The Covenant of Grace, Charles
Spurgeon, The Blood of the Everlasting Covenant, 1859. The Blood of the Everlasting
Covenant, Hebrews 13, 20. Long before the day star knew
its place, long before God had spoken existence out of nothing,
long before angels' wing had stirred the unnavigated ether,
long before a solitary song had disturbed the solemnity of the
silence in which God reigned supreme, The Father had entered
into solemn counsel with Himself, with His Son, and with His Spirit,
and had in that counsel decreed, determined, purposed, and predestined
the salvation of His people. On the Father's part, thus ran
the covenant, I cannot tell it to you in the glorious celestial
tongue in which it was written. I am glad to bring it down to
the speech which suits to the ear of flesh and to the heart
of a mortal. Thus I say ran the covenant in
lines like these. I, the Most High Jehovah, do
hereby give unto my own begotten and well-beloved Son, A people,
countless beyond the number of the stars, who shall be washed
from sin by Him, who shall be preserved and kept and led by
Him, and at last who shall be presented before my throne without
spot or wrinkle or any such thing by Him. I covenant by oath and
swear by myself, because I can swear by no one greater, that
these, whom I now give to Christ, shall forever be the objects
of my eternal love. These I will forgive through
the merit of my son's blood. To these I will give a perfect
righteousness. These will I adopt and make my
sons and daughters. and these shall reign with me
through Christ eternally." The Holy Spirit also, as one of the
contracting parties of the covenant, gave His declaration, I hereby
covenant that all whom the Father gives to the Son, I will in due
time quicken, I will show them their need of redemption. I will
cut off all their groundless hopes and destroy their refuge
of lies. I will bring them to the blood
of sprinkling. I will give them faith whereby
this blood shall be applied to them. I will work in them every
grace, I will keep their faith alive, I will cleanse them and
drive out depravity from them, and they shall be presented at
last spotless and faultless in heaven. This was the one side
of the covenant which is at this very day being fulfilled and
scrupulously kept. The Lord Jesus also, as one of
the contracting parties of the covenant, gave his declaration,
My Father, on my part, I covenant that in the fullness of time
I will become man, I will live in their wretched world, and
for my people I keep the law perfectly. I will work out a
spotless righteousness for them, which shall be acceptable to
the demands of your just and holy law. In due time I will
bear the sins of all my people. You shall exact all their debts
upon me. By my stripes they shall be healed. My Father, I covenant and promise
that I will be obedient unto death, even the death of the
cross. I will magnify your law and make
it honorable. I will suffer all that my people
ought to have suffered. I will endure the curse of your
law, and all the vials of your wrath shall be emptied and spent
upon my head. I will then rise again and ascend
into heaven. I will intercede for them at
your right hand. I will make myself responsible
for every one of them, that not one of those whom you have given
me shall ever be lost. I will bring all my sheep, of
whom by my blood you have constituted me the shepherd. I will bring
everyone safe to you at last." Christ can say of what He promised
to do, it is finished. He has paid the debts of all
the elect. He has for His people, and for
their redemption, suffered the whole of wrath divine. Nothing
remains now, except that He shall continue to intercede for them,
that He may safely bring all His redeemed to glory, all for
whom Christ died, shall be pardoned, all justified, all adopted. The Spirit shall quicken them
all, shall give them all faith, shall bring them all to heaven,
and they shall, every one of them, without hindrance, stand
accepted in the Beloved. The antiquity of the covenant
of grace demands our grateful attention. It is a truth which
tends to elevate the mind. I know of no doctrine more grand
than this. It is the very soul and essence
of all Scripture. In sitting down and meditating
upon it, I confess my spirit has sometimes been ravished with
delight. Can you conceive of the idea,
that before all things God thought of you, that when as yet he had
not made his mountains, He hath thought of you, you, a poor puny
worm. Oh, this cannot make us proud,
But it must make us feel happy.