#THE SACRED LOVE-TOKEN
"And the blood shall be to you for a token."
- Exodus 12:13
You remember that last Sabbath morning we spoke upon the witness within the child of God. We tried to show that believers did not need any man to assure them that they are forgiven, that they could get on exceedingly well without absolution from a priest and could know their salvation altogether apart from the ghostly father, seeing that they have the evidence of it in their own souls by believing in the Lord Jesus Christ. We shall not think or speak much of that miserable impostor, the priest, this morning, for he really is not worth thinking of. But we shall continue our consideration of the witness which the Lord has given to His believing people concerning their safety in Jesus Christ. May the Holy Spirit help us while we meditate upon the most vital of all subjects, which lies at the very heart of true religion.
There are some, as we have said, who desire a token of their safety from man_—_a poor thing when they get it and not worth asking for. And there are others who desire it from God in the form of a sign or a wonder, or else they will not believe. "Show me a token for good" is a prayer which is often used in a very mistaken sense. They desire some special transaction of providence, or remarkable dream, or singular feeling. But God says to all those who desire a token for good, "The blood shall be to you for a token." What more can we desire? All the squadrons of the angelic host could not better assure us if each one brought a message from heaven. The best of all evidences of divine love is the cross. The strongest of all assurances of safety, the surest of all pledges of favor, the best token of grace that a man can possibly behold is the sprinkled blood by which he is cleansed from sin. "The blood shall be to you for a token."
Before we dive into this subject, let us notice that the blood which was a token to God’s people was not merely that which had been shed by the sacrifice of all unblemished lambs, but blood which had been caught in a basin, had been taken by the person at the head of the household in his own hands and recognized as shed for him. Then a bunch of hyssop was laid to soak in a basin and afterwards the blood was sprinkled upon the lintel and the doorposts—this blood, thus appropriated, was the token. By an appropriating faith, we must take Christ to be ours. We must, in a word, believe in the atonement which He has made, for atonement which is not believed in is no atonement to us. Our Lord Jesus laid down His life for us, but He that believes not in Him shall by no means partake of any of the blessings of His death. The sprinkled blood preserved the houses of the Israelites and it is the blood of Jesus accepted by us, relied upon, and applied to our consciences which delivers us from death. This sprinkling, moreover, was done in a very public manner. They stained the lintel and the two side posts, so that every passerby might see it, yes, and must see it. So salvation is premised not alone to believing, but to confession with the mouth. "He that with his heart believes, and with his mouth makes confession of Him shall be saved." And so the grand commission at the end of the Gospel by Mark puts it, not "He that believes shall be saved," but "He that believes and is baptized shall be saved." For if we believe in Christ we must not be ashamed of Him. Shame about faith would argue insincerity of faith. True faith in the Savior is so potent a principle of our lives that it must be seen whether we publish it or not—and we must be willing that it should be seen. Yes, this should be the most visible point in our lives—our glory and our delight—that we do, indeed, believe in the Savior Jesus Christ. Oh, that every one of you, my dear hearers, used the cross for its proper purpose. I grieve that any among you should need to have it asked of
"Is it nothing to you, oh you that pass by,
Is it nothing to you that Jesus should die?"
The Lamb is slain, but you have never caught the blood, you have never sprinkled it with the hyssop of faith and consequently, you are not saved. Oh that each one of you could say, "My faith is resting in the substitutionary work of Jesus." I could indeed sing that blessed hymn just now, and I drank it in with all my heart. And I heartily wish you could all sing it, too—
"Complete atonement You have made
And to the utmost farthing paid
Whatever Your people owed:
Nor can His wrath on me take place,
If sheltered in Your righteousness,
And sprinkled with Your blood."
Now, to the text. The blood of Jesus Christ is to Christians a token and in order to bring out the whole sense we must have five words—it is a distinguishing token, an assuring token, a significant token, a love-token, and a recognition token.
I. First, then, the blood shall be to you for a token, A DISTINGUISHING TOKEN. You could tell where the Israelite dwelt, for the blood-mark was there that night. You knew the Egyptian’s abode, for he knew nothing of the token. Nothing so truly distinguishes Christians as the blood of Jesus Christ. Where the blood is not believed in, nor prized, you have dead Christianity, for "the blood is the life thereof." A bloodless Gospel is a lifeless Gospel. If the atonement is denied or frittered away, or put into a secondary place, or obscured—in that proportion, the life has gone out of the religion which is professed. But we, brethren, bear this distinguishing token, the mark of the blood. Our religion is, in many respects, a very singular one—one open to a world of objection and ridicule from carnal minds. It is one which always has been criticized and always will be, for we believe, first, that our sin deserves death. We do not believe transgression to be a trifle, or a mere misdemeanor of the first class. We know it to be a capital offense deserving the death penalty. When the Lord says, "The soul that sins, it shall die," our conscience says, "Amen," to the sentence of the Most High. The blood on the doorpost meant that those who dwelt there confessed that they deserved to die as much as others and would have done so had it not been for the paschal lamb. The crimson mark was virtually a confession of deserving death. So every believer feels that his sin is great and grievous, terrible and overwhelming. He does not subscribe to theories which make little of man’s guilt. He has no ear for those who try to mitigate the penalty and endeavor to make the guilt appear small. He does not call sin a mistake, a failure or a lapse. I think I have heard all those words, lately, used about sin, by those who say, "Poor unhappy man. So mistaken, seeking after the light and crying after God in the dark. How sad that he should stumble. Surely God will not be so harsh as to punish him forever." Such talk has no charm for us. We admit the heinous criminality of sin and the justice of the awful sentence which declares that the wicked shall go away into everlasting punishment. Our God is just and takes vengeance on iniquity. The God who smote all the first-born of Egypt and overthrew Pharaoh in the Red Sea, is the God whom we adore. And as we bow before Him, we admit that He might righteously have smitten us also and have utterly destroyed us. For us the bloodmark is virtually an acknowledgment that we have the sentence of death in ourselves and dare not trust in ourselves.
We are singular enough to believe in substitution. The blood upon the lintel said, "Someone has died here instead of us." We also hold and rest in the truth that Christ died, "the just for the unjust, to bring us to God." We believe, "He was made a curse for us, as it is written, Cursed is everyone that hangs on a tree." The belief in the greatness of sin distinguishes Christians from Pharisees and all other selfjustifiers. And the belief in substitution separates Christians from all those philosophic adulterators of the Gospel who are willing to hold up Christ’s example, but cannot endure His expiatory sacrifice. They will speak to you of Christ’s spirit and the power of His teaching, but reject His vicarious death. We do not subscribe to the lax theology which teaches that the Lord Jesus did something or other which, in some way or other, is in some degree or other connected with the salvation of men. We hold as vital truths that He stood in His people’s place and for them endured a death which honored the justice of which, from the excellence of His person, was fully equivalent thereto. My brothers and sisters, this is and always will be assailed, but it is the keystone of the Gospel arch. As at Waterloo, all the battle seemed to rage around the chateau of Hugoumont, so does the conflict center around the doctrine of the atoning death of our great Substitute—and we are not going to shift our ground for a moment—nor adopt any other phraseology. We stand to the literal substitution of Jesus Christ in the place of His people and His real endurance of suffering and death in their place. And from this distinct and definite ground we will not move an inch. Even the term, "the blood," from which some shrink with the affectation of great delicacy, we shall not cease to use, no matter who may take offense at it, for it brings out that fundamental truth which is the power of God unto salvation. We dwell beneath the blood-mark and rejoice that Jesus poured out His soul for us unto death when He bore the sins of many.
But we believe more—and what will seem very strange to some—we believe that we died in Jesus. The Israelite knew that when the angel went through Egypt he meant to exact a life at every house, and so he exhibited the blood, as much as to say, "The first-born is dead here." The lamb had died instead of the first-born and virtually, the first-born is dead, and there is no cause for smiting, because the smiting has been done. So when Jesus died His elect died in Him and their sins received the vengeance due in that day when on the accursed tree He yielded up His life a ransom for many. How can we die? We are already dead in Him and have been buried with Him by virtue of our union with His blessed person. This is a most precious truth and those who hold it are thereby distinguished from the rest of mankind.
Believing this, we next come to the conclusion that we are safe, for when the Hebrew had struck the blood upon the door-posts of his house, he went in to feast, not to fret—he went into the house to eat the lamb whose blood had been sprinkled—and to stand at the table with his loins girt about, expecting not to die, but to go forth to a land which the Lord his God would give to him. This is the distinguishing mark of a Christian that he knows himself to be saved and therefore, he keeps the feast rejoicing in the Lord. And standing with his loins girt, he is expecting soon to be called away to the land which the Lord his God has given to him, that he may inherit and dwell there forever. Other men are not saved, nor dare they profess that they are. They acknowledge that they have a great deal to do before they will be saved—present salvation they know not. Or if they think they are saved, yet they dream that their continued salvation depends upon themselves—there is still something needed besides the sprinkled blood. The Israelite wanted nothing but the blood—he was perfectly satisfied with that, and so is the believer. He has believed in Christ as dying in his stead. He is delighted to know that he is complete in Him and accepted in the Beloved. He waits till the summons shall come and he shall be called to ascend to the glory land where Christ has gone to prepare a place for him.
The Israelite in Egypt made this distinction prominent. As we have already said, he put it upon upper part of his door and upon the two side posts, too. We read in the Revelation that those who received the mark of the beast sometimes bore it in their forehead, but sometimes also on their right hand, while he who had the mark of God always received it on his forehead, never on his right hand where it could be hidden within the palm. It has been very well remarked that there is a back door to hell, but there is none to heaven. The way to heaven is the king’s highway, a way which is not made for concealment, but for honest travelers who have nothing to hide. Believers must be seen, for they are the lights of the world. Yet there are some who try to go to heaven up the back stairs and serve the Lord only by night. It must not be. Strike the blood where all can see it, and let men know that you are a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ’s atoning sacrifice. Whether they like it or no, let them know that this is all your salvation and all your desire. I had the pleasure of riding into the Leonine city in Rome a short time after the Italian troops had taken possession, and I noticed that every house had marked up, most conspicuously, the arms of the kingdom of Italy and the name of Victor Emmanuel. They were not content to have it over their doors, but all over the front of the houses you read, "Victor Emmanuel, King of Italy," showing that they were right glad to escape from the dominion of the Pope and to avow their allegiance to a constitutional king. Surely if for a human monarch and the earthly freedom which he brought men could thus set up his escutcheon everywhere, you and I who believe in Jesus are bound to exhibit the blood-red token and to keep it always conspicuous. Let others believe the priest, we believe Jesus. Let others trust their works, we trust the sprinkled blood. Let others rely on frames and feelings, discipline and development, we believe in Jesus Christ and Him only. And we nail to the mast the blood-red banner of the atoning sacrifice.—
"My faith is built on nothing less
Than Jesus’ blood and righteousness.
I dare not trust the sweetest frame,
But wholly lean on Jesus’ name.
On Christ, the solid rock, I stand,
All other ground is sinking sand."
Thus much, then, upon the blood as the distinguishing token.
II. Now, secondly, the blood was an ASSURING TOKEN. When we mean to do a special kindness for a friend it may be we say to him, "That you may be sure I shall do it, here is a token of my faithfulness." God gave to His people the blood of sprinkling as the token that He would preserve them safely. And surely, the more the Israelite studied that token, the more at ease would he be, for he would say, "God has appointed this unblemished lamb to take our place, and seeing that He appointed it, and the lamb has been slain, we are sure He will not run back from the substitution which He has Himself ordained, so we are perfectly safe." Now, I want you for a few minutes, especially you who have any doubts and fears, to look upon the blood of Christ and see its suitableness to be an assuring token to your consciences. Remember, first, what it was—blood, the token of suffering. Your sin deserves suffering. Christ has suffered for sin. Think what suffering He endured, what contradiction of sinners, and what forsaking of His Father. Suffer no one to depreciate the physical sufferings of Christ, but still, remember that His mental sufferings were greater. His soul sufferings were the soul of His sufferings. Go to dark Gethsemane, go to shameful Gabbatha, go to deadly Golgotha and as you see your Lord and mark that wondrous spectacle of woe, will you not feel that He can put away your sin and that if He so terribly suffered, you need not suffer? God has accepted an expiation worthy of His justice. That heaven-rending cry, "My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?" shows how keen were the pangs with which our hope was born. Think, further—blood signifies not only suffering but _death—_for our Lord could only put away sin by actually dying. All His tears, all His holy living, all His painful sufferings even could not recompense for sin till the death penalty was paid, for death was that which God had appointed as the reward of sin, and Jesus died. Oh see Him die—see HIM die! Was ever such a spectacle? Every drop that distils from His pierced hands cries aloud, "Safety for the believer! The ransom price is paid." That gash in His side, like the mouth of love, speaks eloquently to our hearts, "Pardon, acceptance, eternal love!" I cannot see that bowed head, those eyes glazed in death and that dear body taken down to be laid in the tomb without feeling, "If Christ has died, then there must be boundless mercy for the guilty sons of men." Think of it and I pray God the Holy Spirit to lead you to see the sweetness and comfort which lie in this token.
Remember, too, that you rest, not merely on suffering and death, but on the excellence of the person so suffering and dying. Ask whose suffering and death it is? In the Israelites’ case it was an unblemished lamb. In your case and mine, it is the spotless Lamb of God. Oh, brethren, think of the life of Jesus in its innocence and unselfishness. Was ever such a life; was ever such a death of such a sacred person? He was God, "very God of very God." Those hands that were pierced had healed the sick with their touch. And those nailed feet had trod the sea! Those eyes, all closed in death, had looked into men’s hearts and those silent lips had spoken miracles. It was God Himself who on the bloody tree offered expiation for sin against Himself. There must be power in such a death as that to put away sin. Do you not admit that it must be so? Is not the token full of comfort to you?
Think, again, that it was not merely the lamb, but it was the Lamb of God. That is to say, when the Israelite killed the lamb, he was doing what God commanded him to do, and when Jesus died in our place, He did not die as an amateur Savior, but as one appointed by God. Now, if God appointed the atonement, He must accept it. Surely if He said that Christ should die in our place, if He "laid upon Him the iniquity of us all," then the atonement must be accepted since God Himself set it forth, provided it, and ordained it. How sweetly do I rest in this; I feel, when I look up to my dear Lord, and I desire evermore to do so, as if I could say to the justice of God, "What can You do against me? Do I not present to my death? If You have appointed it, I know You will not refuse it." This is one of the sweetest parts of the whole matter of atonement and fills the token with assurance.
One other thought, and a sweet one, this token was that of _blood which was shed—_not to be shed, but shed already. They had killed the lamb, they had taken the warm blood in the basin and smeared the door-posts, it was all done and all over. You and I also are resting in a finished sacrifice, not in a sacrifice to be offered, nor in a sacrifice which continues to be offered, according to this Anglican Popery which reeks in so many parish churches, but a complete sacrifice, for "by one offering He has perfected forever them that are set apart." There is no continuance of the offering of Christ in the sacrifice of the "mass"—it is a barefaced lie before Almighty God, for Christ declares that when He had once offered Himself, He forever sat down at the right hand of the Majesty in the heavens. By that word, "It is finished," He has put an end to all sacrifices and offerings by way of expiation for sin, because they are not wanted—one death has accomplished it all. Beloved, what joy is here! Suffering, suffering to the death, the suffering of the Son of God, a suffering ordained of God to be the vicarious sacrifice and a suffering which is perfect and complete! Let us look at the token and let our hearts be glad within us from now on and forever. One of our kings once gave a ring to his favorite, and said to him, "I know that at the council tomorrow a charge of heresy will be brought against you. But when you come in, answer them if you will, but you need be in no fear—if you find yourself brought to a strait, simply show them the ring and they will go no further." It is even so with us. The Lord has given us the precious blood of Christ to be like a ruby ring upon our finger and now we know how far conscience may go, and how far accusations from Satan may go—we have only to produce that token and bar all further proceedings. "He that believes in Him is not condemned," neither can he be. God cannot and will not go back from His promise. The blood is the faithful assurance of the security of all the saints.
III. But now, thirdly, this is A MOST SIGNIFICANT TOKEN. Tokens generally mean something. Some inner sense is implied in them. Now, our token of the blood means four things. When the Jew smeared the blood upon the lintel and the two side posts, he meant redemption. He did as good as say, "We are redeemed by blood. The people who live in this house are free. They have been slaves but they are redeemed. They are going out tomorrow morning and old Pharaoh and all his army cannot hold them." That is just what the blood of Jesus Christ means to us. We are bought and paid for and we are a free people. And if the Son has made us free, we are free indeed. "O Lord, I am Your servant. I am Your servant. You have loosed my bonds. You have brought me up out of the house of bondage and out of the iron furnace. You have broken all my chains—the sprinkled blood declares it."
Then the blood meant, next, that the people who lived beneath that sign belonged to God. It was the mark of the Lord’s property—"You are not your own, you are bought with a price." He who redeemed us ought to possess us. The blood, when it bought us, also set us apart to be forever the property of the Redeemer. Whenever you think of Jesus crucified, think of yourself also as crucified to the world, as no more belonging to self or sin or Satan—no longer bound by worldly customs, fashions, maxims, laws— but under law to Christ, for you are the Lord’s freeman. Give up the members of your body to His service. Yield them as servants unto righteousness, because you have not been purchased—spirit, soul, and body—with corruptible things as with silver and gold, but with the precious blood of Christ as of a lamb without blemish, and without spot. The token set forth our redemption and also God’s property in us.
This token next means acceptance. He who has the blood of Christ sprinkled on him has that to show which renders him acceptable before the Lord. There has been a war and a wounded soldier comes home. He goes to the house of a father and mother who have a son out in the army, and he inquires, "Does so-and-so live here?" "Yes." "Can I see him?" "Yes." "I have a letter from your son, whom I left in the army, he was my dear comrade." "Are you sure you have such a letter?" The man looks disreputable, his garments are torn, and he is evidently very poor, but he replies, "Yes, I have a letter from your son." He puts his hands into his pockets, and he cannot find it. The master of the house is angry and says "It is of no use your coming here with this tale, you are deceiving me." He fumbles still in his pockets and at last he brings it out. Yes, there is the token. The father knows the handwriting of his dear boy. The letter says, "Father, this is a choice companion of mine and I want you, when he reaches home, to treat him kindly for my sake. Tell mother that anything she does for him shall be the same as if she had done it to her own boy." See how well he is received at sight of that token. And even so, when we present the blood-mark, we say to the Lord, "There is the token that we are Jesus’ friends," and the Lord does not look at the rags in which our poor nature is arrayed, but He looks at the token of His own Son’s blood and accepts us for His sake. What surer and more suggestive token could we desire? When cleansed in the blood of Jesus, we are comely with His comeliness and dear to the heart of God for His Son’s sake.
Yes, beloved, and it moreover means perfect safety. As soon as ever the blood was on the lintel those inside the house were perfectly secure. The angel could not strike them, for if he had done so he would have struck his Master and insulted the Lord of angels. To use his sword while the divine shield was exhibited outside the door would have been to bid defiance to God’s honor, and that no angel of God could ever do. Oh, brethren, there is no shield for a guilty soul like the blood-red shield of the atonement. Stand beneath the purple canopy of sacrifice and the great hailstones of wrath can never fall upon you. You must be safe if Christ’s atonement interposes between you and God. So you see, the sprinkled blood is a very significant token. As I went, a few days ago, through a piece of forest much overgrown with undergrowth and saplings, I noticed certain straight young trees distinguished by a red mark, and I discovered that the woodmen were about to cut down all the undergrowth and clear the ground for the better growth of the timber. Those marked trees were to be spared to become large oaks. I can see the red marks and the small trees in my mind’s eye at this moment—and there come the woodmen chopping down everything with their axes and billhooks. Down goes all the brushwood and many a pole falls too, but they stop at the marked trees—these must not be touched—the red mark saves them. So is it with you and with me, if we have known the sprinkling of the blood. The Lord will not only say, "Let them alone this year also," but He will say to the destroyers, "Come not near unto those upon whom is the mark." By this token you may know that you shall live and not die. Like Rahab, we hang this scarlet line in our window, and when all Jericho goes down with terrible destruction, our house must stand for the red line secures it evermore.
IV. The fourth point is that THE BLOOD IS A LOVE-TOKEN. The blood is a token of ancient love, for it was shed more than 1800 years ago. Oh my soul, the Lord has given you an ancient token which sets forth His great love with which He loved you, even when you were dead in trespasses and sins. Before you were born, the blood was poured forth which is today the ensign and pledge of everlasting love.
It is a token of intense love, for it is a pledge taken from the heart of Christ and it denotes not the love of the lips, not love which begins and ends with outward deeds of mercy, but a love which wells up from the essence of the Redeemer’s being—from His inmost heart which was reached by the cruel spear. What a token is this, a token taken not from the lilies of my Lord’s garden, nor from the jewels of His crown, nor even from the hair of His head, but drawn from the inner sanctuary of His soul—from that Holy of Holies—the heart of Emanuel, God With Us. Oh believer, since you have such a token as this, you should be ready to die sooner than doubt the love of the Lord.
It is a token, too, of mighty love, for it testifies that He who gave it possessed a conquering flame of love which many waters could not quench nor death itself destroy. See, He gives you the blood which is the token of death, His death for you, and thus shows that He went to the grave for your sake, "and death by dying slew". Wear this token near your heart, I pray you, for it is the richest that was ever given by the hands of love to the choicest object of affection. O You who are our Well-Beloved, You have loved us even to the end, for You have loved us to the death.
It is a token, too, of a wise all-seeing love; for it shows that our Lord knows our sin and has known it all. When He gives us the blood, He does as much as declare, "My child, I am aware of the evil which is in you, for I have suffered its penalty. I know your sin, but you shall know it no more, for I have carried it away and cast it into the depths of the sea." By this token, believers know that their sin is covered, and that in the sight of the Lord, they are "all fair," for He has cleansed them from every stain. The day is come when if their sins were searched for, they would not be found. No, they shall not so much as exist, for the blood has washed them white.
And it is the token of a love unlimited which will deny nothing to its object. "He that spared not His own Son, but freely delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things?" If you have received the blood of His dear Son, what will the Lord refuse you? Do you think your God will deny you providential mercies when He has already given the bleeding heart of Jesus to redeem you? Do you imagine that He will leave you without bread and water, or garments to cover your backs when He has yielded up the jewel of His soul, the delight of His heart to you? Prize the token of His love, and look at it till your soul weeps for very joy. Blessed is that man to whom the Lord has said, "The blood shall be to you for a token."
V. Lastly, it is A RECOGNITION TOKEN. The man who has this token is known to the angels as one of the heirs of salvation to whom they minister. As soon as they see the blood applied to the soul by faith, there is joy among them, for this is a sure sign of repentance. All God’s children have this family mark at their birth and there is no mistaking it, so that at the sight of it, the angelic guardians commence their tender care and begin to bear up the newly begotten one in their hands lest at any time he dash his foot against a stone. The devil also knows that mark and as soon as he sees it, he begins to assail the man who bears it, seeking in all sorts of ways to destroy him. If the believer is not destroyed, it will not be for lack of enmity or industry on Satan’s part. He knows the mark of the "seed of the woman," and he roars and rages, but at the same time he trembles, for well he knows that he cannot prevail. At the sight of the sacrificial token, the great enemy stands confounded—like a raging lion, he would gladly devour the sheep of the Lord, but the mark of the blood upon them saves them from his teeth.
And brethren, this blood-mark is known among the saints, themselves, and has a wonderful power for creating and fostering mutual love. I have often noticed that as soon as we begin to discourse upon the atoning death of our divine Lord, we are at home with one another. There may be brethren present from various churches and they may not be well at ease when we handle other subjects, but when we come to the precious blood, we come to the heart of the matter and are all as one. This is one of the secret signs of our spiritual freemasonry. I have had my heart warmed and cheered against my own will sometimes by devout writers whose doctrinal theories I do not believe, and whose churches I could not join, and yet when they write about my Lord, they win my heart. "Aliquid Christi," as one old divine used to say—the something of Christ in them awakens our affections and draws us near. Even books which are corrupt with sacramentarianism have occasionally such a sweet savor of Christ in them that we cannot utterly cast them away. Sometimes we feel bound to very carefully pare the apple and cut out the rotten places and remove the objectionable core for the sake of the sweet morsels flavored with the love of Christ. As the sweet honey-bearing flowers attract the bees, so does the name of Jesus draw all His saints to Him, and so to each other. Give me your hand, my brother, for if you know my Lord, we belong to the same family—the infallible mark of the redeemed is upon us both.
Best of all, the Lord knows this token. When we go to the Mercy Seat, if we would prosper we must produce the sacred passport of the precious blood. With this it is impossible to fail. The Primitive Methodist brother, when he was in a meeting where a friend could not pray, cried out, "Plead the blood, brother!" and the advice was wise. Yes, plead that and say, "For Jesus’ sake—by His agony and bloody sweat—by His cross and passion." What mighty blows are given to the gate of heaven by that battering ram. These are arguments to which heaven always yields.
Our God recognizes the blood-mark in the hour of death and attends His people through the solemn article. Death’s terrors are gone to him who has the blood for a token. Lay me down on my bed! There let me endure the allotted pain and weakness till the clammy sweat stands on my brow and needs to be constantly wiped away. Lay me down, I say, and I will calmly fall asleep like a child tired with a day’s play, if I have but the token. Distresses and poverty and anguish of body may molest me, yet shall I be perfectly at ease and ask for no exchange. Why is this, you ask? Many a man possessed of health and wealth is not one-half so blessed as the poor saint upon his death pallet. From where does this blessedness come? Here is the secret. The Lord has passed by and given a token. "A token," you say, "what is it? Is it some line extracted from the golden book of God’s election? Is it a gem taken from the diadem which is prepared for him in heaven?" No, no, it is not this. "Has he, in his sleep, beheld a vision and seen the shining ones walking the golden streets, or has he heard an audible celestial voice saying to him, ‘You are mine’?" No, he has none of these. He has neither dream nor vision nor anything that men call superhuman. He is resting in the precious blood—and this blood is the token of friendship between God and his soul. By this, he knows the love of God and by this, God communes with him. They meet at the blood. God delights in the sacrifice of Christ and the believing soul delights in it, too. They have, thus, a common love and a common joy—and this has bound the two together by a bond which never can be broken. This is it which makes some of us sing—
"And when I’m to die,
Receive me, I’ll cry,
For Jesus has loved me,
I cannot tell why.
But this thing I find,
We two are so joined,
He won’t be in heaven
And leave me behind."
Oh what a blessing to feel that the blood of Jesus has united us to Him eternally.
Suffer this last word. Some of you, perhaps, have said, "Oh, I wish I had the blood of Jesus Christ for a token." Then let me tell you, first, that you have not to provide a sacrifice, for that is done. The Lamb is slain; the blood of the everlasting covenant is ever before the presence of God. What have you to do? You have nothing to do but to have the blood sprinkled upon you. You know how they sprinkled it—it was with a bunch of hyssop. Hyssop is a common herb to be found everywhere in and around eastern cities, growing even on walls where but little soil is found. It was a plant with a great many stalks, so that it would hold the blood and act as a sort of brush. Indeed, its only excellence was its power to hold the blood. Now, faith is a very simple thing, and it is the act not of refined and educated minds only, but of the poorest and simplest. The efficacy of the hyssop did not lie in what the hyssop was, but in its being put into the basin to drink up the blood. My poor faith is just as common as a bit of hyssop pulled up from the wall, but then I lay it to soak in the atonement, while I muse upon who Jesus was, and what He suffered, and for what purpose, till it is wet, saturated, and all crimsoned with the vital blood. The hyssop was an insignificant item in the whole business, it is only mentioned once, the second time the sprinkling is commanded, it is not mentioned at all. And so, after all, faith is but the humble instrument of salvation—the blood is the main matter—it is the life, the shelter, the token, the everything. Let your trembling faith lay to soak in the precious blood and then say, "I believe You, Jesus, and I tell the world I believe You. Sinner as I am, Your precious blood was shed for me and I trust in You alone." Thus you crimson the lintel and the door posts. Let all men know that whatever you may have been, and whatever you are now, you do now believe in the substitutionary death of Jesus, oppose who you may. Witness, you men and angels and devils, that Jesus’ blood is our sole hope. He who thus believes is saved. Brother, go your way, and leap for joy. No man ever perished who from his heart rested in the atoning blood. God bless you. Amen.
PORTION OF SCRIPTURE READ BEFORE SERMON—Exodus 12:1-15; 21-30.
HYMNS FROM "OUR OWN HYMN BOOK"—152, 280, 404.