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The Holiest of All by Andrew Murray eBook & audio book

Holiest of All: Meditations on the Book of Hebrews "What teaching is needed to give health and vigor to the Christian life in order that, through all adverse circumstances, it may hold fast from the beginning, firm until the end? The teaching of the epistle of Hebrews is the divine answer to [this question]. In every possible way, it sets before us the truth that only the full and perfect knowledge of who Christ is and what He does for us can bring us to a full and perfect Christian life." Andrew Murray, Holiest of All

Holiest of All: Meditations on the Book of Hebrews "What teaching is needed to give health and vigor to the Christian life in order that, through all adverse circumstances, it may hold fast from the beginning, firm until the end? The teaching of the epistle of Hebrews is the divine answer to [this question]. In every possible way, it sets before us the truth that only the full and perfect knowledge of who Christ is and what He does for us can bring us to a full and perfect Christian life."
Andrew Murray, Holiest of All

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426 ;rbc -fcoUest <strong>of</strong> mi<br />

very nature the punishment <strong>of</strong> sin. It was an acknowledgment<br />

<strong>of</strong> the righteous judgment <strong>of</strong> God against sin ;<br />

the confession<br />

that without blood-shedding there could be no remission <strong>of</strong> sins.<br />

It was an act <strong>of</strong> faith ; he counted that the sacrifice would be<br />

acceptable, and that with it he would be accepted too. On the<br />

other hand, the sacrifice was the <strong>of</strong>fering and yielding up himself<br />

to God and His service. He knew it was something that lay in<br />

the very nature and spirit <strong>of</strong> a true sacrifice, that it could not<br />

be pleasing to God if he <strong>of</strong>fered the lamb, and kept back<br />

himself. No, the sacrifice was the double confession—that he<br />

was unworthy to <strong>of</strong>fer himself to God without atonement, but<br />

that, believing that in the sacrifice he was accepted, he gave<br />

himself to God's worship and service, he gave himself to the<br />

very death, to die to self and live to God. And it was as if his<br />

own death had to confirm and seal the truth ; the man who had<br />

<strong>of</strong>fered the sacrifice <strong>of</strong> faith, had founded his worship in the<br />

death <strong>of</strong> a lamb, had to die himself to find the way to God.<br />

<strong>The</strong> atoning sacrifice has ever two sides ; the Iamb was at<br />

once a substitute and a symbol, its death an atonement and a<br />

consecration.<br />

Faith draws nigh to God through sacrifice; in Christ this<br />

truth finds its full realisation. By one <strong>of</strong>ifering He hath perfected<br />

for ever them that are sanctified. Our access to God<br />

and our fellowship with Him can only be in Christ's finished<br />

work. We have boldness through His blood. His blood<br />

cleanses and perfects the conscience. <strong>The</strong> first great work <strong>of</strong><br />

faith is to appropriate the sacrifice and obedience and righteousness<br />

<strong>of</strong> Christ as accepted for us, to hold it up before God, and<br />

<strong>by</strong> the 1 loly Spirit to have the witness given, and to experience<br />

how acceptable we arc. But faith cannot fully do this without<br />

at the same time entering into the inner spiritual significance <strong>of</strong>

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