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C.I. Scofield

Hezekiah Opens the Temple

The sermon emphasizes the importance of cleansing, restoration, and worship in order to be right with God and ready for service.
C.I. Scofield preaches on the importance of thorough spiritual cleansing and restoration to God, using the example of the cleansing of vessels in 2 Chronicles 29:18-31. The sermon emphasizes the need for deep searching of the heart, genuine confession, and separation from dishonorable practices to become vessels fit for God's use. It highlights the significance of acknowledging the eternal sacrifice of Jesus Christ and the resulting praise, worship, and readiness for service that follows a truly restored heart.

Text

(2 Chr. xxix:18-31.)

I. The Analysis.

1. Cleansing of the Vessels (verses 18, 19).--The special form of consecration here is the restoration to the divine service of that which belonged to Him.

2. Sacrifice in View of the Sin of Judah (verses 20-24). --The law required sacrifices such as these to be oft repeated--we have "one sacrifice for sins forever" (Heb. x:12).

3. The Praise of a Cleansed and Restored People (verses 25-28).--This is the order of Psalm li (see below).

4. The Worship of a Praising People (verses 29, 30.) -- (See below.)

5. The Gifts of a People Right with God (verse 31).-- (See below.)

II. The Heart of the Lesson.

So intimately connected are the parts of this precious lesson that they must be considered together. The lesson is all heart; and it is found in the moral order of the return to God of His own people who have become backslidden through sin. Very much superficial and therefore unsatisfying work is done along this line. Conscious of a loss of communion and so of joy and power, we come to God with general and indefinite confessions of coldness and sinfulness, but without deep searching of heart and exercise of conscience, and we find ourselves soon back on the old ground of failure. Here thorough work was done, and the divine order of restoration is here illustrated. Let us mark the steps.

1. Cleansing of the vessels. For the Christian this takes two forms, (1) The cleansing of the ways of the daily walk. This is illustrated by John xiii:4-10, and is performed according to 1 John i:9; for confession is just bringing the defiled feet to the Lord Jesus to be made clean. (2) The second form of cleansing is separation from vessels unto dishonor according to 2 Tim. ii:20, 21. This makes us "vessels unto honor, sanctified and meet for the Master's use."

2. The acknowledgment of the efficacy of the "one sacrifice for sins forever"--the restoration of the Cross to its right place as the sin offering which has settled forever the whole sum of our guilt and demerit before God; and the burnt offering in which Jesus Christ "offered Himself without spot unto God" in our stead and behalf. Faith, dimmed by backsliding and sin, once more sees that as all our demerit was borne by Christ, so all His glorious merit is accounted to us. What inevitably follows is:--

3. The praise of a cleansed and restored heart, now again rejoicing in God through Jesus Christ. In the tabernacle the incense which was burnt on the golden altar was kindled by a live coal from the brazen altar where sacrifice was offered, so true praise like true worship is set aflame by the sacrifice of Christ. Then follows something deeper, higher than praise:--

4. The worship of cleansed, restored, and singing hearts. Praise is vocal, expressive, a testimony. David said that many should hear his new song. Worship is "in spirit"; the bowing of the whole inner self in adoration, wonder and love before the Father. Note this order in 1 Tim. i:12-17. Paul breaks into praise in verse 12, into worship in verse 17, "Now unto the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only wise God, honor and glory forever and ever. Amen."

5. And now the heart, cleansed, restored, filled with the new song, and bowed in adoration, is ready for service. "Come near and bring sacrifices and thank offerings unto the house of the Lord."

Sermon Outline

  1. The Analysis points: - Cleansing of the Vessels (verses 18, 19) - Restoration to divine service
  2. The Analysis points: - Sacrifice in View of the Sin of Judah (verses 20-24) - Repetition of sacrifices
  3. The Analysis points: - The Praise of a Cleansed and Restored People (verses 25-28) - Order of Psalm 51
  4. The Analysis points: - The Worship of a Praising People (verses 29, 30) - Order of worship
  5. The Analysis points: - The Gifts of a People Right with God (verse 31) - Gifts to the house of the Lord
  6. The Heart of the Lesson points: - Cleansing of the vessels - Two forms of cleansing
  7. The Heart of the Lesson points: - The acknowledgment of the efficacy of the 'one sacrifice for sins forever' - Restoration of the Cross
  8. The Heart of the Lesson points: - The praise of a cleansed and restored heart - True praise set aflame by the sacrifice of Christ
  9. The Heart of the Lesson points: - The worship of cleansed, restored, and singing hearts - Worship in spirit
  10. The Heart of the Lesson points: - The heart, cleansed, restored, filled with the new song, and bowed in adoration, is ready for service - Service to the house of the Lord

Key Quotes

“The cleansing of the vessels represents the restoration of the daily walk and separation from vessels unto dishonor, making us 'vessels unto honor, sanctified and meet for the Master's use.'” — C.I. Scofield
“True praise is set aflame by the sacrifice of Christ, just like the incense on the golden altar was kindled by a live coal from the brazen altar.” — C.I. Scofield
“Worship 'in spirit' is the bowing of the whole inner self in adoration, wonder, and love before the Father.” — C.I. Scofield

Application Points

  • We must thoroughly cleanse our daily walk and separate from vessels unto dishonor in order to be 'vessels unto honor, sanctified and meet for the Master's use.'
  • We must acknowledge the efficacy of the 'one sacrifice for sins forever' and restore the Cross to its right place as the sin offering.
  • We must praise and worship God 'in spirit' in order to be right with Him and ready for service.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the significance of the cleansing of the vessels?
The cleansing of the vessels represents the restoration of the daily walk and separation from vessels unto dishonor, making us 'vessels unto honor, sanctified and meet for the Master's use.'
What is the role of the 'one sacrifice for sins forever'?
The 'one sacrifice for sins forever' is the restoration of the Cross to its right place as the sin offering which has settled forever the whole sum of our guilt and demerit before God.
What is the order of worship?
The order of worship is praise, followed by worship 'in spirit', and then service to the house of the Lord.
How does true praise relate to the sacrifice of Christ?
True praise is set aflame by the sacrifice of Christ, just like the incense on the golden altar was kindled by a live coal from the brazen altar.
What is the significance of worship 'in spirit'?
Worship 'in spirit' is the bowing of the whole inner self in adoration, wonder, and love before the Father.

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