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September 20

Mornings With Jesus

In whom we have redemption through his blood. - Ephesians 1:7.

REDEMPTION supposes a price; and here we see

“The precious price that bought us

Was his atoning blood.”

Observe, first, It is here only a poor burdened conscience can find relief. Under a sense of guilt, by the blood of the cross we can approach the footstool of mercy, and bow before the most high God. He hath showed us what is good. We hear the voice that cries: “Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world.” And it is this that constitutes the gospel glad tidings of great joy. It assures us that “the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth from all sin.” There are those who have made the trial of it, and can therefore speak of its sufficiency from their own experience. By believing they have entered into rest; not only have their consciences been tranquilized, but they even joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, “in whom we have redemption through his blood,” and “by whom they have now received the atonement.” Let us follow their example, and say-

“Jesus, my great High Priest,

Offer’d his blood and died;

My guilty conscience seeks

No sacrifice beside.

His powerful blood did once atone,

And now he pleads before the throne.”

Observe, secondly, That the love of the Saviour as herein displayed should powerfully impress our minds. The monarchs of the earth have often sacrificed the lives of their subjects for the safety of their own. Yea, and when their own has not been in danger they have immolated thousands and millions on the altar of their pride and vanity and revenge. Where was one of them ever to be found who gave his life for the lives of his subjects? But it is said of Jesus that “he shall save the souls of the needy,” that “precious is their blood in his sight.” He said himself, “I give my life for the life of the world.” “Herein is love”-truly “greater love hath no man than this, that a man should lay down his life for his friends.” Jesus has done this. He has done more-he died for his enemies.

Lastly, If “in him we have redemption through his blood,” we are not our own. What a man has purchased is surely his own. If he has purchased us, we have no right in ourselves to anything we are, or anything we have, but we belong entirely to him. And what a clear and undeniable claim has he to the whole. It is here he has wooed and here he has won. It is here he has drawn, and here he binds us “with the cords of a man and the bands of love.” It is, as Cowper says, “a soul redeemed,” and therefore passes through the world perpetually singing, “To him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood, and hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father, to him be glory and dominion for ever.”

And let this be said not only “by our lips, but also by our lives,” “by giving ourselves up to his service and by walking before him in holiness and righteousness all our days.”

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