"Behold the blood of the covenant, which the Lord hath made with you."-EX. xxiv. 8; HEB. ix. 20.
"This cup is the new covenant in My blood."-1 COR. xi. 25; MATT. xxvi. 28.
"The blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified."- HEB. x. 29.
"The blood of the everlasting covenant."-HEB. xiii.21.
THE blood is one of the strangest, the deepest,
the mightiest, and the most heavenly of the
thoughts of God. It lies at the very root of both
Covenants, but specially of the New Covenant. The
difference between the two Covenants is the difference
between the blood of beasts, and the blood of the
Lamb of God! The power of the New Covenant
has no lesser measure than the worth of the blood of
the Son of God! Your Christian experience ought
to know of no standard of peace with God, and
purity from sin, and power over the world, than
the blood of Christ can give! If we would
enter truly and fully into all the New Covenant
is meant to be to us, let us beseech God to reveal
to us the worth and the power of the
blood of the Covenant, the precious blood of
Christ!
The First Covenant was not brought in without blood. There could be no Covenant of friendship between a holy God and sinful men without atonement and reconciliation; and no atonement without a death as the penalty of sin. God shake: "I have given you the blood upon the altar to make an atonement for your souls; for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul." The blood shed in death meant the death of a sacrifice slain for sin of man; the blood sprinkled on the altar meant that vicarious death accepted of God for the sinful one. No forgiveness, no covenant without blood-shedding.
All this was but type and shadow of what was
one day to become a mysterious reality. What no
thought of man or angel could have conceived, what
even now passeth all understanding, the Eternal
Son of God took flesh and blood, and then shed
that blood as the blood of the New Covenant, not
merely to ratify it, but to open the way for it and
to make it possible. Yea, more, to be, in time and
eternity, the living power by which entrance into
the Covenant was to be obtained, and all life
in it be secured. Until we learn to form our
expectation of a life in the New Covenant, according
to the inconceivable worth and power of the blood
of God's Son, we never can have even an insight
into the entirely supernatural and heavenly life
that a child of God may live. Let us think for a
moment on the threefold light in which Scripture
teaches us to regard it.
In the passage from Hebrews ix. 15 we read
"For this cause Christ is the Mediator of a new
covenant, that a death having taken place for the
redemption of the transgressions that were under the
first covenant, they that have been called may
receive the promise of the eternal inheritance." The
sins of the ages, of the First Covenant, which had
only figuratively been atoned for, had gathered
up before God. A death was needed for the redemption
of these: In that death and blood-shedding
of the Lamb of God not only were
these atoned for, but the power of all sin was
for ever broken.
The blood of the New Covenant is redemption
blood, a purchase price and ransom from the power
of Sin and the Law. In any purchase made on earth
the transference of property from the old owner
to the new is complete. Its worth may be ever so
great and the hold on it ever so strong, if the price
be paid, it is gone for ever from him who owned it.
The hold sin had on us was terrible. No thought
can realise its legitimate claim on us under God's
law, its awful tyrant power in enslaving us. But
the blood of God's Son has been paid. "Ye were
redeemed, not with corruptible things as silver and
gold, from your vain manner of life handed down
from your fathers, but with precious blood, as of a
lamb without spot, even the blood of Christ." We
have been rescued, ransomed, redeemed out of our
old natural life under the power of sin, utterly and
eternally. Sin has not the slightest claim on us,
nor the slightest power over us, except as our
ignorance or unbelief or half-heartedness allows it
to have dominion. Our New Covenant birthright
is to stand in the freedom with which Christ has
made us free. Until the soul sees, and desires and
accepts, and claims the redemption and the liberty
which has the blood of the Son of God for its purchase
price, and its measure, and its security, it
never can fully live the New Covenant life.
As wonderful as the blood-shedding for our redemption is the blood-sprinkling for our cleansing. Here is indeed another of the spiritual mysteries of the New Covenant, which lose their power when understood in human wisdom, without the ministration of the Spirit of life. When Scripture speaks of "having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience," of "the blood of Christ cleansing our conscience," of our singing here on earth (Rev. i. 5), "To Him that washed us from our sins in His blood," it brings this mighty, quickening blood of the Lamb into direct contact with our hearts. It gives the assurance that that blood, in its infinite worth, in its Divine sin-cleansing power, can keep us clean in our walk in the sight and the light of God. It is as this blood of the New Covenant is known, and trusted, and waited for, and received from God, in the Spirit's mighty operation in the heart, that we shall begin to believe that the blessed promise of a New Covenant life and walk can be fulfilled.
There is one more thing Scripture teaches concerning this blood of the New Covenant. When the Jews contrasted Moses with our Lord Jesus, He spake: "Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink His blood, ye have not life in yourselves. He that eateth My flesh, and drinketh My blood, abideth in Me, and I in him." As if the redeeming, and sprinkling, and washing, and sanctifying does not sufficiently express the intense inwardness of its action and its power to permeate our whole being, the drinking of this precious blood is declared to be indispensable to having life. If we would enter deep into the Spirit and power of the New Covenant, let us, by the Holy Spirit, drink deep of this cup--the cup of the New Covenant in His blood.
On account of sin there could be no covenant
between man and God without blood. And no New
Covenant without the blood of the Son of God.
As the cleansing away of sins was the first
condition in making a covenant, so it is equally the
first condition of an entrance into it. It has ever
been found that a deeper appropriation of the
blessings of the Covenant must be preceded by a
new and deeper cleansing from sin. We know
how in Ezekiel the words about God's causing us
to walk in His statutes are preceded by "From all
your filthiness will I cleanse you." And then later
we read (xxxvii. 23, 25), "Neither shall they defile
themselves any more with any of their transgressions;
I will cleanse them: so shall they be
My people, and I will be their God. Moreover,
I will make a Covenant of peace with them; it
shall be an everlasting Covenant with them." The
confession and casting away, and the cleansing
away of sin in the blood, are the indispensable,
but all-sufficient, preparation for a life in
everlasting Covenant with God.
Many feel that they do not understand or realise
this wonderful power of the blood. Much thought
does not help them; even prayer does not appear
to bring the light they seek. The blood of Christ
is a Divine mystery that passes all thought. Like
every spiritual and heavenly blessing, this too, but
this especially, needs to be imparted to us by the
Holy Spirit. It was "through the Eternal Spirit"
that Christ offered the sacrifice in which the blood
was shed. The blood had the life of Christ, the
life of the Spirit, in it. The outpouring of the
blood for us was to prepare the way for the
outpouring of the Spirit on us. It is the Holy
Spirit, and He alone, who can minister the blood
of the everlasting Covenant in power. Just as He
leads the soul to the initial faith in the pardon
that blood has purchased, and the peace it gives,
He leads further to the knowledge and experience
of its cleansing power. Here again, too, by faith
--a faith in a heavenly power, of which it does
not fully understand, and cannot define, the action,
but of which it knows that it is an operation of
God's mighty power, and effects a cleansing that
does give a clean heart. A clean heart, first known
and accepted by the same faith, apart from signs
or feelings, apart from sense or reason, and then
experienced in the joy and the fellowship with
God it brings. Oh! let us believe in the blood
of the everlasting Covenant, and the cleansing
the Holy Spirit ministers. Let us believe in
the ministration of the Holy Spirit, until our
whole life in the New Covenant becomes entirely
His work, to the glory of the Father and
of Christ.
The blood of the Covenant, O mystery
of mysteries! O grace above all grace! O
mighty power of God, opening the way, into
the holiest, and into our hearts, and into the
New Covenant, where the Holy One and our
heart meet! Let us ask God much, by His Holy
Spirit, to make us know what it is and works.
The transition from the death of the Old Covenant
to the life of the New was, in Christ, "through the
blood of the Everlasting Covenant." No otherwise
will it be with us.