christ's sacrifice for the forgiveness of our sins. In Exodus 24, Moses sprinkled blood on the people, which showcased the seriousness of covenant relationships and the need for sacrificial atonement. This act was not merely religious ritual; it was pointing to the ultimate sacrifice of Jesus Christ, who sheds His blood for the redemption of His people (Hebrews 9:12). The doctrine affirms that it is through the application of Christ's blood that believers are washed, sanctified, and justified before God, emphasizing that salvation is entirely by grace and not by works.

Exodus 24:1-8, Hebrews 9:12

What can the blood of Christ do for believers?

The blood of Christ cleanses believers from sin, sanctifies them, and ensures their justification before God.

The blood of Christ plays a central role in the life of a believer. It is through His shed blood that we receive forgiveness and are reconciled to God. Hebrews 10:10 states that we are sanctified through the offering of Jesus Christ once for all. This means that His sacrifice has decisive power to cleanse us from all unrighteousness and to declare us justified—declared righteous before God. The assurance that our sins have been washed away gives believers peace, knowing they stand without guilt because of Christ’s atoning work. The application of this blood in our lives signifies not only forgiveness but also our sanctification and security in our relationship with God.

1 Corinthians 6:11, Hebrews 10:10

How does God's grace relate to the blood of Christ?

God's grace is fully manifested in the blood of Christ, which secures redemption for His elect.

The relationship between God’s grace and the blood of Christ is foundational in Reformed theology. It is by grace that believers receive the benefits of Christ’s sacrifice, which was established in the covenant of grace. This grace is not merely a general offer but specifically applied to those whom God has chosen to save. In Acts 20:28, we read that Christ purchased the church with His own blood, emphasizing that His sacrifice was intentional and personal. The effect of this grace is life-changing, as it frees us from the dominion of sin and brings us into communion with God, allowing us to approach Him confidently through the merit of Christ’s sacrifice.

Acts 20:28, Hebrews 10:19-22

Sermon Transcript

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If there's a better course than
that, I don't know what it is. It'd be a blessing to us if tonight
when we went to bed, we said in our hearts, living He loved
me. Dying, He saved me. Buried, He
carried my sins far away. Rising, He justified freely forever. One day He's coming, O glorious
day. Exodus 24. And he. God. Said unto Moses, come up unto
the Lord thou and Aaron, Nadab, and Abihu, and the seventy of
the elders of Israel, and worship ye afar off. And Moses alone
shall come near the Lord, but they shall not come nigh, neither
shall the people go up with him. And Moses came and told the people
all the words of the Lord, and all the judgments Everything
that was said in Exodus chapter 20 through 23, the giving of
the law, the Ten Commandments and so on. And all the people
answered with one voice and said, all the words which the Lord
has said will we do. And Moses wrote all the words
of the Lord and rose up early in the morning and built an altar
under the hill and twelve pillars, according to the twelve tribes
of Israel. And he sent young men of the children of Israel,
which offered burn offerings and sacrificed peace offerings
of oxen unto the Lord. And Moses took half of the blood
and put it in basins, and half of the blood he sprinkled on
the altar. And he took the book of the covenant
and read in the audience of the people and they said, all that
the Lord has said will we do and be obedient. And Moses took the blood and
sprinkled it on the people. And said, behold, the blood of
the covenant which the Lord hath made with you concerning all
these words." I've entitled this message, The
Sprinkling of the Blood. The sprinkling of the blood. Now that word sprinkle doesn't
mean he just dropped a little here and there. It means he threw
the blood on the people. He threw the blood on the altar. Now, there's only one type of
person who will have a true appreciation of the doctrine set forth in
our text. A real sinner. That's the only one who will
have any appreciation of the doctrine set forth in our text. A real sinner is someone who
cannot not sin. I've tried to think of different
definitions of what a sinner is, but that's as good a one
as I can come up with. I mean, there's a lot of things
we could say from the Scriptures, but a sinner is someone who cannot
not sin. A real sinner is somebody who
has, in fact, committed real sins, and he stands before God
self-convinced. He is not able to stand on a
moral high ground with anybody, not a real sinner, because he
knows that any sin he has not actually committed, he has committed
in his heart, and he knows that there is no sin he would not
now commit if not restrained by grace. That's what a real
sinner is. You know, the Lord taught us
to pray, lead us not into temptation, and you know why we pray that
prayer? Because we know that if we are tempted, we'll fall.
We ask the Lord to deliver us from even being tempted. There was a man who once boasted,
I have never committed adultery
against my wife. And that's a good thing. That's
a good thing. But a wise old preacher replied,
could that be? Because you were never placed
in a position where you had the opportunity. That's a searching question,
isn't it? A searching question. As I said, a real sinner, somebody
who cannot not sin, they and they only will have an appreciation
of the doctrine of our text. Now, God has just given the law.
That's what Exodus chapters 20 through 23 is. The Ten Commandments
and the civil law. Now, let's look in verse one.
And he said unto Moses, Come up unto the Lord, thou, and Aaron,
and Nadab, and Abihu, and Sedni, the elders of Israel, and worship
ye afar off. And Moses alone shall come near
the Lord, but they shall not come nigh, neither shall the
people go up with him. Now, there are two things that
strike me about those two verses I just read. Did you notice how
he said, worship ye afar off? And he said, the people shall
not come nigh. Now, let me tell you about this
one thing about God's law. You can only worship afar off.
You can't come into the presence of God if all you've got is law.
You can't draw nigh. You see, the only way you can
draw nigh is through the blood of the Lord Jesus Christ. There
is no other way of drawing near. He says to these people, worship
ye afar off and come not nigh. Verse 3, And Moses came and told
the people all the words of the Lord, And all the judgments and
all the people answered with one voice. They were unified
here. They all gave complete agreement
and they said all the words which the Lord has said, will we do? We will keep every one of his
commandments. Now, that's a. Good response. But has there ever been a bigger
lie told in this? Has there ever been a bigger
lie told than this? Turn with me to Deuteronomy,
chapter five, for just a moment. Moses is recounting what took
place and he gives the law once again, the Ten Commandments in
the first part of Deuteronomy, chapter five. And we read beginning
in verse 22. of Deuteronomy chapter 5. These
words the Lord spake unto all your assembly in the mouth out
of the midst of the fire of the cloud of the thick darkness with
a great voice And he added no more. He wrote them in two tables
of stone and delivered them unto me. And it came to pass, when
you heard the voice out of the midst of darkness, for the mountain
did burn with fire, that you came near unto me, even all the
heads of your tribes and your elders. And you said, Behold,
the Lord our God has showed us his glory and his greatness,
and we've heard his voice out of the midst of the fire. We've
seen this day that God doth talk with man, and he liveth. Now,
therefore, why should we die? For this great fire will consume
us. If we hear the voice of the Lord our God, any more will die.
For who is there of all flesh that hath heard the voice of
the living God speaking out of the midst of the fires? We haven't
lived. Go down there and hear all that the Lord our God shall
say, and speak down to us all that the Lord our God shall speak
unto thee, and we will hear it and do it. And the Lord heard
the voice of your words when you spake unto me, and the Lord
said unto me, I have heard the voice of the words of the people
which they have spoken unto thee. They have well said all that
they have spoken. You know, that's the only appropriate
response. What are you going to say? Well,
I keep this one, I won't keep that one. No, they gave the appropriate
response, but look what he says next in verse 29. Oh, and this
is God speaking. He says, oh, that there were
such an heart in them that they would fear me and keep all my
commandments. Always. That it might be well
with them and with their children forever. And they gave the right
answer, but oh, that they had a heart. I think of that passage
of scripture where our Lord says, these people draw nigh unto me
with their lips and they honor me with their mouth, but their
heart. is far from me. Let's go on reading back to our
text in Exodus chapter 24. They make this boast, all the
words which the Lord hath said will we do. Verse 4, And Moses
wrote all the words of the Lord, and rose up early in the morning,
and builded an altar unto the hill, And twelve pillars, according
to the twelve tribes of Israel, he sent young men of the children
of Israel which offered burnt offerings and sacrificed peace
offerings of oxen unto the Lord. Now, what's an altar for? There's only one reason for an
altar. Death. Sacrifice. You know, these altars
you see in religious houses of whatever it is they are, they
have these altars. There's only one person, only
one reason for an altar. It's to slay the sacrifice and
put the sacrifice on the altar. Now, Abraham or Moses rose up
early. There was no delays here. There
would be no need for an altar if there were no sin, but where
there is sin, there must be death. an altar for sacrifice. Now,
who is this sacrifice for? Well, I see the answer. First, it was the people who
told this lie. It was for them. It was for the people who told
this hypocritical lie. And it was for all the twelve
tribes of Israel. It wasn't for everybody. It was
only for the twelve tribes of Israel. Now, we read in verse
five, he sent young men of the children of Israel, which offered
burnt offerings and sacrificed peace offerings of oxen unto
the Lord, burnt offering for sin and the peace that comes
as a result of that whole burnt offering. Now, Moses knew when
they said this, they'd sinned a great sin. You know, it was
really hypocritical. You know, I say, well, they were
sincere when they said it. Well, I don't know if they were
or not. Can you sincerely say, all that the Lord has spoken,
I'll do? Can you say that with a true sincere heart right now?
If you read the Ten Commandments, can you say, I'm not going to
break one of them? And can you be sincere when you say something
like that? Well, I don't think they could either. I think that
there was grotesque hypocrisy and sinfulness in making this
confession. And as far as that goes, they demonstrated a complete
ignorance of the law, didn't they? Anybody that has any spiritual
understanding of the law knows that all the law does is condemn
them. They know they can't keep the law. We're showing great
disrespect for God's law and a very high opinion of ourselves
when we make a statement like, all that the Lord has spoken,
that will we do. What arrogance these people demonstrate
at this time. And Moses knows it. And so what's
the first thing he does? He builds an altar for sacrifice. Verse 6. And Moses took half
of the blood and put it in basins. And half the blood he sprinkled
on the altar. Now, there must have been a lot
of blood. And how blood makes you feel when you see it. You
know, it's a shame that we've got all these programs and movies
and so on with this blood shedding. And I think it makes people desensitized
toward it. But still, you know, there's
something that actually creeps you out when you see blood shed.
When you see blood running out of somebody and onto the floor,
it means death. It means death and it's a very
sobering, it speaks to our gut, doesn't it, when you see blood
shed. I can't help but wonder how Adam and Eve must have felt
when God slew that beast and they saw blood come out of that
beast for the first time and they saw death for the first
time. There was a blood shedding going
on. He took the blood and he sprinkled
it on the altar, the scripture says. You know, since Moses built
the altar, It had to be purged with blood because a sinful man
built it. Even the altar had to be purged with blood. Did
you notice in that passage of scripture I opened with, it said
almost all things are by the law purged with blood. He'd throw
blood on the altar. He'd throw blood on the sacrifice,
on the vessels, on the book itself. Everything was purged with blood,
without the shedding of blood. There is no remission of sins. Now verse 7, And he took the
book of the covenant, and read in the audience of the people.
He read Exodus chapter 20 through 23, once again, the commandments
of the Lord. And they said, all that the Lord has said will we
do, and be obedient. Now, I hope they meant well,
but I can't imagine anybody even being sincere when they say this.
I'm going to do everything He said. I'm going to keep every
one of those commandments. I'm going to be obedient. All that the Lord
has spoken, that will we do. And so what does Moses do? Moses
took the blood and he sprinkled it on the people. That means
he took blood and he threw it on the crowd. Now, can you imagine
having blood thrown on you? I mean, what a sight, what a
gruesome sight that must have been. He was actually taking
the blood of all these oxen and throwing it on the people. And
what a sight that must have been. Can you imagine? What's he doing?
Why is he doing this? What's this blood all about?
You know, I remember hearing one preacher comment on this
passage of Scripture, and he said this is the pact of obedience
between God and the people. It's kind of like two kids pricking
their fingers and putting blood and putting them together, you
know, as a pact. He said this is a pact of obedience
between God and the people. No, it's not. It's God's blood
because he knew they wouldn't obey. That's the purpose of this. He gave this blood of the covenant
because he knew they would not obey. Verse 8, And Moses took
the blood and sprinkled it on the people. And he said, Behold
the blood of the covenant which the Lord hath made with you concerning
all these words. Somebody's going to have to die
Either you or a substitute. This is God's blood. It's the
blood of His covenant, which He's made with you. Not a covenant
you two made together, but a covenant He made with you concerning all
these words. Now, the sprinkling of the blood
has to do with the application of the blood. Let me repeat that. The sprinkling of the blood has
to do with the application of the blood. Now, what do I mean
by that? Well, there are two different views of the application
of the blood of Christ. That means it works for you.
The first view that most people hold is that Jesus Christ shed
his blood for everybody, paid for everybody's sins. That blood
was shed for every individual to ever live, but it's up to
you to do something to make it work for you. You've got to apply
the blood to yourself, either the act of your faith, either
the act of your repentance or something you need to do, some
work you need to perform in order to apply the blood to yourself.
I remember one time hearing a preacher, and it was after he had been
caught in a moral scandal. It was way back in the 80s when
all that stuff was going on, and there were some people interviewing
this preacher, and they said, now, what are you going to do
about your sin? I mean, you were caught red-handed. What are you
going to do about that sin? And he said, I put that sin under
the blood. And I thought, oh, you've got the authority to do
that? You can just up and put your sin under the blood whenever
you want to? Is that what the Scripture teaches? What about
right here? Was there anything they did to
apply the blood to themselves? No, God sprinkled the blood on
them. God threw the blood on them. They didn't apply to the blood
themselves. It was thrown on them. Listen to the language. It's not the blood of the covenant
which the Lord and you made together. He does His part. We do our part.
But it's the blood of the covenant which the Lord hath made with
you. Now, the Lord made a covenant,
and it's called the covenant of grace. We read several times
in the New Testament of the blood of the covenant and the blood
of the everlasting covenant. Here's what happened. I love
thinking about this covenant. And the reason I love thinking
about this covenant is because I know exactly what David meant
when he said, although my house be not so with God, yet hath
he made with me an everlasting covenant ordered in all things
ensured. And this, David said, the man
after God's own heart, the son of Jesse, this, he said, is all
my salvation. And it's all my desire. Now,
we see David's attitude toward the covenant, and that's my attitude, too. I have
the same attitude David did toward this covenant and the blood of
the covenant. Now, here's the way the covenant
works. God, before time began, If I say foresaw the fall of
Adam, I'm probably not using proper language. It was all part
of his purpose and it was all part of his plan. Adam was going
to fall, our entire race was going to fall in him. Yeah, God
foresaw it because it was all part of his purpose and his plan.
He foresaw it, sure enough, but that's weak language if that's
all we say. God purposed this, but God in His mercy elected,
chose out, selected a vast number of Adam's race, and He gave them
to His Son. And he said, you're going to
be responsible for their sin. You're going to be responsible
for their fault. You're going to have to bear all the weight
of the responsibility of their salvation. You're going to have
to keep the law for them. You're going to have to die for them.
You're going to have to put away their sins. And it's your blood
that's going to wash away their sins. And hence, we have the
blood of the everlasting covenant. And like David said, This is
all my salvation, all my desire, and this thrills my heart to
know this. Do you know that when Christ agreed to be my surety,
everything God required of me, He looked to Christ for? I'm
off the hook. I love that. We're talking about
a salvation that's all of grace. It's all in the covenant. Let's
look at some scriptures regarding this. You know, when the Lord
came to this world, We read in Matthew 1.21, Thou shalt call
his name Jesus, for he shall save his people from their sins. That's why he came in the first
place. Now look in Hebrews chapter 9. Verse 12. Neither by the blood
of goats and calves, but by his own blood He entered in once
into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for us. For
if the blood of bulls and of goats and the ashes of an heifer
sprinkling the unclean sanctify to the purifying of the flesh,
how much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal
Spirit offered himself without spot to God, that you purge your
conscience from dead works, Your works don't have anything to
do with salvation. Just get rid of that way of thinking. It's
the blood of the Lord Jesus Christ. And for this cause, verse 15,
he's the mediator of the New Testament, the New Covenant,
that by means of death, for the redemption of the transgressions
that were under the First Testament, they which are called might receive
the promise of eternal inheritance. Look in Hebrews chapter 10, verse
28. He that despised Moses' law died
without mercy under two or three witnesses. Now of how much sore
punishment, suppose you, shall he be thought worthy who hath
trodden underfoot the Son of God, and hath counted, has regarded,
has viewed the blood of the covenant. That's what Moses was talking
about here in Exodus chapter 24. He's counted the blood of
the covenant an unholy thing and had done despite under the
spirit of grace. For we know him that said, vengeance
belongeth unto me. I will recompense the Lord. Now,
how do you view the blood of the covenant? Now, he gives this
warning. That person who views the blood
of the covenant as an unholy thing. Now, that word unholy
is the word that's generally translated common. Common. The word means by definition,
that which is general to all, that which is common to all,
as opposed to that which is peculiar to the few. Now, if you look
at the blood of Christ as just common, just general, it made
salvation possible, but it didn't actually save. And that's what
most folks believe. You know what you've done? You've
done despite to the Spirit of Grace and the Scripture says
you've trodden underfoot the Son of God. That's a scary thing,
isn't it? How do you view the blood of
the covenant? Oh, I view it as my all in salvation. I view it as holy, as precious,
precious to God. I view it as having done everything
He intended to do with it. He saved His people by this Blood
of the Covenant. And this is all my salvation.
The only hope I have, the only hope that a bunch like this has,
these folks who told this hypocritical lie, the only hope that they
have is that God would apply the blood to them and do something
for them. That's all our salvation. Look
at Hebrews 13. Verse 20. Now the God of peace that brought
again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of
the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant.
Make you perfect in every good work to do His will, working
in you that which is well-pleasing in His sight, through Jesus Christ,
to whom be glory forever and ever. Amen. Turn over to Hebrews
chapter 9. Now here, the writer to the Hebrews
actually talks about what took place in Exodus chapter 24. Look
within verse 19. For when Moses had spoken every
precept to all the people according to the law, he gave the Ten Commandments,
he gave the civil laws and so on, what did he do? He took the
blood of calves and of goats with water and scarlet wool and
hyssop and sprinkled both the book and all the people saying
this is the blood of the Testament which God hath enjoined unto
you. Now, we read a blood with water. I like this blood with water.
What came out of the Lord's side when they thrust that spear through
him? Blood and water. Justification and sanctification. The complete salvation that His
blood accomplished. Not blood only, but blood and
water. When you went into the tabernacle, when you were in
the outer court, what did you have to do? You had to have blood
and you had to be washed in the basin. Blood and water to get
into the presence of God, into the holy place. Blood and water. Now what does it say? Look back
in verse 19, for when Moses had spoken every precept to all the
people according to the law, he took the blood of calves and
of goats with water and scarlet wool. You know what that is?
That's purple. That means royal blood. You see, this is why this
is such a glorious thing. It's whose blood was shed. It's
whose blood was shed. It's Christ that died. That's
why His blood must put away sins. And to look at it in any other
way is to trample underfoot the Son of God. This is royal blood. What good would it do to you
if I died for you? Could it wash away any of your
sins? Of course not. It couldn't do anything for you.
But this is the blood of Jesus Christ. This is the blood of
God. The God-Man. And I say that almost
scared when I say it. This is the blood of the Lord
Jesus Christ. This is royal blood. The royal
color of purple. And how is it applied? I like
this, verse 19, in scarlet wool and hyssop. What is hyssop? Hyssop
was that branch that was dipped in the blood on the Passover
and put over the door. That's what David was talking
about when he said, Purge me with hyssop and I'll be clean. That's how that blood was applied on all the people. Let's go on
reading, verse 20, saying, This is the blood of the Testament
which God hath enjoined to you. Moreover, He sprinkled with blood
both the tabernacle and all the vessels of the ministry. And
almost all things are by the law purged with blood, and without
the shedding of blood there is no remission of sins." Now, what
happens when the blood is applied? He took that blood, he took a
hyssop branch, Threw it on the people, the blood hit them. What
a gruesome sight it must have been. But what happens when the
blood is applied? You see, just bloodshed without
blood being applied isn't going to do anybody any good. I have
to have the blood applied to me. What takes place when the
blood is applied? Well, turn with me to 1 Corinthians
chapter 6. 1 Corinthians chapter 6, verse 9, and he speaks of sin. Know ye not that the unrighteous
shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Be not deceived, neither
fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor
abusers of themselves with mankind, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor
drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners shall inherit the
kingdom of God. And such were some of you. But here's what happens when
the blood is applied. You are washed. You are sanctified. You are justified in the name
of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God. You are washed. Now, what happens when you're
washed? Filth is removed. When you take something dirty
and putting it in the washing machine, if your washing machine
works, you know what happens when it comes out? That filth
is gone. It's washed away. It's not there
anymore. When the blood is applied, sin
is removed. Turn to Revelation 1. Hold your
finger there in 1 Corinthians 6 and turn to Revelation 1. Verse 5. And from Jesus Christ,
who is the faithful witness and the first begotten of the dead
and the prince of the kings of the earth, unto him that loved
us and washed us. from our sins in His own blood. Look in Revelation 7, verse 13,
ìAnd one of the elders answered, saying unto me, What are these?
which are arrayed in white robes. And whence came they? And I said
unto him, Sir, thou knowest. And he said to me, these are
they which came out of great tribulation and have washed their
robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. Now, I understand this regarding
the blood of Christ. It washed away the sin of everybody
it was shed for. Now, here's a bigger question.
It's not a bigger question, but it's just as important. How can
I know if he did it for me? How can I know my sin was washed
away? Well, I know this. Everybody who sins is washed
away. They look to the blood of Christ
as the way they're washed away. They rest in the blood of Christ
as the way they're washed away. You know, right now, I really
believe that His precious blood washed away my sins. And I stand
without guilt before God. You're washed. And the next thing
he says, when the blood is applied, you're sanctified. You're declared
by God to be holy. Hebrews 10, 10 says, by the witch
will, we are sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus
Christ once for all. You're justified, he said in
1 Corinthians 6, in that verse in verse 11, you're washed, you're
sanctified, you're justified, you're cleared of all guilt. Being now justified by his blood.
Now that's what happens to somebody when the blood is applied. They're
washed. They're sanctified. And they're
justified. Now turn back to Hebrews chapter
9. Verse 21. Moreover, he sprinkled with blood
both the tabernacle and all the vessels of the ministry and almost
all things are by the law purged with blood. And without shedding
of blood. Is no remission. Now, would to
God that this will be burned in our hearts. Without shedding
of blood. Is no remission, how decisive
this statement is. Well, if I quit sinning, won't
I get remission of sins? Without the shedding of blood,
there's no remission. Well, what if I believe? If I
believe, will I have the remission of sins? Without the shedding
of blood is no remission. Well, what if I never sin again?
Without the shedding of blood is no remission. The only way
sin is remitted is by the blood shedding of the Lord Jesus Christ.
No other way and how universal this is. I love this. The self-righteous
religionists and the prostitutes are put on the same plane without
the shedding of blood. There is no remission of sin. The rich and the poor, the educated
and the uneducated. This is so leveling without the
shedding of blood. There is no remission of sins.
But this is so eternally true. While it's true that without
the shedding of blood, there's no remission of sin, it's equally
true with the shedding of the blood of the Lord Jesus Christ.
There is remission of sins. My sins have been remitted. They've
been washed away. They're gone. I bear them no
more. I'm wholly unblameable and unreprovable
in his sight. And let's close by looking back
to our text. Verse 7, Exodus 24, and he took
the book of the covenant and read in the audience of the people
and they said all that the Lord has said will we do and be obedient. What is the only hope that somebody
has who has been this much of a liar? It's for God to take the blood
and apply it to them. That's what took place in this
passage of scripture. He applied the blood to them. You know, I can't help but think
this. I was thinking of the power of
the blood, the glory of the blood of the Lord Jesus Christ. Should
there ever be a sermon preached without the blood? Any message preached without
the blood is a crime in its execution. Now, if you're a real sinner.
This is the only place you'll find hope. The blood. Of the Lord Jesus Christ applied
to you and you don't need anything else, do you? Is that enough
to satisfy you that the blood of Christ makes you perfect? in God's sight. God's satisfied
with it, and I am too. Let's pray.
Todd Nibert
About Todd Nibert
Todd Nibert is pastor of Todd's Road Grace Church in Lexington, Kentucky.

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