
Atonement Through the Blood of Jesus
"For if the blood of bulls and of goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling
the unclean, sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh" - Paul argued in his
letter to the Hebrews "how much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the
eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God, purge your conscience from
dead works to serve the living God." (Heb. 9:13-14)
No more of this turtle-dove
business, no more offering the blood of bullocks and heifers to cleanse from
sin.
The atoning blood of Jesus Christ - that is the thing about which all else
centers. I believe that more logical, illogical, idiotic, religious and
irreligious arguments have been fought over this than all others. Now and then
when a man gets a new idea of it, he goes out and starts a new denomination. He
has a perfect right to do this under the thirteenth amendment, but he doesn't
stop here. He makes war on all of the other denominations that do not interpret
as he does. Our denominations have multiplied by this method until it would give
one brain fever to try to count them all.
The atoning blood! And as I think it over I am reminded of a man who goes to
England and advertises that he will throw pictures on the screen of the Atlantic
coast of America. So he gets a crowd and throws pictures on the screen of high
bluffs and rocky coasts and waves dashing against them, until a man comes out of
the audience and brands him a liar and says that he is obtaining money under
false pretense, as he has seen America and the Atlantic coast and what the other
man is showing is not America at all. The men almost come to blows and then the
other man says that, if the people will come tomorrow, he will show them real
pictures of the coast. So the audience comes back to see what he will show, and
he flashes on the screen pictures of a low coast line, with palmetto trees and
banana trees and tropical foliage and he apologizes to the audience, but says
these are the pictures of America. The first man calls him a liar and the people
don't know which to believe. What was the matter with them?
They were both right and they were both wrong, paradoxical as it may seem.
They were both right as far as they went, but neither went far enough. The first
showed the coast line from New England to Cape Hatteras, while the second showed
the coast line from Hatteras to Yucatan. They neither could show it all in one
panoramic view, for it is so varied it could not be taken in one picture.
God never intended to give you a picture of the world in one panoramic view.
From the time of Adam and Eve down to the time Jesus Christ hung on the cross he
was unfolding his views. When I see Moses leading the people out of bondage
where they for years had bared their backs to the taskmaster's lash; when I see
the lowing herds and the high priest standing before the altar severing the
jugular vein of the rams and the bullocks; on until Christ cried out from the
cross, "It is finished," (John 19:30) God was preparing the picture for the
consummation of it in the atoning blood of Jesus Christ.
A sinner has no standing with God. He forfeits his standing when he commits
sin and the only way he can get back is to repent and accept the atoning blood
of Jesus Christ.
I have sometimes thought that Adam and Eve didn't understand as fully as we
do when the Lord said; "Eat and you shall surely die." (Gen. 2:17) They had
never seen any one die. They might have thought it simply meant a separation
from God. But no sooner had they eaten and seen their nakedness than they sought
to cover themselves, and it is the same today. When man sees himself in his
sins, uncovered, he tries to cover himself in philosophy or some fake. But God
looked through the fig leaves and the foliage and God walked out in the field
and slew the beasts and took their skins and wrapped them around Adam and Eve,
and from that day to this when a man has been a sinner and has covered himself,
it has been by and through faith in the shed blood of Jesus Christ. Every Jew
covered his sins and received pardon through the blood of the rams and bullocks
and the doves.
An old infidel said to me once, "But I don't believe in atonement by blood.
It doesn't come up to my ideas of what is right."
I said, "To perdition with your ideas of what is right. Do you think God is
coming down here to consult you with your great intellect and wonderful brain,
and find out what you think is right before he does it? " My, but you make me
sick. You think that because you don't believe it that it isn't true.
I have read a great deal - not everything, mind you, for a man would go crazy
if he tried to read everything - but I have read a great deal that has been
written against the atonement from the infidel standpoint - Voltaire, Huxley,
Spencer, Diderot, Bradlaugh, Paine, on down to Bob Ingersoll - and I have never
found an argument that would stand the test of common sense and common
reasoning. And if anyone tells me he has tossed on the scrap heap the plan of
atonement by blood, I say, "What have you to offer that is better?" and until he
can show me something that is better I'll nail my hopes to the cross.
Suffering for the Guilty
You say you don't believe in the innocent suffering for the guilty. Then I
say to you, you haven't seen life as I have seen it up and down the country. The
innocent suffer with the guilty, by the guilty and for the guilty. Look at that
old mother waiting with trembling heart for the son she has brought into the
world. And see him come staggering in and reeling and staggering to bed while
his mother prays and weeps and soaks the pillow with her tears over her godless
boy. Who suffers most? The mother or that godless, maudlin [drunk] bum? You have
only to be the mother of a boy like that to know who suffers most. Then you
won't say anything about the plan of redemption and of Jesus Christ suffering
for the guilty.
Look at that young wife, waiting for the man whose name she bears, and whose
face is woven in the fiber of her heart, the man she loves. She waits for him in
fright and when he comes, reeking from the stench of the breaking of his
marriage vows, from the arms of infamy, who suffers most? That poor, dirty,
triple extract of vice and sin? You have only to be the wife of a husband like
that to know whether the innocent suffers for the guilty or not. I have the
sympathy of those who know right now.
This happened in Chicago in a police court. A letter was introduced as
evidence for a criminal there for vagrancy. It read, "I hope you won't have to
hunt long to find work. Tom is sick and baby is sick. Lucy has no shoes and we
have no money for the doctor or to buy any clothes. I manage to make a little
taking in washing, but we are living in one room in a basement. I hope you won't
have to look long for work," and so on, just the kind of a letter a wife would
write to her husband. And before it was finished men cried and policemen with
hearts of adamant were crying and fled from the room. The judge wiped the tears
from his eyes and said: "You see, no man lives to himself alone. If he sins
others suffer. I have no alternative. I sympathize with them, as does every one
of you, but I have no alternative. I must send this man to Bridewell [house of
correction]." Who suffers most, that woman manicuring her nails over a washboard
to keep the little brood together or that drunken bum in Bridewell getting his
just deserts from his acts? You have only to be the wife of a man like that to
know whether or not the innocent suffer with the guilty.
So when you don't like the plan of redemption because the innocent suffer
with the guilty, I say you don't know what is going on. It's the plan of life
everywhere.
From the fall of Adam and Eve till now it has always been the rule that the
innocent suffer with the guilty. It's the plan of all and unless you are an
idiot, an imbecile and a jackass, and gross flatterer at that, you'll see
it.
Jesus' Atoning Blood
Jesus gave his life on the cross for any who will believe. We're not redeemed
by silver or gold. Jesus paid for it with his blood (1 Peter 1:18). When some
one tells you that your religion is a bloody religion and the Bible is a bloody
book, tell them yes, Christianity is a bloody religion; the gospel is a bloody
gospel; the Bible is a bloody book; the plan of redemption is bloody. It is. You
take the blood of Jesus Christ out of Christianity and that book isn't worth the
paper it is written on. It would be worth no more than your body with the blood
taken out. Take the blood of Jesus Christ out and it would be a meaningless
jargon and jumble of words.
If it weren't for the atoning blood you might as well rip the roofs off the
churches and burn them down. They aren't worth anything. But as long as the
blood is on the mercy seat (Lev. 16:14), the sinner can return, and by no other
way. There is nothing else. It stands for the redemption. You are not redeemed
by silver or gold, but by the blood of Jesus Christ. Though a man says to read
good books, do good deeds, live a good life and you'll be saved, you'll be
damned. That's what you will. All the books in the world won't keep you out of
hell without the atoning blood of Jesus Christ. It's Jesus Christ or
nothing for every sinner on God's earth.
Without it not a sinner will ever be saved. Jesus has paid for your sins with
his blood. The doctrine of universal salvation is a lie. I wish every one would
be saved, but they won't. You will never be saved if you reject the blood.
I remember when I was in the Y.M.C.A. in Chicago I was going down Madison
Street and had just crossed Dearborn Street when I saw a newsboy with a young
sparrow in his hand. I said: "Let that little bird go."
He said, "Aw, g'wan with you, you big mutt."
I said, "I'll give you a penny for it," and he answered, "Not on your
tintype."
"I'll give you a nickel for it," and he answered, "Boss, I'm from Missouri;
come across with the dough."
I offered it to him, but he said, "Give it to that guy there," and I gave it
to the boy he indicated and took the sparrow.
I held it for a moment and then it fluttered and struggled and finally
reached the window ledge in a second story across the street. And other birds
fluttered around over my head and seemed to say in bird language, "Thank you,
Bill."
The kid looked at me in wonder and said: "Say, boss, why didn't you chuck
that nickel in the sewer?"
I told him that he was just like that bird. He was in the grip of the devil,
and the devil was too strong for him just as he was too strong for the sparrow,
and just as I could do with the sparrow what I wanted to, after I had paid for
it, because it was mine. God paid a price for him far greater than I had for the
sparrow, for he had paid it with the blood of his Son, and he wanted to set him
free.
No Argument Against Sin
So, my friend, if I had paid for some property from you with a price, I could
command you, and if you wouldn't give it to me I could go into court and make
you yield. Why do you want to be a sinner and refuse to yield? You are
withholding from God what he paid for on the cross. When you refuse you are not
giving God a square deal.
I'll tell you another. It stands for God's hatred of sin. Sin is something
you can't deny. You can't argue against sin. A skilful man can frame an argument
against the validity of religion, but he can't frame an argument against sin.
I'll tell you something that may surprise you. If I hadn't had four years of
instruction in the Bible from Genesis to Revelation, before I saw Bob
Ingersoll's book, and I don't want to take any credit from that big intelligent
brain of his, I would be preaching infidelity instead of Christianity. Thank the
Lord I saw the Bible first. I have taken his lectures and placed them by the
side of the Bible, and said, "You didn't say it from your knowledge of the
Bible." And I have never considered him honest, for he could not have been so
wise in other things and such a fool about the plan of redemption. So I say I
don't think he was entirely honest.
But you can't argue against the existence of sin, simply because it is an
open fact, the word of God. You can argue against Jesus being the Son of God.
You can argue about there being a heaven and a hell, but you can't argue against
sin. It is in the world and men and women are blighted and mildewed by it.
Some years ago I turned a corner in Chicago and stood in front of a police
station. As I stood there a patrol dashed up and three women were taken from
some drunken debauch, and they were dirty and blear-eyed, and as they were taken
out they started a flood of profanity that seemed to turn the very air blue. I
said, "There is sin." And as I stood there up dashed another patrol and out of
it they took four men, drunken and ragged and bloated, and I said, "There is
sin." You can't argue against the fact of sin. It is in the world and blights
men and women. But Jesus came to the world to save all who accept him.
"How Long, O God?"
It was out in the Y.M.C.A. in Chicago. "What is your name and what do you
want?" I asked.
"I'm from Cork, Ireland," said he, "and my name is James O'Toole." Here is a
letter of introduction." I read it and it said he was a good Christian young man
and an energetic young fellow.
I said, "Well, Jim, my name is Mr. Sunday. I'll tell you where there are some
good Christian boarding houses and you let me know which one you pick out." He
told me afterwards that he had one on the North Side. I sent him an invitation
to a meeting to be held at the Y.M.C.A., and he had it when he and some
companions went bathing in Lake Michigan. He dived from the pier just as the
water receded unexpectedly and he struck the bottom and broke his neck. He was
taken to the morgue and the police found my letter in his clothes, and told me
to come and claim it or it would be sent to a medical college. I went and they
had the body on a slab, but I told them I would send a cablegram to his folks
and asked them to hold it. They put it in a glass case and turned on the cold
air, by which they freeze bodies by chemical processes, as they freeze ice, and
said they would save it for two months, and if I wanted it longer they would
stretch the rules a little and keep it three.
I was just thinking of what sorrow that cablegram would cause his old mother
in Cork when they brought in the body of a woman. She would have been a fit
model of Phidias [ancient Greek sculptor], she had such symmetry of form. Her
fingers were manicured. She was dressed in the height of fashion and her hands
were covered with jewels and as I looked at her, the water trickling down her
face, I saw the mute evidence of illicit affection. I did not say lust, I did
not say passion, I did not say brute instincts. I said, "Sin." Sin had caused
her to throw herself from that bridge and seek repose in a suicide's grave. And
as I looked, from the saloon, the fantan rooms, the gambling hells, the opium
dens, the red lights, there arose one endless cry of "How long, O God, how long
shall hell prevail?" (Psa. 74:10)
You can't argue against sin. It's here. Then listen to me as I try to help
you.
When the Standard Oil Company was trying to refine petroleum there was a
substance that they couldn't dispose of. It was a dark, black, sticky substance
and they couldn't bury it, couldn't burn it because it made such a stench; they
couldn't run it in the river because it killed the fish, so they offered a big
reward to any chemist who would solve the problem. Chemists took it and worked
long over the problem, and one day there walked into the office of John D.
Rockefeller, a chemist and laid down a pure white substance which we since know
as paraffine [paraffin wax].
You can be as black as that substance and yet Jesus Christ can make you white
as snow. "Though your sins be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow." (Isa.
1:18)