Martyn McGeown

Contents:

Introduction

The Doctrine

Its Advocates

Its Implications

Its Importance to Fundamentalists

Its Historical Lineage

(1) Gnosticism

(2) Docetism

(3) Apollinarisanism

(4) Eutychianism

(5) Romanism

(6) Anabaptism

(7) Charismaticism

Fundamental Theological Errors

(1) A Mistaken View of Original Sin

(2) A Misunderstanding Concerning The Virgin Birth

(3) A Misguided Appeal to Science

(4) A Bizarre Interpretation of Old Testament Typology

(5) An Obsession With “Hymns”

Erroneous Exegesis

(1) Leviticus 17:11

(2) Acts 20:28

(3) Hebrews 12:24

(4) I Peter 1:18-19

The Meaning of the Blood of Christ in Scripture

Conclusion



Introduction

The Bible glories in the atoning work of the Lord Jesus Christ, in “the blood of his cross” (Col. 1:20). God “hath set forth [Christ] to be a propitiation through faith in his blood” (Rom. 3:25). Believers are “justified by his blood” (Rom. 5:9); we have “redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins” (Eph. 1:7; cf. Col 1:14; I Pet. 1:17-18); Gentile believers “who sometimes were afar off are made nigh by the blood of Christ” (Eph. 2:13); the blood of Christ “purges the conscience” of the child of God (Heb. 9:14); we “have boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus” (Heb. 10:19); we were “sanctified with the blood of the covenant” (Heb. 10:29); we are “sprinkled” (I Pet. 1:2), “cleansed” (I John 1:7) and “washed” (Rev. 1:5) by that same blood. Clearly, the subject of the blood of Christ is important in divine revelation. However, some, in a zeal which is not according to knowledge (Rom. 10:3), have gone on flights of fancy concerning the nature of the blood of Jesus Christ, adopting mystical theories about the blood, which, not only have no place in Scripture, soberly exegeted, but lead to heretical views about the Person and work of the Lord Jesus Christ Himself.

The Doctrine

The doctrine we examine in this article is somewhat difficult to define, as there are different versions of it. In general, however, the teaching is that the blood of Christ was not truly and fully human, but divine or “supernatural.” Some concede that although it was human blood, it could suffer no corruption; others say that since Christ is both human and divine, that His blood must be both human and divine. Others say that it is divine blood. Being divine or supernatural blood, it is incorruptible and indestructible. Every drop of blood which Christ shed in His lifetime, and especially the blood shed on Calvary, was miraculously preserved, resurrected with Christ and is now with Christ in heaven. Some teach that the blood of Christ re-entered His body during His resurrection; others believe that the blood exists as a separate entity in heaven in some kind of vial or bowl. In order to secure redemption, some say, it was necessary that Christ’s blood be literally sprinkled on a divine mercy seat in heaven. Others maintain that Christ is the mercy seat, so a literal sprinkling of Christ’s blood was unnecessary. All insist that believers must be washed in the literal blood of Christ to be saved, and they reject any attempt to explain the blood as a metaphor.1 Even now, these men insist, that precious blood is in heaven and will forever remain there as the object of adoration and wonder of the saints.



In their assemblies, you will hear prayers in this vein: “Lord, cover this meeting in the Precious Blood.” The idea is that the building in which the meeting is held is somehow painted over with the red blood of Christ, as a kind of protection, for, say they, the Scriptures teach that the saints overcome Satan “by the blood of the Lamb” (Rev. 12:11). This prayer to “cover the meeting in the Blood” is especially important because without it the devil may be able to enter and do much mischief.2 Members of such churches are told to “exalt the Blood,” “to make much of the Blood” and “to plead the Blood” (the capitalisation of the word “Blood” is deliberate, to emphasise its importance). They are warned that any denial of this doctrine is a “bloodless gospel” which leads to modernism and outright apostasy.

Its Advocates

In Northern Ireland, the staunchest advocates of this doctrine are Ian Paisley and the Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster. Martyrs’ Memorial Free Presbyterian Church, of which Ian Paisley is the minister, regularly publicises its meetings in the press, announcing “We exalt the Blood.”3 It is certainly biblical to proclaim, “We preach Christ crucified” (I Cor. 1:23) or to say, “God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ” (Gal. 6:14) or to declare justification in Christ’s blood (Rom. 5:9) but where in the Word of God are we enjoined to “exalt the Blood”? In the Free Presbyterian seminary, the Whitefield College of the Bible, this view is promoted. This would appear to be the doctrinal distinctive of the Free Presbyterians in Ulster. No other denomination in Northern Ireland—except perhaps a few independent churches—believes this.

Outside of the Free Presbyterian denomination, this view is held by Fundamentalist preachers such as Jack Hyles, R. L. Hymers, the Bob Joneses, Rod Bell and others. One can examine Fundamentalist websites and repeatedly encounter this teaching on the blood. Indeed, in August 1986, the World Congress of Fundamentalists made an official declaration on this point. They passed a resolution that

… the precious Blood is incorruptible. It cannot be anything else because of its intrinsic purity … the precious Blood is indestructible. It cannot be anything else because of its permanence. The Blood is eternally preserved in Heaven … the precious Blood is invaluable. It cannot be anything else because of its parentage. It is the blood of God incarnate.

The Congress went on to declare that it

rejects every attempt either to deny the literalness of the Blood or to minimise its efficacy and the necessity of its shedding in Christ’s death on the Cross. Such denial is a dangerous and devilish deception … and [it] calls upon Fundamentalist preachers and God’s saints everywhere to proclaim anew the saving efficacy of the shed Blood of Christ in His death on the Cross, and to alert the Church in regard to all heretical teaching on this vital truth.4

Rev. D. A. Waite, pastor of “Bible For Today Baptist Church,” Collingswood, New Jersey, has made this doctrine of the blood part of the Articles of Faith for his church, even updating them in November 1997 “to meet present-day threats to the Faith”:

We believe that the doctrine of the Blood of the Lord Jesus Christ is of great importance in the Bible; that Christ’s Blood has been under attack in centuries past as well as in recent decades by modernist apostates, Mary Baker Eddy, R. B. Thieme, Jr., John MacArthur, Jr., and others; that Christ’s Blood is not a mere figure of speech or “metonym” to be equal to “death”; that Old Testament sacrifices had two distinct parts: (1) the death of the sacrifice; and (2) the application of the blood of the sacrifice; that death was not sufficient, but the blood had to be applied properly … that some of Christ’s Blood was taken by Him to heaven and placed on the heavenly mercy seat thus cleansing the heavenly tabernacle (Hebrews 9:12-14, 18-24; 10:19-22); that Christ’s Blood is now in heaven as the “Blood of sprinkling” (Hebrews 12:22-24); that Christ’s Blood gives us boldness and access to the holiest in heaven (Hebrews 10:19); that Christ’s Blood makes us perfect in every good work to do His will (Hebrews 13:21); and that Christ’s Blood overcomes Satan.5

Waite is a rank Arminian and is premillennial dispensationalist in his eschatology.6 Interestingly, he defines justification as a declaration of God that the believer is righteous upon the basis of the imputed righteousness of Christ and this is bestowed “solely through faith in the Redeemer’s incorruptible shed Blood.”7 It would appear that to Waite, at least, this doctrine of the blood is vital. Notice too that John MacArthur, Jr., is classified with “Christian science” cultist Mary Baker Eddy as a “modernist apostate” because he disagrees with Waite on this point. We will have occasion to examine the Fundamentalists’ controversy with MacArthur later.

Do Fundamentalists view Christ’s blood as human or divine? Ian Paisley writes, “His Blood is divine Blood as opposed to human blood.”8 That is an amazing statement. If the blood of Jesus is divine, it must have the attributes of divinity. It must, to quote the Westminster Shorter Catechism, be “infinite, eternal and unchangeable in its being, wisdom, power, holiness, justice, goodness and truth” (A. 4). Clearly, Christ’s blood does not possess these qualities.

Not all Fundamentalists agree with Paisley’s assertion that Christ’s blood is divine, not human. Dr. J. Hymers, Jr., of Baptist Tabernacle, Los Angeles, California writes,

Everyone I know of teaches that Jesus is the God-man. Jesus was both human and divine. His Blood, therefore, was both human and divine Blood. That’s the position of every credible fundamentalist on earth today.9

Where does that leave Paisley‘s credibility as a Fundamentalist with his view of Christ’s divine blood? Furthermore, if so-called “credible Fundamentalists” had been present at the Council of Chalcedon (451) and had expressed the opinion that Christ’s blood was divine and not human (Paisley) or both human and divine (Hymers), they would have been condemned as heretics, as we shall see.

Paisley,10 Hymers11 and Waite12 teach that Christ’s blood is in heaven as a distinct entity from His resurrected body, having been sprinkled on the heavenly mercy seat. Rev. John Greer of Ballymena Free Presbyterian Church and Dr. Alan Cairns of Faith Free Presbyterian Church, Greenville, South Carolina, both ministers of Ian Paisley’s Free Presbyterian Church, hold a different view. Cairns writes,

The fact that Christ’s blood may be spoken of metaphorically for His death has led some evangelicals to downplay or even deny the redemptive virtue of the actual blood of Christ. They do not scruple to say that Christ’s blood perished in the dust of Palestine … this is dangerous and without biblical warrant … the incorruptibility of Christ’s body means that it was supernaturally raised from the dead (Acts 2:27, 31-32). There is no Biblical reason to deny that the incorruptibility of Christ’s blood means that it was raised along with His body … if the blood of Christ was preserved and raised incorruptible with His body we would expect it to be in His body.13

In a sermon entitled “The Blood of the Godman” (2002), Rev. Greer argues for this position:

… the blood of Christ is sinless.14 You see the whole humanity of the Lord Jesus Christ is a sinless humanity … Since the blood belongs to His sinless humanity, that means that His blood is incorruptible and His blood is indestructible … No part of the real humanity of Christ could ever see corruption;15 that includes the blood … [in contrast to] the awful teaching of some that the Lord’s precious blood perished in the dust of Palestine … and I’m not talking about Liberals, I’m talking about men who say they’re evangelical … there are evangelical groups that teach that horrendous idea … the Resurrection necessarily took place because the humanity of Christ could not see corruption … the blood of the Lamb, being part of that humanity neither saw corruption nor destruction but was actually resurrected along with the body. There’s the simple answer as to what happened the blood. The blood was raised again … Where is the blood now? Well, the answer’s very simple. It’s in heaven … We often speak of the blood-stained mercy seat where Jesus answers prayer, have you never stopped to think (because, you know, all these hymns are not correct. I need to say that) … there’s no mercy seat in heaven, there’s no altar in heaven. Christ has fulfilled all those things … Christ is our mercy seat … if we accept that doleful, morbid heresy that the blood perished, then my dear friend, lovely gospel verses lose their meaning … thank God that the blood lives on in the body of our glorified Christ.16

It ought to be pointed out at this juncture that when David writes of Christ in Psalm 16:10, “Neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption” (quoted by Peter in Acts 2:27), the Holy Ghost does not mean that he Messiah’s body is indestructible. The fact that the text says “neither wilt thou suffer” implies that, left to itself, Christ’s body would have decayed. Christ had a real human nature. Christ’s real human nature would have gone the way of all human nature, if the Triune God had not ensured that Christ did not see corruption.

Its Implications

If Christ did not have human blood, His complete human nature is denied. Disagreeing with Paisley, who, as we have seen, teaches that Christ had divine, not human, blood,17 Greer and Cairns recognise the danger of denying Christ‘s humanity. For example, Cairns warns of this:

On the other hand, it [i.e., Christ’s blood] must not be deified. It belongs to Christ’s humanity, not His deity … we must never forget that in the incarnation there was no confusion of natures. Christ’s deity was not humanized nor His humanity deified.18

Greer gives a similar warning to his congregation. In the aforementioned sermon, he says,

The humanity of the Lord Jesus Christ had a beginning. Now that may shock you, but it won’t shock you when you think about it … His humanity began in the incarnation through the virgin birth … the Holy Spirit took of the substance of Mary’s womb and He created the sinless humanity of the Lord Jesus Christ … there are evangelical preachers who will tell you that the Lord’s humanity was brought down from heaven and planted in the womb of the Virgin Mary and that is absolutely wrong. That would mean that He would have what they call a heavenly humanity, but that wouldn’t be our humanity.19

Such warnings are to be welcomed. However, can this view of the incorruptible, indestructible blood (even if it is not divine, or divine and human, blood) really fit with Christ’s true and complete humanity? Consider the function of the blood in the human body. Blood is that fluid which carries oxygen (from the lungs to the tissues) and nutrients (from the digestive system to the tissues) and waste products (from the tissues to the liver, kidneys and lungs) around the body. Human blood is a very complex substance consisting of plasma (a pale yellow mixture of water, proteins and salts), blood cells (red and white) and platelets. That is only a very simple explanation and that barely scratches the surface of the composition and function of blood. Truly we are “fearfully and wonderfully made” (Ps. 139:14)! Blood cells die typically every few months and are regenerated by the liver and bone marrow. If Christ had incorruptible blood, did His blood corpuscles need to be regenerated regularly? Did His blood (being pure and untainted, as this teaching goes) need to be cleansed in His kidneys and liver? If not, He did not have a human liver, human kidneys, human bone marrow or even human lungs. Surely an indestructible humanity is not our humanity either. That would make Him a superman! In contrast, orthodox Christianity teaches that Christ had a weakened human nature. As the man of sorrows (Isa. 53:3), He experienced the infirmities of our flesh (Heb. 4:15). He knew what it was to be weary, hungry, thirsty and in pain. If it is denied that Christ’s blood had the properties of normal human blood, it is impossible to confess His true and complete humanity.

How much of Christ’s blood has been preserved? Alan Cairns leaves no doubt where he stands:

When I speak of the blood of Christ, I mean Christ’s blood literally, not figuratively or mystically. When I speak of the blood of Christ, I mean all of His blood, including every drop He ever shed, from His circumcision at eight days old to His crucifixion. All the blood of Christ is precious blood. All the blood of Christ is atoning blood. But, pre-eminently, when I speak of the blood of Christ, I have in mind the “blood of His cross” (Colossians 1:20). The whole of Scripture is taken up with this theme.20

The first recorded instance of Christ bleeding was as an eight day old at His circumcision (Luke 2:21). This blood too must be precious; this blood must also have been preserved according to Cairns, for, he continues, “when the blood of Christ was shed, it did not congeal and disappear into the dust of the ground.”21 As mentioned above, human blood is constantly being regenerated: the cells are regenerated in the bone marrow and the liquid (plasma) is replaced when fluid is excreted by the kidneys and water and nutrients are taken in by the digestive system. In a life-time, a human being goes through a staggering amount of blood. Was it all preserved? Are we to imagine a huge vat (containing thousands of litres) of Christ’s blood in heaven?22 If we accept the explanation of Cairns and Greer that Christ’s blood was resurrected and returned to His body—and yet not one drop was lost—how can all the blood from Christ’s infancy to His death, when aged approximately thirty-three, fit into His body again? If not all was resurrected with and in His body, are we to imagine the resurrected and glorified Christ with some of His blood in His body and the remaining blood in a vial?

If all of Christ’s sinless humanity has been preserved, what about Christ’s skin cells, His hair and other bodily fluids (such as sweat)? Human beings shed billions of skin cells in a lifetime. This makes up the majority of the dust in our homes (Gen. 3:19). If Christ had an incorruptible human nature, why have not all His skin cells and shed hair follicles, including those plucked when He was shamefully treated by the soldiers (Isa. 50:6), been preserved? All our sweat comes from our blood. Sweating, part of the human body’s cooling system, is one of the functions of the skin. We secrete water and salts which come from the plasma in our bloodstream. Christ would certainly have perspired as He worked as a carpenter or during a day preaching in Israel (Gen. 3:19). Are we to believe that all this sweat has been preserved? Of course not! There is no need. Why should Christ’s literal blood be any different?

Hymers argues that there couldbe a bowl of Christ’s blood in heaven, since Scripture teaches that there are “seven golden vials full of the wrath of God” (Rev. 15:7) there.23 However, wrath is not a liquid which can be stored in a literal bowl. Wrath is the attitude of God in His holiness against sin; it is not a physical substance. God does not literally “pour” wrath! The things pictured in the book of Revelation are “signified” as signs (Rev. 1:1). How a supposedly educated man could utter such absurdities is beyond belief!



If Christ’s blood is divine, it must be worshipped. Indeed, Alan Cairns—who wants us to avoid deifying the Lord’s humanity—is nevertheless bold to write,

Undoubtedly, the blood of Christ is the most precious thing in heaven, earth or hell. There are sound Biblical reasons for so esteeming the blood of Christ … Nothing thrills the heart of a child of God more than to think upon the precious blood of Christ. Even eternity will not exhaust our praise for the shed blood of the Lamb.24

Its Importance to Fundamentalists

To deny this cherished dogma makes one a heretic in Fundamentalist circles. John MacArthur, Jr., of “Grace to You” ministries, more than any other, has provoked the wrath of Fundamentalists because he allegedly “denies the Blood.” He first upset them in the 1970s. Hymers has several sermons on his website, preached between 2002 and 2005, in which he attacks MacArthur’s alleged heresy. In September 2002, Hymers preached a sermon in response to a letter which MacArthur had written to clarify his position. In that letter, MacArthur proves that he holds the historic orthodox Christian position on this subject:

The literal blood of Christ was violently shed at his crucifixion. Those who deny this truth or try to spiritualize the death of Christ are guilty of corrupting the gospel message. Jesus Christ bled and died in the fullest literal sense, and when He rose from the dead, he was literally resurrected. To deny the absolute reality of those truths is to nullify them … Clearly the word blood is often used to mean more than the literal red fluid. Thus it is that when Scripture speaks of the blood of Christ, it usually means more than just the red and white corpuscles—it encompasses His death, the sacrifice for our sins, and all that is involved in the atonement … We are not saved by some mystical heavenly application of Jesus’ literal blood. Nothing in Scripture indicates that the literal blood of Christ is preserved in heaven and applied to individual believers. When Scripture says we’re redeemed by the blood (I Peter 1:18-19), it is not speaking of a bowl of blood in heaven. It means we’re saved by Christ’s sacrificial death … It is not the actual liquid that cleanses us from our sins, but the work of redemption Christ accomplished in pouring it out. That is not heresy; it’s basic biblical truth.25

However, Hymers is not convinced by MacArthur’s explanation. He urges his congregation to join with him in earnest prayer for MacArthur, since “nothing short of divine intervention” can change MacArthur’s view on the Blood.26 In another sermon, in September 2002, Hymers claims that MacArthur’s heresy proves he has not even been truly converted:

What’s the matter with MacArthur and his Geeks? The answer is simple: they have never been converted. Having never experienced either conversion or the new birth, these men simply cannot “see” what is in Heaven.27

Almost two years later, on 27 June 2004, in a sermon entitled, “Dr. MacArthur’s Logical Fallacies on the Blood—a Prayer for the Intervention of God’s grace,” Hymers declared that at his midweek prayer meeting the members of his church still pray for John MacArthur by name. MacArthur’s error still lies heavily upon Hymers’ heart:

Untold millions will die the second death, in flames of torment for all eternity, because this error has been left unchecked. It is a key evangelical error today—not a side issue.28

In a more recent sermon, entitled “Dr. MacArthur and the Blood of God” (July, 2005), Hymers warns his listeners that MacArthur is in danger of falling into the error of Nestorianism.29 If MacArthur denies that Christ had the blood of God, then he is dividing the two natures of Christ, claims Hymers.30 However, Hymers is oblivious to the fact that he is confounding or mixing the natures of Christ, the heresy of Eutychianism or Monophysitism.31 There is a world of difference between saying that Christ had the blood of God (that is, that the blood of Christ belonged to both His human and His divine natures [Hymers], or even only to His divine nature [Paisley]) and that the Person whose human blood was shed was also God.

Belgic Confession 19 gives the orthodox position:

We believe that … the person of the Son is inseparably united and connected with the human nature, so that there are not two Sons of God, nor two persons, but two natures united in one single person; yet, that each nature retains its own distinct properties. As then the divine nature hath always remained uncreated, without beginning of days or end of life, filling heaven and earth, so also hath the human nature not lost its properties, but remained a creature, having beginning of days, being a finite nature, and retaining all the properties of a real body. And though He hath by His resurrection given immortality to the same, nevertheless He hath not changed the reality of His human nature, forasmuch as our salvation and resurrection also depend on the reality of His body. But these two natures are so closely united in one person, that they were not separated even by His death.

Richard Alexander is another victim in the Fundamentalists’ zeal for the literal preserved blood. When he first encountered this theory, he was astonished. Now he faces ostracism because he dares to challenge the establishment and attacks a sacred cow of Fundamentalism. Unable to discuss it within his denomination, he was forced to go to print and has produced an on-line book on the subject. He tells of his experiences in the introduction:

The preachers will not permit him [i.e., Richard Alexander, the author] to speak of it to their members, formally or informally, nor will they answer his arguments themselves. The author does not expect them to read this book until they must, for they shun hard questions, calling them “vain babbling” and “division of the brethren.” Perhaps if this book were made available to the general public, fundamentalism would realize that they must answer these questions when they make claims for the Blood Doctrine.32

Rev. Greer, in the sermon quoted earlier, calls a denial of this dogma that “awful teaching” and refers to it as “that doleful, morbid heresy that the blood perished.”



Rev. Thomas Martin, minister of Lisburn Free Presbyterian Church, castigates the “blood deniers” in these words:

There are those who say that Christ’s blood perished … that is heresy; that is bordering on blasphemy against the blood; they’re nearly guilty, only they’re saved … they’re very nearly guilty of blaspheming the Holy Ghost who bears witness to the blood. If that ever happened to an unconverted man, they’d be sure of hell. Remember that: the unpardonable sin.33

Its Historical Lineage

Those who deny this novel blood dogma of Fundamentalism are accused of heresy. Can such a serious charge be substantiated? Heresy is by definition an aberration in doctrine from the historic creeds of the church. However, the creeds breathe not one word in favour of this novel dogma. Indeed it is ironic that many heretical groups past and present hold views related to this blood dogma. What do the creeds teach concerning the person of Christ?

Orthodox Christianity has always taught that Jesus Christ is fully and eternally God, the Second Person of the Holy Trinity, and that in the incarnation the eternal Word “was made flesh and dwelt among us” (John 1:14). “Made flesh” means that the Lord Jesus assumed to Himself a real human nature, “with all the essential properties, and common infirmities thereof” (Westminster Confession 8:2).

The early church was plagued by various heretical groups, who denied either Christ’s divinity or His humanity or the relationship between the two natures. The Fundamentalists’ dogma of the blood of Christ is a form of these heresies.

(1) Gnosticism

Gnostic heretics were a mystical group who claimed salvation by a special knowledge (Greek: gnosis). Among their many heresies, they taught that matter was sinful and therefore Christ could not have assumed a material body. It is surely a form of Gnosticism to teach that physical blood is sinful and therefore Christ did not have real human blood. The Apostle John warns against Gnosticism in his epistles:

Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God: because many false prophets are gone out into the world. Hereby know we the Spirit of God: Every spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is of God. And every spirit that confesseth not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is not of God: and this is that spirit of antichrist, whereof ye have heard that it should come; and even now already is it in the world” (I John 4:1-3). For many deceivers are entered into the world, who confess not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh. This is a deceiver and an antichrist (II John 7).

Therefore, any doctrine which denies the complete human nature of Christ (by claiming His blood is divine or divine and human) is of antichrist and his spirit.

(2) Docetism

The heresy of Docetism arose from Gnosticism. The Docetists taught that the human nature of Christ was an illusion, that Christ only seemed to be human. Modern Fundamentalists teach a form of Docetism because Christ only seemed to have human blood, but it was divine blood, or divine and human blood, or incorruptible and indestructible blood.

(3) Apollinarianism

Apollinarianism denies the completeness of Christ‘s humanity. Apollinarus maintained that Christ had a human body and a human soul but not a human spirit or rational mind (Greek: nous). He taught that Christ’s divine nature (the divine Logos) took the place of His rational human spirit or mind (nous). The blood theorists (like the Apollinarians) deny part of the human nature of Christ: the former deny that the blood is truly human; the latter denied that the spirit or mind was human.

(4) Eutychianism

Eutychianism is the view that Christ’s two natures were mixed together to form one nature (Monophysitism). The Fundamentalists teach a form of Eutychianism, because they attribute divine characteristics to the human blood of Christ, so that His blood is neither truly human nor divine, but both, hence Hymers’ outrageous statement that the blood of Christ is “both human and divine.”

The church father, Athanasius, who defended the orthodox faith concerning the doctrine of Christ, expressed the importance of a true Christology thus, “What He did not assume, He could not redeem.” If Christ did not have human blood, He could not redeem every part of us, and if He did not redeem every part of us, then He redeemed no part of us. Therefore, we are not redeemed at all!

The orthodox view of the true humanity of Christ is that He assumed to Himself at the incarnation a real, complete, sinless and weakened human nature. Reformed theologian, Herman Hoeksema presents the biblical doctrine:

A real man is one who partakes of our human nature, soul and body. Christ must be real man, that is, he must not assume a temporary appearance of a human being, for then he is not related to us. He must not come in a specially created human nature, for then he stands outside the scope of our race. He must be of us. He must subsist in the very human nature that was created in the beginning … Even though he was conceived without the will of man and born of a virgin, his was not a strange or specially created human nature: but he took upon him our flesh and blood. He was organically connected with us. As to this human nature, he did not come from without, but was brought forth by us. He did not stand next to men, but among them, and was of them. He partook of the flesh and blood of the children. He was flesh or our flesh, blood of our blood, bone of our bone.34

To ascribe divinity to the blood of the Lord Jesus is a mixing of the two natures of Christ, something condemned in the early councils of the church. The Chalcedon Creed (451) affirms that Christ is

to be acknowledged in two natures, without confusion, without change, without division, without separation; the distinction of natures being by no means taken away by the union, but the property of each nature being preserved, and concurring in one person and one subsistence.

To say, as Hymers, supposedly representing all “credible Fundamentalists,” has done, that the blood of Christ is both human and divine, or to claim, as Paisley has done, that Christ’s blood is divine and not human, is to confuse the two natures of the Lord Jesus Christ, and to fail to preserve the property of each nature. This is Christological heresy contrary to the early creeds.

(5) Romanism

The subject of the blood of Christ was hotly debated in the fifteenth century. The question was asked “Did the blood shed by the Saviour during His Passion remain united to the Eternal Word?” This led to a debate between the Dominicans and the Franciscans in the presence of Pope Pius II (1405-1464). The Dominicans held that the blood of Christ was an essential part of His sacred humanity and as such could never be detached from the divine Logos. The Franciscans argued that Christ’s blood was only concomitant with His sacred humanity, that is, it existed with it but was not an essential part. Although Pope Pius II did not decide one way or the other, the trend of Roman Catholic theological thought, according to the on-lineCatholic Encyclopedia, is in favour of the Dominican teaching. Accordingly, Rome teaches that the blood shed by Christ during His passion was “reunited to the body of Christ at the Resurrection, with the possible exception of a few particles which instantly lost their union to the Word and became holy relics to be venerated but not adored.”35 Apart from the reference to relics and “the possible exception of a few particles,” that is almost identical to what many Free Presbyterian ministers, such as Greer, Cairns and Martin teach.

Rome teaches that “viewed as a part of the Sacred Humanity hypostatically united to the Word, the Precious Blood deserves latreutical worship or adoration.”36 This is an integral part of Rome’s idolatry, where she allocates different levels of adoration to various persons and objects. According to the above classification, the blood of Christ is to be adored with latria, which is why Romanists worship the bread and wine (which they believe are transubstantiated into the body and blood of Christ) in the Mass. Other objects of devotion, such as relics, receive dulia(supposedly a lower level of worship), not latria.

The Reformed Faith condemns such idolatry. For example, Calvin dismisses such distinctions as an “inept” and “entirely worthless.”37 There really is no difference between religious adoration, veneration or worship. They all amount to the same thing.38

Furthermore, Rome has among her many idolatries a special devotion to the blood of Christ. “Confraternities which made it their special object to venerate the Blood of Christ first arose in Spain,” states the on-line Catholic Encyclopedia.39 In the Romish calendar, the month of July is dedicated to the honour of Christ’s blood. On 30 June, 1960, Pope John XXIII addressed a gathering of devotees on the eve of “The Feast of Our Lord Jesus Christ’s Most Precious Blood” in these words:

Following our predecessors’ example, we have taken further steps to promote the devotion to the Precious Blood of the unblemished Lamb, Jesus Christ. We have approved the Litany of the Precious Blood drawn up by the Sacred Congregation of Rites and through special indulgences have encouraged its public and private recitation throughout the Catholic world.40

On 1 July, 2000, Pope John Paul II addressing the “Catholic associations devoted to the Most Precious Blood” exhorted them to think on the “mystery of the Blood of Christ.”41

Jesuit, John A. Hardon addressing a conference on the “Precious Blood of Christ” (1987) speaks of the blood in these terms:

God took on a human nature so that in that human nature He could die. In order to die, the soul had to separate from the body. But for the body to have the soul separate, the body itself had to be deprived of His Blood … that draining of the human body of His blood was the only way that Christ, sinless Son of God and Son of Mary that He was, the only way that He could die … Why does Peter identify the Blood of the Lamb of God as “Precious?” Well, it is surely Precious because it is the Blood of no human being. It is the Blood of the living God who took on human nature, capable of shedding His Blood. Why was the Blood of Christ Precious? Because it is the Blood of God who took on human nature in order to be able to suffer and to bleed and, let us add, in order to bleed to death. Why Precious? Because it is the Blood of the living God.42

Those words would be quite acceptable in many a Fundamentalist pulpit. Hardon is mistaken. Christ did not die by having the blood “drained” from His body. There was still blood in His body after His death (John 19:34). Christ died by an act of His will (John 10:17-18) not from blood-loss. When He has suffered in body and soul the wrath of God due to God’s elect, He gave up the ghost (Matt. 27:50; Mark 15:37; Luke 23:46; John 19:30).43

Hardon laments that the modern church has neglected devotion to the Blood. He writes,

I really believe that one of the symptoms of modern society (and I would even include, sadly, modern Catholic society) one of the symptoms of a growing, gnawing secularism is the lessening and the weakening of devotion to the Precious Blood … Suppose I picked a thousand Catholics at random, I mean, believing, Churchgoing Catholics and would ask them: What litanies has the Church approved for the universal recitation by the faithful? I honestly doubt if very many out of a thousand would know that one of those litanies is the Litany of the Precious Blood.44

The Litany of the Precious Blood (which is particularly to be recited during the month of July) contains lines such as these:

Blood of Christ, stream of mercy,

Blood of Christ, victor over demons,

Blood of Christ, courage of martyrs,

Blood of Christ, strength of confessors,

Blood of Christ, bringing forth virgins,

Blood of Christ, help of those in peril,

Blood of Christ, relief of the burdened,

Blood of Christ, solace in sorrow,

Blood of Christ, hope of the penitent,

Blood of Christ, consolation of the dying,

Blood of Christ, peace and tenderness of hearts,

Blood of Christ, pledge of eternal life,

Blood of Christ, freeing souls from purgatory,

Blood of Christ, most worthy of all glory and honour.45

While Fundamentalists would baulk at the idea of worshipping the blood (although language such as “make much of the Blood,” “exalt the Blood,” etc., come dangerously close) and would rightly reject unscriptural notions such as purgatory, it is noteworthy that they too lament the modern lack of emphasis and devotion to the Blood. They are the ones who complain about the so-called “bloodless” pulpits and the “bloodless” hymns of modern Evangelicalism.46

(6) Anabaptism

The Anabaptists comprised a number of heretical sects which sprung up like toadstools at the time of the Reformation. The Reformers fought for the Word of God and laboured for the Reformation of Christ’s church on two fronts: against Rome and against the Anabaptists. The latter group were radicals. Many of them were guilty of fomenting rebellion.47 Mainly for this reason, they were persecuted by the state. They are widely regarded as the precursors of the Charismatics. The Reformers considered them to be heretics.48 Some of the more radical Anabaptists denied the Trinity and claimed direct extra-biblical revelation from God, claiming to have the Spirit.49 The Belgic Confession, specifically condemns the errors of the Anabaptists in several places.50 For example, Belgic Confession 18 declares,

we confess in opposition to the heresy of the Anabaptists, who deny that Christ assumed human flesh of His mother, that Christ is become partaker of the flesh and blood of the children.

Article 13 was written specifically to counter the error of a leading Anabaptist, Menno Simons (1496-1561), who taught the idea of “celestial flesh.” According to an article by Cky. J. Carrigan, Menno derived this view from Melchior Hoffmann (1495-1543) and Casper Schwenckfeld (1490-1561). He quotes Menno:

Our doctrine and belief is that this same Word, Wisdom, and First-born, as we have confessed, in due time descended from heaven, and that He became a true, mortal man subject to suffering and death by the power of the most High and His Holy Spirit, not of Mary but in Mary,51 above all human comprehension. We confess and say, and that in accordance with the Lord’s Word, that the Scripture exempts none from sin but Him that is free indeed, namely, Christ Jesus … whereby it is plainly shown that He is not of Mary’s flesh.52

While Menno and other Anabaptists denied that Christ derived His flesh from Mary, many modern Fundamentalists teach a form of Anabaptism, by maintaining that Christ did not derive His blood from Mary. Of course, most modern Fundamentalists are Anabaptistic in other ways, such as their Arminianism and their denial of paedobaptism.53

(7) Charismaticism

A mystical “pleading of the blood” is found among many evangelicals, especially those of the Pentecostal and Charismatic variety. James A. Fowler critiques a growing tendency to “plead the blood” in a mystical sense:

This is a popular phrase within some Christian circles. They ‘plead the blood’ to relieve fears and depression.

They ‘plead the blood’ to cast out demons.

They ‘plead the blood’ to remove a curse.

They ‘plead the blood’ to heal and work miracles.

They ‘plead the blood’ to get what they call the ‘baptism in the Spirit’ and to speak in tongues.

They ‘plead the blood’ to be delivered from difficult circumstances, and to keep them from all accidents.

They ‘plead the blood’ to protect their home and family.

They ‘plead the blood’ for revival, for intercessory prayer and for worship. They go on to say, ‘Since the life of Jesus is in His Blood, if we plead, honor, sprinkle and sing about it, we actually introduce the life of God into our worship.’ ‘We sprinkle the Blood with our tongues, by repeating the word, ‘Blood, Blood, Blood of Jesus.’ ‘The more we plead the blood the more power we have, power to conquer the world for Jesus, power to clean up the church, power against Satan, as we use the blood as a weapon of spiritual warfare, which fights sinful infection like our white blood cells fight infection in our physical body.’54

This kind of prayer is not uncommon in Fundamentalist prayer meetings in Northern Ireland, although most of them prefer the phrase, “cover the [insert wish] in the blood.” The idea is similar.55

An inappropriately named website called “Bible-Knowledge.com” offers advice on “How to Plead the Blood of Jesus for Deliverance and Protection.” By following the instructions on this site, it is claimed, you can ward off illness, car accidents, natural disasters, attacks on your family, bankruptcy, credit card fraud, redundancy and demonic assaults. Disaster will strike if you do not plead the blood regularly. The warning is given:

I have personally found out the hard way—that if I want God’s full protection on all of the above—that I have to Plead the Blood on the night before the beginning of the next month. In other words, if I want God’s protection for the month of May—then I have to Plead the Blood on all of the above on the last day of April. I have been burned several times when I forgot to do this and was subject to several abnormal attacks on the first day of that new month.56

If you want to protect your property, just apply a “Bloodline,” we are told:

You can walk around the entire property Pleading the Blood as you walk completely around it in a circle. What you are doing is applying a Bloodline around your property … I have read of cases where Christian farmers have done this to protect their livestock and flock from attacks from wild predators. In one case in particular, a farmer was having a problem with some of his farm animals being killed by a wild wolf. He went ahead and applied a Bloodline around his entire property. When he woke up the next day, he found a dead wolf … Pleading the Blood and applying a Bloodline around your house and property can also help protect you from earthquakes or tornadoes … Another area in which you can Plead the Blood on is whenever you are getting ready to get on a train or plane to go out of town. Simply Plead the Blood on the train or plane either right before you board it – or do it the night before.57

Of course, none of this has any basis in Scripture and is simply an attempt to manipulate God. Fowler complains of this as the attitude that “all one has to do is push God’s ‘blood-button,’ and God will respond like a remote-control God.” The third petition, “Thy will be done” (Matt. 6:10), is absent from such prayers.

Fundamental Theological Errors

(1) A Mistaken View of Original Sin

Some Fundamentalists believe that original sin is propagated through blood. For example, Ian Paisley writes, “Through the veins of humanity flows a poisoned bloodstream. The life of the flesh is in the blood. The life of man is totally depraved, therefore his blood is but human depravity in solution.”58 Likewise, Alan Cairns asserts, “Each of us is naturally corrupt. The poison of sin flows in the veins of every one of us, and the foul corrupt nature of sin is passed on from father to son.”59Scripture teaches that “by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned” (Rom. 5:12) and “by one man’s disobedience many were made sinners” (Rom. 5:19). For this reason, the Psalmist teaches that he was “shapen in iniquity” and conceived in sin (Ps. 51:5) and therefore “the wicked are estranged from the womb: they go astray as soon as they be born” (Ps. 58:3). But we reject this idea that sin is passed on through the blood, and that therefore we all have polluted and sinful blood. Our blood is not the problem; blood is an amoral substance. Blood in itself, as a red liquid, which carries nutrients, gases and waste products through the body, is neither virtuous nor sinful, neither pleasing nor displeasing to God.

The Reformed creeds explain original sin thus:

Man after the fall begat children in his own likeness. A corrupt stock produced a corrupt offspring. Hence all the posterity of Adam, Christ only excepted, have derived corruption from their original parent, not by imitation, as the Pelagians of old asserted, but by the propagation of a vicious nature (Canons of Dordt III/IV:2).

Ian Paisley writes of the blood of Christ: “His Blood is innocent Blood as opposed to guilty blood” and quotes Matthew 27:4.60 However, when Judas Iscariot speaks of betraying “innocent blood” (Matt. 27:4), he does not mean that the blood of Jesus Christ—His haematology—was pure or without guilt (for it was amoral), but Judas means that Christ was innocent of crime. His regret at betraying “innocent” blood is recognition that Jesus was innocent of the charges against Him and that He was being treated unjustly.61 Nor does a reference to Christ’s innocent blood in this text imply that others have guilty and sinful blood. The term “innocent blood” cannot mean pure and sinless blood, if we consider other passages. In Jonah 1:14, the sailors beseech God not to punish them for shedding Jonah’s “innocent blood” but nobody maintains that Jonah was sinless. Indeed, by the reckoning of Paisley and Cairns, he must have inherited the same “poison of sin” in his veins. Deuteronomy gives directions to Israel on what to do if a dead body is found in the field “and it be not known who hath slain him” (Deut. 21:1). A sacrifice is to be offered and prayer made to God that “innocent blood” be not imputed to Israel. Obviously, this victim is not sinless either. King Manasseh is said to have shed much “innocent blood” in Israel (II Kings 21:16), yet every victim of that murderous king was born with original sin. Jonathan refers to David’s “innocent blood” (I Sam. 19:5). Examples could be multiplied. The term “innocent blood” simply refers to a person innocent of the crime of which he is accused. Original sin, then, is not passed on through blood, but is imputed to us as guilt by God, and passed on to us by human generation.

Therefore, it is not that man has polluted blood. He has a polluted or totally corrupt nature. The effects of sin are universal: his mind, his will and his soul are depraved and marred by sin. The Canons of Dordt express it thus:

revolting from God by the instigation of the devil, and abusing the freedom of his own will, he [i.e., man] forfeited these excellent gifts; and on the contrary entailed on himself blindness of mind, horrible darkness, vanity and perverseness of judgment, became wicked, rebellious, and obdurate in heart and will, and impure in his affections (III/IV:I).

Sin is no more carried in blood than in urine or in sweat.62 Blood is simply a bodily fluid. Christ’s blood, since it was human blood (because Christ had a real human nature), had all the properties of human blood. It was not supernatural blood. The incarnation of Christ involved His taking a real, complete, sinless and weakened human nature, “with all the essential properties and common infirmities thereof” (Westminster Confession 8:2) or as the writer to the Hebrews put it,

Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same … for verily he took not on him the nature of angels; but he took on him the seed of Abraham. Wherefore in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his brethren, that he might be a merciful and faithful high priest (Heb. 2:14, 16-17).

(2) A Misunderstanding Concerning the Virgin Birth

Flowing from a mistaken view of original sin, many believe that the Virgin Birth was necessary in order to prevent Jesus inheriting sinful human blood from his parents. Paisley claims this:

If [Christ] had been born by natural generation His blood would have been poisoned by the universal malady of sin and would have been absolutely valueless as an atonement for the sinful sons of men … The Virgin Birth of Christ, which took place with no male contribution which would originate the infant’s blood in the usual way, but by a supernatural act of God thus originating supernatural blood, is absolutely essential to the work of redemption. By such a birth and by such a birth alone could blood be produced—precious, incorruptible, supernatural and divine, to redeem the fallen sons of Adam’s accursed race.63

The Bible teaches that the virgin birth was both a wonder and a sign (Isa. 7:14), a wonderful sign pointing to an infinitely greater wonder, the incarnation of the Son of God: “without controversy great is the mystery of godliness: God was manifest in the flesh” (I Tim. 3:16). The idea that Jesus would have been tainted by sin except He was virgin-born has no basis in Scripture. The reason why Jesus was born sinless is because He is the Son of God. It is impossible for Jesus to be tainted with sin! Jesus did not need a sinlessly perfect mother (as Rome teaches) to be the Lamb without blemish or spot, nor did He need supernaturally-created divine blood or divine and human blood. Who can even understand what supernatural, “divine” blood is? Remember God is spirit and has no blood (John 4:24). The Bible explains how Jesus was born without sin in the womb of a sinful woman:

And the angel answered and said unto her, The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee: therefore that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God (Luke 1:35).

The reason why the human nature of Christ was free from sin is because of the power of the Holy Ghost, not because of some quality in Christ’s blood.

The Heidelberg Catechism too teaches that the blood of Jesus’ human nature (obviously His divine nature had no blood) was from his mother:

God’s eternal Son, who is and continueth true and eternal God, took upon Him the very nature of man, of the flesh and blood of the Virgin Mary, by the operation of the Holy Ghost; that He might also be the true seed of David, like unto His brethren in all things, sin excepted (A. 35).

Rev. Ronald Hanko explains the virgin birth thus:

Christ was born of the flesh and blood of Mary, that he was a Jew of the line of David, of the seed of Abraham according to the flesh. So, too, he was a true son of Adam, our own flesh and blood. This seems self-evident, but it has been denied in church history. Some taught that Christ brought his human nature with him from heaven and that by his birth and conception he merely passed through Mary’s womb like water through a tap. Or they taught that his human nature was specially created in her womb, so that he was not genetically and physically her son. This was taught by some Anabaptists at the time of the Reformation, and more recently by the neo-orthodox theologian Karl Barth. Both Barth and the Anabaptists held such views in the interest of preserving Christ’s sinlessness. If Jesus was not born of human ancestry, they claimed, then there was no possibility that he was tainted with human depravity. It is not necessary to hold these views, however, in order to believe that Christ was wholly without sin. His conception by the Holy Spirit guaranteed his sinlessness, as Luke 1:35 teaches. Indeed to hold the view of the Anabaptists and of Barth is to deny that Christ was like us in all things except sin (Heb. 2:14, Heb. 4:15), even in his conception and birth.64

(3) A Misguided Appeal to Science

One of the main proponents of this doctrine, who has influenced Ian Paisley in his views, was Dr. M. R. De Haan of Radio Bible Class, Grand Rapids, Michigan. De Haan, in his 1943 book The Chemistry of the Blood, asserted, “Not only is it a scientific fact, but it is plainly taught in Scripture that Jesus partook of human flesh without Adam’s blood.”65 Let the import of those words sink in! Christ—according to Paisley and De Haan—did not have Adam’s blood. Obviously, nobody literally had Adam’s blood but Adam himself, but what is meant here by De Haan is that Christ was not in the “bloodline” of Adam. Therefore, He did not have the blood (was not in the “bloodline”) of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, David or any of the others in the covenant line. How, then, could Christ be “of the seed of David according to the flesh” (Rom. 1:3)? How can He have taken “on him the seed of Abraham” (Heb. 2:16)? How can it be said that, of the Jews, “concerning the flesh, Christ came” (Rom. 9:5), if Christ was not in the “bloodline’’ of Adam and the covenant people of God? De Haan (and Paisley) would grant that Christ was a true descendant of Adam, Abraham, and David but they insist that Christ had a different sort of blood.

However, the Bible teaches that Christ had the same sort of blood we do: human blood! Hebrews 2:14 proves that Christ took part of the same “flesh and blood” of the children, so that He was “in all things [sin excepted] made like unto his brethren.” De Haan seeks to twist this text (II Peter 3:16) and Paisley quotes De Haan’s Scripture-twisting with approval.66 De Haan wants Hebrews 2:14 to say that “the children take both flesh and blood of Adam, but Christ took only part, that is, the flesh part, whereas the blood was the result of supernatural conception” but Hebrews 2:14 does not say that.67

Furthermore, De Haan stated elsewhere in The Chemistry of the Blood that the blood of Adam was sinful, but not his flesh:

Christ could partake of Adam’s flesh, which is not inherently sinful, but He could not partake of Adam’s blood, which was completely sinful. God provided a way by which Jesus, born of a woman (not man), could be a perfect human being, but, because He had not a drop of Adam’s blood in His veins, He did not share in Adam’s sin.68

De Haan, who studied medicine nearly a century ago, is still hailed as an authority by some Fundamentalist preachers who insist that the blood comes from the father, and never from the mother, and that the blood of the foetus and the mother never mix. Because of these medical “facts,” Ian Paisley and others believe that Christ’s blood came from a different source than His flesh. However, de Haan’s medical “facts” are at variance with recent medical discoveries. In his book Blood, The Bible and Fundamentalism, Richard Alexander explodes the treasured theories of De Haan and demonstrates that the “Blood Indoctrinators,” as he terms them, are building on an unsound foundation: “Doctor De Haan, in many of his writings, constantly displayed inaccurate ideas that were scientifically naïve.”69 Jesus got His flesh and blood from His mother (or to speak more precisely, He inherited her chromosomes so that the foetus could produce the cells and tissues, including blood cells, from her) and He was born sinless because He was conceived of the Holy Ghost. An appeal to science, outdated science at best, is not only unnecessary, but also foolish and brings reproach on the Christian gospel.

Another preacher who appeals to faulty medical science is Calvin Ray Evans, pastor of Rubyville Community Church, Rubyville, Ohio. In a sermon preached in 2003 entitled “The Incorruptible Blood,” he tells an anecdote of how he came across an amazing fact about our blood and by implication astounding facts about Christ’s blood. He starts by making scientifically credible statements about human blood:

… you know, our blood, if we spill our blood on the sand, if you bleed and your blood pours out, immediately your blood has a clotting ability. Coagulates are in your blood. It’ll clot. If the blood falls on the sand, that same ability will cause that blood to dry, and as the blood dries, it starts a decaying process …70

After explaining that to the congregation, he relates the story of a man he visited in the hospital who had almost died from internal bleeding. This man mentioned something very interesting to Evans which he claims revolutionised his thinking about Christ’s blood. Having heard this from the patient, he calls a doctor to check the accuracy of what he has just heard. The doctor confirms it.

He said, “Preacher, I didn’t realise … when your blood comes out of your body quickly, that your organs shut down … all of your organs immediately stop excreting any kind of fluid in your body, and the blood pulls the water out of your body” … so I called a doctor and I said, “Let me ask you something, Doc” … he said, “Yes,” he said, “that is exactly what happens” … and I said, “Well, let me ask you this … what would happen if your body lost, or it was absent in your body, the coagulates which cause your blood to clot” … he said, “I’ll tell you what would happen … immediately, your blood,” he said, “you wouldn’t lose blood with a trickle, he said your blood would pour out or flow out, and because the fluids is [sic] there, the fluids keep the consistency coming out with the blood that it keeps pouring out, and he said immediately your organs would shut down and it would pull all of the fluids out of your organs.” And he said, “Basically, what would happen, your organs would become petrified on the inside.”

Evans at this stage is overcome with emotion (he “laid the phone down and [he] wept for just a minute or two”) and presses the doctor for more information:

I said, “Doc, let me tell you what I’m thinking about, I’ve heard preacher after preacher after preacher preach about when Christ died on the cross and they plunged the spear into His side that it punctured the pericardial sack, the sack around your heart, and the fluids was [sic] there.” And I said, “Doc, do you believe that it was possible since Jesus’ blood was incorruptible, that meant His blood could not rot” [frenzied cheering from the congregation] and I said, “Since His blood could not rot, that means that you have to have clotting ability or coagulates to make it dry up to start the deterioration process. Would that mean that Jesus would have started bleeding?” And he said … “That would have meant when they drove nails in His hands and His feet, it would have become like a fountain that was open” [more cheering from the audience] … and he said, “Do you know what would happen if you did not have that clotting ability?” I said, “What?” He said, “If you would sweat intensely enough”—we preach that the capillaries broke down. He said that we’re wrong. That’s not what it was—He said, “It was the incorruptible blood of a perfect Savior, that as He sweated, the blood began to flow, and His sweat became as though it were great drops of blood, because out of the blood He poured the fluids from His body” [enthusiastic, fanatical cheering from the audience]. And then it dawned on me: God said in Acts chapter 2 that He would not allow His Holy One to see corruption, and I said, “If that was the case, if the blood flowed out of Him in that manner, and the fountain was opened, and the blood was flowing like a mighty crimson river, what would that do to the body, would it die?” He said, “It wouldn’t rot, not in three days would it rot” [enthusiastic ‘Amen’ from the audience] … how do they keep you as a corpse from becoming an odour, take the blood out of you, O glory! and then I went to Zechariah chapter 13 verse 1 and the Bible says in that day … and that blood will never decay. This same doctor told me, he said, “You know if people would just understand; that would mean that the blood of Jesus was just as fresh today [audience screaming, ‘Amen!’] as the day He died on Calvary.”

We must interrupt this fanatical frenzied cheering of Hallelujahs, into which Evans has whipped his audience, and inject some sober thinking into this discussion (Acts 26:25; I Thess. 5:6; I Pet. 4:7). If Christ’s blood had lacked the vital clotting ability, He would not—in a day of primitive medicine—have lived to thirty three years. He would have died in childhood, probably shortly after being circumcised, or whenever He suffered a cut or injury or serious bruise. Moreover, He would have been a haemophiliac and therefore ceremonially unclean in Israel (cf. Lev. 15). How, then, could He have been a High Priest unto the people of God?

Assuming that He had survived to adulthood, let us consider the example that Evans gives. If Christ had started bleeding from His pores in the Garden of Gethsemane in the way described by Evans (though not in the way described in Luke 22:44), He would have been dead within a matter of hours if He had had no coagulates in His blood. He would not have been able to walk the way to Calvary or even stand up at His trial. In the unlikely event that He had survived the arraignment before the Sanhedrin, the scourging by the Romans (John 19:1) would have brought a swift end to His life. It was not unknown for people to die from scourging, and certainly a haemophiliac would have stood no chance.

Laying aside all this nonsense, we ought to note that Scripture makes it clear why Christ died so quickly on the cross—a death which ordinarily could take days. It was because Christ was completely in control. He gave up His spirit to the Father at the appointed time (Luke 23:46; quoting Psalm 31:5) for no man took His life from Him (John 10:18). Pilate marvelled at the swiftness of Christ’s death (Mark 15:44) but God was in control of all events (Acts 4:27-28), making sure that Christ’s bones would not be broken (John 19:36), which would have happened if Christ had died as slowly as those who were crucified with Him. The reason why Christ’s body did not decay in the grave was not because His body was drained of His special non-coagulating blood, as Evans surmises, nor because He had an incorruptible humanity, as Greer and Cairns teach, but because God preserved Christ’s corpse in the grave miraculously. It was God’s purpose that Christ rise again for our justification (Rom. 4:25). Death could have no power over Christ (Rom. 6:9), because He has vanquished death by His own death on the cross.

(4) A Bizarre Interpretation of Old Testament Typology

Since Fundamentalist preachers like Paisley believe that the blood of Jesus Christ is incorruptible and indestructible, they teach that it has been preserved in heaven. Every drop of Christ’s blood, they claim, has been resurrected, gathered and brought to heaven, where it pleads for blood-bought souls before the Father. Paisley excoriates those preachers who dare to oppose such a teaching:

Into the pulpit of the churches there has come a new breed of men who sail under the flag of Evangelicalism and some of whom even dare to hoist the flag of Fundamentalism. Their message is void of the “blood evangel” and destructive of the Rock granite of accomplished redemption … the bloodless track of these preachers is a road of impossibilities, the cul de sac of Bible rejection.71

Paisley teaches that Jesus fulfilled the Old Testament types and shadows (such as the sacrifices of Leviticus) when He made atonement on the cross. With this we agree (Belgic Confession 21, 25). The book of Hebrews explains at length that Jesus Christ fulfilled the Old Testament sacrificial system, superseding it. However, some believe that in order properly to fulfil the types Jesus had to die and then present His blood in heaven, where the divine mercy seat is said to be situated.72 This is unnecessary to fulfil the type because Jesus Christ Himself is the Mercy Seat; there is no separate ark of the covenant with a mercy seat in heaven.73 Such Fundamentalist preachers confuse the types and believe that Jesus had to do more than die on the cross to secure our redemption. As A. M. Stibbs writes,

There is in heaven no blood ritual such as there was in the Levitical tabernacle. For, in the fulfilment of these divinely-ordained “figures of the true,” Christ Himself does not do things after His sacrifice with His blood, as something material and outside Himself, which He comes before God to minister. He entered in not with, but “through his own blood” that is, by means of, or because of, His death as Man, when His human blood was shed. So, in the heavenly glory, He does not sprinkle, and never has actually sprinkled, blood upon some heavenly mercy-seat. Rather He is Himself, so to speak, the mercy-seat or propitiation, being Himself sufficiently “blood stained” by reason of His death on the Cross.74

Some “Blood Indoctrinators” (to use Richard Alexander’s term) see in the events after the resurrection proof for their theory. In the garden, Mary Magdalene was not permitted to touch Christ: “Jesus saith unto her, Touch me not; for I am not ascended to my Father” (John 20:17). In chapter 14 of his book The Church, Dr. Jack Hyles, pastor of First Baptist Church, Hammond, Indiana, until his death in 2001, offers this highly speculative explanation:

When Jesus was resurrected, and Mary Magdalene saw him, Jesus said, “Touch me not, for I am not yet ascended to my Father.” He was the High Priest. He was taking the blood He had shed as the Lamb of God to the Mercy Seat in Heaven, to sprinkle it there. Between the time the High Priest took the blood in the basin and sprinkled it on the Mercy Seat, nobody could touch Him. That is why He told Mary Magdalene not to touch Him. Later He told Thomas to put his hands into His side. Why could Thomas touch Him when Mary Magdalene could not? Because when Thomas saw Him, He had already been to Heaven, sprinkled the blood, and the blood was already talking to the Father.75

According to this view, Christ had two bodily ascensions. Christ ascended soon after His resurrection to sprinkle the blood on the heavenly mercy seat, came back down to earth, appeared several times to His disciples over the space of 40 days, and then made a second ascension from the Mount of Olives (Acts 1:9). However, there is no biblical evidence to support this idea of two bodily ascensions of Christ, and the church has never held such a view.

Moreover, this highly speculative interpretation does not accord with other material. For example, after Mary Magdalene finds the empty tomb (Matt. 28:1) and meets the Lord (John 20:16), Christ appears to His disciples (Matt. 28:9). This is after the women had fled (Matt. 28:8). Christ greets His disciples with “All hail.” The text goes on to say that the disciples “came and held him by the feet and worshipped him” (Matt. 28:9). However, Christ did not rebuke His disciples for holding him. About a week later, Christ appeared again and this time Thomas (who previously had been absent) was also permitted to touch Jesus. Hyles wants it to appear that about a week elapsed between Mary’s being forbidden to touch Jesus and Thomas being allowed to handle Him. He needs this time for his fanciful blood-sprinkled-in-heaven theory. However, the time between Mary being forbidden to touch Jesus and the disciples (excluding Thomas) touching Him was probably very short indeed, as indicated by Matthew 28:9.

More serious than that objection is that Hyles contradicts the Saviour’s words on the cross: “It is finished” (John 19:30). If Hyles is right, Jesus ought not to have uttered those famous words. He ought instead to have said, “It is almost finished. Once the blood has been gathered and sprinkled in heaven, then it will be finished.” He did not say that. He did not even hint at such a thing. The very idea is foolish.

Rod Bell, pastor of Tabernacle Baptist Church, Virginia Beach, Virginia, and often a guest speaker in Paisley’s Martyrs’ Memorial Church, utters the same nonsense:

Atonement, my friends, cannot be completed at the cross, but at the altar and upon the mercy seat. Neither the Old Testament nor the New Testament leaves us in any doubt on this matter … just as the High Priest in Old Testament times took with him into the holiest the blood of animal sacrifices. Christ our High Priest entered heaven with His own precious blood. He took His own precious blood into the holy place to obtain eternal redemption for us. Now, Christ our High Priest entered into heaven with His own precious blood. Where is the blood of Christ now, today? It is in heaven, because it is indestructible blood.76

Notice that Bell emphatically denies that atonement was completed on the cross. He appeals to Hebrews 9:12 where it says that “by his own blood he entered in once into the holy place” and argues that “by” should be translated “with” so that Christ brought His own blood into the holy place. Notice too his misquoting of the text. Hebrews 9:12 does not say “to obtain eternal redemption for us” but “having obtained eternal redemption for us.” Redemption was accomplished before Christ ascended to heaven. George Smeaton is just one of many Reformed writers who explode this theory:

To suppose, as we must do in that case, that Christ’s priestly action began in heaven,—that is, that He sprinkled the mercy-seat, and completed the atonement only when He entered on the mediatorial exaltation or reward,—seems to confound everything … A few words will suffice to prove that He entered within the veil and sprinkled the mercy-seat at the moment when He commended His spirit into His Father’s hand … When did the true High Priest sprinkle the mercy-seat?—which was a propitiatory act in the course of averting wrath—we must emphatically answer, At the moment of death … it is incongruous and absurd to hold, then, that the sprinkling of the mercy-seat and the purifying of the heavenly things (Heb. 9:23) took place only after His ascension.77

A. W. Pink too disagrees with Bell and others. On Hebrews 9:12, he writes,

It was by virtue of the blood of these animals that Aaron entered so as to be accepted with God. The reference here is not directly to what the high priest brought with him into the holiest—or the “incense” too had been mentioned—but to the title [or right] which the sacrifices gave him to approach unto the Holy One of Israel.78

John Owen calls the idea that Christ brought His own “material blood” into heaven “vain speculation.” In commenting on Hebrews 9:12, he declares,

It is a vain speculation, contrary to the analogy of faith, and destructive of the true nature of the oblation of Christ, and inconsistent with the dignity of his person, that he should carry with him into heaven a part of that material blood which was shed for us on the earth. This some have invented, to maintain a comparison in that wherein is none intended. The design of the apostle is only to declare by virtue of what he entered as a priest into the holy place. And this was by virtue of his own blood when it was shed, when he offered himself unto God. This was that which laid the foundation of, and gave him right unto the administration of his priestly office in heaven.79

Herman Bavinck explains at length:

One should note, however, that the author of this letter nowhere says that Christ entered heaven with his blood, the way the Old Testament high priest on the great Day of Atonement entered the holy of holies with blood to sprinkle it on and before the mercy seat. He only says that Christ once for all entered the sanctuary through his blood (9:12). He did not take with him the blood that was shed on the cross to sprinkle it in the heavenly sanctuary, thereby to bring about atonement. But by means of his blood, on the basis of the sacrifice made on the cross, he secured for himself the right to enter heaven to appear in God’s presence on our behalf. In the Old Testament, after the sacrifice had been brought, the high priest still had to take some of the blood, enter the holy of holies with it, and offer it for both his own and his people’s misdeeds. But that was still a part of the imperfect system of the Old Testament. This showed that the way into the sanctuary had not yet been disclosed so long as the first tabernacle was still standing (9:7-8). This, however, did not apply to Christ. He brought a unique and perfect sacrifice on the cross. he did not take his blood with him to heaven to offer it there, but through the tent of his own body and the curtain of his flesh (9:11; 10:20), he entered once for all into the true sanctuary and to that end received the right and the power by his own blood that he had shed on the cross (9:12). His blood had that power because it was his own, because through the eternal Spirit he offered himself to God without blemish (9:14). That blood, to be sure, had been shed only once, and that sacrifice had taken place only once at a specific moment in time; yet this event was not—like the sacrificial cult of the Old Testament—temporary, passing, transient. On the contrary, the sacrifice on the cross was the sacrifice of One who was the Son, Creator, and Heir of all things, who also became human, perfected himself by his obedience, and proved by the shedding of his blood that the eternal Spirit dwelt in him. It, therefore, has eternal, spiritual significance. Christ was high priest already on earth (7:27; 9:11, 14, 25, 28; 10:10; 13:12), but he was that not in the way of Aaron’s high priesthood, but according to the order of Melchizedek, eternal and unchanging. It is for this reason, however, that the Letter to the Hebrews so strongly stresses Christ’s entry into the true sanctuary. He entered it by the power of his own blood, not to sacrifice himself again in a different manner, for he did that once for all, and by that sacrifice acquired all the benefits of the covenant of grace (9:26-28; 10:12, 14; etc.).79a

(5) An Obsession With “Hymns”

Fundamentalist churches most often sing “hymns,” uninspired human compositions, instead of the God-breathed Psalms (I Pet. 1:21). One of the signs of modernism in the churches, they claim, is that the “hymns” about the blood have been removed from modern hymnals.80 Modern apostate evangelicals no longer like to sing about the blood of Christ, they say. Proud of their perceived separatism from apostasy, Fundamentalists unashamedly and enthusiastically sing “hymns” about the blood. So ingrained is “hymn” singing in these churches that it is not uncommon for “hymns” to be quoted in sermons and other literature which promote their peculiar blood doctrine. Alan Cairns quotes five times from “hymns” in his pamphlet,81 and Ian Paisley’s Christian Foundations is peppered with quotes from uninspired “hymns.”

Elsewhere Paisley complains about modern preachers in these words:

They call their congregations to sing in their evangelistic services such hymns as “There is a fountain filled with blood,” “There’s power in the blood” and “Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb” … they say with great fervour that, while we … sing about the blood in our hymns and preach about the blood in our sermons, there is no blood today … they give out the invitation hymn, “I am coming Lord, Coming now to Thee, Wash me, Cleanse me in the Blood, That flowed from Calvary.” Thus they invite sinners to an empty fountain and to a washing in the blood which no longer exists.82

It is not wrong to quote from uninspired writings, but it is a mistake to take “hymns” literally, if the “hymn” is erroneous or the words are not intended to be taken literally. The “fountain filled with blood” (possibly a reference to Zechariah 13:1) of William Cowper’s song is not literal. The blood was not “drawn from Immanuel’s veins;” it was shed. Sinners are “not plunged” into the blood of Christ; they are sprinkled (Isa. 52:15; Eze. 36:25; I Pet. 1:2), although not literally. Many of the “hymns” of this type are characterised by symbolism and stirring devotional language which is not meant to be taken literally. That many such “hymns” were penned by Arminians ought to make them doubly suspect, for what qualifications do Arminians have to write about the atonement? The Canons of Dordt speak of the Arminian doctrine of universal, ineffectual atonement in these words:

This doctrine tends to the despising of the wisdom of the Father and of the merits of Jesus Christ and is contrary to Scripture … these adjudge too contemptuously of the death of Christ, do in no wise acknowledge the most important fruit or benefit thereby gained, and bring again out of hell the Pelagian error … these … seek to instill into the people the destructive poison of the Pelagian errors (II:1, 3, 6).

Popular “hymns” mould the thinking of the worshipper (often teaching him lies about God). Carried away by his emotions, the hymn-singer often fails to sing with understanding (Ps. 47:7; I Cor. 14:15) and forgets that “hymns” are not the Word of God and are therefore not authoritative. They cannot be quoted to prove a theological point! Many are so accustomed to hymns nowadays that they can automatically quote from a hymn in a theological controversy. Sadly, many who have memorised the words of countless uninspired odes are woefully ignorant about the contents of God’s inspired hymnbook, the Psalter.

Even John Greer in the sermon quoted earlier reminds his congregation, “you know, all these hymns are not correct. I need to say that.” Indeed he does, but the question should be asked, why do Fundamentalists sing “hymns” which are not correct? Is singing erroneous human, “hymns” what Jesus had in mind when He said that the Father seeks worshippers who worship “in spirit and in truth” (John 4:23)?



James A. Fowler rightly points out that “fanciful language concerning the blood of Jesus can be seen in many hymns” and adds that whereas “most people take these phrases as but the symbolism of ‘poetic license’ there are some who take them quite literally.”83

Erroneous Exegesis

In order to have even a semblance of credibility, Fundamentalists need to prove their bizarre doctrine of the blood from Scripture.

Paisley claims to stand on the Word of God when he teaches that the blood of Christ has been eternally preserved:

I am not concerned what the scholars say on this subject; my only concern is what the Scriptures say. My appeal is not to the word of the scholars either in consensus or in controversy but to the Word of the Spirit of God. My rule is not any textbook of biology but the truth of the Bible. I care not how unpleasing God’s revelation is to the natural man, no matter how educated he may be; I care not how unlikely the doctrine of the Bible may appear to the majority of men—that matters not: all that matters is the plain teaching of God’s infallible Book.84

Those are laudable sentiments. Would to God that all who call themselves Christians were as bold to defend what they believe the Scriptures teach! The question is, however, do the Scriptures appealed to by Paisley and others in this controversy actually teach what is claimed?

We have examined Hebrews 9:12 already and seen that it does not teach that Christ entered Heaven with His blood, but by His blood, which He had shed on Calvary, having obtainedeternal redemption for us. What are the main texts Fundamentalists appeal to for proof of their doctrine about the blood of Christ?

(1) Leviticus 17:11

“For the life of the flesh is in the blood: and I have given it to you upon the altar to make an atonement for your souls: for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul” is the testimony of Leviticus 17:11. From this verse, De Haan maintained that the very essence of life is blood. What makes a person, or an animal, alive, above everything else, is blood. He even goes so far as to claim that when God breathed into Adam the breath of life, causing Adam to become a “living soul” (Gen. 2:7), this refers to the addition of blood to the lifeless body of Adam, a sort of blood transfusion:

The breath of God put something in man that made him alive. That something was blood. It must have been. It could be nothing else: for we have already shown that the life of the flesh is in the blood and so when life was added by the breath of God, He imparted blood to that lump of clay in the shape of a man, and man became a living soul. Adam’s body was of the ground. His blood was the separate gift of God, for God is Life and the Author of all life … Adam’s body was of the earth, but his blood was directly from God. God demands that we respect this fact, since it was God’s own breath which filled all flesh with blood. To eat blood, therefore, is to insult the life of God for the life … is in the blood.85

Paisley agrees with De Haan’s ludicrous interpretation of Genesis 2:7. In a sermon in March 2002 entitled, “The Blood! The Shed Blood! The Precious Blood of Jesus!” he asserted, “The moment God breathed into Adam, his bloodstream was created and his substance physically was tied into the mystery of his spiritual being.”86 Furthermore, he agrees with De Haan on Leviticus 17:11:

The blood equals the life, therefore the Blood of Christ equals the life of Incarnate Deity. According to Colossians 2:9, in Him dwelt all the fulness of the Godhead bodily and that fulness was emptied out in the crimson of the cross. The Blood then is the life-tide of the Godhead.87

How could Christ, in shedding his human blood, empty out the “fulness of the Godhead”? The blood is the life “of the flesh” (Lev. 17:11), not of the Godhead. The Son of God has life in Himself, “for as the Father hath life in himself; so hath he given to the Son to have life in himself” (John 5:26). When Christ died, He died in His human nature; He did not die in His divine nature. Christ can neverdie in His divine nature, and it is difficult to imagine how He could have suffered and died in the incorruptible, indestructible human nature which is imagined by Fundamentalists!88

Christ’s human blood was not deified at the incarnation; His human nature was able to sustain the wrath of God because it was united to (not mixed with) His divinity. Lord’s Day 6 of the Heidelberg Catechism explains the necessity of the incarnation of the Son of God. Firstly, the Saviour must be human because “the justice of God requires that the same human nature which hath sinned should … make satisfaction for sin” (A. 16). Secondly, the Saviour must be divine “that he might, by the power of His Godhead, sustain in His human nature, the burden of God’s wrath” (A. 17). Quite simply, if Christ’s human nature differed from ours, He could not save us.

In Leviticus blood stands for life, because when blood is shed (of a man or of a beast) life is violently taken away. However, the fact that the “life of the flesh is in the blood” does not prove that Christ’s blood is divine, supernatural, sinless or eternally preserved in heaven.

(2) Acts 20:28

Another text appealed to by Fundamentalists is Acts 20:28: “Take heed therefore unto yourselves, and to all the flock, over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed the church of God, which he hath purchased with his own blood.” From this text, some infer that Christ had God’s blood, the blood of Christ was divine. It speaks of “the blood of God” does it not? Ian Paisley writes, “His Blood is divine Blood as opposed to human blood,” and cites this text.89

Calvin comments on this text:

Surely God does not have blood (Acts 20:28), does not suffer (I Cor. 2:8), cannot be touched with hands (I John 1:1). But since Christ, who was true God and also true man, was crucified and shed his blood for us, the things that he carried out in his human nature are transferred, improperly, although not without reason, to his divinity.90

In theology this is known as the communicatio idiomatum or the “communication of properties.” Calvin explains:

Thus, also, the Scriptures speak of Christ: they sometimes attribute to him what must be referred solely to his humanity, sometimes what belongs uniquely to his divinity; and sometimes what embraces both natures but fits neither alone. And they so earnestly express the union of the two natures that is in Christ as sometimes to interchange them.91

Acts 20:28, then, does not teach that Christ had divine blood, but that Christ’s human nature is inseparably united with His divine nature in one divine Person forever, as orthodox Christianity has always maintained.

(3) Hebrews 12:24

Ian Paisley insists that this text (“and to the blood of sprinkling, that speaketh better things than that of Abel”) teaches that the blood of Christ (again he means the red liquid in Christ’s veins which was shed on the cross) is literally sprinkled and literally speaks:

You cannot sprinkle blood that has congealed. You cannot sprinkle blood that has perished. You cannot sprinkle blood that is lost. You cannot sprinkle blood that has corrupted. You cannot sprinkle blood that is extinct. The continuing characteristic of the blood of Christ in the New Testament is the fact of the sprinkled blood! The apex of the glory in Emmanuel’s land is the blood of sprinkling. If Christ’s blood had not been preserved and sprinkled on the mercy seat of the Triune Jehovah, in no way could sinners be reconciled to God.92

But the question must be reiterated: Is the blood literally sprinkled on souls? Again, we return to the true humanity of Christ. When blood comes into contact with air, it clots. If Jesus’ blood had not clotted like normal human blood, He would have bled to death as an eight-day-old child when He was circumcised. Jesus had real human blood. The efficacy of Christ’s sacrificial death continues, although His physical blood perished in the dust (Luke 22:44). Incidentally, you cannot literally sprinkle blood which has returned to Christ’s resurrection body either, as Paisley’s colleagues, Greer, Cairns and Martin teach.

A second claim from Hebrews 12:24 is that for Christ’s blood to speak (literally) it has to have been preserved. Again, we will let Paisley explain himself: “Did the literal blood of Abel cry to God? Yes. The Holy Ghost recorded it to be so. Does the literal blood of Jesus speak today? Yes. The Holy Ghost has recorded it to be so.”93

The author to the Hebrews is obviously using figurative language. Blood does not speak. That is figurative. Christ’s blood does not literally speak, and neither did Abel’s in Genesis 4:10. It is a figure of speech. That should be obvious from the context. If the blood of sprinkling “speaketh better things than that of Abel” does that mean that Abel’s blood is also preserved?

Some Fundamentalists have even appealed to Calvin’s commentary on Hebrews, showing that they can no more differentiate between the literal and the figurative in his writings than they can in Scripture.94 Calvin comments on Hebrews 10:19 (“having, therefore, brethren boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus”):

He afterwards marks the difference between this blood and that of beasts; for the blood of beasts, as it soon turns to corruption, could not long retain its efficacy; but the blood of Christ, which is subject to no corruption, but flows ever as a pure stream, is sufficient for us even to the end of the world. It is no wonder that beasts slain in sacrifice had no power to quicken, as they were dead; but Christ who arose from the dead to bestow life on us, communicates his own life to us. It is a perpetual consecration of the way, because the blood of Christ is always in a manner distilling before the presence of the Father, in order to irrigate heaven and earth.95

You see, say the Fundamentalists, Calvin taught that Christ’s blood was “subject to no corruption, but flows ever as a pure stream.” The highly figurative language ought to be an indicator that Calvin should not be taken literally here, but such men are undeterred. In the same commentary on Hebrews 13:20 (“through the blood of the everlasting covenant”), Calvin writes,

Christ so arose from the dead, that his death was not yet abolished, but it retains its efficacy for ever, as though he had said, God raised up his own Son, but in such a way that the blood shed once for all in his death is efficacious after his resurrection for the ratification of the everlasting covenant, and brings forth fruit the same as though it were flowing always.96

Ian Paisley teaches that the blood of Christ is one of seven things in heaven and he lambastes those who disagree:

[This new brand of preachers say that] all that are mentioned above [in Hebrews 12:22-24] are real except the blood. God places it at the apex. They displace it altogether. There is no blood in Heaven, they affirm. There is no blood-sprinkling there. There is no speaking blood there.97

How can Christ’s shed blood (a created substance) be at the “apex of heaven”? The saints of God celebrate the fact of the accomplished redemption of Christ. Their song is “Worthy the Lamb who was slain” (Rev. 5:12); not “Worthy the Blood that was shed.” Is there much difference between Romanists worshipping what they think is Christ’s blood in the Mass, and Fundamentalists exalting the literal blood of Christ as they imagine it to be in heaven?98

Charles Spurgeon denies that this text is referring to the literal material blood:

What is this “blood of sprinkling?” In a few words, “the blood of sprinkling” represents the pains, the sufferings, the humiliation, and the death of the Lord Jesus Christ, which he endured on the behalf of guilty man. When we speak of the blood, we wish not to be understood as referring solely or mainly to the literal material blood which flowed from the wounds of Jesus. We believe in the literal fact of his shedding his blood; but when we speak of his cross and blood we mean those sufferings and that death of our Lord Jesus Christ by which he magnified the law of God.99

Paisley does not even attempt an exegesis of Hebrews 12:24. He just makes the bold assertion, “The Blood is in heaven” and attacks all who disagree. What is the correct interpretation of this passage? First, the context describes a contrast between the church under the law and the church of the new dispensation with the coming of Christ. That is one of the themes of the epistle to the Hebrews. In Hebrews 12:18-21, the apostle gives a graphic account of the church (Acts 7:38) at Sinai. New Testament believers have not “come unto” that mount. Hebrews 12:22-24 is not a description of heaven. John Owen’s commentary sheds a lot of light on this subject:

The apostle intends a description whereunto believers are called by the gospel. For it is that alone which he opposeth to the state of the church under the old testament. And to suppose that it is the heavenly, future state which he intends, is utterly to destroy the force of his argument and exhortation.100

The realities described in Hebrews 12:22-24 are spiritual. Mount Zion, the city of the living God (Rev. 21:10), the heavenly Jerusalem (Rev. 21:2), the general assembly and church of the firstborn are all names for the church. There is no mountain called “Zion” in heaven. Zion is a type of the church. Through the gospel we have an interest in all the spiritual blessings of Christ. Owen writes,

This is the first privilege of believers under the gospel. They “come unto mount Sion”; that is, they are interested in all the promises of God made unto Sion, recorded in the Scripture, in all the love and care of God expressed towards it, in all the spiritual glories assigned unto it.101

Through Christ, elect believers have communion with the saints and angels, because Christ has gathered and reconciled “all things” unto Himself (Eph. 1:10; Col. 1:20). The saints and angels are in one mystical body; angels and the saints are fellow worshippers (Heb. 1:6; Rev. 5:11); angels are interested in the affairs of the church (I Pet. 1:12), rejoice over penitents (Luke 15:10) and serve the church (Heb. 1:14). We have been reconciled, not only to God, but also to the angels (Col. 1:20) who, being holy (Matt. 25:31), could have no fellowship with us in our sins. Through Christ, our relationship to the angels has been radically transformed. Writes Owen,

Wherefore by Jesus Christ we have a blessed access unto this “innumerable company of angels.” Those who, by reason of our fall from God, and the first entrance of sin, had no regard unto us, but to execute the vengeance of God against us, represented by the cherubim with the flaming sword, (for “he maketh his angels spirits, and his ministers a flame of fire,”) to keep man, when he had sinned, out of Eden, and from the tree of life, Genesis 3:24; those whose ministry God made use of in giving of the law, to fill the people with dread and terror; they are now, in Christ, become one mystical body with the church, and our associates in design and service. And this may well be esteemed as an eminent privilege which we receive by the gospel.102

In a very real sense, the church militant on earth is one with the church triumphant in heaven. God has “made us to sit together in heavenly places with Christ Jesus” (Eph. 2:6); we have “access by one Spirit unto the Father” and are “fellow citizens with the saints, and of the household of God” (Eph. 2:18-19), and “our conversation [i.e., citizenship] is in heaven” (Phil. 3:20), although we are still on the earth. This is part of what the creeds call “the communion of saints”—not that believers on earth pray to or seek the intercession of the glorified saints in heaven—but that all the elect (past, present and future) are “in Christ” who is the head of the body (Col. 1:18).

The elect, of whom are “the spirits of just men made perfect” (Heb. 12:23), who comprise “the church of the firstborn, which are written in heaven” (Heb. 12:23; cf. Luke 10:20; Phil. 4:3) have access through “Jesus the mediator of the new covenant” (Heb. 12:4; cf. I Tim. 2:5; Heb. 8:6) to “God the Judge of all” (Heb. 12:23). The means whereby they have access to angels, departed saints, the holy God and judge of all, is through the “blood of sprinkling” (Heb. 12:24). This “blood of sprinkling” speaks better things than that of Abel. It is said in Genesis 4:10 that Abel’s blood “crieth” unto God: that is the blood of Abel is witness against his brother, and cries out for justice and the divine punishment of Cain. As indicated earlier, this is a figure of speech: blood does not speak. The blood of Christ “speaketh” too, but it does not cry out for vengeance; it cries out, “Atonement has been made.” God forgives guilty sinners on the basis of what Christ did by shedding His blood. The justice and vengeance of God against the sins of God’s elect has been satisfied. God hears the cry of the blood of the Lamb and the elect sinner is pardoned. The elect are “sprinkled” with (not plunged beneath) that blood spiritually. As Owen says, “It is the expiating, purging efficacy of his blood, as applied unto us, that is included therein.”103

Paisley complains that you cannot sprinkle blood that has been lost. That is not the issue. The idea of sprinkling the blood of Christ in Scripture is not a literal sprinkling of the material blood, so it is not necessary that it be preserved. As Stibbs writes,

“The sprinkling of the blood” in the case of Christ’s sacrifice means the extension to the persons sprinkled of the value and the benefits of the death of which it is token. So the phrase and the idea continue to be a metaphorical way of referring to the application of, and the participation in, the saving benefits of the death of Jesus. This efficacy of the one sacrifice already made is continuous and all-sufficient. So Christians can still prove, as they walk in the light, that the blood of Jesus cleanses them from all sin; that is, that Christ’s death avails to purge away any and every fresh defilement.104

(4) I Peter 1:18-19

Perhaps the text most appealed to by the proponents of this doctrine is I Peter 1:18-19 where we read,

Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain conversation received by tradition from your fathers; but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot.

It is argued that silver and gold are corruptible, but the blood of Christ is incorruptible, meaning that it can never congeal, perish, be lost or corrupt. Paisley writes, “The blood that coursed in the blood vessels of the holy incorruptible body of God Incarnate while He was on earth was as holy and incorruptible as the flesh of the body itself.”105

That statement is heresy. It may sound pious to claim that Christ had incorruptible flesh, but it is the heresy of the Docetists. Because the Docetists believed, like the Gnostics before them, that matter is sinful, they believed it was more honouring to Christ to confess that He did not have a real human nature; that He only seemed to be human. The early church condemned the Gnostics and Docetists and the church has always rejected any denial of Christ’s true humanity. Incorruptible flesh and incorruptible blood do not constitute a real and complete human nature. Rather, such an assertion is a denial of the incarnation.

Returning to I Peter 1:18-19, we should mention, first of all, that the text does not say that Christ’s blood is incorruptible; it says that gold is corruptible, and Christ’s blood is precious. The value of Christ’s blood is contrasted with the value of gold, and Peter affirms that Christ’s blood is infinitely more valuable than gold. What Paisley and others have to prove is, not even that Peter means that the “blood of Christ is precious and incorruptible” but that the blood of Christ means that red liquid consisting of blood cells, platelets and plasma.

By the blood of Christthe apostle means that the saving virtue of the bloody, sacrificial, atoning death of Christ is incorruptible, still as effective as it was when He died approximately 2,000 years ago. The power of the bloody, sacrificial, atoning death of Christ never decays, never ceases, is always effectual unto the salvation of every elect sinner. There is not one sinner for whom Christ died who will ever say, “Christ died for me, but I was damned. Here I am in hell, and although Christ’s blood was shed for me, and although Christ put away my sins by His death, yet I did not make it to heaven.”106 Christ will see the travail of His soul and be satisfied (Isa. 53:11) or, as Calvin expresses it: “Christ so arose from the dead, that his death was not yet abolished, but it retains its efficacy for ever.107



The bloody, sacrificial, atoning death of Christ is eternally present in the mind and decree of God Almighty, for Christ is the ”Lamb slain from the foundation of the world” (Rev. 13:8). It is not that two millennia have passed since the death of Christ and it has “gone stale.” It will never go stale! The effects of the atonement are everlasting! When Christ appears before His Father on behalf of His elect (cf. John 17:9), He (as it were) reminds God of His work of redemption. He is always interceding and the ground of His intercession is His blood (the bloody, sacrificial,