Christ Set Forth as a Propitiation by C. H. Spurgeon

A Sermon Delivered On Good Friday Morning, March 29, 1861, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.

Christ Jesus whom God has set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood. (Ro 3:25)

1. We commenced the services in this place by the declaration that here Christ shall be preached; our brother who followed us expressed his joy that Christ was preached, in this he rejoiced, yes, and would rejoice; and our friends must have observed, how, throughout the other services there has been a most blessed mixture not only of the true spirit of Christ, but of pointed and admirable reference to the glories and beauties of his person. This morning, which is the beginning of our more regular and constant ministry, we come again to the same noble theme. Christ Jesus is today to be set forth. You will not charge me as repeating myself,—you will not look up to the pulpit and say, “Pulpits are places of tautology;” you will not reply that you have heard this story so often that you have grown weary of it, for I know well that with you the person, the character, and the work of Christ are always fresh themes for wonder. We have seen the sea, some of us hundreds of times, and what an abiding sameness there is in its deep green surface, but who ever called the sea monotonous; travelling over it as the mariner does, sometimes for a whole year, there is always a freshness in the undulation of the waves, the whiteness of the foam of the breaker, the curl of the crested billow, and the frolicsome pursuit of every wave by its long train of brothers. Which one of us has ever complained that the sun gave us very little variety—that in morning he yoked the same steeds, and flashed from his chariot the same golden glory, climbed with dull uniformity the summit of the skies, then drove his chariot downward, and bade his flaming coursers1 steep their burning fetlocks2 in the western deep? Who among us has complained about the monotony of the bread that we eat. We eat it today, tomorrow, the next day, we have eaten it for years that are passed, and though we have other savoury foods with it, yet still the one unvarying food is served upon the table, and the bread remains the staff of life. Surely I know that since Christ is your food and your spiritual bread; since Christ is your sun, your heavenly light; since Christ is the sea of love in which your passions swim, and all your joys are found, then it is not possible that you as Christian men should complain of a monotony in him, “He is the same yesterday, today, and for ever;” and yet he has the dew of his youth. He is the manna in the golden pot which was always the same, but he is the manna which came from heaven which was new every morning. He is the rod of Moses which was dry, and did not change its shape, but he is also to us the rod of Aaron which buds and blossoms and brings forth almonds.

2. I come then now to preach Christ crucified, as God has set him forth to be a propitiation for us through faith in his blood. To begin at once then, we shall notice first, what is meant here by God’s setting forth Christ as propitiation; secondly, we shall dwell upon the truth which may very naturally be drawn from the first,—Christ the propitiation, as looked upon by the believer; and then, thirdly, putting the two together, I mean inverting the two thoughts, we shall look at Christ as set forth by us, and looked upon by God.

3. I. First then, the text says of Christ Jesus, “WHOM GOD HAS SET FORTH TO BE A PROPITIATION THROUGH FAITH IN HIS BLOOD.”

4. The words “set forth” in the original may mean “foreordained;” but according to eminent critics it has also in it the idea of our translation of setting forth as well as a “foreordination.” Barnes says, “The word properly means to place in public view; to exhibit in a conspicuous situation, as goods are exhibited or exposed for sale, or as premiums or rewards of victory were exhibited to public view in the games of the Greeks.” So has God the Father set forth, revealed, made conspicuous the person of the Lord Jesus as the propitiation for sin. How has he done this? He has done it first by ordaining him in the divine decree as the propitiation for sin. Christ did not take upon himself the office of High Priest without being chosen for it as was Aaron. As surely as every member of Christ’s body is elect according to the foreknowledge of God, as certainly as in God’s book all his members were written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there were none of them, so certainly was the Head himself ordained the chosen of God. As our poet puts it—

Christ be my first elect he said, Then chose our souls in Christ our Head.

Perhaps some might say there could be no election where there was no room for choice. But how do we know that there was no room for choice? We can scarcely imagine that angel or archangel could have been set forth as a propitiation for sin; yet who can tell whether the Almighty mind might not have devised another plan? Who shall dare to limit the Holy One of Israel? At any rate, there was this choice between the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit: the Divine wisdom, conjoined with Divine Sovereignty, chose, and appointed, and determined that Christ Jesus, the second of the Mysterious Three, should be the propitiation for our sins. When Christ comes into the world, he comes as one of whom all eternity had spoken; he is the child born—born from the womb of destiny; he is the Lamb whom God had appointed from before the foundation of the world. Long before this world was made, or Adam fell, Christ had been set forth. In the volume of the Book it had been written of him, “I delight to do your will, oh God.” I think those who are afraid of looking back upon the great decrees of God because they say they are secrets, have a fear where no fear is. There is never fear, my brethren, of our meddling with secret things; if they are secret, it is quite certain that we shall not meddle with them. Only let it be announced once and for all, that they are secret; and there is no one who can betray the secrets of God. But things that are revealed belong to us and to our children; and this is one of the things that is revealed, this is the decree and we will declare it, the Lord said to Christ, “You are my Son, today I have begotten you;” and he has said to him moreover, “I will make him my firstborn, higher than the kings of the earth.” And all this, so that he may be the “propitiation for our sins by faith in his blood.”

5. And next, God had set forth Christ to be a propitiation for sins in his promises before the advent. Did he not set him forth most plainly in the garden where we fell? Was he not plainly revealed afterwards in the ark in which Noah was saved? Did not God speak constantly, not only by verbal promises, but by typical promises, which are just as sure and certain as those which are spoken in words? Did he not to a hundred seers, and to multitudes of holy men and women, constantly reveal the coming of him who should bruise the serpent’s head, and deliver his people from the power of the curse? It is wonderful to see how engaged the Holy Spirit was through every age and era in ordaining types, in bringing forth representations and symbols in which Christ should be set forth as being the appointed propitiation for sins through faith in his blood. But the great setting forth was the actual doing of the deed when Jesus Christ came forth from the chambers of mystery and revealed himself in the manger,—when God set him forth by angelic messengers appointed to be his attendants,—set him forth by the star in the East which should guide the distant strangers to the place where the young child was. When he set him forth afterwards by preserving his life in the midst of imminent perils, fulfilling promises made concerning his infancy in the place where he was hidden from Herod’s fury, and in the place where he was educated and brought up. Throughout the life of Christ, how constantly did his Father set him forth! The voice of God was in the voice of John—“Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.” And on the cross itself, “when it pleased the Father to bruise him, and put him to grief,” what an exhibition there was of Christ to the eye of Jew and Gentile, of prince and peasant, of the learned Greek, of the ruder Roman—that God had appointed Christ to be the full propitiation for sin. I think, my dear friends, while we must always regard the cross as being the representation of Christ’s love for his Church, we must also view it as being God setting forth to man the way by which he will accept man, pardon his sin, hear his prayer, and be reconciled with his erring creatures.

6. But, oh my dear friends, this is not all; God the Father set forth Christ since then by later signs. What a setting forth that was of Christ the propitiator, when the Holy Spirit came down on Pentecost! And what have all conversions been since then? Have they not been repeated seals to the testimony that Christ is the appointed Redeemer of men, and that through him the faithful are justified and accepted? Many of you, I trust, have had such a special setting forth of Christ in your own hearts, that you can set your seal to the text before us, for God has set him forth in you as being the propitiation. By effectual grace your eyes have been opened; by infinite love your stubborn heart has been melted; you have been turned from every other hope and every other refuge; you have seen Christ to be the power and wisdom of God; constrained by an omnipotent influence which you neither could nor would resist, you have received him as the One sent by God, have taken him as being God’s Messiah and your only refuge. God in you, then, has graciously fulfilled the text, “God has set him forth to be a propitiation.”

7. But now, to change the subject for a moment, and yet to continue on the same point, what is it that God has so obviously set forth? We have seen how he has done it—we turn now to what? Sinner, listen, and if you have already accepted that which the Father has revealed, let your joy become full. God has set forth Christ as being a propitiation. The Greek word has it ??as????? which, being translated, may mean a mercy seat or a covering. Now God has said to the sinner, “Do you desire to meet me? would you be no longer my enemy? would you tell me your sorrows? would you receive my blessing? would you establish communion between your Creator and your soul? I set forth Christ to you as being the mercy seat, where I can meet with you and you can meet with me.” Or take the word as signifying a covering; as the mercy seat covered the tables of the law, and so covered what was the cause of Divine ire, because we had broken his commandment. “Would you have anything which can cover your sin? Cover it from me your God, so that I need not be provoked to anger; cover it from you so that you need not be cowed with excessive fear, and tremble to approach me as you did when I came in thunders and lightnings upon Sinai? Would you have a shelter which shall hide altogether your sins and your iniquities? I set it forth to you in the person of my bleeding Son. Trust in his blood, and your sin is covered from my eyes; indeed, it shall be covered from your own eyes too; and being justified by faith, you shall have peace with God through Jesus Christ your Lord.” Oh that we may have grace to accept now what God the Father sets forth! The Romish priest sets forth this and that; our own Romish hearts set forth such and such other things; but God sets forth Christ. The preacher of doctrine sets forth a dogma; the preacher of experience sets forth a feeling; the preacher of practice often sets forth an effort; but God puts before you Christ. “Here I will meet with you.” This is the place of my rest—glorious for me, safe for you. Come to Christ! “Come to Christ, and you will come to me.” The Lord Almighty comes to Christ, and there he comes to you. God, then, has set forth Christ Jesus; made him conspicuous as being the mercy seat and the great hider of sin.

8. What has he set forth? He has set forth Christ before each of you, in the daily preaching of the Word, and in that Inspired Book, as his anointed to do his work, suffering in the room and place of all who believe on him. He has set him forth as nailed to Calvary’s cross, so that your sins might be nailed there. Set him forth as dying, so that your sins might die; indeed, buried so that your iniquities might be buried; risen, so that you might rise to newness of life, ascended, so that you might ascend to God; received in triumph, so that you might be received in triumph too; made to reign, so that you might reign in him, for ever loved, for ever crowned, so that you in him may be for ever loved and for ever crowned too. God the Father has set him forth, so that by faith in his blood our sins being put away, you might enjoy the blessing of complete justification. “Who is he who condemns; Christ has died, yes rather, has risen again, and sits at the right hand of God, who also makes intercession for us.” “Who shall lay anything to the charge of God’s elect?” Thus, then, and in these respects, God the Father has set forth Christ.

9. II. And now I proceed in the second point—and may the Spirit of God descend more visibly into our midst than at present—to speak upon a duty, a privilege rather, which so naturally rises out of God’s having shown forth his Son as being the propitiation through faith in his blood. That privilege is that WE SHOULD LOOK TO CHRIST, AND LOOK TO CHRIST ALONE AS THE PROPITIATION FOR OUR SINS, AND TAKE CARE THAT OUR FAITH IS SIMPLE, AND FIXED SOLELY ON HIS PRECIOUS BLOOD.

10. A very common mistake is to look to our sense of need as being at least in some degree a propitiation for sin. Repentance is an absolute duty, and a Christian grace—a grace without which there can be no salvation. But there has been a strong temptation upon many minds to make repentance a preparation for Christ, and to regard a sense of need as being a kind of wedding garment in which they may approach the Saviour. How many read that promise, “Come to me all you that are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest,” and they fondly imagine that if they could be more weary and more heavily laden then they would have rest. Whereas, being weary and heavy laden gives no man rest. It is coming to Christ that gives him rest; it is not the being weary and the being heavy laden. And I have known some ministers who preach what is called a deep experience and law work, and preach very rightly too, because many of the people of God have to endure this; but I think they lead the people into error, for the people imagine that this law work, this deep experience has something to do with the propitiation of their sins. Now, my hearers, the sins of God’s people are taken away by the blood of Christ, and not by any repentance of their own. I have already guarded my statement, and now I will make it as bold as possible. I say that repentance for sin does in no wise contribute to the removal of that sin meritoriously. I say that our sense of need does not take away our guilt, nor help to take it away; but the blood, the blood, the blood alone, pure and unmixed, has for ever washed the people of God, and made them whiter than snow. So, poor heart, if your soul is as hard as a nether millstone, if your conscience seems to yourself to be seared by long habits of sin, if you cannot force tears from your eyes, and scarcely can get a groan from your heart, yet you are groaning today because you cannot groan, weeping because you cannot weep, and sorrowing because you cannot sorrow. Hear, then, this gospel message, God the Father has set Christ forth to be your propitiation; not your tender conscience, not your groans, not your sense of need, not your law work, not your deep experience. He is enough without any of these; have faith in his blood, and you are saved.

11. But again, many have fallen into another mistake. They make their propitiation depend upon their evidences. I would be the last to say, “Away with evidences, away with evidences,” for they are good things in their proper place; but there are so many people who always judge their past conversion and ultimate salvation by present evidence. Judge, brethren, whether you could ever form a proper estimate of the world by its appearance on any one day. If I had taken you out a month ago into the fields, you would have declared that the trees were dead. What signs of life would you have seen? The bulbs were buried in the ground; you might have taken a solemn oath that flowers were banished, and you might have imagined that because there were none, there never would be any. But what was your evidence of the world’s state worth? Look at it now, when the buds are bursting on the trees, when the flowers are springing from the sod, when everything is hastening on towards spring and summer. Why, just as it is absurd and ridiculous for us to judge the world’s estate by the fact that there was a cloud today and there was a shower of rain yesterday, and therefore infer that the sun has lost its force and will never shine; so it is just as ridiculous to judge our standing before God by our present standing, according to our evidences on any one day. The right way to read evidences is this. First, my soul, whether you are saved or not, look to Christ as a poor guilty sinner. When you have done this, then read your evidences; then, not until then. Then the blessed evidence will be a confirmation; the witness of the Spirit will confirm your faith. But if you look to your evidences first you will be foolish indeed. It is as in a reflector; first, let us have the light, then the reflector will be of use to us to increase and reflect back the light; but if I take my reflector into a dark place, and look for light in it, then I shall find none. I must first see to the light itself, and then to the reflection of it. Our graces are the reflection of Christ’s love; they are the tokens of it, but we had better go to Christ first, and then look for the tokens afterwards. I am sure if you, as a spouse, had offended your husband, you would find very sorry comfort in looking at those little tokens of love which in the past he had conferred on you. You would go to him first, ask him whether his love was still firm, whether he had forgiven the fault, and when you had received the assurance of his unabated and pure affection, then you could go upstairs to the secret drawer and look over the love notes and the love tokens, but they would have afforded you sorry comfort before. So with any child who has been chastened by his parent, if he thinks that his father is angry with him he will not, if he is a wise child, a simple hearted child, go up to the nursery and look at the gifts which his father gave him, but going to his father’s knee he will look up, with a tear in his eye, and say, “Father do you love me; can you forgive your child?” and, when he has had the personal token, the kiss of acceptance, then the child may go back and see in every mouthful that he eats, and every garment which he wears, the sure token of his father’s continued affection. Evidences are good as second things, but as first things they are usurpers, and may prove antichrists to Christ. Whatever my evidences may say, if I believe in the precious blood, there is not a sin against me in God’s book, and in the teeth of everything which might make me tremble.

Just as I am, without one plea,
But that his blood was shed for me
And that he bids me come,

I come again, and come afresh to him whom God has set forth to be the propitiation for our sins.

12. Friends, I may surprise you by what I am about to say, but there is another fault into which we sometimes fall, namely, looking to God’s promises instead of looking to Christ as the propitiation for sin. The text does not say that God the Father has set forth promises. Indeed he has given us exceedingly great and precious promises and they are true in Christ. We often err by going to promises instead of going to Christ. I know many Christians who, when they are in distress, look in the Bible to find a promise,—a very good and a very admirable plan, if, note, it is preceded by something else. If they go to Christ first, then they may come to the promise afterwards. “Yes,” one says, “but suppose a promise is applied.” Very good; you have comfort from it, but I say suppose the promise is not applied, what then? Why it is just as sure for all that; whether the promise is applied or not. Application is not my duty; my business is to take Christ whom God the Father has set forth as the propitiation for my sins, and if in searching this book through, there is not a single promise which I dare lay hold of, if I cannot find one bottle filled with the rich wine of consolation; if I can lay hold on no bunch of the grapes of Eshcol, still God the Father has set forth Christ whatever else he has not set forth, and my eye looks to Christ and to Christ alone. There is a man who very much desires an estate, at the same time his heart is smitten with the beauty of some fair heiress. He gets the title deeds of her estate. Well, the title deeds are good, but the estates are not his, though he has the title deeds. By and by he marries the lady, and everything is his own. Get the heiress and you have gotten the estate. It is so in Christ; promises are the title deeds of his estates. A man may have the promise and not have Christ, and then they will be of no more use to him than the deeds of another man’s estate would be to me, if I am not the lawful proprietor; but when my soul is married to Christ, then I am heir of all things in him and with him. Why, Christian, what right have you to say, “that promise is not mine because it is not applied.” Your right to the promise does not lie in its being applied, nor yet in your power to lay hold of it. Every promise that is in the Bible belongs to every man who is in Christ, and belongs to him as much one day as another day, because Christ is his at all times, for evermore the same. Oh! I do not know whether I can express this exactly as I mean it, but I mean this, that the devil has often tempted me with, “You have not had a promise sent home to your heart for months, you are no child of God, you cannot get that sweetness out of such and such a passage that some men can.” I reply to Satan in this way; “Well, God has never said he has set forth the promise to be a propitiation through faith but he has set forth Christ, and my soul accepts what God has set forth and if a promise is never applied to me, the promise is mine for all that, and in faith I will lay hold on it and defy you to rob me of it when my soul has laid hold on Christ.” Oh, that we lived more on Christ and less on anything but Christ, nearer to Christ’s person, more surely resting on Christ’s blood, more simply accepting him as our all in all.

13. I have not yet finished with this second point, a remark or two suggest themselves to me now. God has set forth Christ to be the propitiation through faith in his blood, and we ought to accept Christ as being all sufficient propitiation. I believe in Christ today; but if some sin lies upon my conscience, and I am worried and troubled about it, ought I not to perceive at once that I have failed to accept Christ as an all sufficient propitiation. Whether my sin is little or is great, whether it is fresh or old, it is the same sin, and blessed be God all has been atoned for through Christ the propitiation. We ought to take Christ as being the death of every sin and of all sin, as having expunged and wiped out the great debt as well as the little one; the ten thousand talents as well as the one hundred pence. We have never had the full idea of Christ until we know that every sin of thought, of word, of deed that the believer has ever been guilty of, finds its death, its drowning, its total annihilation in the propitiation which God has set forth. Oh! we need to come where Kent was, when he said—

Now free from sin I walk at large,
My Saviour’s blood’s my full discharge,
At his dear feet my soul I lay,
A sinner saved and homage pay.

14. Well, but when we have come as far as this, we need to add a second thought. God has set forth Christ to be not only an all sufficient but an immutable propitiation for sin. Christ is as much my soul’s propitiation, when my soul has fallen into sin, as when I have stood firm and resisted temptation, if I am a believer. “That is putting it,” you say, “in a bold and almost Antinomian way.” I cannot help it; it is true—it is true that the propitiation of Christ is never more, never less. It cannot be more, it is complete; it cannot be less, for it is the same yesterday, today, and for ever. That man who has been washed in blood is white; his doubts and fears have not spoiled that whiteness; his powerlessness yesterday in prayer, his despondency a week ago, his all but complete unbelief last month, do not mar the perfection of Jesus’ righteousness,—do not take away from the complete achievement of the pardon of his sin by precious blood. I do believe, and hold, and rejoice in that precious truth, that our standing before God, when we have believed in Jesus, depends no more upon our frames and our feelings, than the sun itself in its native glory depends upon the clouds and darkness that are here below. The same—the same in all its splendour, the same undimmed, as full of glory, as full of majesty, the righteousness and blood of Christ abides; and we, standing before God in him, and not in ourselves, are always complete in him—always accepted in the Beloved: never more so, never less so. “Strong food is this,” one says. Let it be strong: nothing short of this will ever satisfy the tried Christian in the hour when sin rolls over his head. If any man can make a bad use of the doctrine of the real substitution of Christ, and the standing of Christ’s people in Christ’s place every day,—if any man can make a licentious use of that, his damnation is just; he has no part nor lot in this matter. But I know this, that I am not to be restrained from the comfort of a doctrine because some licentious vagabond chooses to destroy his soul with it. Still there stands the glorious truth; and nothing short of this is the full glory of Christ’s atonement: that when once he shed his blood, and when once that blood has been applied to us, by it and it alone we stand completely pure, and are as pure one day as another day; perfect, complete, accepted, made secure and safe in Christ Jesus the Lord. “God the Father has set him forth to be a propitiation for sin.” My soul accepts him today as it did yesterday, and knows that the sin is put away for ever.

15. III. Now I shall come to my third and last point. Turn the thoughts over. We have said God sets forth Christ, and we look at it. Now, as a matter of duty and privilege, we must SET FORTH CHRIST, AND GOD WILL LOOK AT HIM.

16. The preacher, standing here as he does today before this immense assembly, knows that without God’s looking upon the ministry it will be vain and void. How shall God’s eye be secured?—how shall his presence be guaranteed? If in this pulpit Christ is set forth, God will look down upon that Christ set forth, and honour and bless the Word. Brethren, I might preach clear doctrine, but God might never look down upon doctrine; for I could point you to churches with a tear in my eye, because I am able to do so, where conversions are rare things. The doctrine is high, high enough; perhaps so high as to have become putrid. I will not say that, but I do know some churches where there has not been an addition to the church by the stretch of ten or a dozen years together, and I have known the reason. Christ was not set forth, and therefore God did not look down on what was set forth, because it was the wrong thing. I have known, too, churches—and with equal sorrow I mention them—where practice has been preached, but not Christ. People have been exhorted to do ten thousand things; moral duties presented before the people in pleasing and well polished essays have taken the place of the cross of Christ, and there have been no conversions; by degrees the attendance has become very slender; for where Christ is not preached, it is a strange thing there are some exceptions to the rule, but still the rule is—there are not many to listen. Only preach Socinianism,3 and what a splendid hunting ground this tabernacle will be for the spiders! Give up Christ and preach philosophy, you need not have an organ and a skilful person to play the people out of the church: they would never need that; they will never come in. So it is. Those flimsy doctrines never can prevail, because no one will listen to them; they are not attractive; they look as if they would attract all: but no one can receive them. The secret is that God will not look down on any man’s ministry unless that man sets forth what God sets forth, even Christ Jesus as the propitiation for sin. It is not a question as to whether there will be conversions when Christ is set forth; that is certain. Some good brethren quote the text, “Paul may plant, and Apollos may water, but”—and they are a long while upon the “but,” and they pervert the text a little, “but God gives the increase.” Now the text does not say any such thing. It says, “Paul plants and Apollos waters, God gives the increase.” They are all linked together; Paul does not plant in vain, Apollos does not water in vain; God gives the increase—sure to do it, and if there are no souls saved, there is always some reason for it; and the reason to which I would look—leaving now the inscrutable sovereignty of God out of the question for a moment—the reason would be either that Christ is not preached, or else he is preached in such a way as he never ought to be preached—with cold heartedness, with a lack of zeal, with a lack of tenderness. Only let Christ be preached by an earnest heart, though there is no eloquence, though the elocution is defective, Christ being set forth, God the Holy Spirit will come forth too, and the Word must and will be blessed. His Word shall not return to him void; it shall prosper in the thing where he has sent it.

17. But again, as in the ministry we must set forth Christ if we wish to have God’s smile, so you my brothers and sisters in your pleadings for the souls of men must set forth Christ. What a mass of wickedness is around here; what tens of thousands there are in this immediate neighbourhood who know nothing of God. Here is a city with very nearly three million inhabitants; it is not a city but an empire in itself. What shall we do when we are on our knees? I confess I have sometimes found myself utterly unable to express my desires in prayer to God for this city. When you once get a notion of its sin, its infamy, its dens, its innumerable missionaries teaching Satanic doctrines, its multitudes of men and women whose livelihood it is to ensnare the simple ones, it is an awful burden to carry before God, you cannot pray for London except in sighs and groans. Good old Roby Flockhart, who stood for many years in the streets of Edinburgh, and used to be much laughed at, but who preached every night in the week, and had during the winter months a little lantern which he put upon a stick and then stood in a corner and preached to the passersby, with a great power, but much eccentricity. That good man was eminent in his prayers when alone. A gentleman told me that he went one night to see poor Robert, he was extremely poor; the candle had been blown out and he stumbled his way up two or three flights of stairs and came at last to Flockhart’s room; he opened the door and he could not see the good old man, but he could hear him say, “Oh Lord, dinna forget Edinboro’, dinna forget Edinboro’, do not turn away your hand from auld Reekie, dinna forget her, Lord; your servant will never give you rest until you pour out your Spirit upon Edinboro’.” My friend stood still, and there was that old man alone with his God; my friend had never heard such groaning and crying; it seemed as if he could even hear the falling of his tears while he prayed for God to bless Edinburgh, and to pour out his Spirit upon that city. He made some noise, and the old man said, “There is someone there I suppose.” He struck a light and found he had taken one of the pillows of his bed to kneel upon by the side of an old chair which was about the only furniture, with the exception of the bed. He would pray for Edinburgh by the hour together, and then go out to preach, though many laughed at and hooted him. Oh, one needs to feel like that for London too, kneeling there until one’s knees are sore, crying, “Do not forget London, do not forget London. Lord do not turn your face from London, but make bare your arm in this great city.” But how are we to make our prayers prevail with God? Brethren, we must show forth Christ in prayer, and then God will look upon our prayers. The Methodist cry which was once heard at the prayer meeting when a poor Methodist brother could not go on and someone at the far end of the chapel cried out, “Plead the blood, brother, plead the blood,”—that old Methodist cry has force and power in it. “Plead the blood.” God cannot, cannot, cannot, resist the cry of the blood of Christ. Abel’s blood demanded vengeance, and it had it; Christ’s blood demands pardons and shall have it, must have it; our God cannot be deaf to the cry of his own Son’s blood; and if you and I and all of us together can plead the precious blood of Christ for London, a revival must come, will come, shall come, and the face of the times shall be changed. God’s arm shall be revealed, and “all flesh shall see it together, for the mouth of the Lord has spoken it.”

18. Yet once again, and here with affectionate earnestness, I come to plead personally with each of you. Soul, are you this morning sick of self and longing to be saved; do your sins condemn you; do the lusts accuse you; does your conscience flog you? Have you been to God in prayer; have you sought for mercy; has no mercy come? Have you read the Bible to find a promise, has no promise dropped with honey to you? Come I pray you and obey the word of God which I utter in your hearing; come and take Christ and show Christ’s blood to God, and he will, he must smile upon you. If you cannot take the promise, take the blood; if you cannot come before God with any feelings come with Christ in your hands. “May I trust Christ?” one says. “May you! you are commanded to do it.” He who does not believe has made God a liar because he does not believe. He who believes has set his seal that God is true. Sinner, God is satisfied with Christ. Does he satisfy God and will he not satisfy you? The eternal Judge has accepted Jesus, and do you refuse him? The Lord has opened the door and stands in it; is the door good enough for the king, and yet not good enough for a rebel like yourself? “But.” Away with your “buts,” you want to bring something to add to Christ; is he enough to reconcile God, and not enough to reconcile you? “But,” “but,” again. So God thinks the precious blood to be a sufficient price, and you think it is not? Oh fool, and slow of heart, how dare you to think that God has not set forth enough but you must add to it. Instead of this, I pray you in Christ’s stead, believe in Christ, as you are. Whoever you may be, whatever your past life has been, whatever your present feelings are now, entrust your soul with Christ, and God declares that your sins are put away. Put your soul as it is, I do not care how black, it does not matter how depraved it is, put it here on that mercy seat which God has set forth, and you have put it where God bade you put it, and its salvation rests no more with you, nor is it any more a matter of chance; you have put your salvation into Christ’s hands, it is his business to save you and he will do it.

I know that safe with him remains
Protected by his power,
What I’ve committed to his hands
Until the decisive hour.

I do not know how it is, but this simple doctrine is the hardest doctrine to make plain. It seems so easy, and yet many will mystify and doubt. “What, no good works, no good feelings!” All these things are fruits of grace; but salvation does not depend upon them. Salvation is in Christ, wholly in Christ, in Christ alone, and the moment any of you do trust him sincerely to be your sole and only Saviour you have accepted God’s propitiation, and God has accepted you. It is not possible for the Lord, unless he could reverse his nature, stain his honour, betray his character, make his word a farce, and the atonement of Christ a falsehood, to reject any man under heaven who believes in Christ, and takes him to be his all in all. Today is called Good Friday; may it be a Good Friday for some of you. Perhaps I have some here to whom I have preached these last seven years, and yet you have remained unsaved. I am clear of your blood if you had only heard this one morning sermon, for God witnesses that I do not know how to put the plan of salvation more plainly than I have done. “God has set forth Christ to be a propitiation through his blood.” I bid you look to Christ bleeding, to Christ sweating drops of blood, Christ scourged, Christ nailed to the tree, and if you believe in Christ’s blood he is the propitiation for your sins. But I can do no more than this; it is mine to preach, it is mine to pray, and mine to plead. Oh may God the Holy Spirit give you grace to receive, to accept, to yield to this blessed proclamation of free mercy. There is no other salvation; you may rack your soul with pain, and wear out your bones with toil, but there is rest nowhere except here, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and you shall be saved.” “He who with his heart believes, and with his mouth makes confession, shall be saved.” “For he who believes and is baptized shall be saved, but he who does not believe shall be damned.” What shall I say? Instead of pleading further with you I would plead with God in private, so that many of you may now ascertain whether Christ cannot save you. Rest yourself on him, trust yourself with him, and he will be as good as his word, and save you now, and save you even to the end. The Lord add his blessing, for Jesus’ sake. Amen.

Footnotes

  1. Courser: A large powerful horse, ridden in battle, in a tournament, etc. OED.  
  2. Fetlock: That part of a horse’s leg where the tuft of hair grows behind the pastern-joint; the tuft itself. OED.  
  3. Socinianism: One of a sect founded by Laelius and Faustus Socinus, two Italian theologians of the 16th century, who denied the divinity of Christ. OED.

http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2010/01/28/christ-set-forth-as-propitiaion