Ruth 4 | Seeing the Unseen Hand of God: The Redeemer's Love

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He just loves you.

He just loves you.

He just loves you.

Just because he does.

That is the grace of God.

And that's what we see
over and over and over.

In the book of Ruth, we're going

to wrap up the book of Ruth today
in chapter four.

But before we do, I do as your pastor,

feel the need to at least

make comment on the tragedy
that happened in Minneapolis

this last week.

And always around situations like this.

There are those who say

we need to pray for the families
and those involved, and those who say,

God do more than pray.

Let me just say this.

We don't do anything until we pray.

And at the end of the day,

what happened in Minneapolis

and the things like that that happen

far too often in this country.

Are at the heart of it.

A result of the manifestation of evil

through an individual's life
perpetrated against other innocent people.

That's the heart of it.

And when our country in our culture
celebrates,

and promotes the denial of truth,

so much so an individual doesn't

know who or what they are anymore,

the natural degradation of that
is going to be

the denial of the sanctity of human life.

It's not an NRA issue.

It's an evil issue.

And, well, though there are those

in our government and politic
that want to make it simply

a governmental issue,
you and I prayerfully are aware

it's the manifestation of the evil one
who seeks only to steal, kill and destroy,

and the

degradation
and evil and demonic nature of a heart

that would turn weapons against children.

To say needs to be redeemed is.

That's where we are.

And so

while some in our politic choose
not to pray,

we do.

Father,

we live in a broken world.

This is not surprising to you.

Sometimes we're shocked by it.

And we live in a world that,

is broken

and a world full of evil.

No world and a country and a people,

that have denied your lordship.

And as we as we consider

and we hear things that that happen,
like what happened in Minneapolis.

God, our heart breaks.

For those dear, precious children.

And along with their families.

And, father, there are some

in our politic who would deride us

for going before the throne in prayer.

But that is exactly what we do.

I look forward

to the day when you will eradicate evil.

That though the devil is a defeated foe,

he still has play in this world. And.

And when we see it in gruesome detail

that God it it's horrifying.

But I thank you
that you've won the victory.

And we implore you

by the strong name of Jesus,

that you comfort the hurting,

that you bring justice to this world.

And that hearts that are far from you

would be turned to you.

God, at the end of the day.

It's our responsibility

to be your ambassadors in a very broken

world.

Where people who deny the truth

of who they are, so much so that they deny
the sanctity of human life.

God, it's our job.

To reach them, to love them.

To show them.

Who you are.

And so, father, I pray that,

in times like this, you would embolden us

to be bold with faith
and to be bold with you

and the truth of your word.

It's the only thing that will save
humanity.

It's the only thing.

And so do that.

And your name, I pray.

Amen.

So chapter four,
as we wrap up the book of Ruth.

Yeah, I need to address.

I need to address, a little bit

from chapter three that I didn't get to.

And so the book of Ruth is

the grand story of God's providence,

where God works in the natural world
supernaturally

to bring about his good.

That's providence.

And the book of Ruth is all about that.

It's also a love story
between God and his people.

It's also the love story
between a man and a woman.

It's a beautiful story, beautiful account.

But, but let me say this about this
love story idea

for any of you single people, listen,

just because you may feel

the rush of romance, don't
rush into a relationship,

okay?

So in the book of Ruth,
you've got these people that are feeling

the rush of romance,
but they they did it right.

They abided by God's plan and timing.

They let God's providence work stuff out.

There was no rush, there was no hurry.

And God worked that out,
which God always does.

But there's a point in chapter three.

There's two verses in chapter three

that I want to draw attention
to before we get into chapter four.

This is this is after, Ruth has kind of

made her desire known to Boaz, the one
that she would really like to marry.

And Boaz reciprocates the feeling.

And in the end of chapter,
chapter three, Boaz this this land owner,

this farmer says to Ruth, this
the young widowed young lady

that he
has, he has intentions to marry her.

And as a sign of that,
the Bible says he gives her this.

These measures of barley
to take to her mother in law.

And so in verses
15 and 18 of chapter three,

verse 15 says,

bring the garment
you were wearing to hold it out.

So she held it, and he measured out
six measures of barley and put it on her.

So that was the I was the gift he was
giving her before she went back home.

In verse 18.

This is Naomi, her mother, on

speaking to Ruth when she saw this,

this bundle of barley
that she had been given.

Wait, my daughter,
until you learn how the matter turns out.

For the man will not rest.

But we'll settle the matter today.

Here's what I want us to understand.

This whole story,

all the Bible and Ruth included in

that, is a story about Jesus.

And it's a story about God's love for us
and God's

entering into our story to redeem

us, to buy us back from sin.

It's all about Jesus.

And so whenever there's a difficult
passage, this is Bible Interpretation 101.

Whenever there's a weird passage
in the Bible because it's all about Jesus,

you put Jesus in the middle of it and,

kind of sorted its way out there.

And so

Boaz gives the Bible, says boys,
gives Ruth six

measures of barley.

Here's what you we got to understand.

Couple things.

One, that word measure
is not in the original Hebrew text.

It just says Boaz gave Ruth six balis.

We they added the idea of measure
or ethos in some translations

to give us an idea
that, a of a weight to it.

But but here's what God if,
if if Boaz gave Ruth six

if either you know of barley,
it's too much for her to carry.

Like she would have

to have a big old cow
with her to haul all this barley back.

And so and so.

There's no way that this gal could have
carried all this back by herself.

And so what the text says is Boaz
gave Ruth

six barley y6 could have given her,
five could have given her seven.

Why six?

We have to think in the Jewish mindset,
the Hebrew mindset.

Ruth was a moabite.

She didn't have all the
this Old Testament like

we would say, oh, there's all this Hebrew
history behind her.

Naomi was a Hebrew from Bethlehem,
Ephrathah.

She knew the history of God's people.

She knew the law.

So was Boaz.

So Boaz
gives to Ruth to give to Naomi. Six

and says, I will not rest

until the job is completed.

Think in a Jewish mindset.

What else happened in the
span of six and then rested

for the work of God?

And what?

Boaz was telling Naomi that Ruth missed it
because she was a mole,

but she didn't know all the stuff.

But immediately Naomi, knowing,

immediately
went to went to the work of God

that Boaz was saying,
you and I believe in this

great grand creator,
the supreme God of the universe.

You and I believe in this.

We know what he's about, and I am aligning

what I'm doing with God's Word
and God's plan.

And as he worked and didn't rest
until the job was done. So

to with your daughter in law, I will work

and not rest until the job is done.

That's why Naomi could say to Ruth, relax.

He will not rest
until this completed. Do you see that?

You see that on

the other side of that for us.

And I'm telling you, like everything
you here points to God, points to Jesus.

The other point of that is this

in the Bible, six

is the number of man and work.

Okay? It's what we do.

It's work.

There is no rest in our work.

We cannot work our way into redemption.

It's only by the rest of God
resting in God.

In the seventh day.

And what God has done, that

we find completion of our redemption

has nothing to do with our work.

Do you understand this?

This is all prefigured in the book.

It's a beautiful, beautiful book.

So as we read through
all these little details, let's not miss

Jesus in the middle of it.

What's the scene?

I miss the forest for the trees.

When we read the Bible, read

every word, read what's not there, read
what is there,

understand the tense of it,
the history of it.

It's his story.

It's beautiful.

And so chapter four.

Now, Boaz

had gone up to the gate
and sat down there.

And behold, the Redeemer of whom
Boaz had spoken came by.

So Boaz said,
turn aside, friend, sit down here.

And he turned aside and sat down.

If you're new to this story of of of Ruth,

what has happened is this young lady

was a moabite
means she lived in the land of Moab.

And these two individuals

in Bethlehem,
the Promise Land, Bethlehem, Ephrathah

Elimelech and Naomi,
they're experiencing famine, which was the

the judgment of God
on the on the Promised Land,

because it was during the time of judges,
and they were all walking away from God.

So God

allows famine to happen
to draw them back to him.

During that famine they leave to Moab,
which was God said, don't ever do that.

Don't ever do that.

So they go to a place where they shouldn't
be trying to fix a problem

they didn't see God working on.

And while they're there

fixing their own problem, tragedy hits
because that's what happens.

And so Naomi's husband Elimelech dies.

They have two sons,

okay?

Their sons names were sick and tired.

That's a that that truly,
that was their name.

Second turn.
That's a commentary on parenting.

And so while they were there,
they married these two Moabite women,

and they're out of the will of God.

There was some of the family,
and those two men died.

And so now there's

Naomi, who should be in Bethlehem,
Ephrathah, who's in Moab

with these two Moabite women to one
obra Orpah.

She went into telecommunications,
that whole thing.

She stays there. Ruth comes back.

This mother comes back with Naomi.

Two Israel to Bethlehem.

While she's there,
she meets this guy named Boaz.

And we're introduced to this Hebrew
word, go.

Well, kinsman, redeemer.

And the law in Israel was
if there was a woman who was married

and her husband
died, the next in line in that husband's

lineage, brothers, was to marry her and
and have a baby through her and perpetuate

the dead husband's name and family
so that the name wouldn't die.

And so that the
the property would stay within the family.

That was that was the Old Testament
law in the book of Deuteronomy.

And so

this is this whole story
up to this point, up to chapter four

is about Ruth realizing what's going on
and then approaching Boaz and saying,

you are Mike.

They called him a kinsman redeemer,
the one who is close to me who will redeem

me. You're my kids memory, Dever,
and I would love for you to marry me.

And so Boaz says, yeah,
that sounds like a great idea.

I mean, you know, I'm
he's he's he's a successful businessman.

She's young, attractive woman.

She's a woman of virtue.

He's a stand up guy.

And he's like,
this would be a great marriage,

but there's someone closer to you
than I am.

So according to law and Deuteronomy,
like, the closest

one to the widow
would be the first kinsman.

And if they said no, then,
then they would just go down the line

until someone said yes.

And so Boaz says, I would love to,
but there's one closer

said, so, sweetie, go home.

Relax.

You have no more work
in this work of redemption.

You let me do all the work.
Do you follow? So far?

You understand Jesus in this you have
no work and the redemption of yourself.

I will handle everything to it, Boaz says.

And so she goes home
and Boaz goes to the gate.

What was the gate?

Well, the gate was where business
took place in ancient Israel.

The gates of the city
is where the rulers of the city would sit,

and they would drink,
you know, their coffee or whatever,

and conduct business at the gate.

And so Boaz goes to the gate,
because this is a legal thing

that he wants to enter into
with Ruth in marrying her

and being the kinsman redeemer
and known as that.

And the Bible says in verse one,
he goes to the gate, he sits down,

and behold the Redeemer, of whom
Boaz had spoken came by.

And so he goes to the gate.

And it just so happened that the guy

that was the nearer
kinsman just happened to be there. Two

right?

Whenever stuff just happens,

if you were a Christ follower,
it doesn't just happen.

It's the providence of God.

Happens to come by.

And Boaz
said, turn aside and sit down here.

So he turned to side and sat down.

Boaz immediately took action.

There was no delay.

Once he knew this was what God has to be.

There's no delay.

He took action here.

Here's what I want you to understand.

Right up front here,

one of the leading characteristics
of the man or woman of God

is an unrivaled obedience
to the command of God and no hesitation

to obey an unrivaled obedience
to the command of God.

Being the kiss.

My Redeemer was the command of God
in the in, in the law.

And the moment Boaz knew
this is the command of God.

There's no hesitation to obey.

This is a word for me in you,

one of the leading characteristics for you
and I as a man or woman of God.

I don't care how young or how old you
are, is an unrivaled obedience

to the command of God,

an unrivaled obedience

if it's this or that,
and what is God's command

or what is not, guess
which one wins an unrivaled obedience

to the command of God
and no hesitation to obey

this. The old adage

when he says, jump

on the way up, you ask how high?

That's that's the idea.

And this is exactly what Boaz is.

This is a word.

Maybe this is the word
that some of you need to hear,

and you got what
you need, and you can leave

because some of
you have to some of us have to understand.

Listen.

Like I'm obedient

most of the time.

To most things.

But an unrivaled obedience.

I don't know if I could claim that

you follow.

And and there might be some of us, like.

You know what I know
God has been asking is showing. But,

I say I'm pulled trigger on it yet
I'm trusting him yet.

No hesitation.

Obey. Right.

You understand?

Right now.

When Boaz moves in obedience,

God moves in providence.

I want you to understand this.

When Boaz moves in obedience,

God moves in providence.

Boaz was immediately obedient.

And then it just so happened
the other guy showed up.

See? So many times we wait.

Oh God, once I see you move, then I will.

And God says it doesn't work that way.

You'll be obedient and you'll see him.

Once you're obedient,
then you'll see my providence.

You track in.

Is such a good word

sometimes. Not all the time.

But sometimes I feel like
I preach better than you.

Listen.

Look at verse 234.

And he took ten men of the elders
of the city and said, sit down here.

So they sat down.

Then he said to the Redeemer,

Naomi, who has come back from
the country of Moab,

is selling a parcel of land
that belonged to our relative Elimelech.

So I thought I would tell you of it
and say, buy

it in the presence of those sitting here
and in the presence

of the elders of my people,
if you will redeem it, redeem it.

But if you will not tell me
that I may know, for

there is no one beside you to redeem it.

And I come after you.

And he said, yeah, I'll redeem it.

So here's the man.

Once the property, although has said so
far, is there's this girl.

Naomi has come back, her husband's dead
and she's got this piece of land.

Do you want it?

What are you going to say?

This is real property.

This is wealth, right?

He's all.

Yeah, I absolutely do want it.

Now, at this point, Boaz wants Ruth.

And Boaz knows that Ruth
is attached to the land.

Boaz has only told the man about the land
of the man says, yeah, I want the land.

To me, this shows incredible
trust on Boaz is part

in God's providence because he wants Ruth.

And at this point of this transaction,
he has just lost her.

Do you follow? Yeah.

And it's like, okay, God,

if she's if she's meant to be right,
I'm gonna trust you.

I'm gonna do it right.

And if you keep this going,
then fantastic.

But honestly, I'm willing to let her go.

You understand?

I'm willing to let her walk.

If you've deemed that right.

What incredible.

Surrender and trust,

That dream you have,

that deep desire,
you're willing to let it walk

if it's not of God.

Or you want to keep pushing.

Now. Boaz knows.

Boaz knows this.

That God's providence

with my obedience results in convergence.

Boaz just doesn't realize that

providence shows up in obedience.

Boaz realizes that God's providence
with my obedience results in convergence.

Romans 828

God works together, good

in all things, works all things together
for the good of those

who love him,
who are called according to his purpose.

My obedience with God's providence

results in convergence, the working
together of all things for good.

You follow, you follow.

It doesn't happen in my disobedience.

Once we

become obedient, God can reverse
engineer it.

So it has.

But God's providence

with my obedience results in convergence
is that that's what Boaz understands.

I'm going to be obedient.

God's going to work this together
because his providence

and it's going to converge in something
beautiful.

He just has that trust.

To watch verse five.

So the guy says he wants the land.

Then Boaz said, the day
you buy the field from the head of Naomi,

you also acquire Ruth the Moabite,
the widow of the dead,

in order to perpetuate
the name of the dead in his inheritance.

So though Boaz is willing
to trust God's providence

and let her go,
he makes sure that this guy knows.

Oh yeah, by the way,

it's just not the field

you get. Ruth

the Moabite,

the Moabites were like the dust.

They were nasty dirt.

Who knows? And we don't know.

But we know the culture of Moab.

Who knows the lifestyle
that Ruth was involved in before

she got married to the Hebrew boy,
before she came back, who knows?

It was in a completely evil, nasty,

dirty like way of living in Moab.

Who knows what she was subjected to,
who knows how she was living.

And all this baggage comes with her.

And this guy's looking at her thinking,

Moabite girl? We.

Like the land wouldn't be bad,
but all that.

Right.

Look at verse six.

Then the Redeemer said, yeah,
I can't do it.

I cannot redeem it for myself lest
I impair my own inheritance.

Take my right of redemption yourself.

I can't redeem it.

He wanted it. The land.

He didn't want her. The baggage.

And he said,
if I do this, it's going to cost me.

We don't know why it will cost him.

Maybe he's got kids now.

This inheritance is all split up
and everything.

It's just too much
work is too much hassle for him.

He says, look, I don't mind the land,
but I don't want the person.

Please understand this.

What's happening
here is a picture of the law.

The nearer kinsman,

the the law

is very close to each one of us.

It's the law that cannot redeem
the person.

It's the law that simply sees the baggage
and not the redemption.

It's the law that sees that's
what's wrong with them.

But not the way out of it.

Do you understand that?

And so the law says, yeah, I wish I could,
but I can't, because why?

Because the Old Testament
law only points out what is wrong in us.

It was never meant to save us.

It was only meant to say,
I want to show you how bad you are,

so you realize you need a redeemer,
but it has no power to redeem.

Do you follow?
That's what's going on here.

He realizes
the baggage, the dirt of her past.

He says, I cannot touch that.

I don't want to be a part of it.

And that's what the law of God does.

It is perfect, reviving the soul
because it shows us how dirty we are,

and it shows us we need someone
to redeem us because we can't.

We can't. The law can't.

And that's why religion doesn't work.

That's why so many people have tried
so hard to be so good,

only to find out
they're just not good, right?

If you and I can't live up

to our own standards, how in the world
are we going to live to God's standards?

And that's the point of the law.

You can't.

So you need a redeemer.

And that's what this is talking about.

The law reminds us we're broken.

The role of the Redeemer was to create
life, right?

That's why there was marriage.
It happened.

So a life could be created
to continue the name and the.

And the legacy and the history.

He's saying, I can't create life.

Law doesn't create life.

It cannot create life.

Only Christ can.

And that's why he says, I can't do it.

I can't create life.

You with me?

So far.

Look.

Verse seven.

Now, this was the custom in former times
in Israel

concerning redeeming
and exchanging to confirm

a transaction, the one true office
and only gave it to the other.

And this was the manner
of a testing in Israel.

So when the Redeemer said to Boaz, buy it
for yourself, he took off his sandal.

And Boaz said, the elders
and all the people,

you are witnesses this day
that I have bought from the hand of Naomi

all that belong to Elimelech, and all that
belonged to chili on a meal on.

Those were the two sons that died.

Also Ruth the Moabite,
the widow of Mahlon.

I have bought to be my wife, to perpetuate
the name of the dead in his inheritance,

that the name of the dead
may not be cut off among his brothers.

And from the gate of of his native place.

You are witnesses of this day.

I want you to understand something.

When the first man

could not redeem that which was broken,

it wanted the field.

It didn't want the person.

Boaz doesn't care about the field.

Boaz wants the person.

Boaz had plenty of fields.

He wanted the person.

In Ruth.

Boaz is a picture of Jesus.

Ruth is a picture of us, a Gentile

separated from Christ.

Jesus doesn't want the possession.

He wants the person.

Do you understand?

The world
and all of creation are Christ's.

Scripture tells us that
everything was created through Christ.

He's got it all.

He doesn't need anything else.

What he doesn't have is the person.

And so he says, I want everybody to know

I don't care about the field.

I want the person.

You follow.

In my mind,

I go to the book of Matthew

in chapter 13

and in Matthew chapter 13, verse 44.

The kingdom of heaven is like a treasure
hidden in a field,

which a man found and covered up.

Then in his joy he goes and sells
all that he has and buys the field.

Listen,

when I see this transaction
happen in boys, I think two things one,

that Jesus wants the treasure
attached to the field.

He wants the person.

The baggage doesn't scare him.

The past doesn't concern him.

The Moab
ness of the person isn't a threat.

I will take it all and redeem it all.

I didn't see him.

The other thing I see in this transaction

right here is that parable of the field.

The treasure in the field.

The Kingdom of God is so

beautiful, is so powerful, is so valuable

that when you find it the kingdom,

you sell everything

to possess it.

It is worth everything that we have.

The Kingdom of God.

There's no sacrifice too great.

There's no sacrifice too little.

It's everything.

And when you understand
the kingdom of God,

you will move heaven and earth
to be a part of it, to gain it.

And all it will do is cost you your life.

And what a worthy transaction that is.

You tracking with me?

It's a beautiful picture of Christ

and His kingdom.

He wants you,

and he wants you to sell everything
in your world

to be a part of that kingdom,
whatever it costs,

it's worth it.

It's so interesting to me
that this first kinsman

rejected Ruth,
because what it would cost him.

And at the moment he made that decision,

he slipped away into anonymity.

We never hear or see from him again.

He's written off the pages of Scripture.

And I'm reminded

of Matthew 1625.

Whoever would save his life will lose it,

but whoever loses his life for my sake
will find it.

He tried to save his life.

He tried to save his own inheritance.

He tried to save his own possessions.

And he lost his life.

Written out of the pages
of of Scripture for all of history.

Nobody knows who he is.

He's gone. He's vanished.

You want to save your life,
you're going to lose it.

And then Boaz comes in.

He says, I don't care what it cost me.

That is a valuable treasure.

And those who lose their life.

Jesus says, for my sake, guess what?

You finally found it.

So Boaz redeems this bride

and creates life.

That's the whole point of this.

He didn't want the field.

He wanted the treasure.

Friends,
do you realize how valuable and beautiful

the kingdom of God is?

And anything that you and I put ahead of

that is death.

No. Verse 11 and 12.

Then all the people who were at the gate

and the elders,
they said, we're witnesses made.

May the Lord make
the woman who was coming into your house

like Rachel and Leah, who together
built up the house of Israel.

May you act worthily in ephrathah
and be renown in Bethlehem,

and may your house
be like the house of Perez,

whom tame our board of Judah,
because of the offspring that the Lord

will give you by this young woman.

This is what's going on.

There's this outburst of joy
because someone's been redeemed.

There's this celebration and blessing

because someone has been redeemed.

This is this, this is ours.

This ought to be our story.

Like the the Bible
says, the angels in heaven throw a party

every time there's a redemption.

Like heaven's watching and celebrates

what's going on.

It's so interesting to me.

Like you says for Boaz,
may your house be like your family life.

Be like that of Perez.

That's what the Bible says.

The story of Perez. It's
really interesting.

We'll talk about it in just a minute, but
just let me introduce it in Genesis 38,

the story of Perez.

It's thought that this, that,
that from Perez

came the entire, ancestor
of the people of Bethlehem.

Ephrathah of all these people.

And I won't I won't take you
through the study of this.

But if you were to go to Second Chronicles
two, verses

five and verses
eight, and verses 50 and following,

you'll see that out of this boy
Perez came all these Bethlehem ites.

And so that's what they're saying

out of it.

May your house be like the house of Perez.

Like may the all of all this
Bethlehem Ephrathah come out of your line.

Guess who else came from Bethlehem?

Ephrathah
that was prophesied generations earlier?

Jesus the Christ.

That's beautiful.

See, here's what happens.

Let me tell you what happens
with obedience.

Obedience isn't to make us better people.

Jesus didn't come to make us moral people,
better people.

Here's what happens with obedience.

God turns obedience into legacies.

That's what's happening in our lives.

When we live a life of obedience

and quick repentance,
he turns obedience into legacies.

Obedience isn't just for my benefit,
it's for my family.

Like those coming up after me.

My obedience becomes their legacy,
their obedience.

Who becomes others.
Do you understand this?

And all of this happened.

All this redemptive work happened.

Where was Ruth during this whole time?

Where now

she's at home, resting and waiting.

She's doing nothing to effect her own
redemption.

She rests in the work of her Redeemer.

Jonathan Edwards said this.

The only contribution we make

to our redemption is sin

that requires it.

That's the only contribution we make
our own

redemption is our sin
that makes it necessary.

She's resting and waiting.

The nearer Redeemer is not afraid
of the baggage of the Moabite.

You have to understand this, my friends.

Your Redeemer is not afraid
nor threatened by your baggage.

When you were living in Moab.

He wants to redeem it all.

He doesn't care about your baggage. Why?

Because. Second Corinthians 517

says,
those who are in Christ are new creations.

The old has gone, the new has come.

It's all new now with Christ,

some of you are holding on stuff

that Jesus has already let go of.

Do you understand?

He's called you into Bethany.

He's redeemed you.
You're still living like you're in Moab.

He's called you out of that.

It's new now.

Look at 1314.

Look. Look at this thing.

So Boaz took Ruth and she became his wife,
and he went into her.

And the Lord gave her conception.
She bore a son.

Then the women said to Naomi,
blessed be the Lord who has not left you

this day without a redeemer,
and may his name be renowned in Israel.

He shall be to you every store of life
and inertia of your old age.

For your daughter in law who loves you,
who is more to you than seven sons,

has given birth to him,

then Naomi took the child and laid him
on her lap and became his nurse.

And the woman of the
the women of the neighborhood

gave him a name, saying,
A son has been born to Naomi.

They named her Obed.

He was the father of Jesse,
the father of David.

Wait a minute.

Boaz and Ruth get married.

Then they have a baby.

That's a great order of doing things.

And look at what the ladies say.

They said to Naomi,

blessed be the Lord who has not left you
this day without a redeemer.

May his name be renown in Israel.

A son has been born to Naomi,
who had the baby

Ruth, and grandma gets the credit.

Why do they say, blessed are you, grandma?

You got a son.

Listen,

I love the Bible.

Boaz is a picture of Christ.

Ruth is a picture of the church.

Naomi is a picture of Israel.

Follow

God is not done with Israel.

He will bring life again

to a dead people who have rejected him.

Life Jesus came through Israel

and will come again to Israel.

Do you understand?

He's not done with them.

This life will come back through with them

and to them.

And it's beautiful to be

that Naomi, in her old age,

somehow got to nurse this new life.

Now watch.

Verse 18.

Now these are the generations of Peres.

Because, remember,
may your house be like Peres.

That was the
that was the joyful proclamation.

Now, parenthetically, here just now,
these journeys are first.

Peres father has on his run fathered Ram.

Ram fathered a minute, ABBA a minute.

That father nation.

Nation fathered Solomon.

Solomon fathered Boaz.

Boaz, father.

Obed, Obed father Jesse and Jesse.

Father. David.

Doesn't that seem like it?

Well,
that's a weird way to end this story.

Like they wrote
off, lived happily ever after.

You know it.

Why does genealogy back to Peres?

Genesis 38.

I'm gonna give you a little Bible.

We're going to go to seminary
real quick. Okay?

Genesis 38

Peres was the

son of an ancestral encounter

between of the father
and his daughter in law.

Okay? She fooled him.

Her husbands died.

He wouldn't give her another one.

And like this all love leave,
right? Marriage.

You wouldn't
give her another one of his sons to me.

Because there's other kids who died
and that were married to her.

He figured she was bad luck and he didn't
want one of his other kids to die.

And so he kind of sends her on her way.

Well, she dresses up as a prostitute

and propositions him
because he goes on this business trip

and it was like she was all veiled
and he couldn't tell who she was.

And she got pregnant
and she had given him this signet ring.

And look, I'm going to come back and pay
you, but for now, take my signet ring.

She leaves, she hides out,
she shows up pregnant, and they tell him,

hey, your daughter in law is pregnant.

And he says like, well,
she must be a prostitute killer.

And she's all, well,
you can go ahead and kill me.

But the man who owns the signet
ring is the father.

And it was actually him.
And he's like, oh, shoot.

Okay.

And so out of that

relation, father daughter in law
is this boy named Perez.

Okay.

That's that's Genesis 38.

It's just terrible.

In Deuteronomy 23,

watch this.

And Deuteronomy 23,
it says that any lawyer,

no one born of a forbidden union
that would be father daughter in law,

may enter the assembly of the Lord,
even to the 10th generation.

None of his descendants may enter
the assembly of the Lord.

There. They're closed out.

So Perez
and all of his sons are closed off

from the presence of God.

Do you follow?

Go back to the genealogy.

Perez, the father of, has Ron,

the father of Ram, the father of Minitab,

the father of nation,
the father of Solomon, the father of Boaz.

Father. Obed. Jesse. David.

How many generations?

Ten. Ten.

Ten. Who was the 10th generation King?

David

gives the last people.

We're impatient.

They didn't want to wait on God.

They didn't trust his sovereignty,
and they didn't trust his providence.

So they forced
God's hand in giving them a king.

And the first king of Israel was whom?

You Bible students, Saul.

And it was a disaster.

It was tragic

because they wouldn't trust God's
providence, God's timing,

nor his providence.

They hadn't waited ten generations yet.

And then suddenly the 10th generation
was whom?

David, David.

And out of David's line came who Christ.

Do you see this all through the Bible?

God saying, trust me.

Trust my sovereignty.

Trust my plan,
trust my word, trust my providence.

If you all.

I laid it out for, if you all just
would have paid attention to my by to my,

and then counted ten generations,
you would know that Saul, wasn't it?

You would know that the ones coming
you could have saved yourself

so much tread had you just trusted.

Right.

In chapter one,

all Ruth and Naomi knew was tragedy
and pain.

They had no idea chapter four was coming.

You may be in chapter one right now.

All you know.

Questions?

Difficulty, pain.

And you have no idea

that chapter four is on your horizon.

Listen.

My obedience

with God's
providence results in convergence.

I will be obedient,

and I will trust that God will work
all things together for my good.

Because I love him

and I obey him.

Jesus, his crucifixion was chapter one.

Nothing but death and despair and pain.

But chapter four came three days later.

Resurrection and our redemption

and communion reminds us.

Communion reminds us

that there's a chapter one

and there's a chapter for.

And communion is a symbol of chapter four.

The redemption that can be ours,

because the body of Christ and the blood
shed on the cross for the forgiveness

of our sins, to buy us back
and redeem us from our moab's,

from our chapter ones.

That's what this reminds us of.

And it's a very fitting way
for Christ followers to remember.

Chapter four

To the Body and Blood of Jesus.

Friends, if you have a relationship

with Jesus by faith

and you trust what he's done on the cross
for your salvation,

these elements are for you
as your memory tool

to remember what our redemption cost,

the price associated with it,

as an expression
of the father's love for us.

And so if that's you,
as you wrap up the book of Ruth.

I want you to take the bread.

And remember

the body of Christ

that was given for us, his life for ours.

The Bible says that

when Jesus shared that final meal
with his disciples,

he took the bread he lifted up to heaven.
He gave thanks.

And then he broke and he gave it to them.

He said, this is my body.

Now that I'm giving for you, do this
every time you eat it in memory of me.

And in a very similar way, Jesus took
the cup and he lifted it up to heaven.

He gave thanks

and said,
this cup is a new covenant in my blood,

shed for the forgiveness of your sin,

for our redemption
to buy us back from Moab

to ensure chapter four
for those who love him.

Do this
every time you drink it and remember him.

Ruth is a beautiful story

because it's the story of Christ
and the love of the father.

And that is available

for everyone who would call upon his name,

who would submit themselves to him.

And commit themselves to obedience,

relying on God's mercy and grace.

Where we fall short.

I want to invite you into that.

You should pray with me.

If any of you have never made
that decision

or need to make it again
to re solidify it,

I'd invite you in this moment.

To say something along these lines.

God, I admit that.

I have lived outside of your will.

I know what you have asked of me,
and I've denied it.

I've denied you.

And the Bible calls that sin.

And I agree

that I'm a sinner and I live in sin.

And I cannot be right with you by any work
I do.

I just can't be good enough.

And I thank you that I don't have to.

Tell him.

Say I accept what Jesus did on the cross

for my redemption.

Tell him, say,

Jesus,
thank you that you've done all the work

and I get all the benefit.

So today I trust myself to you,

and I trust you with my present
and my future.

Help me love you with my whole heart

and soul and mind and strength,

and now work all things,

even my past, together for my good.

Because I love you.

Father,
this story is ultimately your story,

and I thank you that you've shared it
with us and invited us into it.

I pray you help us trust your hand,

that you remind us that our obedience
with your Providence

creates convergence,

and that you will work all things together
for good for those who who love you.

We love you.

In your name I pray, Amen.

This. Listen, I'm proud of you.

Ruth's been a good study,

It's been a good study.

It. Next week I'm going to do a separate

little message based on our values.

You're wearing shirt.

There's seven of them. There.

And so we're going to talk about
those next week as we get

ready to get into our birthday Sunday.

To celebrate our 20th birthday. Okay.

I love you.

I'm proud of you.

God's doing good things.

Listening.

Ruth 4 | Seeing the Unseen Hand of God: The Redeemer's Love
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