I was hoping for something with some meat to it. You have a whole treatise on women pastors and only a tiny snippet on the blood of Christ. Which is of greater consequence?
For the cause of Christ
Roger
This may help answer your question "What does the AOG teach about the "Blood of Christ?" If not you will need to be more specific and I will see if I can find the answer for you.
This is from
"Systematic Theology" for first year Bible College students written by Stanley Horton:
His degrees included an M. Div. from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, an S.T.M. from Harvard University, and a Th.D. from Central Baptist Theological Seminary. He was an ordained minister in the Assemblies of God.
This is not an Official statement from the Assemblies of God on "The Blood of Christ" as I doubt that there is any such thing. The AOG does not make official documents on every heading found in a book on Systematic Theology other than an official statement about their core beliefs, foundational truths, and position papers published when a controversy arises in their organization that needs to be clarified. The following is simply an example from ONE of the text books used in their bible colleges, but this is not the only one that covers the subject of the atonement and not the only author used.
ASPECTS OF CHRIST’S SAVING WORK:
SACRIFICE
No one reading the Scriptures perceptively can escape the fact that sacrifice stands at the heart of redemption, both in the Old and New Testaments. The imagery of a lamb or a kid slain as part of the saving, redeeming drama goes back to the Passover (Ex. 12:1–13). God would see the sprinkled blood and “pass over” those whom the blood shielded. When the Old Testament believer placed his hands on the sacrifice it conveyed more than identification (i.e., this is “my” sacrifice); it was a sacrificial substitute (i.e., this I sacrifice in my place). Although we must not press the comparisons too far, this imagery is clearly transferred to Christ in the New Testament.54 John the Baptist introduced Him by announcing, “‘Look, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world’” (John 1:29). In Acts 8, Philip applies Isaiah’s prophecy that the Servant would be “led like a lamb to the slaughter” (Isa. 53:7) to “the good news about Jesus” (Acts 8:35). Paul refers to Christ as “our Passover lamb” (1 Cor. 5:7). Peter says that we were redeemed “with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect” (1 Pet. 1:19). Even those in the heavenlies praised and worshiped the Lion of the tribe of Judah as the slain Lamb (Rev. 5). Although some may cringe at the “blood and gore” associated with sacrifice, to remove it rips the heart out of the Bible. Closely related to the concept of sacrifice are the terms “propitiation” and “expiation,” which seek to answer the question, What effect does Christ’s sacrifice have? In the Old Testament these words reflect the word group of kipper and in the New that of hilaskomai. Both word groups mean “to appease,” “pacify,” or “conciliate” (i.e., to propitiate), and “to cover over with a price” or “atone for” (so as to remove sin or offense from one’s presence; i.e., to expiate). At times the decision to choose one meaning over the other relates more to a theological position than to basic word meaning. For example, one may make a theological decision concerning what the Bible means when it speaks of God’s wrath or anger. Does it require appeasing? Colin Brown refers to a “broad segment of biblical scholars who maintain that sacrifice in the Bible is concerned with expiation rather than propitiation.” G. C. Berkouwer refers to Adolph Harnack’s statement that orthodoxy confers on God the “horrible privilege” of not being in “a position to forgive out of love.” Leon Morris expresses the general consensus of evangelicals in saying, “The consistent Bible view is that the sin of man has incurred the wrath of God. That wrath is averted by Christ’s atoning offering. From this standpoint his saving work is properly called propitiation.” Neither the Septuagint nor the New Testament emptied the force of hilaskomai as to its meaning of propitiation.55 The Bible abandons the crudeness often associated with the word in pagan ritual. The Lord is not a malevolent and capricious deity whose nature remains so inscrutable that one never knows how He will act. But His wrath is real. However, the Bible teaches that God in His love, mercy, and faithfulness to His promises provided the means by which to satisfy His wrath. In the case of New Testament teaching, God not only provided the means, He also became the means. First John 4:10 says, “This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice [Gk. hilasmos] for our sins.”56
All the lexicons show that kipper and hilaskomai mean “propitiate” and “expiate.” The difference lies in how one views their meaning in the biblical materials that deal with atonement. If one accepts what the Bible says about God’s wrath, a possible solution presents itself. We could see the words as having a vertical and horizontal reference.
When the context focuses on the Atonement in relation to God, the words speak of propitiation. But they mean expiation when the focus is on us and our sin. We do not choose either/or but both/and. The historical and literary context determines the appropriate meaning.57 The question may arise, if He bore the penalty of our guilt by taking the wrath of God on himself and covering our sin, did He suffer the exact same consequences and punishment in kind and degree that all for whom He died would cumulatively suffer? After all, He was only one; we are many. As with so many such questions there can be no final answer. The Bible makes no such attempt. One should, however, remember that in the Cross we do not deal with a mechanical event or commercial transaction. The work of salvation moves on a spiritual plane, and no tidy analogies exist to explain it all.
Horton, Stanley M.. Systematic Theology: Revised Edition