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MESSIAH
OUR CITY OF REFUGE
Dr. Daniel Botkin
For God so loved the world, that
He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him
should not perish, but have everlasting life (John 3:16)
John 3:16 is the best-known verse in the
Bible, probably because it is the one verse that best summarizes
in a nutshell the main message of the Bible. It is a wonderful
verse, and many people are familiar with it. Unfortunately,
familiarity can lead to misuse. I have seen unrepentant drunkards
and fornicators use John 3:16 to try to convince me that they
were on their way to heaven, in spite of their refusal to repent
of their sins.
All it says you have to do is believe in Jesus,
they say.
Of course the unrepentant drunkards and fornicators who quote
John 3:16 have to ignore the Scripture verses which say that
drunkards and fornicators will not inherit the kingdom of God
(1 Cor. 6:9f; Gal. 5:19-21).
We cannot isolate one verse of Scripture and divorce
it from the rest of the Bible. Doctrinal errors are established
when men focus on one verse and ignore everything else the Bible
says about the subject they are trying to understand. We must
let the Bible define its own terms. When we read John 3:16,
we must let the Bible define God, love, believe, etc.
The term in John 3:16 that needs to be clarified is the
phrase believeth in Him. What does it mean to believe
in the Son of God? How does the Bible define the term belief
or faith? One thing is certain. Faith without works is dead.
The Bible plainly and clearly states this three times so there
will be no mistake about how God defines faith. (See James 2:17,
20, 26.) Unrepentant sinners who say they believe in the Son
of God have a faith that is like that of the
devils [who] also believe, and tremble (James 2:19).
The only faith God recognizes as genuine is a faith that produces
good works. The good works are not a substitute for faith, nor
are they the basis or source for faith. The good works are the
fruit of faith and the proof of it. Genuine, Biblical faith
is always accompanied by repentance. Repentance and faith are
often mentioned together in the New Testament. Repent
ye, and believe the gospel (Mark 1:15); ...repentance
toward God, and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ (Acts
20:21); ...repentance from dead works, and of faith toward
God (Heb. 6:1).
A look at the Biblical concept of the cities of refuge
can serve as an illustration to clarify what it means to believe
in the Messiah. Before the children of Israel went in to possess
the Land, the Lord instructed them to designate certain cities
to be cities of refuge. (See Numbers 35 & Joshua 20.) These
cities, six in number, were walled cities scattered over the
land of Israel. If a man killed someone and it was not a case
of cold-blooded, pre-meditated murder, the killer could flee
to the nearest city of refuge. Here a person who had killed
someone accidentally or in self-defense had a place of sanctuary
where he would be safe from the avenger of blood,
i.e., the victims family.
It is interesting to note that the number of cities was
six. Seven is the Biblical number of perfection and completion.
This suggests that the six cities of refuge speak prophetically
of a seventh and final City of Refuge. The Messiah Yeshua, Jesus
of Nazareth, is our spiritual City of Refuge, the place where
we are safe from the enemy of our soul.
There is a story in the Bible about a man who should
have taken advantage of Gods provision of a city of refuge,
but did not. The story is recorded in 2 Samuel 2. David was
king over Judah, and Sauls son Ish-bosheth was king over
the other tribes. Ish-bosheths army was led by Abner and
Davids army was led by Joab. Abner and his men were fighting
against Joab and his men. When Abner realized that defeat was
inevitable, he fled the battle. Looking behind him, he saw he
was being pursued by Joabs younger brother Asahel. A young,
inexperienced soldier like Asahel was no match for a veteran
fighter like Abner. Knowing this, Abner told Asahel to fight
with one of the younger men. Turn thee aside from following
me: wherefore should I smite thee to the ground? How then should
I hold up my face to Joab thy brother? But Asahel refused
to heed Abners warning, so Abner slew him in self-defense.
In the next chapter we see Abner in and out of the city
of Hebron, which happened to be one of the cities of refuge.
Then we read about Abners death: And when Abner
was returned to Hebron, Joab took him aside in the gate to speak
with him quietly, and smote him under the fifth rib, that he
died, for the blood of Asahel his brother.
After Abners death King David lamented, Died
Abner as a fool dieth? The answer is obvious. However
wise Abner may have been about some things, he was foolish about
one thing. He failed to take advantage of Gods provision
of a place to protect him from Joabs revenge. Abner did
not stay inside the gate of Hebron, the city of refuge. He was
almost inside. He died on the very threshold of the city gate
of Hebron, just inches from safety. He allowed himself to be
lured out to unsafe ground where he forfeited his right to legal
protection. He was deceived and destroyed by his enemy at the
very entrance to the place of safety. Because of a false sense
of security, Abner died like a fool.
Hebron was a city of refuge built by men to protect a
mans physical life from a human enemy, but it speaks of
a spiritual place not made with mens hands,
a place to protect a persons eternal life from Satan,
the enemy of our soul. The only place of safety for the slayer
was in the city of refuge; the only place of safety for the
sinner is in the Messiah, our City of Refuge.
Just as a man had to enter into a city of refuge to be
in the place of safety, so we have to enter into the Messiah
to be in the place of safety. We enter into the Messiah by believing
into Him. The phrase believe into Him sounds more
awkward than believe in Him, but it is, in fact,
a more accurate translation of the phrase as it appears in the
Greek text of John 3:16. As a matter of fact, in the very first
English translation of the New Testament (in 1380), John Wycliffe
translated this phrase in John 3:16 as whosoever believeth
into Him. Wycliffe translated it this way because the
Greek word eis (eiV) means into. The Greek word
for in is en (en). John 3:16 uses eis, not en.
The Greek word eis, like the English word into, carries
with it the idea of movement. The use of the word into tells
us that the person or object was formerly outside (the house,
for example), and has now moved into the house. The difference
between into and in may seem minor and nit-picky, but it is
of vital importance when we are talking about being in the Messiah.
We cannot say we are in Him unless we have first
believed into Him, and moved from being outside
the Messiah to being in Him. In the Epistles of the New Testament,
the phrase in Christ [Messiah] appears dozens of
times, but until repentance and faith have carried us over the
threshold of the door, we cannot say we are in Him. First we
believe into Him, then we are in Him.
Many people who mistakenly think they are in Messiah
are like Abner at the gate of Hebron. Abner is a picture of
a man almost there. He typifies multitudes of people who are
at the very entrance, but refuse to take that one final step
of commitment that will carry them over the threshold. Such
people are so close to safety that they develop a false sense
of security. They may feel more at home in a church than in
a bar or a night club, but they are still on the wrong side
of the threshold. Being at the very gate, they look into the
city; they see and hear all the activity; perhaps they even
talk with Jesus as did many other would-be disciples. It is
easy for such people to imagine that they are inside.
What are you doing, Daniel, trying to make people
doubt their salvation? If a persons salvation is
genuine, these words will not drive him out of the City of Refuge.
If anything, my words will drive him deeper into the heart of
the City of Refuge. My concern is for those who have an imaginary
faith and therefore an imaginary Messiah and an imaginary salvation.
A.W. Tozer wrote about such people. Imagination has been
mistaken for faith and has been made to do service for obedience,
Tozer wrote. There is a mental disease fairly familiar
to all of us where the patient lives in a world wholly imaginary.
It is a play-world, a world of make-believe, with no objective
reality corresponding to it. Everyone knows this except the
patient himself. He will argue for his world with all the logic
of a sane man, and the pathetic thing is that he is utterly
sincere. So we find Christians who have lived so long in the
rarefied air of imagination that it seems next to impossible
to relate them to reality.
Died Abner as a fool dieth? Yes, because he was outside
the city of refuge. But a person who remains outside the Messiah,
the City of Refuge for the soul, is twice the fool Abner was.
Abner died only once for his error; those who die outside the
Messiah die a second death, called the lake of fire,
a place of weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth.
However unpopular the belief in hell may be, hell has
not changed to keep up with the times and the shifting sands
of mens opinions about the afterlife. Regardless of what
men think about hell, it cannot be wished away. Its jaws remain
open wide to swallow all who continue to sin against a holy
God who gave His Son to die that all might have a place of refuge.
Jonathan
Edwards, in his famous sermon Sinners
in the Hands of an Angry God, pictures people outside
the Messiah as people who walk on a thin, rotten covering that
is stretched over the fiery pit. And there are innumerable
places in this covering so weak that they wont bear their
weight, Edwards stated. And these places are not
seen. The arrows of death fly unseen at noonday. The rotten
covering described by Edwards surrounds the City of Refuge and
extends all the way to the entrance. The only solid ground is
inside.
Why has God ordained His Son to be the only place of
safety? Because His Son took upon Himself the punishment for
our sins. And because the sentence has already been carried
out upon Him, it will fall no more upon Him, nor upon those
who are in Him. The only place of safety is where the fire of
Gods wrath has already fallen.
My home state, Illinois, is known as the Prairie State.
Years ago when prairie grass covered the flat plains, one of
the most dreaded events was a grass fire in the dry season.
If a man in a field saw smoke in the distance, he knew the wind
would carry the fire to his location in a matter of minutes.
There were no trees high enough, no water near enough, and no
legs fast enough to escape the fire. There was only one way
of escape. With his back to the wind, he started a second fire
in the grass and waited for the wind to carry that fire away
from him until a burned-out patch of ground was before him.
He then stepped into that area, and when the fire reached his
location, it simply stopped and died. Where there is no
fuel, the fire goeth out (Prov. 26:20). So it is with
our City of Refuge, the Messiah Yeshua. The only place of safety
is where the fire of Gods wrath has already fallen.
But he was wounded for our transgressions,
he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace
was upon him; and by his stripes we are healed. (Isaiah
53)
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The Hebrew letter mem ( )
can serve as a visual aid to help us picture the Messiah
as our City of Refuge. This is appropriate, because the
Hebrew word for Messiah, Mashiach ( )
begins with the letter mem. Even in rabbinic thought
the mem stands allegorically for Mashiach.1
Shown below are the two forms the letter mem can
take. The form on the right is called the open mem.
This is how the letter appears when it is used at the
beginning of a word or in the middle of a word. The form
on the left is called the closed mem or final
mem. This form is used only when the mem
is the very last letter of a word.
Look at the open mem below and imagine it
as a walled city, our spiritual City of Refuge. The mem
is open; there is a way to enter into the Messiah and
receive the blessing of God. Rabbis see the open mem
as [t]he constant outpouring of blessing from His
open hand2 As long as there
is an open door, the sinner can repent and enter into
the Messiah. The door will not remain open forever, though.
Just as there is a final mem that closes a word, so there
will be a final Judgment Day that will close the door
of repentance, judge those outside Messiah, and close
the books.
In Judaism, God is sometimes referred to by the
name Makom (Omnipresent; literally,
place). The Hebrew word Makom contains
an open mem at the beginning and a closed mem
at the end:
(read right to left). According to the rabbis, the open
mem of Makom speaks of that part of God
which is open, i.e., that which can be known
and understood. The closed mem speaks of that which
is closed, i.e., that which is unknowable
and hidden and beyond the grasp of our limited, finite
understanding.3 There will always
be the secret things [which] belong unto Yahweh
our God (Deut. 29:29); we will always know
in part in this life. But to find eternal life and
the true knowledge of God, we must enter into the Messiah,
our City of Refuge. And this is life eternal, that
they might know Thee the only true God, and Yeshua the
Messiah, whom Thou hast sent (John 17:3).

1 Rabbi Michael L. Munk,
The Wisdom in the Hebrew Alphabet (New York: Mesorah
Publ., 1994), 146.
2 Ibid., 144.
3 Ibid.
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