A Cleansed Conscience

 •  2 min. read  •  grade level: 8
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Human beings have consciences. They know good and evil. Some are so troubled that they try by various ways to have a quiet conscience. They think they need consolation, but what they really need is salvation. They try this and that to secure a quiet conscience, but every now and then conscience terribly accuses them. Numberless sins and failures crowd upon the memory, death stares them in the face, the fear of death and of judgment frightens them and they dread to appear before God.
Religiousness, reformation and good deeds of any kind fail to set such people right before God, and they learn from the Bible that the divine verdict is, There is none righteous, none that doeth good, no, not one, but that all have sinned and are guilty before God. The more they ponder God’s truth, and the more they try to avoid what is wrong, the more guilty they feel. They find themselves increasingly unfit for God, and they become more and more distressed.
The burdens of sin become intolerable, and the constant accusing of conscience makes them cry out for forgiveness of sin. They then learn it is not a quieted conscience, but a cleansed conscience that they need—the certainty that all their sins have been righteously judged and blotted out forever.
They learn there is only one thing which can give a cleansed conscience: it is the blood of Jesus Christ, God’s Son, and it cleanses from all sin. This they believe, because God says so, and their conscience is cleansed. What a relief! Everyone, on believing, can say,
I hear the words of love,
I gaze upon the blood
I see the mighty sacrifice,
And I have peace with God.
We are told, How much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered Himself without spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God? (Hebrews 9:1414How much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God? (Hebrews 9:14).)
The blood of Christ satisfies the conscience because it has satisfied God about sin. It is only when the heart is cleansed from an evil conscience that we can approach God by Him who is gone into heaven by virtue of His own blood. Such have no more conscience of sins, and know it is God that justifies. They are assured that by one offering they are perfected forever, and their sins and iniquities God will remember no more.
Now brought to God, reconciled to God by the death of His Son, they enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus, and they praise and give thanks. They know, through God’s grace, that their sins are cleansed, their conscience cleansed, and that they are cleansed worshippers. This separates them from dead and unscriptural religiousness to serve and obey the living and true God, according to His Word, and to wait for His Son from heaven.