ABEL’S LAMB
Genesis 4:1-8
- Intro.
- the doctrine of the blood atonement is found everywhere in the Bible
- we need to be careful to not minimize the importance of the blood in God’s redemption plan
- principles for understanding the sacrificial system
- the life is in the blood - Lev. 17:11
- therefore, blood is forbidden as food - Lev. 17:10, Acts 15:29
- therefore, the shedding of man’s blood by murder is forbidden - Gen. 9:6
- the blood on the alter makes an atonement for the soul - Lev. 17:11
- in order for man to approach God, the blood must come between man’s sins and a holy God
- the atonement includes both propitiation and expiation
- propitiation means that the demand for justice is satisfied
- expiation means that the guilt of sin is removed
- the two offerings
- Cain’s offering - Gen. 4:3
- Cain was not an atheist
- he was not even religiously indifferent
- he believed in God just like many people today believe in God
- Cain wanted to bring an offering to God, and he did
- religious people of every age want to bring an offering to God
- like Cain, they want to bring the works of their own hands
- they want to display their own worth
- Cain’s offering reflected his true nature - I John 3:10-12
- Cain was "of" the wicked one
- he had the wicked one as the source of his evil
- he was a child of the devil
- a corrupt nature produced a corrupt offering
- Abel’s offering - Gen. 4:4
- nothing but the very best could be an offering for the Lord
- Abel’s offering reflected his confession of sin
- he recognized that he was unworthy to come into the presence of the Holy God
- his offering confessed that sin and guilt can only be covered through the blood of an innocent victim
- the two results - Gen. 4:4-5
- those making the offering
- the Lord had respect unto Abel and his offering
- his offering was done by "faith" - Hebrews 11:4
- God testified that Abel was a righteous man
- Cain was a religious man, and he also brought an offering
- his offering did not confess his unworthiness and humility
- Cain’s offering was not grounded on "faith", but on human reasoning
- Cain’s idea of the atonement was a man’s works
- he did not believe that God’s demand for justice had to be satisfied
- he did not believe that sin separated man and God
- Cain would have thought that the death of Christ only served as an example of God’s love
- Cain believed that every man redeems himself by his good works
- the offering
- the attitude of the heart is important, but God places the emphasis on the sacrifice itself
- "and the Lord had respect unto Abel and his offering" - Gen. 4:4
- "by faith Abel offered a more excellent sacrifice than Cain" - Hebrews 11:4
- some would say that Cain’s offering was rejected because he had a wrong attitude
- they believe that the worth of worship lies in the spirit of the worshipper
- they believe the acceptance of Abel’s sacrifice had nothing to do with the nature of his offering
- it is true that Cain’s heart was not right with God, but that was only part of it
- God had prescribed the proper kind of sacrifice in the garden - Gen. 3:21 [coats of skin]
- the death of an innocent creature by bloodshed laid the foundation for God’s redemptive plan
- here was the first bloody footstep toward the redemption of man at the cross of Calvary
- the great principle taught is that blood must come between the sinner and God for fellowship to take place
- God’s prescribed way for a sinner to approach a holy God is throw the blood
- the two ways
- these two ways have descended down through history
- the way of Cain
- the religion of the flesh
- the offering of deeds and rituals
- a justification by works
- Cain offered the fruit of his labors
- the fruit of a sin-cursed earth
- there is no faith in the Word of God
- there is no confession of guilt and helplessness
- there is no blood to cover sin from the eyes of God
- Cain’s religion is the religion of all apostates who despise a substitutionary sacrifice
- the way of Abel
- confesses guilt before God
- acknowledges that the "wages of sin is death"
- relies on the bloody sacrifice appointed by God
- believes the promise of salvation through the blood
- focuses its faith on the true Lamb of God that died on Calvary’s hill