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Bought With the Precious Blood of Christ
Bob Jennings

Bob Jennings (January 2, 1949 – November 6, 2012) was an American preacher and pastor whose ministry focused on biblical fidelity, prayer, and preparing believers for eternity, leaving a profound impact within evangelical circles. Born in Kirksville, Missouri, to a family that shaped his early faith, he surrendered to Christ as a young man and began preaching in 1978 alongside Charles Leiter in Kirksville. In 1983, he became an elder at Highway M Chapel in Sedalia, Missouri, where he co-pastored for nearly three decades, emphasizing sound doctrine and a vibrant church community. Married to Terri since around 1970, he raised five children—Jared, Zachary, Evan, and two daughters—instilling in them the same spiritual devotion. Jennings’ preaching career gained wider reach through conferences, such as those with HeartCry Missionary Society alongside Paul Washer, and university outreaches in the U.S. and Eastern Europe, where his sermons on sin, grace, and Christ’s return resonated deeply. Diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2010, he chronicled his journey in an online journal (bobjenningsjournal.wordpress.com), offering meditations like “The most important thing in life is to be ready for death,” preached at a 2008 funeral. His final sermon, “Behold the Lamb of God” (2012), and a farewell letter to Sedalia reflect his unwavering hope in Christ. He died at 63, his sons having built his casket, buried in a rural Missouri cemetery after a life of humble, resolute ministry.
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This sermon emphasizes the call to surrender our entire being as a living sacrifice to God, highlighting the profound motivation of being bought with a price, specifically the precious blood of Christ. It delves into the incomprehensible sacrifice of God sending His Son, Jesus, to die for us, showcasing the depth of love and redemption through Christ's payment for our sins. The message underscores the significance of understanding and embracing the personal nature of Christ's sacrifice for each individual.
Sermon Transcription
Take my life, my body, my hands, my feet, my lips, my all, and all, a living sacrifice for you. We're going to be judged by the things we have done in our body. Every thought we've thought, every word we've spoken, every step we've taken, every penny we've spent, every bite we've taken, the body is specified here. So a glorious exhortation to glorify God and a specific designation in our bodies. Now third and the first phrase, for you've been bought with a price. Here we have a very binding, gripping motivation. You've been bought with a price, therefore glorify God in your body. You have been bought with a price. Notice this, and Paul puts this motivation before us. It's not law, it's love. You've been bought with a price in view of what the Lord has done for you, therefore glorify God in your body. Love so amazing, so divine, demands my life, my soul, my all. He says a price. You've been bought with a price. What is that price? Peter calls it, he says you've been redeemed, not with corruptible things like silver and gold. They seem so valuable, they seem so precious, they seem so incorruptible. But yet he says, not with corruptible things like silver and gold. Ultimately they are corruptible, ultimately they are nothing compared to what he mentions in the next phrase. He says but with the precious blood of Christ, the precious blood of Christ. In August we sent our second son Zachary off to college about two hours away to study to become a mechanical engineer. Zach, he'd been with us for 20 years, lived in our house. He was with us for 20 years and we sent him off and I knew I was going to feel it. I came back and the room, all of his furniture, we'd moved it with him and his room was empty. The only thing that was left was the mirror on the wall for the old scripture verse that Zach had written on that mirror. And I was brought to tears. If that's the way a father feels on earth, what was it for the heavenly father to send his son? I mean I'd been with Zach, he'd been with me for 20 years, but the son of God had been with a father from all eternity. And thankfully, so thankfully, Zach and I, we'd had hardly even a rift of difficulty. Real good fellowship, real good friendship with my dear son. But that's nothing compared with a heavenly father and his son. There was absolutely perfect fellowship, perfect love, the love which I ever had with you before the world began. I sent my son off to get a degree in mechanical engineering. When the father in heaven sent his son off to be made sin, it was very real, very real. It was no piece of theater, it was very real what happened. We're talking about the price. And think of what the Lord Jesus, we can only imagine really, what it was for him. The immortal dies, the infinite becomes finite. He upholds all things, but the word of his power was now upheld by a mother's arms. He was so great, the heavens could not contain him, yet squeezed down into a mother's womb. God of light and the darkness of a mother's womb. You built the heavens, now fiddling around in a carpenter's shop and growing up, the patience of the Lord exercised for 30 years, knowing he was the savior of the world, yet saying hard almost nothing, waiting and waiting and waiting and waiting and waiting until the time appointed by the father when he could open his mouth and go forth, repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. And then began more severely the sufferings, the shame, the rejection, the neglect. And then the scoffing, the spitting, the slapping, the spite, the spear, the thorns, dying as an apparent failure and being forsaken by the heavenly father, having been made sin for us. We have no idea what the Lord went through, the price that was paid. You've been bought with a price. Look at this other word, you've been bought. Sometimes scripture describes it in terms of justification. For formerly we were condemned, but now we are right with God. Sometimes it talks in terms of forgiveness. For once we were in debt, but now it is canceled. Sometimes it talks in terms of adoption. For once we were strangers, but now we are sons of God. Sometimes in terms of reconciliation. For once we are enemies, but now we are friends. Sometimes in terms of redemption. For once we were slaves, but now we are free. But here the term is bought. Just so simple, isn't it? You know, everyone knows what the word bought means. Jesus paid it all. He paid our sin debt. I like that simple term. You've been bought with a price. Acts 20, shepherd the church of God which he purchased with his own blood. You've been redeemed, not with corruptible things, but with the precious blood of Christ. Worthy are you to take the book and to break the seals, for you were slain and you've purchased with your blood men from every tribe, tongue, people, and nation. You've been bought. Was the body bought? It surely was. Romans chapter 8, it says we're waiting for the adoption to with the redemption of the body. The Lord has bought our soul. He's bought our bodies, bought it all. Jesus paid it all. That ram was put in Isaac's place. That Passover lamb was slain for Israel, not Egypt. I tell you, if you don't come to see that the Lord Jesus personally died for you personally, you're not going to find the comfort and the assurance that you could have. You have been bought with a price. He loved us. He gave himself for us that he might redeem us from every lawless deed and purify for himself a people for his own possession. For more media content from I'll Be Honest, visit us online at I'llBeHonest.com.
Bought With the Precious Blood of Christ
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Bob Jennings (January 2, 1949 – November 6, 2012) was an American preacher and pastor whose ministry focused on biblical fidelity, prayer, and preparing believers for eternity, leaving a profound impact within evangelical circles. Born in Kirksville, Missouri, to a family that shaped his early faith, he surrendered to Christ as a young man and began preaching in 1978 alongside Charles Leiter in Kirksville. In 1983, he became an elder at Highway M Chapel in Sedalia, Missouri, where he co-pastored for nearly three decades, emphasizing sound doctrine and a vibrant church community. Married to Terri since around 1970, he raised five children—Jared, Zachary, Evan, and two daughters—instilling in them the same spiritual devotion. Jennings’ preaching career gained wider reach through conferences, such as those with HeartCry Missionary Society alongside Paul Washer, and university outreaches in the U.S. and Eastern Europe, where his sermons on sin, grace, and Christ’s return resonated deeply. Diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2010, he chronicled his journey in an online journal (bobjenningsjournal.wordpress.com), offering meditations like “The most important thing in life is to be ready for death,” preached at a 2008 funeral. His final sermon, “Behold the Lamb of God” (2012), and a farewell letter to Sedalia reflect his unwavering hope in Christ. He died at 63, his sons having built his casket, buried in a rural Missouri cemetery after a life of humble, resolute ministry.