Come to God’s City Of Refuge – December 20, 2014

2014-12-20     
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Come to God’s City Of Refuge

Tell the Israelites to designate the cities of refuge, as I instructed you through Moses…. Joshua 20:2

In Old Testament times, if you killed someone by accident, their family had the right to take your life in return. So God arranged six ‘cities of refuge,’ three on either side of the Jordan River, so that no matter where you were, you had access to God’s mercy and protection. You just ran to one of those cities, told the town elders your story, and they were required to take you in. The only stipulation was that you stayed in that city until the high priest died. When that happened, you were free to return to your family and take back everything you’d lost.

Can you see a spiritual parallel here? Jesus Christ is called ‘the High Priest of our confession’ (Hebrews 3:1). You run to Him for refuge. You confess your sins. There you are forgiven, viewed as ‘a new creation,’ and placed in God’s protective custody. Just as ‘the avenger of blood’ couldn’t enter the city of refuge, Satan cannot cross ‘the blood line’ and hurt you either. When Jesus cried from the cross, ‘…It is finished…’ (John 19:30), all your sins from the womb to the tomb were paid for in full. And because Christ, your great High Priest, died and rose again, He will restore back to you everything you lost as the result of sin’s power in your life. One author put it this way: ‘If there were a thousand steps between us and God, He will take all but one. He will leave the final one to us. The choice is ours.’ So come to God’s city of refuge today.

Prayer
Heavenly Father, thank You for being that city of refuge for me – and for freeing me so I can come back! In Jesus’ Name, Amen

 

One comment

  1. Tim, great devotion this morning. However, I disagree with the author you quote in your last paragraph. I have always believed that God takes ALL the steps to come to us and rescue us! If we have the free will to take even one step to meet God; we are taking credit for something we can’t do without the Holy Spirit drawing us to him. The last sentence in the devotion moved us to “decision theology.”

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