2 Our second question is—what has that power accomplished?As we see something of the wonders that power has accomplished, we shall be encouraged to believe that it can do the same for us. Our best plan is to note how the Scriptures glory in the great things which have taken place through the power of the blood of Jesus.The Blood of Jesus has opened the grave.We read in Hebrews xiii. 20 “Now the God of peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus that great Shepherd of the sheep, through The Blood OF The everlasting covenant.”It was through the virtue of the blood, that God raised up Jesus from thedead. God’s almighty power was not exerted to raise Jesus from the dead, apart from the blood.He came to earth as surety, and bearer, of the sin of mankind. It was through the shedding of His blood alone that He had the right, as man, to rise again, and to obtain eternal life through resurrection. His blood had satisfied the law and righteousness of God. By so doing He had overcome the power of sin, and brought it to naught. So, also, death was defeated, as its sting, sin, had been removed, and the devil also was defeated, who had the power of death, having now lost all right over Him and us. His blood had destroyed the power of death, the devil and hell—The Blood of Jesus has opened the grave. He who truly believes that, perceives the close connection which exists between the blood and the almighty power of God. It is only through the blood that God exerts His almightiness in dealing with sinful men. Where the blood is, there the resurrection power of God gives entrance into eternal life. The blood has made a complete end of all the power of death, and hell; its effects surpass all human thought.Again The Blood of Jesus has opened Heaven.We read in Hebrews ix. 22, Christ “by His own blood entered in once for all into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for us.”We know that in the Old Testament Tabernacle God’s manifested presence was inside the veil. No power of man could remove that veil. The High Priest alone could enter there, but only with blood, or the loss of his own life. That was a picture of the power of sin in the flesh, which separates us from God. The eternal righteousness of God guarded the entrance to the Most Holy Place, that no flesh might approach Him.But now our Lord appears, not in a material but in the true Temple. As High Priest and representative of His People, He asks for Himself, and for sinful children of Adam, an entrance into the presence of the Holy One. “That where I am, there they may be also” is His request. He asks that heaven may be opened for each one, even for the greatest sinner, who believes in Him. His request is granted. But how is that? It is through the Blood. He entered through his own Blood. The Blood of Jesus has opened Heaven.So it is ever, and always, through the blood that the throne of grace remains settled in heaven. In the midst of the seven great realities of heaven (Heb. xii. 22, 24), yes, nearest to God the judge of all, and to Jesus the Mediator, the Holy Spirit gives a prominent place to “The Blood of sprinkling.”It is the constant “speaking” of that blood that keeps heaven open for sinners, and sends streams of blessing down on earth. It is through that blood that Jesus, as Mediator, carries on, without ceasing, His mediatorial work. The Throne of grace owes its existence ever, and always, to the power of that blood.Oh, the wonderful power of the blood of Christ 1 Just as it has broken open the gates of the grave, and of hell, to let Jesus out, and us with Him; so it has opened the gates of heaven for Him, and us with Him, to enter. The blood has an almighty power over the kingdom of darkness, and hell beneath; and over the kingdom of heaven, and its glory above.The Blood of Jesus is all powerful in the human heart.Since it avails so powerfully with God and over Satan, does it not avail even more powerfully with man, for whose sake it was actually shed?We may be sure of it.The wonderful power of the blood is especially manifested on behalf of sinners on earth. Our text is but one out of many places in Scripture where this is emphasized. “Ye were redeemed from your vain conversation with the precious blood of Christ” (I Pet. 1. 18, 19).The word redeemed has a depth of meaning. It indicates particularly deliverance from slavery, by emancipation or purchase. The sinner is enslaved, under the hostile power of Satan, the curse of the Law, and sin. Now it is proclaimed “ye are redeemed through the blood,” which had paid the debt of guilt, and destroyed the power of Satan, the curse, and sin.Where this proclamation is heard and received, there Redemption begins, in a true deliverance from a vain manner of life, from a life of sin. The word “redemption” includes everything God does for a sinner from the pardon of sin, in which it begins (Eph. I. 14; iv. 30) to the full deliverances of the body by Resurrection (Rom. viii. 24).Those to whom Peter wrote (1 Pet. I. 2) were “Elect —to the sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ.” It was the proclamation about the precious blood that had touched their hearts, and brought them to repentance; awakening faith in them, and filling their souls with life and joy. Each believer was an illustration of the wonderful power of the blood.Further on, when Peter exhorts them to holiness, it is still the precious blood which is his plea. On that he would fix their eyes.For the Jew, in his self-righteousness, and hatred of Christ; for the heathen, in his godliness, there was only one means of deliverance from the power of sin. It is still the one power that effects daily deliverance for sinners. How could it be otherwise? The blood that availed so powerfully in heaven and over hell, is all-powerful also in a sinner’s heart. It is impossible for us to think too highly, or to expect too much, from the power of Jesus’ blood.
3 How does this power work? This is our third question.In what conditions, under what circumstances, can that power secure, unhindered, in us, the mighty results it is intended to produce:The first answer is, that just as it is everywhere in the kingdom of God,It is through faith.But faith is largely dependent on knowledge. If knowledge of what the blood can accomplish is imperfect, faith expects little, and the more powerful effects of the blood are impossible. Many Christians think that if now, through faith in the blood, they have received the assurance of the pardon of their sins, they have a sufficient knowledge of its effects.They have no idea that the words of God, like God Himself, are inexhaustible, that they have a wealth of meaning and blessing that surpasses all understanding.They do not remember that when the Holy Spirit speaks of cleansing through the blood, such words are only the imperfect human expressions of the effects and experiences by which the blood, in an unspeakably glorious manner, will reveal its heavenly life-giving power