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The Atonement: in its Relation to the Covenant, the Priesthood and Intercession of Our Lord

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Hugh Martin (1822-1885) modestly begins this work by acknowledging that it is not a systematic treatment of the Atonement. Whilst this is true, his approach provides answers to all the key questions regarding the necessity, extent, and nature of the Atonement.

As the subtitle suggests he insists that a clear biblical view can only be arrived at when it is seen in the context of the eternal Covenant of Grace, Christ’s role as both Offering and Offerer, the ongoing work of His Intercession, and how our sin is imputed to Christ and His righteousness to His people.

The Atonement is always under attack and this volume provides a framework against which erroneous views may be measured and rejected. Since modern denials simply repackage the same false ideas that Martin combated in his day, the arguments he advances remain relevant and necessary.

First published in 1870, this edition has been completely re-typeset for issue as an eBook.

319 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1976

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Hugh Martin

16 books2 followers
Hugh^^^Martin

19th century Scottish Minister

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Alex.
238 reviews62 followers
May 27, 2021
Something happened in reading this book that I've never experienced before. After reading the first two chapters, I was stopped cold in my tracks. I couldn't go on reading. I had to start again from the beginning. Martin's thoughts were so astonishing, so overwhelming and so electrifying, that just I had to go back. It was all too important to miss. When I finally did manage to reach the end of the book, I had so enjoyed it that I couldn't bear for it to be over. So I left my bookmark on the last page. I also started it over again.
Profile Image for Daniel.
Author 16 books98 followers
January 29, 2024
I have upgraded this one to five stars. A couple of the earlier chapters are not the best stylistically, but the content of the whole book is golden. Hugh Martin's writing style takes a bit of getting used to, as he says so much in such a short space, and often his works demand meditation, not mere reading. Consequently, I plan to revisit this one in the future.
Profile Image for Joshua Savage.
26 reviews5 followers
May 8, 2018
Compared to Martin's other works ("The Abiding Presence", "Simon Peter", "Jonah"), this work is far more technical and seems written to a more academic audience. It is therefore more challenging to get through, as Martin's writing style and ideas are sometimes difficult to grasp. That being said, it is well worth the effort to understand his explanation of the necessity of Christ's Atonement, Intercession, and Priesthood.

This book was compiled by Martin from various articles he wrote for publication throughout his life, and even though Martin (and his editors) did a fair job connecting these articles, they do still read quite separately. This, of course, can also be a help as it encourages one reading a chapter at a time, meditating on its concepts, and not feeling compelled to immediately jump into the next chapter.

Even with it's more academic prose, there are moments that Martin cannot help himself, and his heart-centered, devotional spirit comes through. And really, why not? The truths that Martin unpacks in this volume are powerful, awesome, and cut to the core of the believer--like one who is colorblind seeing the beautiful, color-saturated world around him. Indeed, Martin himself encourages the reader to take these intellectually challenging ideas and use them to meditate on God's Triunity in a Spirit-filled prayer. He says, "My text is not a cold, didactic assertion of the proposition that God is a blessed being. It is the warm, adoring, direct ascription of blessedness to him by a soul in communion with him, rejoicing in his blessedness: 'Blessed art thou, O LORD.' Therefore, bretheren, join with me in thus ascribing blessedness unto our God. Bless ye God in the congregations, even the Lord from the fountain of Israel . . ." (232).
Profile Image for Zach Byrd.
91 reviews11 followers
December 2, 2024
Hugh Martin wonderfully sets forth the doctrine if he Atonement and her many relations - covenant theology, the priesthood of Christ, remission of sins, and so forth. One of his frequent targets is the Hypothetical Universalism, in whom he aptly dispatches.

Alongside clear theological discussions, Martin provides doxological prose which would excite any man to boldly proclaim the gospel of Christ.
Profile Image for Andy.
220 reviews13 followers
April 17, 2015
The most memorable part of the book is his refutation of the notion that God could've pardoned sin by fiat, without atonement. His appeal and exposition of Hebrews 9:22 (without the shedding of blood there is no remission of sins) demolishes this theory.
Profile Image for Cbarrett.
298 reviews13 followers
January 10, 2011
An old classic on atonement; not the easiest reading, but thorough in articulating biblical view. Also deals with erroneous views of atonement that were popular in Martin's day.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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