The Inexpressible Gift -
Part 1
“…then
shall the sanctuary be cleansed.” Daniel
8:14
How
Does this Apply to Me in My Life Today?
By
Vance Ferrell
THE
GIFT OF GOD’S PRESENCE
It is
satisfying. It meets every need, every real problem:-and
it is all found in the little tent God instructed Moses to make. “And let them
make me a sanctuary; that I may dwell among them.” (Exodus 25:8), God
said. God wants to dwell among us and in us. He wants us as much as we want Him.
Our deepest emotions can but faintly express the yearning that God has that this
desire be fulfilled.
It is through this building and its service that God reveals how He is
going to dwell with us-in
us-in
our very souls (Exodus 29:42-46; 2 Corinthians 6:16; 1
Corinthians 3:16; 6:19).
This plan for the indwelling of God is a marvelous Gift-the
first of a chain of gifts that is so wondrous that it is almost
incomprehensible. The disappointments and grief’s are so many in this life,
that it is hard to believe that these living promises are true. And yet they are
more than true. You can, in your own life, begin tasting them as living
realities.
Now, let us look at the plan. Though it is revealed through simple
things yet, at the same time, it is mind-shaking; for in it we see Divinity
reaching down and taking hold of humanity-and
changing humanity.
The work of the Sanctuary was divided into a daily and a yearly service.
In the daily service, a man who had sinned would come with a lamb or other
animal. Then, at the large Altar of Burnt offering in the Outer Court of the
Sanctuary, he would place his hands on the head of the animal and confess his
sin. He then slew it, and it was consumed on the smoking altar. In connection
with these daily sacrifices, some of the blood was taken into the first of the
two apartments of the Sanctuary and there sprinkled before the dividing veil.
Thus the man’s sin was symbolically transferred to the Sanctuary. On the basis
of this confession and transferal of sin, the man could hold communion with God.
The Bible tells us what has separated us from God. It is sin (Isaiah
59:2). This explains the purpose of the Sanctuary, and why, through it, God can
again dwell among us-because
it is through the Sanctuary service that God intends to take sin out of our
lives.
Jesus was the “Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world” (John
1:29). Like the little animal, He also bore sin-our
sin (Isaiah 53:12; 1 Peter 2:24). He was led to the altar and
there slain (Isaiah 53:7). Can we imagine such a depth of love? It is
deeper and wider than any on earth (John 3:16).
By His blood Christ purchased redemption for every man (1 Peter
1:18-19). The Sanctuary is a living picture of the Atonement, of God’s plan to
remove sin from our minds and souls. And this atonement can only be started,
carried through, and completed, with blood (Leviticus 17:11). Your sin and
my sin is so deep that it took God’s blood to meet the price.
The blood redemption had been purchased for every man-now
it must be applied. Before the atonement that fully restores us to God’s
presence can be completed, Christ must take this blood into the Sanctuary and
apply it individually on behalf of all who will receive it.
Following His death and resurrection, Christ ascended to heaven (Luke
24:51). But where did Christ go when He went to heaven? It is a vital truth
that, in Jesus and His work for us, our faith must center. God desires that we
know where He is and what He is doing, that we may fix our eyes and our faith
even more firmly upon Him.
In the mount, Moses was told to make the Sanctuary according to the
pattern shown him (Exodus 25:7-8; 40). The earthly Sanctuary, then, was
only a copy of the great pattern,-the
original was in heaven. Into this Sanctuary-the
heavenly -Jesus
entered when He ascended out of the sight of the disciples. This is where He is
today (Hebrews 8:1-2).
Do we not have abundant reason for rejoicing? Jesus, our Lamb, has
ascended to heaven; and, now as our great High Priest, He is mediating on our
behalf in the Sanctuary (Hebrews 2:17). He went to heaven to intercede
for each one of us before the Father (Romans 8:34).
We have seen the daily service in the Sanctuary and the great sacrifice
and intercession of Christ that it represents. But what about the yearly
service? When did this begin, or has it yet begun? What is its purpose for our
lives? To understand this, we must briefly view the second of God’s special
gifts-the
Gift of God’s Word.
SEE
SANCTUARY PICTURE
THE
GIFT OF GOD’S WORD
It is in the gift of the Word that God reveals His Plan for our lives (Deuteronomy
29:29; Amos 3:7).
The Bible is the great lesson book of the ages, given to men that they
might know of the thoughts and ways of God: that, in learning of the promises
and in claiming them, they might become like God (2 Peter 1:2, 4).
But, in addition to this, the Bible is the great prophecy book of the
ages, given to men that the fullness of God’s wonderful plan, still in the
future, might be opened to their understanding (2 Peter 1:21; 1 Corinthians
2:9-10).
The central theme of the Bible is the work of Christ to redeem us from
sin. The Sanctuary reveals the three main parts of this plan-Christ’s
work in the outer court, in the first apartment, and in the second apartment of
the Sanctuary. In these three are given the beginning, the daily application,
and the conclusion of the Atonement. Did you know that they are so important
that the very year in which each began is prophesied in Scripture before it
occurred?
We do not have space here to observe, in detail, this entire prophecy as
it is found in Daniel 8 and 9; we can only observe the main points. The
cleansing of the Sanctuary was to occur at the termination of 2300 prophetic
days, or years (Daniel 8:14; a day in prophecy stands for a year:
Numbers 14:34; Ezra 7). At the end of 7 weeks, or 49 years, the
rebuilding of Jerusalem was completed, in 406 B.C. (Daniel 9:25).
The first 70 weeks, or 490 years, of this prophecy were to be
“determined upon,” or, in the Hebrew, “cut off for,” or “allotted
to,” the Jewish nation as final probationary time of God’s special people (Daniel
9:24). At the beginning of the final week of the 70 (82 weeks, or 434 years,
from 406 B.C.), the recognition of Jesus as the Messiah, His baptism in the
Jordan, and the beginning of His 3 ½-year ministry began. In the midst of the
last week of the 70 (the last 7 years of the 490), Jesus was crucified for us in
A.D. 31 (Daniel 9:26). At that time (A.D. 31), the “sacrifices and
oblations ceased” to have further meaning in the eyes of God, for the great
Antitype-the
Lamb of God-had
been slain, and had begun His priestly work in the Sanctuary in heaven (Daniel
9:27). Then, 3 ½ years after the death of Jesus, Stephen was stoned to death
(A.D. 34), and the gospel was carried to the Gentiles. This event brought to a
close the 70 weeks, or 490-year period, and left 1810 years more to bring to
full completion the end of the 2300 years. The prophecy then reaches to A.D.
1844, spanning the years from 457 B.C. and culminating with the declaration:
“Then shall the Sanctuary be cleansed” (Daniel 8:14).
Thus, through the gift of the Bible-the
Gift of Prophecy-God
reveals to men events over 2,000 years in the future. And, through this gift, He
reveals to us today that this special yearly work of cleansing-the
great antitypical Day of Atonement, the final application, the conclusion of the
Atonement, has begun in heaven! The longest prophecy in the Bible-the
great 2300-year timetable-reveals
that we today are living in the closing hours of this earth’s history!
THE
GIFT OF GOD’S BLOOD
The Sanctuary
reveals the Gift of God’s Blood, and the story of this Gift is the story of
the Atonement. It is the work of this atonement to cleanse our lives of all sin,
and this atoning work can only be carried out with blood (Leviticus 17:11;
Hebrews 9:22). It is only upon the basis of the blood sacrifice that we can be
lifted from the pit of sin (Zechariah 9:11). The plagues of Egypt reveal that it
is only the sprinkling of blood that protects God’s people in the day of
destruction (Exodus 12:13; Romans 5:9). We have been “purchased
with His blood” (Acts 20:28), and we must never forget the fact.
The path of the atonement is a path of blood-Christ’s
blood-and
it runs all the way through the Bible, from the Fall of man, in Genesis, to the
final full restoration in Revelation. This is a most precious gift, for the gift
of God’s blood is, in reality, the gift of His Son-to
live with us, to die on our behalf, to intercede for us.
At the cross this blood was provided-and
it occurred when prophecy said it would, in A.D. 31, and there applied on behalf
of all who would receive it. But as we have seen, there was, in addition to the
daily service that entered “beyond the veil” into the first apartment, a
yearly service that entered, beyond the second veil, into the second apartment.
This yearly service was a most important service, for it concluded the
application of the blood atonement. The antitypical Day of Atonement is now
going on in heaven. Soon it will be completed. When it is, sin will have been
blotted out of the lives of all who have prepared for its solemn work, and human
probation will cease.
The yearly Day of Atonement was the day when sin was finally cleansed
from Israel. The service that took place on this day is carefully explained in
Leviticus 16.
Throughout the year the sins of Israel were forgiven and transferred,
through the daily service, to the Sanctuary. But then came the time, once a
year, when all the people were to gather to the Sanctuary for a special service.
It was a very solemn day, and whoever was not prepared for it was forever cut
off from Israel (Leviticus 23:27-30).
On this day the priest went all the way into the second apartment, and
made the final application of blood before the Ark of the Covenant. By this
service, the record of the sins of Israel was finally removed-cleansed-from
the Sanctuary. This completed the atonement (Leviticus 16:25-27, 33-34).
“Unto two thousand three hundred days, and then shall the Sanctuary be
cleansed” (Daniel 8:14).
The prophecy of Daniel 8 and 9 reveals that, in 1844, Jesus, our High
Priest, entered the second apartment of the Sanctuary in heaven to begin the
final atonement for His people. To the Jews, the yearly service was known as the
Day of Atonement, the Day of Cleansing, and the Day of Judgment; and, on this
day, all these events occurred. The final investigative Judgment of the lives of
all who have ever professed faith in Jesus Christ has now begun in heaven. The record books of heaven are being
examined. On the basis of it, those who are shown to have claimed the merits and
the blood of Jesus, have their sins blotted out of the books of heaven.
Each one of us has a soul temple (Exodus 29:44-46; Leviticus
26:11;26:11-12; 1 Corinthians 3:16-17; 6:19-20; 2 Corinthians
6;16). It is the work of the atonement to forever cleanse the Sanctuary, where
these sins are recorded, and our hearts and minds as well, where the sins
originated (Leviticus 16:30).
As we would expect, when the investigation and atonement are completed,
Jesus will return to earth for His people. The Bible reveals that this
Investigative Judgment (Daniel 7:9-10, 26) and the victory over the power
of Satan (Revelation 7:11, 26) precedes the coming of Jesus for His elect
(Revelation 7:13-14, 27).
It is the work of the Investigative Judgment to examine the records and
determine who will inherit eternal life and who will inherit eternal death. Then
follows the Second Coming of Christ and the Executive Judgment, when Jesus will
execute, or begin to carry out, the sentences previously decided upon (Jude 14).
Jesus returns to “execute upon them the judgment written” (Psalm 149:9).
And begins to give out the rewards (Mark 8:38; Revelation 22:12).
At that time every man will begin to receive his reward-the
righteous (Philemon 3:20, 21; 1 Thessalonians 4:16-18; Corinthians
15:51-55) as well as the wicked (Revelation 1:7; 6:15-16; Matthew 3:12).
As His people are gathered at the entrance to the Sanctuary and are, by
faith, following Him in His work, Jesus, our High Priest, stands before the
golden mercy seat. This mercy seat covers the Ark of the Covenant, within which
is the holy Ten Commandment Law which we have transgressed. Above the mercy seat
is the Presence of the Father. Jesus sprinkles some of the blood on the mercy
seat and some of it “eastward”-toward
the people (facing the ark. He is facing westward (Leviticus 16:14); the
people are gathered at the entrance to the outer court [Joel 2:15-17; Exodus
27:13-17]). By this final sprinkling of blood, both the people responsible for
the sin and the Sanctuary, containing the records of sin-are
cleansed (Leviticus 16:29-34).
The Gift of the Blood-the
blood of the Lamb-will
bring eternal purity and holiness to all who will afflict their souls, to all
who seek God with prayer, confession, and earnestly petition Him to put away sin
from their lives, in preparation for the final judgment-hour cleansing-to
these will the blood be applied.
THE
GIFT OF GOD’S RIGHTEOUSNESS
God is holy and He
wants His people to be holy. The Gift of God’s Righteousness is the gift of
His Law, which He intends, through the atonement to write in our hearts. The Ten
Commandment Law is the standard of the righteousness which God wants to give us.
This can only be done through the atonement. Sin will eventually destroy us, if
we cling to it. Jesus knows this, and He is working now in heaven to remove it
from the lives of all who will accept His intercession.
One might question why it is necessary for the blood to be brought all
the way into the Most Holy Place (the second apartment) of the Sanctuary before
the atonement can be completed, human probation can close, and Jesus can return
for His people. It is necessary because of the nature of sin. “Sin is the
transgression of the law” (1 John 3:4), and “The wages of sin is
death” (Romans 6:23). The atonement cannot be completed until the blood
representing the death of Jesus is brought before the moral code-the
Ten Commandments-which
have been transgressed.
The moral law is not only the standard of righteousness, but it is also
the great standard of the judgment (Ecclesiastes 12:13-14; Psalm
96:13; 119:142). The lives of all men will be compared with its ten principles
of conduct. It is the statute book of the court of heaven (James 2:10-12;
Psalm 119:43-46).
The tables of stone rest beneath the Shekinah Presence of God. They are
the basis of His government, as surely as the Constitution is the basis of ours.
As it is on earth, so it is in heaven-lawbreakers
are judged according to the law they have broken. How thankful we can be that
God knows that, of ourselves, we are powerless to resist Satan and to render the
obedience that the law requires. To meet the demands of the broken law and to
enable us to render perfect obedience to all of its requirements, through faith
in the merits of the blood of Christ-this
is the purpose of the atonement. Through faith in Jesus, His grace is imparted
to us, and we are enabled to render this obedience.
The moral law-the
great standard of God for our lives-is
a written expression, or transcript, of His character. God is holy, God is love;
and His law is holy, His law is love. It tells us what we will be like through
His grace. It is a law of love. It is not negative. Its “Thou shalt nots”
are not intended primarily to be “you had better not, or else,” but rather,
“you should not.” Properly understood, the law is ten promises of what our
lives will become like, as we look to Jesus our righteousness.
“Righteousness,” in the original Biblical Greek, means “right doing,” and
Christ is our righteousness (1 Corinthians 1:30; Jeremiah 23:6).
Beholding His glory, we are changed (2 Corinthians 3:18). He writes His
law upon our hearts (Hebrews 8:6-10); and we, by enabling grace, keep
His commandments, and thus He dwells with us (1 John 3:24).
This eternal standard, written on stone, Jesus makes into an experience
of obedience written upon hearts over flowing with repentance and love. The very
righteousness of God is imparted to us that we might be brought back to our lost
condition of godliness-Godlikeness.
This marvelous gift is ours-through
the blood of the Covenant.
THE
GIFT OF GOD’S DECISION
We
live in an hour of “good news.” “Gospel” means good news, and the angel
of Revelation 14:6-7, who proclaims the message of the judgment, is said to be
giving the “everlasting gospel.” The judgment is good news for those who are
seeking it. It is news to rejoice at, for Jesus is preparing to remove all sin
from the lives of His people, and then He is going to return for them! Eternal
deliverance from sin and wickedness! Can there be better news!
But for the wicked, the judgment has a far different meaning. They are
joined to their idols. They do not desire it or want it. They would rather
believe that it does not exist (Proverbs 28:4-5; Jeremiah 5:4).
Their words are “Where is the God of Judgment?” (Malachi 2:17). And
their lives match their words. To them the judgment will bring, not good news,
but “the strange act” (Isaiah 28:21),-”the
wrath of the Lamb” (Revelation 6:16; Psalm 76:7-9).
Decisions must be made in the judgment regarding who shall live and who
shall die. We may thank God that He makes the decision! The fact that God makes
the decision in the judgment is a precious gift. At first it may not seem like a
gift-
indeed, it may not even seem necessary. But it is.
Decisions must be made regarding who shall live and who shall die. The
atonement cannot go on forever. God’s people must be purified; sin and sinners
must finally be destroyed. It has to be;-for
our sake and for the sake of the entire universe.
Thank God that the work of judgment is His work. He who created us,
Jesus, has been appointed to be our Judge (Acts 10:42; 17:31; Romans
2:16; 14:10). He who created us and who died to redeem us is the One who will
decide whether each one will inherit eternal life or eternal death. The thoughts
and feelings of Jesus are deeper than any that we have ever experienced. He
loves us more deeply than we love ourselves. Oh, the pain that every decision of
death will cause our precious Saviour!
He who makes these decisions will be the One who also executes them. At
the Second Coming, the wicked are destroyed by the brightness of His coming, and
the righteous are taken to heaven (2 Thessalonians 2:8; 1
Thessalonians 4:16-17; John 14:1-3). Then, during the 1,000-year millennium,
the righteous review the records of the wicked (Revelation 20:4; 1
Corinthians 6:1-3). Every question that could ever arise regarding the
nature and working out of sin is forever settled in this vast review of the age
long controversy between Christ and Satan. How sin began, what it is, what it
must inevitably lead to, why some reached heaven and others did not,-all
such questions will be forever resolved during this thousand-year period.
Following this, the wicked come up in the second resurrection (Revelation
20:5-7, 13), and they are consumed in the lake of fire until they are
entirely destroyed-”both
root and branch” (Malachi 4:1)-Satan,
the root, and his followers, the branches. Nothing remains, following the work
of hellfire, but ashes (Malachi 4:3).
We may thank God that Jesus makes the decision and executes it. And we
may also thank Him that He has created us with free wills, and that there is
still probationary time in which to make our decision. Our decision regarding
us. Make it now, as you read this. How often we put off many of the important
matters of life till another day,-but
a more favorable time to accept Jesus as your Sacrifice and your Priest may
never come. Do not wait. Come now, while the blood is still being applied.
THE
GIFT OF GOD’S LIFE
God’s life is eternal life,-and
this life-the
very life of God-He
wishes to give to you! “Sin pays its servants: The wage is death. But God
gives to those who serve Him. His free gift is eternal life through Jesus Christ
our Lord” (Romans 6:23, Phillips).
The word, “immortal,” is used only once in the Bible, and is applied
to God (1 Timothy 1:17). The word, “immortality,” is used five times
in the Bible, and we are told that God alone has it (1 Timothy 6:16). We
are to seek it (Romans 2:7); it is brought to light, or revealed, through
the gospel (2 Timothy 1:10), and it will be bestowed upon God’s saints
at the Second Coming (1 Corinthians 15:51-55).
We are, by nature, “mortal” (Job 4:17), that is, subject to
death-eternal
death. Our sins have separated us from God (Isaiah 59:2); and, apart from
God, we have no life (1 John 5:11-12). During probationary time He grants
us probationary life. We are given time enough to make our decision for
eternity,-and
then it is all over.
God so loved-the
world-that
He gave-His
only begotten Son-that
whosoever believeth-in
Him-might
not die-but
have life-eternal
life (John 3:16). This gift of eternal life is the gift of God’s life.
Only He has it, so only He can give it. The probationary life we now have, as
well as the life we can choose to have for eternity, was provided at the cost of
the very life of Jesus, our God. Christ received wages He did not deserve-the
wages of sin-death,
that we might, through Him, receive the gift we do not deserve-the
gift of eternal life (Romans 6:23).
This gift of eternal life is claimed only as we follow in the symbolic
path revealed in the Sanctuary service, and accept and trust in the Sacrifice of Jesus-the
Intercession and the Blood Atonement of Jesus.
Why must the life be received only through shed blood? Because-and
we must never forget it-the
blood represents the poured-out life of Christ.
“For the life of the flesh is in the blood…for it is the blood that
maketh an atonement for the soul.”-Leviticus
17:11.
The purpose of redemption, the purpose of the atonement is to give us
life-eternal
life-the
very life of God (1 John 5:11-12; John 3:16). It is God’s
purpose that, through a daily offering on your part, you are to become heir to
that life.
Morning and evening He intends that you search your heart and seek His
face, that you put away the desire for self-supremacy and be filled with the
desire for His righteousness.
Daily He intends that the Burnt Offering experience be your experience-an
entire renunciation of self-will, of self-love, of self-righteousness, and a
full submission to the Divine will, the Divine love, the Divine righteousness.
It is offered to you, just now. Come make it your own! Christ can forgive
you and enable you to obey His Ten Commandment Law.
Thus, dying daily to self (1 Corinthians 15:31) and living daily
in Christ (Galatians 2:20), you may, night by night, look up at the
eternal stars and know that you will live as long as they will,-for
that day you have again chosen to hide your life in the One who made them and who
continually guides them in the timeless circuits of eternity.
Praise God for His inexpressible Gift-eternal
sinless life,-in
Jesus.
Continue
- Part 2
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