The Cities of Refuge
Numbers 35:9-34
And the LORD spoke to Moses, saying,…


I. THEIR DESIGN.

1. The first object aimed at in them was undoubtedly to save the condemned. The gospel is everything to a sinner, or it belies itself, it is nothing. It is either "a cunningly devised fable," a mockery of human woes, or it is a great remedy in a desperate case, an antidote for a mortal poison, help in a total wreck, life for the dead.

2. These cities had, however, a second end in view — they were undoubtedly intended to uphold and honour the Divine law. The Lord Jesus Christ humbled Himself and died to "magnify His law and make it honourable"; to show His creatures, in the very utmost stretch of His love, how "glorious He is in holiness," how determined to do or give up anything rather than suffer one of His commands to fail, rather than suffer the authority of His eternal statutes to be even suspected. Nothing establishes His law, nothing honours it, like His gospel; nothing goes half so far in proving its unchangeableness; the destruction of a universe could not have clothed it with such an awful glory.

II. We come now to the second point we proposed to consider — THE MEANS BY WHICH THE PROTECTION OF THESE CITIES WAS OBTAINED.

1. The manslayer was, in the first instance, to enter one of them. It is one thing to have the name of Christ in our ears and on our lips, and another to have Christ Himself in our hearts, "the hope of glory."

2. But it was not enough for the manslayer to enter the city of refuge; to secure his permanent safety, we are told in this chapter that he must abide in it. Within its walls he was safe; a step out of them, he was once more at the avenger's mercy. And here we have another spiritual lesson taught us — the sinner who would be saved by Christ, must not only actually apply to Him for salvation, but must abide as a suppliant at His feet to his dying hour. And here we must stop; but the partial view we have taken of this ancient institution will remind us of the care which God manifested in it of two gracious objects. The first is the safety of the transgressor who seeks his safety in the way which God has prescribed. Another object secured in the appointment of these refuges, was the encouragement of the trembling offender.

(C. Bradley, M. A.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: And the LORD spake unto Moses, saying,

WEB: Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying,




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