No. 1923-32:541. A Sermon Delivered On Lord’s Day Morning, October 3, 1886, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
For on that day the priest shall make an atonement for you, to cleanse you, so that you may be clean from all your sins before the Lord. {Le 16:30}
1. Before Adam transgressed he lived in communion with God; but after he had broken the covenant, and grieved God’s Spirit, he could have no more familiar fellowship with God. Under the Mosaic economy, in which God was pleased in his grace to dwell among his people and walk with them in the wilderness, it was still under a reserve: there was a holy place where the symbol of God’s presence was hidden away from mortal gaze. No man might come near to it except in only one way, and then only once in the year, “The Holy Spirit signifying this, that the way into the holiest of all was not yet revealed, while the first tabernacle was still standing.” Our subject today illustrates the appointed way of access to God. This chapter shows that the way of access to God is by atonement, and by no other method. We cannot draw near to the Most High except along the blood-sprinkled way of sacrifice. Our Lord Jesus said: “No man comes to the Father, except by me”; and this is true in many senses, and in this among them, that our way to God lies only through the sacrifice of his Son.
2. The reason for this is that sin lies at the door. Brethren, a pure and holy God cannot endure sin: he cannot have fellowship with it, or with those who are rendered unclean by it, for it would be inconsistent with his nature to do so. On the other hand, sinful men cannot have fellowship with God: their evil nature could not endure the fire of his holiness. Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? Who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings? What is that devouring fire, and what are those everlasting burnings, but the justice and holiness of God? The apostle says, “Even our God is a consuming fire.” A guilty soul would perish if it were possible for it to draw near to God apart from the Mediator and his atonement. The fire of God’s nature must consume the stubble of our nature as long as there is sin in us or about us. Hence the difficulty of access, a difficulty which only a divine method can remove. God cannot commune with sinful men, for he is holy. Sinful men cannot commune with a holy God, because he must destroy them, even as he destroyed Nadab and Abihu when they intruded into his holy place. That terrible judgment is mentioned in the opening verses of the chapter before us as the reason why the ordinances contained here were first of all made.
3. How, then, shall men come to God? Only in God’s own way. He himself devised the way, and he has taught it to us by a parable in this chapter. It would be very wrong to prefer any one passage of Scripture beyond another; for all Scripture is given by inspiration; but if we might do so, we should set this chapter in a very eminent and prominent place for its fulness of instruction, and its clear yet deep doctrinal teaching. It deals with a matter which is of the very highest importance to all of us. We are taught here the way by which the sin that blocks the door may be taken away, so that a seeking soul may be introduced into the presence of God and stand in his holy place, and yet live. Here we learn how we may say, with the astonished prophet, “I have seen God, and my life is preserved.” Oh that we might today so learn the lesson that we may enter into the fullest fellowship with the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ, in that safe way, that only way, which God has appointed for us. Oh for the power and guidance of the Holy Spirit, that we may know and use “the new and living way!”
4. Before I proceed to enlarge upon this chapter, I want to notice that, of course, this was only a type. This great day of atonement did not see an actual atonement made, nor sin really put away; but it was the symbol of heavenly things—the shadow of good things to come. The substance is Christ. If this day of atonement had been real and satisfactory, as touching God and the conscience of men, there would never have been another; for the worshippers once purged would have had no more consciousness of sin. If they had lived fifty or a hundred years, they would never have needed another day of atonement; but because this was, in its nature, imperfect and shadowy, being only typical, therefore every year, on the seventh month, on the tenth day of the month, a fast was proclaimed, sin was confessed, victims were slain, and atonement was again presented. In the Jewish year, as often as it came around, on one special day they were commanded to afflict their souls, even though it was a Sabbath of rest. In very deed a remembrance of sin was made every year, a painful remembrance for them, although sweetened by a new exhibition of the plan by which sin is cleansed. The Lord said, “This shall be an everlasting statute to you”; it lasted as long as the Mosaic economy in the letter, and its spirit and substance last on for ever. They had to remember that day that their sin was not put away once and for all and for ever, by all their types and ceremonies, and therefore they had to humble themselves again and come before God with sacrifices which could never truly put away sin. Israel had to do this constantly until Jesus, the true High Priest appeared, and now they have no sacrificing priest, nor altar, nor holy of holies. By Jesus Christ’s one offering of himself, sin was put away, once and for all, effectively and finally, so that believers are really clean before God. Now if I should seem to run the type into the substance you will just separate them in your own minds. It is not easy so to speak as to keep shadow and substance quite clear of each other. We are apt to say, “This is such and such,” when we mean, “this represents such and such”; and we have our Lord’s example for so doing, for he said, “this is my body and my blood,” when he meant that the bread and wine represented his body and blood. We are not speaking to fools, nor to those who will wrench the letter from its obvious spiritual sense. I shall trust in your intelligence and the guidance of the Holy Spirit that you will in this discourse discern between the symbol and the substance. May the divine Spirit help me and help you to a correct understanding of this sacred type!
5. I. Now, then, let us come to the text, and note, first, WHAT WAS DONE on that particular day. The text tells us what was done symbolically—“On that day the priest shall make an atonement for you, to cleanse you, so that you may be clean from all your sins before the Lord.”
6. The people themselves were cleansed. If any of them had become unclean so as to be denied communion with God and his people, they were made clean, so that they might go up to the tabernacle, and mingle with the congregation. All the host were that morning regarded as unclean, and all had to bow their heads in penitent sorrow because of their uncleanness. After the sacrifice and the sending away of the scapegoat the whole congregation was clean and in a condition to rejoice. If it happened to be the year of jubilee, the joyful trumpets rang out as soon as the atonement was complete. Every year, within four days after the Day of Atonement, the people were so clean that they kept the joyful Feast of Tabernacles. Jewish Rabbis were accustomed to say that no man had ever seen sorrow who had not seen the Day of Atonement, and that no man had ever seen gladness who had not witnessed the hilarity and delight of the people during the Feast of Tabernacles.
7. The people themselves were made to be a clean people; and I lay great stress on this, because unless you yourself are purged, everything that you do is defiled in the sight of God. When a man was unclean, if he went into a tent and sat on anything it was unclean; if a friend touched his garments he was rendered unclean. The man himself needed first to be delivered from impurity, and it is precisely the same in your case and mine. I have need to cry, “Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.” Your very person by nature is defiled, and obnoxious to the justice of God. In body, soul, and spirit you are by nature altogether as an unclean thing, and all your righteousnesses are as filthy rags: you yourself need to be washed and renewed. It is a far simpler thing to remove outward stains than it is to purge the very substance and nature of man; yet this is what was done on the day of atonement typically, and this is what our redeeming Lord actually does for us. We are criminals, and his atonement purges us of crimes, and makes us citizens; we are lepers, and by his stripes we are so healed as to be received among the clean. By nature we are only fit to be flung into those fires which burn up corrupt and offensive things; but his sacrifice makes us so precious in the sight of the Lord that all the forces of heaven stand sentinel around us. Once black as night, we are so purged that we shall walk with him in white, for we are worthy.
8. Their persons being made clean, they were also purged of all the sins confessed. I called attention, in the reading of the chapter, to its many “alls.” I think there are seven or eight of them. The work which was done on that day was comprehensive: a clean sweep was made of sin. I begin with what was confessed, for it was that for which cleansing would be most desired. It is said that “Aaron shall lay both his hands upon the head of the live goat, and confess over him all the iniquities of the children of Israel.” All sin that was confessed over the scapegoat was carried away into a land not inhabited. Sin that is confessed is evidently real sin, and not a mere dream of a morbid conscience. There is a certain mythical cloud of sin which people talk about, and pretend to deplore, and yet they have no sense of the solid weight and heinousness of their actual iniquity. Certain grievous sins are comparable to cauldrons of foaming filth: no man will willingly admit to them, however clearly they may be his; but when he does acknowledge them before God, let him remember that it is this real sin, this foul and essentially abominable transgression, which is put away by the atonement of Christ. Sin confessed with tears, sin which causes the very heart to bleed—killing sin, damning sin—this is the kind of sin for which Jesus died. Sham sinners may be content with a sham Saviour; but our Lord Jesus is the real Saviour, who really died, and died for real sin. Oh, how this ought to comfort you, you who are sadly bearing the pressing burden of a wretched life; you, too, who are crushed into the mire of despondency beneath the load of your guilt! Brethren, sin which you are bound to acknowledge to as most assuredly committed is the kind of pollution from which Jesus cleanses all believers. Sin which you dare not confess to man, but acknowledge only as you lay your hand on the divine sacrifice,—such sin the Lord removes from you.
9. The passage is very particular to mention “all sins.” “The goat shall bear upon him all their iniquities.” This includes every form of sin, of thought, of word, of deed, of pride, of falsehood, of lust, of malice, of blasphemy. This includes crimes against man, and offences against God, of particular blackness; and it does not exclude sins of inadvertence, or carelessness, or of omission. Transgressions of the body, the intellect, the affections are all blotted out. The outrageous scandals which I dare not mention are still pardonable; yes, such have been pardoned. There is not the same degree of virus in all sins; but whether or not, the atonement is for all transgressions. The Lord Jesus Christ did not pour out his heart’s blood to remove one set of stains and leave the rest; but he takes away every spot and trace of sin from the soul that puts its trust in him. “Wash me,” said David, “and I shall be whiter than snow.” He looked for the extreme of cleanness: and such the Saviour brings to the soul for whom he has made an effective atonement. I desire to be so plain and broad that the chief of sinners may gather hope from my words. I speak in very simple language, but the theme is full of sublimity, especially to you who feel your need of it. The atonement removed all sin. I must give you the exact expression. He says, “all the iniquities of the children of Israel, and all their transgressions in all their sins.”
10. It seems that the divine atonement puts away the sin of sin—the essence and heart of sin. Sin has its core, its kernel, its mortal spot. Within a fruit there is a central stone, or seed; this may serve as the likeness of sin. Within each iniquity there seems to lie something more essentially evil than the act itself: this is the kernel of intent, the core of obstinacy, the inner hate of the mind. Whatever may be the sin of the soul, or the soul of the sin, atonement has been made for it all. Most sins are a conglomerate of sins. A sin may be compared to a honeycomb: there are as many sins within one sin as there are cells within a piece of honeycomb. Sin is a swarming, hiving, teeming thing. You can never estimate its full vileness, nor perceive all its evil bearings. All kinds of sins may hide away in one sin. It would puzzle all the theologians in the world to tell what sin was absent from Adam’s first offence. I could take any point you choose, and show that Adam sinned in that direction. All sin was within that first sin. Sin is a multitudinous evil, an aggregate of all manner of filthiness, a chain with a thousand deadly links. A sinner is like a man possessed with a devil who cries, “My name is Legion: for we are many”: it is one in evil, and yet countless in forms. The atonement is more than equal to sin: it takes away all our transgressions in all our sins. It is the fullest purification that could be imagined. The Lord Jesus has not left upon those for whom he has made atonement a single spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing, as far as their justification is concerned. He has not left an iniquity for which they can be condemned before the bar of judgment “You are clean every whit” is his sure verdict, and no one can contradict it.
11. It appears from this chapter, too, that another thing was done. Not only were all the sins that they had committed put away, but also all their holy things were purged. There stood the altar upon which only holy things were offered; but because imperfect men ministered there it needed to be sprinkled with blood before it could be clean. There was the holy place of the tabernacle, which was dedicated solely to God’s service, where the holiest rites of God’s ordaining were celebrated; but because the priests who served there were fallible, and unholy thoughts might cross their minds even when they handled the holy vessels, therefore the blood was sprinkled seven times within the holy place. Inside, within the veil, the sanctuary was called the “holy of holies.” Yes, but standing, as it did at first, in the midst of the camp of an erring people, and afterwards near to it, it needed to be purged. It is written, “the priest shall make an atonement for the holy place, because of the uncleanness of the children of Israel.” Even the mercy seat, and the ground where it rested, were sprinkled with the blood of the sacrifice seven times. Oh brothers and sisters, I do feel so glad that our Lord has atoned for the sins of our holy things. I rejoice that Jesus forgives the sins of my sermons. I have preached my very soul out among you with purity of motive, seeking to win men for Christ; but I dare not hope to have them accepted in and of themselves, for I perceive that they are defiled with sin. I feel so glad that Jesus has purified our prayers. Many saints spend much time in hearty, earnest cries to God; but even on your knees you sin; and herein is our comfort, that the precious blood has made atonement for the shortcomings of our supplications. Sometimes when we get together, beloved, we sing to the praise of our Lord with heart and will. I have felt in this place as if you and I and all of us were so many burning coals, all blazing within a censer, and so releasing the odours of the sweet incense of our Lord’s praise. How often has a pillar of fragrant smoke risen from this house to heaven! Yes, but even then there was sin in our praises, and iniquity in our doxologies. We need pardon for our psalms, and cleansing for our hymns. Blessed be God, atonement is made for all our faults, excesses, and shortcomings. Jesus puts away, not only our unholy things, but the sins of our holy things also.
12. Once more, on that day all the people were cleansed. All the congregation of the house of Israel were typically cleansed from all sin by the day of atonement: not the priests only, but all the people: not the princes only, but the poorest servants in the camp. The aged woman and the little child the greybeard and the youth, were equally purified. Men of business inclined to covetousness, they were cleansed; and younger men and maidens in their levity, too apt to descend into immorality—they were all made clean that day. This gives great comfort to those of us who love the souls of the multitude. All who believe are justified from all things. It is written, “The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanses us from all sin.” I have often heard the text quoted with the “us” left out; permit me to put it in at this moment—“cleanses us from all sin.” Now put yourself into the “us.” Dare to believe that grace admits you there. By an act of faith let all of us all around the galleries and in this great area say, “The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanses US.” If you pull “us” to pieces it is made up of a great many “me’s.” A thousand thousand times “me” will all pack away into a single “us.” Let each one say—“The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanses me, and cleanses me from all sin.” Be glad and rejoice for ever because of this gracious truth. This was done on the day of atonement in the symbol, and it has been really done by the Lord Jesus through his atoning sacrifice.
13. II. Now we notice, in the second place, HOW IT WAS DONE. We have seen what was done, and this is most cheering; but now we will see how it was done. I shall have to be brief in this description.
14. The atonement was made first of all by sacrifice. I see a young bull for a sin offering, a ram for a burnt offering, and again a goat for a sin offering. Many victims were offered that day, and so the people were reminded of the instrumental cause of atonement, namely, the blood of sacrifice. We know that the blood of bulls and of goats could never take away sin; but very distinctly these point to the sufferings of our dear Redeemer. The woes he bore are the expiation for our guilt. “He was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed.” If you want to know by what means sin is put away, think of Messiah’s life of grief and shame and arduous service; think of his agony and bloody sweat in the garden; think of the betrayal and denial, the scourging and the spitting. Think of the false accusations and the reproaches and the jeers; think of the cross, the nailed hands and feet, the bruised soul, and the broken spirit. Fierce were the fires which consumed our sacrifice. “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” is the quintessence of agony; and this came from the heart which was crushed for our sins. Atonement was made for your sins and mine by the shedding of blood—that is to say, by our Lord’s suffering, and especially by his laying down his life on our behalf. Jesus died: by that death he purged our sin, only he who has immortality gave up the ghost; in the cold embrace of death the Lord of glory slept. They wrapped him in spices and linen clothes and laid him in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathaea. In that death lay the essential deed by which sin dies and grace reigns through righteousness to eternal life.
15. Notice, next, that the atonement was made not only by the blood of sacrifice, but by the presentation of the blood within the veil. With the smoke of incense and a bowl filled with blood Aaron passed into the most holy place. Let us never forget that our Lord has gone into the heavenly places with better sacrifices than Aaron could present. His merits are the sweet incense which burns before the throne of heavenly grace. His death supplies that blood of sprinkling which we find even in heaven. “For Christ is not entered into the holy places made with hands, which are the symbols of the true; but into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for us.” “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.” The presenting of the blood before God accomplishes the atonement. The material of the atonement is in the blood and merits of Jesus, but a main part of the atoning act lies in the presentation of these in the heavenly places by Jesus Christ himself.
16. Furthermore, atonement was made effective by its application to the thing or person cleansed. The atonement was made for the holy place: it was sprinkled seven times with blood. The same was done to the altar; its horns were smeared seven times. So to make the atonement effective between you and God the blood of Jesus must be sprinkled upon you by a living faith. Though this does not so plainly appear in the type before us as for the people on this occasion, yet it comes out in other types: the cleansing blood was always the blood of sprinkling. Before the blood of the Paschal lamb could cause the avenger to pass over the house, it must be marked with the crimson sign. This is that scarlet thread in the window which delivers the Lord’s Rahabs in the day of destruction. Before any man can receive reconciliation with God the atonement must be applied to his own heart and conscience. Faith is that bunch of hyssop which we dip into the blood, and with it sprinkle the lintel and two side-posts of the house where we live, and so we are saved from destruction.
17. Further, my dear brothers and sisters, inasmuch as no one type was sufficient, the Lord represented the method of the removal of sin, as far as we are concerned, by the scapegoat. One of two goats was chosen to live. It stood before the Lord, and Aaron confessed all the sins of Israel upon its head. A fit man, selected for the purpose, led this goat away into a land not inhabited. What became of it? Why do you ask the question? It is not edifying. You may have seen the famous picture of the scapegoat, representing it as expiring in misery in a desert place. That is all very pretty, and I do not wonder that imagination should picture the poor devoted scapegoat as a kind of cursed thing, left to perish amid accumulated horrors. But please observe that this is all imagination—mere groundless imagination. The Scripture is entirely silent as for anything of the kind, and purposely so. All that the type teaches is this: in symbol the scapegoat has all the sin of the people laid upon it, and when it is led away into the solitary wilderness, it has gone, and the sin with it. We may not follow the scapegoat even in imagination. It is gone where it can never be found, for there is no one to find it: it is gone into a land not inhabited,—into “no man’s land” in fact. Stop where the Scripture stops: to go beyond what is written is unwise, if not presumptuous. Sin is carried away into the silent land, the unknown wilderness. By nature sin is everywhere, but to believers in the sacrifice of Christ sin is nowhere. The sins of God’s people have gone beyond recall. Where to? Do not ask anything about that. If they were sought for they could not be found; they are so gone that they are blotted out. Into oblivion our sins have gone, even as the scapegoat went beyond the tracks of mortal man. The death of the scapegoat does not come into the type; in fact, it would mar the type to think of it. Of Melchizedek, we read that he was without father, without mother, without descent, and so on, because these things are not mentioned in Scripture, and the omission is part of the teaching; so in this case, the fate of the scapegoat is not spoken of, and the silence is a part of the instruction. We do not know where the scapegoat is gone; and so our sin has vanished completely away; no one will ever find the scapegoat, and no one will ever find the believer’s sins.
18. “Where are my sins? Oh where?” Echo answers, “Where?” Gone to the land of nobody, where Satan himself could not find them. Yes, where God himself cannot find them. He says he has cast our sin behind his back, where he cannot see. What part of the creation must that be which lies behind God’s back, whereas he is everywhere present, beholding all things both by night and by day? There is no such place as “behind his back”; and there is no place for our sins. They have gone into the nowhere. “As far as the east is from the west, so far he has removed our transgressions from us.” He has cast them into the depths of the sea—and even that is not as good a symbol as the scapegoat, for things that are at the bottom of the sea are still there, but the scapegoat soon passed away altogether, and, as far as Israel was concerned, it ceased to be. The sins of God’s people are absolutely and irrevocably forgiven. Never, never, never can they be laid to our charge; they are extinct, buried, blotted out, forgotten. “Who shall lay anything to the charge of God’s elect?”
19.
Yet, dear friends, the ceremony was not quite finished; for now
everyone who had had a hand in it needed to be washed, so that
everyone might be clean. There is Aaron: he takes off his garments,
and washes himself scrupulously clean; yes, he does it a second time.
Here is the man who took the scapegoat away, and he washes himself.
Here is a third person, who carried away the skin and the flesh of
the sin offering, and burned them outside the camp; he also washes
himself. Everyone becomes purged; the whole camp is clean right
through. So, when Jesus completes his sacrifice, we sing:
“Now both the sinner and surety are free.”
No sin remains upon him on whom the Lord once laid the iniquities of us all. The great atonement is made, and everything is cleansed, from beginning to end. Christ has put it all away for ever by the water and the blood which flowed from his riven side. All is purified, and the Lord looks down on a clean camp; and soon he will have them rejoicing before him, each man in his tabernacle, feasting to the full. I am so glad: my joy overflows. Oh Lord, who is a pardoning God like you? Where can such forgiveness be found as you freely give to sinners through Jesus, your Son?
20. III. In the third place, I ask your attention, for a brief interval, to this special point—WHO DID IT?
21. The answer is, Aaron did it all. Aaron was quite alone in the work of that day. It was heavy, and even exhausting work, but he had no assistant. Aaron performed the work of priest and Levite that day, and no one helped him; for it is written, “There shall be no man in the tabernacle of the congregation when he goes in to make an atonement in the holy place, until he comes out, and has made an atonement for himself, and for his household, and for all the congregation of Israel.” The tabernacle seemed lonely that day. Aaron went into its courts and rooms, and saw no sign of man. Of course there were lamps to be lit, but Aaron had to light them himself: the showbread had to be changed—Aaron had to change it. All the offices of the tabernacle were left to his sole care for the day. When it came to killing the victims, priests and Levites were there on other days, but now the high priest must do it all. He must kill, and receive the blood, and sprinkle it himself. He must kindle the sacrificial fire, and lay the burning coals upon the incense. He must carry both the incense and the basin of blood into the holy place with his own hands. I think I see him looking around in the solitude. He says, “I looked, and there was no man.” Of the people there was no one with him. In the holy place there stood no priest to minister before the Lord except himself alone. It must have been with trembling that he lifted up the curtain and passed into the secret place of the Most High with the censer smoking in his hand. There he stood in that awful presence quite alone with the Eternal: no man was with him when he sprinkled the blood again and again until the sevenfold rite was finished. Three times he goes in and out, and never a soul is there, so much as to smile upon him. The tension of mind and heart which he endured alone that day must have been trying indeed. All that entire day he must have been conscious of a burden of responsibility and a weight of reverence enough to bow him to the dust, and yet no one was present to cheer him.
22. Now fix your eye on the great antitype of Aaron. There was no one with our Lord: he trod the wine-press alone. He himself bore our sins in his own body on the tree. He alone went in where the thick darkness covered the throne of God, and no one stood by to comfort him. “All the disciples forsook him, and fled.” It would have been a very natural thing, one would think, that Peter should have defended him, and even died with him; but no one died with Jesus except thieves, and no one could suspect that thieves aided him in his sacrifice: they showed the need of the sacrifice, but they could do no more. Worship our Lord as working salvation by his own single arm. Do not tolerate those who would share his work. Do not believe in priests of any church who pretend to offer sacrifice for the quick and the dead. They cannot help you, and you do not need their help. Do not put your own merits, works, prayers, or anything else side by side with your one lone High Priest, who in his white garments of holy service performed the whole work of expiation, and then came out in his garments of glory and of beauty to gladden the eyes of his chosen. I say no more. Let that truth remain in your hearts—our High Priest alone has made reconciliation.
23. IV. Lastly, WHAT WERE THE PEOPLE TO DO for whom this atonement was made? There were two things they had to do that day, only I must add that one of them was doing nothing.
24.
For the first thing, they had to afflict their souls that day.
Brethren, does it seem to you a strange thing that on a day of rest
they were to afflict their souls? Think of it for a little, and you
will see that there was a reason for it. We most rightly sing—
Here let our hearts begin to melt,
While we his death record,
And, with our joy for pardon’d guilt
Mourn that we pierced the Lord.
It was a day of confession of sin. And should not confession be made with sorrowful repentance? A dry-eyed confession is a hypocritical confession. To acknowledge sin without grieving over it is to aggravate sin. We cannot think of our sin without grieving, and the more sure we are that it is forgiven, the more sorry we are that it ever was committed. Sin seems all the greater because it was committed against a sin-forgiving God. If you do wrong to a person, and he grows angry, you may be wicked enough to persist in the wrong; but if, instead of growing angry, he forgives, and does you good in return, then you will deeply regret that you ever had an unkind thought towards him. The Lord’s pardoning love makes us feel truly sorry to have offended him.
25.
Not only was it a day of confession, but it was a day of sacrifice.
No tender-hearted Israelite could think of that young bull, and ram,
and goat dying for him, without saying, “That is what I deserve.” If
he heard the moans of the dying creature he would say, “My own heart
groans and bleeds.” When we think of our dying Lord our emotions are
mixed: we feel a pleasing grief and a mournful joy as we stand at
Calvary. So it is we sing—
Alas! and did my Saviour bleed?
And did my Sovereign die?
Could he devote that sacred head
For such a worm as I?
Was it for crimes that I have done
He died upon the tree?
Amazing pity, grace unknown,
And love beyond degree.
Well might the sun in darkness hide,
And shut his glories in,
When God the mighty Maker died
For man, the creature’s sin!
Well might I hide my blushing face
When his dear Cross appears,
Dissolve my heart in thankfulness,
And melt my eyes to tears.
It was a day of sacrifice, and hence a day of affliction of their souls, and in this we are in sympathy with them.
26. Once more, it was a day of perfect cleansing, and hence, by a strange logic, a day of the affliction of the soul; for, oh! when sin is forgiven, when we know it is forgiven, when by divine assurance we know that God has blotted out our sins like a cloud, it is then we mourn over our iniquities. “They shall look upon me whom they have pierced”—that look gives life: “and they shall mourn for him, as one mourns for his only son, and shall be in bitterness for him, as one who is in bitterness for his first-born”—this bitterness is one of the best signs of life. They were to afflict their souls. Brethren, we cannot talk about the cross of Christ except in subdued tones. If you think you can laugh and sport yourself because your sin is forgiven, you know nothing of the matter. Sin has been pardoned at such a price that we cannot henceforth trifle with it. The sacrifice was so august that we must almost speak of it with holy trembling. I always feel a suspicion of those converts who get up and glibly boast that once they were drunkards, thieves, blasphemers, and so forth. Brother, if you do tell the story of your sin, blush scarlet to think it should be true. I am ashamed to hear a man talk about his sins as an old Greenwich pensioner might talk about his sea battles. I hate to hear a man exhibiting his old lusts as if they were scars of honour. Friend, these things are disgraceful to you, however much the putting of them away may be to the honour and glory of God; and they are to be spoken of by you with shame and confusion of face. Afflict your soul when you remember what you once were.
27. On the day of atonement they were to afflict their souls, and yet they were to rest. Can these things come together—mourning and resting? Oh yes, you and I know how they meet in one heart. I never am so truly happy as when a sober sadness tinges my joy. When I am fullest of joy I could weep my life away at Jesus’ feet. Nothing is more really sweet than the bitterness of repentance. Nothing is more healthful than self-abhorrence mixed with the grateful love which hides itself in the wounds of Jesus.
28. The purified people were to rest; they were to rest from all physical labour. I will never do a hand’s turn to save myself by my own merits, works, or feelings. I am finished for ever with all interference with my Lord’s sole work. Salvation as for its meritorious cause is complete; we will not think of beginning it over again; for that would be an insult to the Saviour. “It is finished,” says our Lord Jesus, as he bowed his dear triumphant head and gave up the ghost; and if it is finished we will not dream of adding to it. It is finished; we have no work to do with the view of self-salvation. But you say to me—“Do we not have to work out our own salvation?” Certainly we have to. We are to work out our own salvation because God works it in us. It is our own salvation, and we reveal it in our lives: we work it out from within; we develop it from day to day, and let men see what the Lord has done for us. It must first be worked for us, and then in us, or we can never work it out.
29. They were assuredly to cease from all sinful work. How can the pardoned man continue in sin? We are finished with toiling for the devil now. We will no more waste our lives in his service. Many men are worn to rottenness in the service of their lusts, but the servant of God has been set free from that yoke of bondage. We are slaves no longer: we quit the hard bondage of Egypt and rest in the Lord.
30.
We are also finished with selfish work; we now seek first the
kingdom of heaven, and expect that all other things shall be added to
us by the goodness of our heavenly Father. Henceforth we find rest by
bearing the easy yoke of Christ. We rejoice to spend and be spent in
his beloved service. He has made us free, and therefore we are under
bonds to his love for ever. Oh Lord, I am your servant, I am your
servant, you have released my bonds, henceforth I am bound to you.
May God grant that this may be a high day to you, because you gladly
believe the grand truths which are foreshadowed in these delightful
types, Amen.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Le 16]
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Work of Grace as a Whole — The Unspeakable Gift” 240}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Jesus Christ, Sufferings and Death — The Shepherd Smitten” 291}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Gospel, Received by Faith — ‘The Lord Hath Laid On Him The Iniquity Of Us All’ ” 564}
The Sword And The Trowel. Edited by C. H. Spurgeon.
Contents for October, 1886.
Unity and how not to promote it. By C. H. Spurgeon.
Paltry Battles of Small Natures.
How Thieves are Reclaimed.
Chrysostom.
The Cure of Cares.
“In Perils in the Sea.”
Hymns for Children.
A Death-bed Repentance. (?).
“The Great Talker, ‘Fairly Done.’ ”
The Man who could not Agree with Himself.
Beware of Rome.
Compulsory Tithes.
Notices of Books.
Notes.
Pastors’ College.
Stockwell Orphanage.
Colportage Association.
Society of Evangelists.
Price 3d. Post-free, 4 Stamps.
Passmore & Alabaster, 4 Paternoster Buildings; and all Booksellers.
The Work of Grace as a Whole
240 — The Unspeakable Gift
1 Come, happy souls, approach your God
With new melodious songs;
Come, render to almighty grace
The tribute of your tongues.
2 So strange, so boundless was the love
That pitied dying men,
The Father sent his equal Son
To give them life again.
3 Thy hands, dear Jesus, were not arm’d
With an avenging rod,
No hard commission to perform,
The vengeance of a God.
4 But all was mercy, all was mild,
And wrath forsook the throne,
When Christ on the kind errand came,
And brought salvation down.
5 Here, sinners, you may heal your wounds,
And wipe your sorrows dry;
Trust in the mighty Saviour’s name,
And you shall never die.
6 See, dearest Lord, our willing souls
Accept thine offer’d grace;
We bless the great redeemer’s love,
And give the Father praise.
Isaac Watts, 1709.
Jesus Christ, Sufferings and Death
291 — The Shepherd Smitten
1 Like sheep we went astray,
And broke the fold of God;
Each wandering in a different way,
But all the downward road.
2 How dreadful was the hour
When God our wanderings laid,
And did at once his vengeance pour
Upon the Shepherd’s head!
3 How glorious was the grace
When Christ sustain’d the stroke!
His life and blood the Shepherd pays,
A ransom for the flock.
4 His honour and his breath
Were taken both away;
Join’d with the wicked in his death,
And made as vile as they:
5 But God shall raise his head
O’re sons of men to reign,
And make him see a numerous seed,
To recompense his pain.
6 “I’ll give him,” said the Lord,
“A portion with the strong;
He shall possess a large reward,
And hold his honours long.”
Isaac Watts, 1709, a.
Gospel, Received by Faith
564 — “The Lord Hath Laid On Him The Iniquity Of Us All”
1 Charged with the complicated load
Of our enormous debt,
By faith, I see the Lamb of God
Expire beneath its weight!
2 My numerous sins transferr’d to him,
Shall never more be found,
Lost in his blood’s atoning stream
Where every crime is drown’d!
3 My mighty sins to thee are known;
But mightier still is he
Who laid his life a ransom down,
And pleads his death for me.
4 Oh may my life, while here below,
Bear witness to thy love:
Till I before thy footstool bow,
And chant thy praise above!
CHarles Wesley, 1762;
Augustus M. Toplady, 1776.
These sermons from Charles Spurgeon are a series that is for reference and not necessarily a position of Answers in Genesis. Spurgeon did not entirely agree with six days of creation and dives into subjects that are beyond the AiG focus (e.g., Calvinism vs. Arminianism, modes of baptism, and so on).
Modernized Edition of Spurgeon’s Sermons. Copyright © 2010, Larry and Marion Pierce, Winterbourne, Ontario, Canada. Used by Answers in Genesis by permission of the copyright owner. The modernized edition of the material published in these sermons may not be reproduced or distributed by any electronic means without express written permission of the copyright owner. A limited license is hereby granted for the non-commercial printing and distribution of the material in hard copy form, provided this is done without charge to the recipient and the copyright information remains intact. Any charge or cost for distribution of the material is expressly forbidden under the terms of this limited license and automatically voids such permission. You may not prepare, manufacture, copy, use, promote, distribute, or sell a derivative work of the copyrighted work without the express written permission of the copyright owner.
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