Jesus, when he had cried
again with a loud voice, yielded up the ghost. And, behold, the veil of
the temple was rent in twain from the top to the bottom—Matthew
27:50-51.
Having therefore, brethren,
boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus, by a new and
living way, which be hath consecrated for us, through the, veil, that is
to say, his flesh—Hebrews 10:19-20.
HE DEATH of our Lord Jesus Christ was fitly
surrounded by miracles; yet it is itself so much greater a wonder than all
besides, that it as far exceeds them as the sun outshines the planets
which surround it. It seems natural enough that the earth should quake,
that tombs should be opened, and that the veil of the temple should be
rent, when He who only hath immortality gives up the ghost. The more you
think of the death of the Son of God, the more will you be amazed at it.
As much as a miracle excels a common fact, so doth this wonders of wonders
rise above all miracles of power. That the divine Lord, even though veiled
in mortal flesh, should condescend to be subject to the power of death, so
as to bow His head on the cross, and submit to be laid in the tomb, is
among mysteries the greatest. The death of Jesus is the marvel of time and
eternity, which, as Aaron's rod swallowed up all the rest, takes up into
itself all lesser marvels.
Yet the rending of the veil of the temple
is not a miracle to be lightly passed over. It was made of "fine twined
linen, with Cherubims of cunning work." This gives the idea of a
substantial fabric, a piece of lasting tapestry, which would have endured
the severest strain. No human hands could have torn that sacred covering;
and it could not have been divided in the midst by any accidental cause;
yet, strange to say, on the instant when the holy person of Jesus was rent
by death, the great veil which concealed the holiest of all was "rent in
twain from the top to the bottom." What did it mean? It meant much more
than I can tell you now.
It is not fanciful to regard it as a
solemn act of mourning on the part of the house of the Lord. In the East
men express their sorrow by rending their garments; and the temple, when
it beheld its Master die, seemed struck with horror, and rent its veil.
Shocked at the sin of man, indignant at the murder of its Lord, in its
sympathy with Him who is the true temple of God, the outward symbol tore
its holy vestment from the top to the bottom. Did not the miracle also
mean that from that hour the whole system of types, and shadows, and
ceremonies had come to an end? The ordinances of an earthly priesthood
were rent with that veil. In token of the death of the ceremonial law, the
soul of it quitted its sacred shrine, and left its bodily tabernacle as a
dead thing. The legal dispensation is over. The rent of the veil seemed to
say—"Henceforth God dwells no longer in the thick darkness of the Holy of
Holies, and shines forth no longer from between the cherubim. The special
enclosure is broken up, and there is no inner sanctuary for the earthly
high priest to enter: typical atonements and sacrifices are at an end."
According to the explanation given in our
second text, the rending of the veil chiefly meant that the way into the
holiest, which was not before made manifest, was now laid open to all
believers. Once in the year the high priest solemnly lifted a corner of
this veil with fear and trembling, and with blood and holy incense he
passed into the immediate presence of Jehovah; but the tearing of the veil
laid open the secret place. The rent front top to bottom gives ample space
for all to enter who are called of God's grace, to approach the throne,
and to commune with the Eternal One. Upon that subject I shall try to
speak this morning, praying in my inmost soul that you and 1, with all
other believers, may have boldness actually to enter into that which is
within the veil at this time of our assembling for worship. Oh, that the
Spirit of God would lead us into the nearest fellowship which mortal men
can have with the Infinite Jehovah!
First, this morning, I shall ask you to
consider what has been done. The veil has been rent. Secondly, we
will remember what we therefore have: we have "boldness to enter
into the holiest by the blood Jesus." Then, thirdly, we will consider
how we exercise this grace: we "enter by the blood of Jesus, by a new
and living way, which he hath consecrated for us, through the veil, that
is to say, his flesh."
I. First, think of WHAT HAS BEEN DONE. In
actual historical fact the glorious veil of the temple has been rent in
twain from the top to the bottom: as a matter of spiritual fact, which is
far more important to us, the separating legal ordinance is abolished.
There was under the law this ordinance—that no man should ever go into the
holiest of all, with the one exception of the high priest, and he but once
in the year, and not without blood. If any man had attempted to enter
there he must have died, as guilty of great presumption and of profane
intrusion into the secret place of the Most High. Who could stand in the
presence of Him who is a consuming fire? This ordinance of distance runs
all through the law; for even the holy place, which was the vestibule of
the Holy of Holies, was for the priests alone. The place of the people was
one of distance. At the very first institution of the law when God
descended upon Sinai, the ordinance was, "Thou shalt set bounds unto the
people round about," There was no invitation to draw near. Not chat they
desired to do so, for the mountain was together on a smoke, and "even
Moses said, I exceedingly fear and quake." "The Lord said unto Moses, Go
down, charge the people, lest they break through unto the Lord to gaze,
and many of them perish." If so much as a beast touch the mountain it must
be stoned, or thrust through with a dart. The spirit of the old law was
reverent distance. Moses and here and there a man chosen by God, might
come near to Jehovah; but as for the bulk of people, the command was,
"Draw not nigh hither." When the Lord revealed His glory at the giving of
the law, we read—"When the people saw it, they removed, and stood afar
off." All this is ended. The precept to keep back is abrogated, and the
invitation is, "Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden." "Let
its draw near" is now the filial spirit of the gospel. How thankful I am
for this! What a joy it is to my soul! Some of God's people have not yet
realized this gracious fact, for still they worship afar off. Very much of
prayer is to be highly commended for its reverence; but it has in it a
lack of childlike confidence. I can admire the solemn and stately language
of worship which recognizes the greatness of God; but it will not warm my
heart nor express my soul until it has also blended therewith the joyful
nearness of that perfect love which casteth out fear, and ventures to
speak with our Father in heaven as a child speaketh with its father on
earth. My brother, no veil remains. Why dost thou stand afar off, and
tremble like a slave? Draw near with full assurance of faith. The veil is
rent: access is free. Come boldly to the throne of grace. Jesus has made
thee nigh, as nigh to God as even He Himself is. Though we speak of the
holiest of all, even the secret place of the Most High, yet it is of this
place of awe, even of this sanctuary of Jehovah, that the veil is rent;
therefore, let nothing hinder thine entrance. Assuredly no law forbids
thee; but infinite love invites thee to draw nigh to God.
This rending of the veil signified, also,
the removal of the separating sin. Sin is, after all, the great
divider between God and man. That veil of blue and purple and fine twined
linen could not really separate man from God: for He is, as to His
omnipresence, not far from any one of us. Sin is a far more effectual wall
of separation: it opens in abyss between the sinner and his Judge. Sin
shuts out prayer, and praise, and every form of religious exercise. Sin
makes God walk contrary to us, because we walk contrary to Him. Sin, by
separating the soul from God, causes spiritual death, which is both the
effect and the penalty of transgression. How can two walk together except
they be agreed? How can a holy God have fellowship with unholy creatures?
Shall justice dwell with injustice? Shall perfect purity abide with the
abominations of evil? No, it cannot be. Our Lord Jesus Christ put away sin
by the sacrifice of Himself. He taketh away the sin of the world, and so
the veil is rent. By the shedding of His most precious blood we are
cleansed from all sin, and that most gracious promise of the new covenant
is fulfilled—"Their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more."
When sin is gone, the barrier is broken down, the unfathomable gulf is
filled. Pardon, which removes sin, and justification, which brings
righteousness, make up a deed of clearance so real and so complete that
nothing now divides the sinner from his reconciled God. 'The Judge is now
the Father: He, who once must necessarily have condemned, is found justly
absolving and accepting. In this double sense the veil is rent: the
separating ordinance is abrogated, and the separating sin is forgiven.
Next, be it remembered that the
separating sinfulness is also taken away through our Lord Jesus. It is
not only what we have done, but what we are that keeps us
apart from God. We have sin engrained in us: even those who have grace
dwelling them have to complain, "When I would do good, evil is present
with me." How can we commune with God with our eyes blinded, our ears
stopped, our hearts hardened, and our senses deadened by sin? Our whole
nature is tainted, poisoned, perverted by evil; how can we know the Lord?
Beloved, through the death of our Lord Jesus the covenant of grace is
established with us, and its gracious provisions are on this wise: "This
is the covenant that I will make with them after those days, saith the
Lord; I will put my laws into their mind, and write them in their hearts."
When this is the case, when the will of God is inscribed on the heart, and
the nature is entirely changed, then is the dividing veil which hides us
from God taken away: "Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see
God." Blessed are all they that love righteousness and follow after it,
for they are in a way in which the Righteous One can walk in fellowship
with them. Spirits that are like God are not divided from God. Difference
of nature hangs up a veil; but the new birth, and the sanctification which
follows upon it, through the precious death of Jesus, remove that veil. He
that hates sin, strives after holiness, and labors to perfect it in the
fear of God, is in fellowship with God. It is a blessed thing when we love
what God loves, when we seek what God seeks, when we are in sympathy with
divine aims, and are obedient to divine commands: for with such persons
will the Lord dwell. When grace makes us partakers of the divine nature;
then are we at one with the Lord, and the veil is taken away.
"Yes," saith one, "I see now how the veil
is taken away in three different fashions; but still God is God, and we
are but poor puny men: between God and man there must of necessity be a
separating veil, caused by the great disparity between the Creator and the
creature. How can the finite and the infinite commune? God is all in all,
and more than all; we are nothing, and less than nothing; how can we
meet?" When the Lord does come near to I His favored ones, they own how
incapable they are of enduring the excessive glory. Even the beloved John
said, "When I saw him, I fell at his feet as dead." When we have been
especially conscious of the presence and working of our Lord, we have felt
our flesh creep, and our blood chill; and then we have understood what
Jacob meant when he said, "How dreadful is this place! this is none other
but the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven." All this is true;
for the Lord saith, "Thou canst not see my face and live." Although this
is a much thinner veil than those I have already mentioned, yet it is a
veil; and it is hard for man to be at home with God. But the Lord Jesus
bridges the separating distance. Behold the blessed Son of God has
come into the world, and taken upon Himself our nature! "Forasmuch then as
the children are partakers of the flesh and blood, he also himself
likewise took part of the same." Though He is God as God is God, yet is He
as surely man as man is man. Mark well how in the, person of the Lord
Jesus we see God and man in the closest conceivable alliance; for they are
united in one person forever. The gulf is completely filled by the fact
that Jesus has gone through with us even to the bitter end, to death, even
to the death of the cross. He has followed out the career of manhood even
to the tomb; and thus we see that the veil, which hung between the nature
of God and the nature of man, is rent in the person of our Lord Jesus
Christ. We enter into the holiest of all through His flesh, which links
manhood to Godhead.
Now, you see what it is to have the veil
taken away. Solemnly note that this avails only for believers: those who
refuse Jesus refuse the only way of access to God. God is not
approachable, except through the rending of the veil by the death of
Jesus. There was one typical way to the mercy-seat of old, and that was
through the turning aside of the veil; there was no other. And there is
now no other way for any of you to come into fellowship with God, except
through the rent veil, even the death of Jesus Christ, whom God has set
forth to be the propitiation for sin. Come this way, and you may come
freely. Refuse to come this way, and there hangs between you and God an
impassable veil. Without Christ you are without God, and without hope.
Jesus Himself assures you, "If ye believe not that I am he, ye shall die
in your sins." God grant that this may not happen to any of you!
For believers the veil is not rolled up,
but rent. The veil was not unhooked, and carefully folded up, and put
away, so that it might be put in its place at some future time. Oh, no!
But the divine hand took it and rent it front top to bottom. It can never
be hung up again; that is impossible. Between those who are in Christ
Jesus and the great God, there will never be another separation. "Who
shall separate us from the love of God?" Only one veil was made, and as
that is rent, the one and only separator is destroyed. I delight to think
of this. The devil himself can never divide me from God now. He may and
will attempt to shut me out from God; but the worst he could do would be
to hang up a rent veil. What would that avail but to exhibit his
impotence? God has rent the veil, and the devil cannot mend it. There is
access between a believer and his God; and there must be such free access
forever, since the veil is not rolled up, and put on one side to be hung
up again in days to come; but it is rent, and rendered useless.
The rent is not in one corner, but in the
midst, as Luke tells us. It is not a slight rent through which we may see
a little; but it is rent from the top to the bottom. There is an entrance
made for the greatest sinners. If there had only been a small hole cut
through it, the lesser offenders might have crept through; but what an act
of abounding mercy is this, that the veil is rent in the midst, and rent
from top to bottom, so that the chief of sinners may find ample passage!
This also shows that for believers there is no hindrance to the fullest
and freest access to God. Oh, for much boldness, this morning, to come
where God has not only set open the door, but has lifted the door from its
hinges; yea, removed it, post, and bar, and all!
I want you to notice that this veil, when
it was rent, was rent by God, not by man. It was not the act of an
irreverent mob; it was not the midnight outrage of a set of profane
priests: it was the act of God alone. Nobody stood within the veil; and on
the outer side of it stood the priests only fulfilling their ordinary
vocation of offering sacrifice. It must have astounded them when they saw
that holy place laid bare in a moment. How they fled, as they saw that
massive veil divided without human hand in a second of time! Who rent it?
Who but God Himself? If another had done it, there might have been a
mistake about it, and the mistake might need to be remedied by replacing
the curtain; but if the Lord has done it, it is done rightly, it is done
finally, it is done irreversibly. It is God Himself who has laid sin on
Christ, and in Christ has put that sin away. God Himself has opened the
gate of heaven to believers, and cast up a highway along which the souls
of men may travel to Himself. God Himself has set the ladder between earth
and heaven. Come to Him now, ye humble ones. Behold, He sets before you an
open door!
II. And now I ask you to follow me, dear
friends, in the second place, to an experimental realization of my
subject. We now notice WHAT WE HAVE: "Having therefore, brethren, boldness
to enter into the holiest," Observe the threefold "having" in the
paragraph now before us, and be not content without the whole three. We
have "boldness to enter in." There are degrees in boldness; but this
is one of the highest. When the veil was rent it required some boldness to
look within. I wonder whether the priests at the altar did have the
courage to gaze upon the mercy-seat. I suspect that they were so struck
with amazement that they fled from the altar, fearing sudden death. It
requires a measure of boldness steadily to look upon the mystery of God:
"Which things the angels desire to look into." It is well not to look with
a merely curious eye into the deep things of God. I question whether any
man is able to pry into the mystery of the Trinity without great risk.
Some, thinking to look there with the eyes of their natural intellect,
have been blinded by the light of that sun, and have henceforth wandered
in darkness. It needs boldness to look into the splendors of redeeming and
electing love. If any did look into the holiest when the veil was rent,
they were among the boldest of men; for others must have feared lest the
fate of the men of Bethshemesh would be theirs. Beloved, the Holy Spirit
invites you to took into the holy place, and view it all with reverent eye
for it is full of teaching to you. Understand the mystery of the
mercy-seat, and of the ark of the covenant overlaid with gold, and of the
pot of manna, and of the tables of stone, and of Aaron's rod that budded.
Look, look boldly through Jesus Christ: but do not content yourself with
looking! Hear what the text says: "Having boldness to enter in."
Blessed be God if He has taught us this sweet way of no longer looking
from afar, but of entering into the inmost shrine with confidence!
"Boldness to enter in" is what we ought to have.
Let us follow the example of the high
priest, and, having entered, let us perform the functions of one who
enters in. "Boldness to enter in" suggests that we act as men who are
in their proper places. To stand within the veil filled the servant of God
with an overpowering sense of the divine presence. If ever in his
life he was near to God, he was certainly near to God then, when quite
alone, shut in, and excluded from all the world, he had no one with him,
except the glorious Jehovah. O my beloved, may we this morning enter into
the holiest in this sense! Shut out front the world, both wicked and
Christian, let us know that the Lord is here, most near and manifest. Oh
that we may now cry out with Hagar, "Have I also here looked after him
that seeth me?" Oh, how sweet to realize by personal enjoyment the
presence of Jehovah! How cheering to feel that the Lord of hosts is with
us! We know our God to be a very present help in trouble. It is one of the
greatest joys out of heaven to be able to sing—Jehovah Shammah—the Lord is
here. At first we tremble in the divine presence; but as we feel more of
the spirit of adoption we draw near with sacred delight, and feel so fully
at home with our God that we sing with Moses, "Lord, thou hast been our
dwelling place in all generations." Do not live as if God were as far off
from you as the east is from the west. Live not far below on the earth;
but live on high, as if you were in heaven. In heaven You Will be with
God; but on earth He will be with you: is there much difference? He hath
raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in
Christ Jesus. Jesus hath made us nigh by His precious blood. Try day by
day to live in as great nearness to God, as the high priest felt when he
stood for awhile within the secret of Jehovah's tabernacle.
The high priest had a sense of
communion with God; he was not only near, but he spoke with God. I
cannot tell what he said, but I should think that on the special day the
high priest unburdened himself of the load of Israel's sin and sorrow, and
made known his requests unto the Lord. Aaron, standing there alone, must
have been filled with memories of his own faultiness, and of the
idolatries and backslidings of the people. God shone upon him, and he
bowed before God. He may have heard things which it was not lawful for him
to utter, and other things which he could not have uttered if they had
been lawful. Beloved, do you know what it is to commune with God? Words
are poor vehicles for this fellowship; but what a blessed thing it is!
Proofs of the existence of God are altogether her superfluous to those of
us who are in the habit of conversing with the Eternal One. If anybody
were to write an essay to prove the existence of my wife, or my son, I
certainly should not read it, except for the amusement of the thing; and
proofs of the existence of God to the man who communes with God are much
the same. Many of you walk with God: what bliss! Fellowship with the Most
High is elevating, purifying, strengthening. Enter into it boldly. Enter
into His revealed thoughts, even as He graciously enters into yours: rise
to His plans, as He condescends to yours; ask to be uplifted to Him, even
as He deigns to dwell with you.
This is what the rent of the veil brings
us when we have boldness to enter in; but, mark you, the rent veil brings
us nothing until we have boldness to enter in. Why stand we without? Jesus
brings us near, and truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with His
Son Jesus Christ. Let us not be slow to take up our freedom, and come
boldly to the throne. The high priest entered within the veil of blue, and
purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen, with blood, and with incense,
that he might pray for Israel; and there he stood before the Most
High, pleading with Him to bless the people. O beloved, prayer is ai
divine institution, and it belongs to us. But there are many sorts of
prayers. There is the prayer of one who seems shut out from God's holy
temple; there is the prayer of another who stands in the court of the
Gentiles afar off, looking towards the temple; there is the prayer of one
who gets where Israel stands and pleads with the God of the chosen; there
is the prayer in the court of the priests, when the sanctified man of God
makes intercession; but the best prayer of all is offered in the holiest
of all. There is no fear about prayer being heard when it is offered in
the holiest. The very position of the man proves that he is accepted with
God. He is standing on the surest ground of acceptance, and he is so near
to God that his every desire is heard. There the man is seen through and
through; for he is very near to God. His thoughts are read, his tears are
seen, his sighs are heard; for he has boldness to enter in. He may ask
what he will, and it shall be done unto him. As the altar sanctifieth the
gift, so the most holy place, entered by the blood of Jesus, secures a
certain answer to the prayer that is offered therein. God give us such
power in prayer! It is a wonderful thing that the Lord should hearken to
the voice of a man; yet are there such men. Luther came out of his closet,
and cried, Vici—"I have conquered." He had not yet met his
adversaries; but as he had prevailed with God for men, he felt that he
should prevail with men for God.
But the high priest, if you recollect,
after he had communed and prayed with God, came out and blessed the
people. He put on his garments of glory and beauty, which he had laid
aside when be went into the holy place, for there he stood in simple
white, and nothing else; and now he came out wearing the breast-plate and
all his precious ornaments, and he blessed the people. That is what you
will do if you have the boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of
Jesus: you will bless the people that surround you. The Lord has blessed
you, and He will make you a blessing. Your ordinary conduct and
conversation will be a blessed example; the words you speak for Jesus will
be like a dew from the Lord: the sick will be comforted by your words; the
despondent will he encouraged by your faith; the lukewarm will be
recovered by your love. You will be, practically, saying to each one who
knows you, "The Lord bless thee, and keep thee: the Lord make his face
shine upon thee, and give thee peace." You will become a channel of
blessing: "Out of your belly shall flow rivers of living water." May we
each one have boldness to enter in, that we may come forth laden with
benedictions!
If you will kindly look at the text, you
will notice, what I shall merely hint at, that this boldness is well
grounded. I always like to see the apostle using a "therefore":
"Having therefore boldness." Paul is often a true poet, but he is
always a correct logician; he is as logical as if he were dealing with
mathematics rather than theology. Here he writes one of his therefores.
Why is it that we have boldness? Is it
not because of our relationship to Christ which makes us "brethren?"
"Having therefore, brethren, boldness." The feeblest believer has
as much right to enter into the holy places as Paul had; because he is one
of the brotherhood. I remember a rhyme by John Ryland, in which he says of
heaven—
"They shall all be there, the
great and the small;
Poor I shall shake hands with the blessed St. Paul."
I have no doubt we shall have such a position, and such fellowship.
Meanwhile, we do shake hands with I Him this morning as he calls us
brethren. We are brethren to one another, because we are brethren to
Jesus. Where we see the apostle go, we will go; yea, rather, where we see
the Great Apostle and High Priest of our profession enter, we will follow.
"Having therefore, boldness."
Beloved, we have now no fear of death in
the most holy place. The high priest, whoever he might be, must always
have dreaded that solemn day of atonement, when he had to pass into the
silent and secluded place. I cannot tell whether it is true, but I have
read that there is at tradition among the Jews, that a rope was fastened
to the high priest's foot that they might draw out his corpse in case he
died before the Lord. I should not wonder if their superstition devised
such a thing, for it is an awful position for a man to enter into the
secret dwelling of Jehovah. But we cannot die in the holy place now, since
Jesus has died for us. The death of Jesus is the guarantee of the eternal
life of all for whom He died. We have boldness to enter, for we shall not
perish.
Our boldness arises from the perfection
of His sacrifice. Read the fourteenth verse: "He hath perfected forever
them that are sanctified." We rely upon the sacrifice of Christ, believing
that He was such a perfect Substitute for us, that it is not possible for
us to die after our Substitute has died; and we must be accepted, because
He is accepted. We believe that the precious blood has so effectually and
eternally put away sin from us, that we are no longer obnoxious to the
wrath of God. We may safely stand where sin must be smitten, if there be
any sin upon us; for we are so washed, so cleaned, and so fully justified
that we are accepted in the Beloved. Sin is so completely lifted from us
by the vicarious sacrifice of Christ, that we have boldness to enter where
Jehovah Himself dwells.
Moreover, we have his for certain, that
as a priest had a right to dwell near to God, we have that privilege; for
Jesus hath made us kings and priests unto God, and all the privileges of
the office come to us with the office itself We have a mission within the
holy place; we are called to enter there upon holy business, and so we
have no fear of being intruders. A burglar may enter a house, but he does
not enter with boldness; he is always afraid lest he should be surprised.
You might enter a stranger's house, without an invitation, but You Would
feel no boldness there. We do not enter the holiest as housebreakers, nor
as strangers; we come in obedience to a call, to fulfill our office. When
once we accept the sacrifice of Christ, we are at home with God. Where
should a child be bold but in his father's house? Where should a priest
stand but in the temple of his God, for whose service he is set apart?
Where should a blood-washed sinner live but with his God, to whom he is
reconciled?
It is a heavenly joy to feel this
boldness! We have now such a love for God, and such a delight in Him, that
it never crosses our minds that we are trespassers when we draw near to
Him. We never say, "God, my dread," but "God, my exceeding joy." His name
is the music to which our lives are set: though God be a consuming fire we
love Him as such, for He will only consume our dross, and that we desire
to lose. Under no aspect is God now distasteful to its. We delight in Him,
be He what He may. So you see, beloved, we have good grounds for boldness
when we enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus.
I cannot leave this point until I have
reminded you that we may have this boldness of entering in at all
times, because the veil is always rent, and is never restored to its
old place. "The Lord said until Moses, Speak unto Aaron thy brother, that
he come not at all times into the holy Place within the veil before the
mercy-seat, which is upon the ark; that he die not"; but the Lord saith
not so to us. Dear child of God, you may at all times have "boldness to
enter in." The veil is rent both day and night. Yea, let me say it, even
when thine eye of faith is dim, still enter in; when evidences are dark,
still have "boldness to enter in"; and even if thou hast unhappily sinned,
remember that access is open to thy penitent prayer. Come still through
the rent veil, sinner as thou art. What though thou hast backslidden, what
though thou art grieved with the sense of thy wanderings, come even now!
"Today, if ye will hear his voice, harden not your heart," but enter at
once; for the veil is not there to exclude thee, though doubt and unbelief
may make you think it is so. The veil cannot be there, for it was rent in
twain from the top to the bottom.
III. My time has fled, and I shall not
have space to speak as I meant to do upon the last point—HOW WE EXERCISE
THIS GRACE. Let me give you the notes of what I would have said.
Let us at this hour enter into the
holiest. Behold the way! We come by the way of atonement: "Having
therefore, brethren, boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of
Jesus." I have been made to feel really ill through the fierce and
blasphemous words that have been used of late by gentlemen of the modern
school concerning the precious blood. I will not defile my lips by a
repetition of the thrice-accursed things which they have dared to utter
while trampling on the blood of Jesus. Everywhere throughout this divine
Book you meet with the precious blood. How can he call himself a Christian
who speaks in flippant and profane language of the blood of atonement? My
brothers, there is no way into the holiest, even though the veil be rent,
without blood. You might suppose that the high priest of old brought the
blood because the veil was there; but you have to bring it with you
though the veil is gone. The way is open, and you have boldness to enter;
but not without the blood of Jesus. It would be an unholy boldness which
would think of drawing near to God without the blood of the great
Sacrifice. We have always to plead the atonement. As without shedding of
blood there is no remission of sin, so without that blood there is no
access to God.
Next, the way by which we come is an
unfailing way. Please notice that word—"by a new way"; this
means by a way which is always fresh. The original Greek suggests the idea
of "newly slain." Jesus died long ago, but His death is the same now as at
the moment of its occurrence. We come to God, dear friends, by a way which
is always effectual with God. It never, never loses one whit of its power
freshness.
Dear dying lamb, thy precious
blood
Shall never lose its power.
The way is not worn away by long traffic: it is always new. If Jesus
Christ had died yesterday, would you not feel that you could plead His
merit today? Very well, you can plead that merit after these 19' centuries
with as much confidence as at the first hour. The way to God is always
newly laid. In effect, the wounds of Jesus incessantly bleed our
expiation. The cross is as glorious as though He were still upon it. So
far as the freshness, vigor, and force of the atoning death is concerned,
we come by a new way. Let it be always new to our hearts. Let the doctrine
of atonement never grow stale, but let it have dew upon your souls.
Then the apostle adds, it is a "living
way." A wonderful word! The way by which the high priest went into the
holy place was of course a material way, and so a dead way. We come by a
spiritual way, suitable to our spirits. The way could not help the high
priest, but our way helps us abundantly. Jesus says, "I am the way, the
truth, and the life." When we come to God by this way, the way
itself leads, guides, bears, brings us near. This way gives its life with
which to come.
It is a dedicated way. "which he
hath consecrated for us." When a new road is opened, it is set apart and
dedicated for the public use. Sometimes a public building is opened by a
king or a prince, and so is dedicated to its purpose. Beloved, the way to
God through Jesus Christ is dedicated by Christ, and ordained by Christ
for the use of poor believing sinners, such as we are. He has consecrated
the way towards God, and dedicated it for us, that we may freely use it.
Surely, if there is a road set apart for me, I may use it without fear;
and the way to God and heaven through Jesus Christ is dedicated by the
Saviour for sinners; it is the King's highway for wayfaring men, who are
bound for the City of God; therefore, let us use it. "Consecrated for us!"
Blessed word!
Lastly, it is a Christly way; for
when we come to God, we still come through His flesh. There is no coming
to Jehovah, except by the incarnate God. God in human flesh is our way to
God; the substitutionary death of the Word made flesh is also the way to
the Father. There is no coming to God, except by representation. Jesus
represents us before God, and we come to God through Him who is our
covenant head, our representative and forerunner before the throne of the
Most High. Let us never try to pray without Christ; never try to sing
without Christ; never try to preach without Christ. Let us perform no holy
function, nor attempt to have fellowship with God in any shape or way,
except through that rent which He has made in the veil by His flesh,
sanctified for us, and offered upon the cross on our behalf.
Beloved, I have done when I have just
remarked upon the next two verses, which are necessary to complete the
sense, but which I was obliged to omit this morning, since there would be
no time to handle them. We are called to take holy freedoms with God. "Let
us draw near," at once, "with a true heart in full assurance of faith."
Let us do so boldly, for we have a great high priest. The twenty-first
verse reminds us of this. Jesus is the great Priest, and we are the
sub-priests under Him, and since He bids us come near to God, and Himself
leads the way, let follow Him into the inner sanctuary. Because He lives,
we shall live also. We shall nor die in the holy place, unless He dies.
God will not smite us unless He smites Him. So, "having a high priest over
the house of God, let its draw near with a true heart in full assurance of
faith."
And then the apostle tells its that we
may not only come with boldness, because our high priest leads the way,
but because we ourselves are prepared for entrance. Two things the high
priest had to do before he might enter: one was, to be sprinkled with
blood, and this we have; for "our hearts are sprinkled from an evil
conscience."
The other requisite for the priests was
to have their "bodies washed with pure water." This we have received in
symbol in our baptism, and in reality in the spiritual cleansing of
regeneration. To us has been fulfilled the prayer—
"Let the water and the blood,
From thy riven side which flowed,
Be of sin the double cure,
Cleanse me from its guilt and power.
We have known the washing of water by the Word, and we have been
sanctified by the Spirit of His grace; therefore let us enter into the
holiest. Why should we stay away? Hearts sprinkled with blood, bodies
washed with pure water—these are the ordained preparations for acceptable
entrance. Come near, beloved! May the Holy Spirit be the spirit of access
to you now. Come to your God, and then abide with Him! He is your Father,
your all in all. Sit down and rejoice in Him; take your fill of love; and
let not your communion be broken between here and heaven. Why should it
be? Why not begin today that sweet enjoyment of perfect reconciliation and
delight in God which shall go on increasing in intensity until you behold
the Lord in open vision, and go no more out? Heaven will bring a great
change in condition, but not in our standing, if even now we stand within
the veil. It will be only such a change as there is between the perfect
day and the daybreak; for we have the same sun, and the same light from
the sun, and the same privilege of walking in the light. "Until the day
break, and the shadows flee away, turn, my beloved, and be thou like a roe
or a young hart upon the mountains of Division." Amen, and Amen.
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