Amen, Amen

Let every creature rise and bring
their grateful praises to our King.
Angels descend with songs again
and Earth repeats a loud Amen.

Amen, Amen
Amen, Amen
I found my life
I found my life in Him
Amen, Amen

Peace like a river from His throne
will flow to nations yet unknown.
His word a light where all hope is dim
and all tribes unite to cry Amen.

Amen, Amen
Amen, Amen
I found my life
I found my life in Him
Amen, Amen

And in this Child we’ll find our rest
and all the meek and lowly blessed.
An infant tongue could sing the hymn
of Hallelujah and Amen.

Amen, Amen
Amen, Amen
I found my life
I found my life in Him
Amen, Amen

—Neil and Kate Robins
on Advent Songs by Sojourn Music

Christ is a Complete Saviour

Christ is a Saviour. He did not come on earth to be a conqueror, or a philosopher, or a mere teacher of morality. He came to save sinners. He came to do that which man could never do for himself – to do that which money and learning can never obtain – to do that which is essential to man’s real happiness – He came to ‘take away sin.’

Christ is a complete Saviour. He ‘taketh away sin.’ He did not merely make vague proclamations of pardon, mercy, and forgiveness. He ‘took’ our sins upon Himself, and carried them away. He allowed them to be laid upon Himself, and ‘bore them in His own body on the tree.’ (1 Peter 2:24.) The sins of every one that believes on Jesus are made as though they had never been sinned at all. The Lamb of God has taken them clean away.

Christ is an almighty Saviour, and a Saviour for all mankind. He ‘taketh away the sin of the world.’ He did not die for the Jews only, but for the Gentile as well as the Jew. He did not suffer for a few persons only, but for all mankind.

The payment that He made on the cross was more than enough to make satisfaction for the debts of all. The blood that He shed was precious enough to wash away the sins of all. His atonement on the cross was sufficient for all mankind, though efficient only to them that believe. The sin that He took up and bore on the cross was the sin of the whole world.

—J.C. Ryle
Expository Thoughts on John, Vol. 1

Via: Tolle Lege