As the epistles express the more elaborated thought of the apostolic ministry, the sacrifice of our Lord naturally finds more definite exposition, and inasmuch as He was both active and passive in the offering of Himself, the conception of sacrifice branches into the twofold division, the object offered, and the person offering. It must never be forgotten, however, that the thought of Christ's sacrifice even when thus separated into its two great divisions necessarily involves in each conception the suggestion of the other: God setting Him forth as a propitiation through faith in His blood (
Ro 3:25). He was delivered for our offenses and raised for our justification (
Ro 4:25). Through Him we have access to the conditions of justification and peace (
Ro 5:2). Christ died for the ungodly, and we are justified by His blood (
Ro 5:8,
9). The conception of life both as forfeit from man and gift by God, expressed by sacrifice, runs through the reasoning of
Ro 8 (see especially
Ro 8:11,
32-34, where Christ who died for man rises from the dead, and becomes the intercessor; the victim and the High Priest are thus united in the Lord, and thus He becomes full expression and supplier of the love of God which is the perfect life). In
1Co 1:23 Paul affirms the preaching of the cross as the center of his message. The subject of his teaching was not merely Christ, but Christ and Him crucified (
1Co 2:2). In
1Co 5:7 Christ is declared to be the Passover, and sacrificed for us (
1Co 10:16-18). The manifestation of the death of the Lord by the bread and wine is given in the account of the institution of the Supper (
1Co 11:26). In
1Co 15:3 Christ is said expressly to have died for our sins. Christ's sacrifice lies at the basis of all the thought of the Galatian epistle (
Gal 1:4;
2:20;
3:13). In Eph we have the definite statement of redemption through the blood of Christ (
Eph 1:7). Christ's humiliation to the cross is given in
Php 2:8; community with Christ's death, one of the important elements of sacrifice, in
Php 3:10,
11. Forgiveness, the essence of redemption, is declared to be through the blood of Christ (
Col 1:14). Peace is secured through the blood of the cross, and reconciliation (
Col 1:20); the presentation of us in Christ's flesh through death, holy and unblamable and unreprovable to God (
Col 1:22). The community of sacrifice sets forth the oneness of believers with Christ (
Col 3:1-4). Christ is declared to be the one Mediator between God and man, who gave Himself a ransom for all (
1Ti 2:5,
6).