Charles H. Spurgeon Refutes the Blood Doctrine.

The Blood Doctrine refers only to the physical blood of Jesus Christ when it speaks of the blood of Jesus or the blood of His sprinkling. With that understood, they freely quote sermons on the blood of Christ, such as Charles Spurgeon's The Blood of Sprinkling (2nd Sermon). However, Mr. Spurgeon himself refuted this application of the term:

 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; we mean what Isaiah intended when he said, "He shall make his soul an offering for sin;" we mean all the griefs which Jesus vicariously endured on our behalf at Gethsemane, and Gabbatha, and Golgotha, and specially his yielding up his life upon the tree of scorn and doom. "The chastisement of our peace was upon him, and with his stripes we are healed." "Without shedding of blood there is no remission;" and the shedding of blood intended is the death of Jesus, the Son of God.(8)

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