Page 18 - That I May Know Him (1964)

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A Star of Hope, January 11
Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world.
John 1:29
.
To fallen man was revealed the plan of infinite sacrifice through which
salvation was to be provided. Nothing but the death of God’s dear Son
could expiate man’s sin, and Adam marveled at the goodness of God in
providing such a ransom for the sinner. Through the love of God, a star
of hope illumined the terrible future that spreads before the transgressor.
Through the institution of the typical system of sacrifice and offering,
the death of Christ was ever to be kept before guilty man, that he might
better comprehend the nature of sin, the results of transgression, and the
merit of the divine offering. Had there been no sin, man would never have
known death. But in the innocent offering slain by his own hand he beheld
the fruits of sin—the death of the Son of God in his behalf. He sees the
immutable character of the law he has transgressed, and confesses his sin;
he relies upon the merits of the Lamb of God....
In becoming man’s substitute, in bearing the curse which should fall
upon man, Christ has pledged Himself in behalf of the race to maintain the
sacred and exalted honor of His Father’s law.... God has given the world
into the hands of Christ, that He may completely vindicate the binding
claims of the law and make manifest the holiness of every principle
The sacrifice of beasts shadowed forth the sinless offering of God’s
dear Son, and pointed forward to His death upon the cross. But at the
crucifixion type met antitype, and the typical system there ceased....
The Son of God is the center of the great plan of redemption which
covers all dispensations. He is the “Lamb slain from the foundation of
the world” (
Revelation 13:8
). He is the Redeemer of the fallen sons and
daughters of Adam in all ages of human probation. “Neither is there
salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given
among men, whereby we must be saved” (
Acts 4:12
)
[18]
24
Signs of the Times, February 20, 1893
.
25
Ibid
.
14