Sunday, March 22, 2026

Sun.’s Devo - When You Come Into the Land…

Read: Numbers 33:40-35:34; Luke 5:12-28; Psalm 65:1-13; Proverbs 11:23 In the middle of their travel log we have the statement that the people who lived in Canaan knew they were coming to Canaan. Todays, travel takes us from where Aaron died on Mt. Hor to the Jordan River in the plains of Moab across from Jericho. *** The Lord told Moses to tell the people they were to drive out all the inhabitants of the land and destroy all their images and places of their worship. They were to possess the land because God was giving the land to them. If they failed to drive them out, they would become thorns in their sides and a stumbling block for them. *** God gave them all the borders of their land. The nine and a half tribes yet to receive their land would receive it by lot. Their lot would be sized according to the number of people they had. Every tribe was lead by the chief the Lord appointed. *** Each tribe was to give some of their cities to the Levites for them to live in. These cities should have pasturelands for the Levites livestock and beasts that extend outside their city a thousand cubits on all sides. Six of these cities were to be cities of refuge where a person could run to if he accidentally killed a person. There, he could present his case and be allowed to stay until the death of the high priest, then he would be allowed to go home safely. If a person murdered a person with intent then he must be put to death. *** How interesting that we are talking about cities in the Old Testament and our New Testament scripture opens with: “While Jesus was in one of the cities, there came a man full of leprosy.” This is a great picture of what would happen in a city of refuge. The person would come to the priest at the gate of the city and present his case just like this guy did. The man at the gate would decide if his story was plausible enough to investigate. He would determine if the guy could enter the city of refuge. This man in Luke told Jesus that if he wanted to he could make him clean. Jesus was the priest who would decide. He touched him and the leprosy left him. He told him to go and present himself to the priest as proof of his miracle. Other books tell us that he didn’t do this. *** One day, while Jesus was preaching, a paralyzed man was brought to him on his bed. The crowd was so thick, the man was lowered through the roof in front of Jesus. Jesus saw the faith of this man’s friends and told the man that his sins were forgiven. The scribes and Pharisees heard this and thought he was blaspheming God for thinking he could forgive sins. Jesus told them that to prove he had the power to forgive sins, he told the man to get up and walk and he did. *** Then, Jesus went out and demonstrated his point even greater by choosing the tax collector, the chief of sinners in the eyes of the religious, to be his follower. He chose Matthew. *** When we are saved, we have entered into our land and we have to drive out all the past inhabitants of our land like fear, hate, envy, lust, religion, etc. *** Lord, thank you that you forgive our sins and chose us to walk with you. Thank you that you are our city of refuge where we can run and receive forgiveness of every sin we can imagine.

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