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Discover how the Spirit and the blood agree as one eternal witness, and why cooperating with both unlocks the full inheritance Christ purchased for every believer.
In this fifteenth installment of the Blood Covenant series, the pastor delivers a transitional message that bridges the truth of redemption with the practical responsibility every believer carries to lay hold of what Christ has already purchased. Drawing from Galatians 3:13-14, Hebrews 9:12-15, and 1 John 5:8, the message centers on a profound theological insight: the Spirit and the blood are inseparable witnesses that agree as one. The pastor explains that Christ redeemed us not only from the curse of poverty, sickness, and spiritual death, but into the blessing of Abraham, the promise of the Spirit, and an eternal inheritance. A key emphasis is placed on the Greek word for eternal, demonstrating that eternal redemption carries no decay, no beginning, and no weakness, making the blood of Jesus perpetually effective. The Holy Spirit, identified as the eternal Spirit through whom Christ offered Himself, is shown to be the activating power behind every blessing the blood purchased. Believers are exhorted to stop passively waiting on God and instead actively cooperate with the Spirit, grow in knowledge, and embrace the righteousness, healing, and abundance already provided through the new covenant.
Joshua 1:8, Psalm 103:2-4, Colossians 1:13, 1 Peter 2:9, Galatians 3:13-14, Galatians 3:29, 1 John 5:8, Hebrews 9:12-15, Isaiah 53:3-5, 1 Peter 2:24, Titus 1:1-2, Hebrews 11:1, 2 Peter 1:2-4, James 1:17, Isaiah 55, Romans 5:17, 2 Corinthians 4:16-18, John 7:37-39, John 6:54, John 6:63, Ephesians 2:13, Ephesians 2:18, Hebrews 10:29, Hebrews 13:20-21, Romans 8:11, 1 Corinthians 2:6-12, Philippians 2, Zephaniah 3
One of the central tensions the pastor addresses is the passive Christianity that assumes God will act without any engagement from the believer. Drawing on Joshua 1:8 and Philippians 2:12, he makes clear that working out your salvation with fear and trembling is not earning grace but cooperating with it. God has established laws and principles in His kingdom, and the believer who meditates on the Word day and night positions himself to prosper. The blood has paid in full, but the inheritance must be actively received, embraced, and walked out through faith and obedience.
First John 5:8 introduces three earthly witnesses: the Spirit, the water, and the blood. The pastor explains the water as the outward command of baptism, pointing to Jesus submitting to John’s baptism to fulfill all righteousness, at which moment the Holy Spirit descended visibly. The blood refers to Christ’s atoning sacrifice, and the Spirit is the one who both empowers the blood and bears witness to what it accomplished. When the centurion at the cross declared that Jesus was the Son of God, it was the Holy Spirit giving him eyes to see what natural understanding could never perceive.
The Greek concept of eternity, explored through Hebrews 9:12-15 and Titus 1:1-2, reveals that what is eternal has no beginning and therefore has no reference point for change or weakness. Because Christ offered Himself through the eternal Spirit, His blood entered the heavenly Most Holy Place and retains its cleansing power forever. The pastor applies this practically: healing is not something believers must beg for but an eternal inheritance already provided. As the believer grows in knowledge of what was purchased, the reality of that eternal provision manifests more fully in everyday life.
The pastor brings the theology into direct personal application by teaching believers to declare the blood of Jesus against lack, sickness, and every form of the curse. Because the Spirit and the blood agree as one, speaking the blood in faith is not a ritual but an act of spiritual agreement with heaven. The believer who understands that Christ redeemed him from the curse of the law and into the blessing of Abraham has legal, covenant ground to stand on. Galatians 3:13-14 and Romans 5:17 together paint the picture of a believer who reigns in life by receiving the gift of righteousness and the abundance of grace.
The pastor addresses denominations that deny the present-day ministry of the Holy Spirit and explains that this denial effectively cuts believers off from the very agent who makes the blood effective. Romans 8:14 is cited to show that those led by the Spirit are the sons of God, and 1 Corinthians 12 confirms that gifts of healings, miracles, prophecy, and tongues are all expressions of what the blood purchased. Without the Spirit opening spiritual eyes, a believer cannot even see the kingdom of God, let alone walk in the inheritance. Embracing the Holy Spirit is not optional; it is the pathway into everything Christ died to provide.
The sermon closes with a call to communion that is rooted not in ritual remembrance but in covenant declaration. John 6:54 records Jesus saying that whoever eats His flesh and drinks His blood has eternal life, and verse 63 clarifies that it is the Spirit who gives life to that act. Communion becomes the moment when the believer visibly and physically agrees with the testimony of the Spirit and the blood, declaring that the eternal covenant is active, the inheritance is real, and the same Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead is at work in their mortal body right now.
First John 5:8 teaches that the Spirit, the water, and the blood are three earthly witnesses that give unified testimony to the reality of Christ’s redemptive work. The Spirit and the blood agree because the blood of Christ was offered through the eternal Spirit, making them inseparable in both their origin and their ongoing ministry to believers. To benefit from one, you must embrace both.
Hebrews 9:12 declares that Christ entered the Most Holy Place once for all and obtained eternal redemption. Because this redemption was accomplished through the eternal Spirit, it carries no expiration date, no decay, and no diminishing power. The believer’s forgiveness, healing, and standing before God are secured by a covenant that time and corruption cannot touch.
The Holy Spirit acts as the agent who reveals, applies, and empowers everything the blood of Christ purchased. Without the Spirit opening spiritual eyes, a person cannot even perceive the kingdom of God or understand their covenant inheritance. As the believer yields to and cooperates with the Spirit through the Word, the fullness of what the blood bought becomes increasingly manifest in daily life.
Most people understand eternal life simply as life that never ends, but the deeper meaning is a quality of life that has no beginning, no weakness, and no corruption. It is the zoe life of God Himself, independent of time and therefore unaffected by the decay that governs everything created in time. When a believer receives eternal life, they receive access to the very nature and vitality of God.
Hebrews 10:29 warns that counting the blood of the covenant a common thing and insulting the Spirit of grace carries a punishment worse than those who violated the old covenant. The blood and the Spirit are one, so rejecting the miracles, healings, and provisions the blood purchased is simultaneously an insult to the Holy Spirit. This is not merely doctrinal error but a grievous spiritual offense with real consequences.
Galatians 3:13-14 explains that Christ became a curse for us so that the blessing of Abraham, encompassing prosperity, health, and spiritual life, would come upon Gentile believers through faith. The curse, detailed in Deuteronomy 28, encompasses poverty, sickness, and spiritual death, all of which were placed on Christ so that we might receive their opposites. The blessing is not future; it is a present inheritance to be actively received and walked in.
Practical cooperation begins with meditating on the Word day and night as commanded in Joshua 1:8, because knowledge of the covenant is the pathway into its benefits. The believer must also receive the gift of righteousness by faith as described in Romans 5:17, declare the blood against lack and sickness, yield to the leading of the Holy Spirit, and take communion as a covenant act of agreement. These are not works of merit but acts of faith that position the believer to receive what has already been purchased.
Hebrews 9:14 identifies the Spirit as the eternal Spirit to explain why the blood of Christ retained its power and could not decay after being shed. Because the Spirit is eternal, having no beginning or end, His presence in Christ’s blood guaranteed that it would remain living, active, and effective even as it was taken into the heavenly Most Holy Place. This is the theological foundation for the believer’s confidence that the blood of Jesus is as powerful today as it was at Calvary.