DocCas
New Member
I don't believe MacArthur "denies the blood of Christ." I do believe he tends to deminish the place of the literal blood in the atonement, perhaps deliberately, or it may just be semantics.
If what Larry said is true of MacArthur, I.E., "The blood is important because the life of the flesh is in the blood. When the blood was shed, it was a sacrifical, violent death that paid the price for sin" - then I would have to disagree. The blood of Christ is much, much more than merely "important" as a symbol of His violent death. If Christ had died on the cross, but His blood had not been shed (literally) there would have been no atonement. It is the blood sprinkled on the Mercy Seat which completes the atonement. Without the sprinkling of Christ's blood on the Mercy Seat, as we see in Hebrews 9:12, there would have been no atonement. We then see a warning in the next chapter that we only enter the Holy of Holies by the literal blood of Christ, and that we must be very careful we never demean the blood (10:29), and count it as common, ordinary blood.
To put it another way, had Christ died on the cross, but not bled, there would have been no redemption, and, conversely, had he shed His blood, but not died, we could not have been redeemed. Think of it this way, the purchase price of the atonement was the blood. But while the testator still lived, that which He purchased was His alone, but after He died, we became heirs to all that was His, including the atonement He purchased by His own blood, then left to us, His heirs, according to His last will and (New) Testament. That is why, when we celebrate the Lord's Supper, we have both the bread, signifying the broken body (broken in death, not fractured), and the cup which is the New Testament in His blood. If the blood is not co-equal with His death in the atonement, then we have an oddity in our celebration of the Lord's supper. The bread is the symbol of the death of Christ, and the cup is the symbol of the symbol! I don't think so! The cup is the symbol of His shed blood, just as the bread is the symbol of His broken body. They are both necessary for the atonement, and to lift one over the other is to tamper with the atonement and possibly bring the curse of Hebrews 10:29 into our lives and our churches. No thanks.
Oh, and, by the way, the "MacArthur denies the blood issue did not originate with the Sword of the Lord or Curtis Hutson, but at BJU with Bob Jones, Jr.
If what Larry said is true of MacArthur, I.E., "The blood is important because the life of the flesh is in the blood. When the blood was shed, it was a sacrifical, violent death that paid the price for sin" - then I would have to disagree. The blood of Christ is much, much more than merely "important" as a symbol of His violent death. If Christ had died on the cross, but His blood had not been shed (literally) there would have been no atonement. It is the blood sprinkled on the Mercy Seat which completes the atonement. Without the sprinkling of Christ's blood on the Mercy Seat, as we see in Hebrews 9:12, there would have been no atonement. We then see a warning in the next chapter that we only enter the Holy of Holies by the literal blood of Christ, and that we must be very careful we never demean the blood (10:29), and count it as common, ordinary blood.
To put it another way, had Christ died on the cross, but not bled, there would have been no redemption, and, conversely, had he shed His blood, but not died, we could not have been redeemed. Think of it this way, the purchase price of the atonement was the blood. But while the testator still lived, that which He purchased was His alone, but after He died, we became heirs to all that was His, including the atonement He purchased by His own blood, then left to us, His heirs, according to His last will and (New) Testament. That is why, when we celebrate the Lord's Supper, we have both the bread, signifying the broken body (broken in death, not fractured), and the cup which is the New Testament in His blood. If the blood is not co-equal with His death in the atonement, then we have an oddity in our celebration of the Lord's supper. The bread is the symbol of the death of Christ, and the cup is the symbol of the symbol! I don't think so! The cup is the symbol of His shed blood, just as the bread is the symbol of His broken body. They are both necessary for the atonement, and to lift one over the other is to tamper with the atonement and possibly bring the curse of Hebrews 10:29 into our lives and our churches. No thanks.
Oh, and, by the way, the "MacArthur denies the blood issue did not originate with the Sword of the Lord or Curtis Hutson, but at BJU with Bob Jones, Jr.