Why the Cross and Blood?

calendar_today March 22, 2026
menu_book Hebrews 9:22-28
person Nathan Titus

The sermon unfolds the necessity of Christ’s bloody death as rooted not in external compulsion but in the unchanging holiness, justice, and love of God, demonstrating that the cross was the only possible way for God to save sinners without compromising His nature. Drawing from Hebrews 9:22–28, it argues that the Old Testament sacrifices, though necessary as shadows, pointed to a greater reality requiring a final, perfect sacrifice—Christ’s once-for-all offering in heaven itself, which definitively put away sin. The necessity is grounded in both the divine appointment of human death and judgment, and the moral impossibility of God overlooking sin, making Christ’s substitutionary death essential for atonement. Far from diminishing God’s freedom, this necessity reveals His perfect consistency, where love and justice converge in the cross, making Jesus the only sufficient Savior. The sermon concludes with a urgent call to trust in Christ alone, emphasizing that salvation is not found in any other sacrifice, priest, or merit, but solely in the once-for-all work of the God-man who bore God’s wrath so that sinners might be glorified.

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