The Power of the Blood of Jesus

The Power of the Blood of Jesus

by Andrew Murray
The Power of the Blood of Jesus

The Power of the Blood of Jesus

by Andrew Murray

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Overview

Astounding results can take place in your life once you have learned about the power of the blood of Jesus and how to use it in coping with life's difficult situations. This mighty weapon of spiritual warfare holds the secret to a victorious life.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781494791872
Publisher: CreateSpace Publishing
Publication date: 12/24/2013
Pages: 80
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.17(d)

About the Author

Andrew Murray (1828-1917) was a South African writer, teacher, and Christian pastor. Murray considered missions to be "the chief end of the church." Andrew pastored churches in Bloemfontein, Worcester, Cape Town and Wellington, all in South Africa. He was a champion of the South African Revival of 1860. In 1889, he was one of the founders of the South African General Mission (SAGM), along with Martha Osborn and Spencer Walton. After Martha Osborn married George Howe, they formed the South East Africa General Mission (SEAGM) in 1891. SAGM and SEAGM merged in 1894. Because its ministry had spread into other African countries, the mission's name was changed to Africa Evangelical Fellowship (AEF) in 1965. AEF joined with SIM in 1998 and continues to this day. He died on January 18, 1917, four months before his eighty-ninth birthday. Over the years he has influenced many, including Jessie Penn-Lewis, a key figure in the 1904-1905 Welsh Revival.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1 What the Scriptures Teach about the Blood''...not without blood...''--Hebrews 9:7

God has spoken to us in the Scriptures in diverse portions and in various manners, but the voice is ever the same. It is always the Word of the same God. Hence the importance of treating the Bible as a whole and receiving the witness it gives in its various portions concerning certain definite truths. It is thus we learn to recognize the place these truths actually occupy in revelation, or rather in the heart of God. Thus, too, we begin to discover what the foundation truths of the Bible are which, above others, demand attention. Standing as they do, so prominently, in each new departure in God's revelation, remaining unchanged when the dispensation changes, they carry a divine intimation of their importance.

It is my object, in the chapters which follow this introductory one, to show what the Scriptures teach us concerning the glorious power of the blood of Jesus and the wonderful blessings procured for us by it. I cannot lay a better foundation for my exposition, nor give a better proof of the superlative glory of that blood as the power of redemption, than by asking my readers to follow me through the Bible, and thus see the unique place which is given to the blood from the beginning to the end of God's revelation of Himself to man, as recorded in the Bible. It will become clear that there is no single scriptural idea, from Genesis to Revelation, more constantly and more prominently kept in view, than that expressed by the words, the blood. Our inquiry then is what the Scriptures teach us about the blood:

First, in the Old Testament; Second, in the teaching of our Lord Jesus Himself; Third, in what the apostles teach; Fourth, what Saint John tells us of it in Revelation; and Last, the lessons we can learn from Scripture.

What the Old Testament Teaches

Its record about the blood begins at the gates of Eden. Into the unrevealed mysteries of Eden I do not enter. But in connection with the sacrifice of Abel all is plain. He brought of ''the firstlings of his flock'' to the Lord as a sacrifice, and there, in connection with the first act of worship recorded in the Bible, blood was shed. We learn from Hebrews 11:4 that it was 'by faith'' Abel offered an acceptable sacrifice, and his name stands first in the record of those whom the Bible calls 'believers.'' He had this witness borne to him 'that he pleased God.'' His faith, and God’s good pleasure in him, are closely connected with the sacrificial blood. In the light of later revelation, this testi-mony, given at the very beginning of human history, is of deep significance. It shows that there can be no approach to God, no fellowship with Him by faith, no enjoyment of His favor apart from the blood. Scripture gives but short notice of the following sixteen centuries. Then came the flood, which was God's judgment on sin, by the destruction of the world of mankind. But God brought forth a new earth from that awful baptism of water. Notice, however, that the new earth must be baptized also with blood, and the first recorded act of Noah, after he had left the ark, was the offering of a burnt sacrifice to God. As with Abel, so with Noah at a new beginning, it was 'not without blood.'' Sin once again prevailed, and God laid an entirely new foundation for the establishment of His Kingdom on earth. By the divine call of Abraham, and the miraculous birth of Isaac, God undertook the formation of a people to serve Him. But this purpose was not accomplished apart from the shedding of the blood. This is apparent in the most solemn hour of Abraham's life. God had already entered into covenant relationship with Abraham, and his faith had already been severely tried, and had stood the test. It was reckoned, or counted to him, for righteousness. Yet he must learn that Isaac, the son of promise, who belonged wholly to God, can be truly surrendered to God only by death. Isaac must die. For Abraham, as well as for Isaac, only by death could freedom from the self-life be obtained. Abraham must offer Isaac on the altar. That was not an arbitrary command of God. It was the revelation of a divine truth, that it is only through death that a life truly consecrated to God is possible. But it was impossible for Isaac to die and rise again from the dead, for on account of sin, death would hold him fast. But see, his life was spared, and a ram was offered in his place. Through the blood that then flowed on Mount Moriah, his life was spared. He and the people which sprang from him, live before God ''not without blood.'' By that blood, however, he was in a figure raised again from the dead. The great lesson of substitution is here clearly taught. Four hundred years pass, and Isaac has become, in Egypt, the people of Israel. Through her deliverance from Egyptian bondage, Israel was to be recognized as God's first-born among the nations. Here, also, it is ''not without blood.'' Neither the electing grace of God, nor His covenant with Abraham, nor the exercise of His omnipotence, which could so easily have destroyed their oppressors, could dispense with the necessity of the blood. What the blood accomplished on Mount Moriah for one person, who was the father of the nation, must now be experienced by that nation. By the sprinkling of the door frames of the Israelites with the blood of the Paschal lamb; by the institution of the Passover as an enduring ordinance with the words, ''When I see the blood I will pass over you,'' the people were taught that life can be obtained only by the death of a substitute. Life was possible for them only through the blood of a life given in their place, and appropriated by ''the sprinkling of that blood.'' Fifty days later this lesson was enforced in a striking manner. Israel had reached Sinai. (chapter continues)

Table of Contents

Contents
1. What the Scriptures Teach about the Blood 7
2. Redemption by Blood 25
3. Reconciliation through the Blood 41
4. Cleansing through the Blood 57
5. Sanctification through the Blood 73
6. Cleansed by the Blood to Serve the Living God 91
7. Dwelling in "The Holiest" through the Blood 107
8. Life in the Blood 131
9. Victory through the Blood 147
10. Heavenly Joy through the Blood 165
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