Volume 9
Cincinnati,
Saturday, February 7, 1846
THE ATONEMENT
by O. R. L.. CROSIER
Ellen White Recommends the
Article
I believe the Sanctuary, to be cleansed at the end of the
2300 days, in the New Jerusalem Temple, of which Christ is
a minister. The Lord showed me in vision, more than one year
ago, that Brother Crosier had the true light, on the cleansing
of the sanctuary, et cetera, and that it was His will that
Brother C. should write out the view which he gave us in the
Day-Star Extra, February 7, 1846. I feel fully authorized
by the Lord to recommend that Extra to every saint.
Ellen G. Harmon (White), A Word to the Little Flock,
page 12, April 21, 1847).
The Atonement
Now it must be clear to every one, that if the antitype of
the yearly service (Hebrews 9:7), began at the first Advent,
the antitype of the daily (Hebrews 9:6), had been previously
fulfilled; and, as the atonement for forgiveness was a part
of that daily service, they are involved in the conclusion
that there has been no forgiveness of sins under the Gospel
Dispensation. Such a theory is wholly at war with the entire
genius of the Gospel Dispensation, and stands rebuked, not
only by Moses and Paul, but by the teaching and works of our
Savior and His commission to His apostles, by their subsequent
teaching and the history of the Christian church. But again,
they say the atonement was made and finished on Calvary, when
the Lamb of God expired. So men have taught us, and so the
churches and world believe; but it is none the more true or
sacred on that account, if unsupported by Divine authority.
Perhaps few or none who hold that opinion have ever tested
the foundation on which it rests.
1. If the atonement was made on Calvary, by whom was it made?
The making of the atonement is the work of a Priest? but who
officiated on Calvary? - Roman soldiers and wicked Jews.
2. The slaying of the victim was not making the atonement:
the sinner slew the victim, Leviticus 4:1-4, 13-15, etc.,
after that the Priest took the blood and made the atonement.
Leviticus 4:5-12, 16-21.
3. Christ was the appointed High Priest to make the atonement,
and He certainly could not have acted in that capacity till
after His resurrection, and we have no record of His doing
any thing on earth after His resurrection, which could be
called the atonement.
4. The atonement was made in the Sanctuary, but Calvary was
not such a place.
5. He could not, according to Hebrews 8:4, make the atonement
while on earth. "If He were on earth, He should not be
a Priest." The Levitical was the earthly priesthood,
the Divine, the heavenly.
6. Therefore, He did not begin the work of making the atonement,
whatever the nature of that work may be, till after His ascension,
when by His own blood He entered His heavenly Sanctuary for
us.
Let us now examine a few texts that appear to speak of the
atonement as passed. Romans 5:11; "By whom we have now
received the atonement," (margin, reconciliation). This
passage clearly shows a present possession of the atonement
at that time the apostle wrote; but it by no means proves
that the entire atonement was then in the past.
When the Savior was about to be taken up from His apostles,
He "commanded them that they should not depart from Jerusalem,
but wait for the promise of the Father," which came on
the day of Pentecost when they were all "baptized with
the Holy Ghost." Christ had entered His Father's house,
the Sanctuary, as High Priest, and began His intercession
for His people by "praying the Father" for "another
Comforter", John 14:15, "and having received of
the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost," Acts 2:33,
He shed it down upon His waiting apostles. Then, in compliance
with their commission, Peter, at the third hour of the day
began to preach, "Repent, and be baptized every one of
you in the name of Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins,"
Acts 2:38. This word remission, signifies forgiveness, pardon
or more literally sending away of sins.
Now put by the side of this text another on this point from
his discourse at the ninth hour of the same day, Acts 3:19,
"Repent ye therefore; and be converted that your sins
may be blotted out when the times of refreshing shall come
from the presence of the Lord." Here he exhorts to repentance
and conversion (turning away from sins); for what purpose?
"That your sins may be (future) blotted out." Every
one can see that the blotting out of sins does not take place
at repentance and conversion; but follows, and must of necessity
be preceded by them. Repentance, conversion, and baptism had
then become imper-ative duties in the present tense; and when
performed, those doing them "washed away" (Acts
22:16) remitted or sent away from them their sins. (Acts 2:28);
and of course are forgiven and have "received the atonement";
but they had not received it entire at that time, because
their sins were not yet blotted out.
How far then had they advanced in the reconciling process?
Just so far as the individual under the law had when he had
confessed his sin, brought his victim to the door of the tabernacle,
laid his hand upon it and slain it, and the priest had with
its blood entered the Holy and sprinkled it before the veil
and upon the altar and thus made an atonement for him, and
he was forgiven. Only that was the type, and this the reality.
That prepared for the cleansing of the great day of atonement,
this for the blotting out of sins "when the times of
refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord, and He
shall send Jesus." Hence, "by whom we have now received
the atonement" is the same as "by whom we have received
forgiveness of sin." At this point the man is "made
free from sin." The Lamb on Calvary's cross is our victim
slain; "Jesus the Mediator of the new Covenant"
"in the heavens" is our interceding High Priest,
making atonement with His own blood, by and with which He
entered there. The essence of the process is the same as in
the "shadow". 1st, Convinced of sin; 2d, Repentance
and Confession; 3d, Present the Divine sacrifice bleeding.
This done in faith and sincerity we can do no more, no more
is required.
Then in the heavenly Sanctuary our High Priest with his own
blood makes the atonement and we are forgiven. 1 Peter 2:24;
"Who His own self bare our sins in His own body on the
tree." See also Matthew 8:17; Isaiah 53:4-12. His body
is the "one sacrifice" for repenting mortals, to
which their sins are imputed, and through whose blood in the
hands of an active Priest they are conveyed to the heavenly
Sanctuary. That was offered "once for all", "on
the tree"; and all who would avail themselves of its
merits must through faith, there receive it as theirs, bleeding
at the hands of sinful mortals like themselves. After thus
obtaining the atonement of forgiveness we must "maintain
good works", not the "deeds of the law"; but
"being dead to sin should live unto righteousness."
This work we all understand to be peculiar to the Gospel Dispensation.
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