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Word of God to His people. I'm
thankful for Preston and for you guys just for letting me
be here today and give you the word. I'm from Conway. I know Delano and Zach, some
of the guys you might know as well. And I go to Grace Bible
Theological Seminary there with them. And so I know them from
there. And they've been great brothers.
And Delano reached out and asked if I wanted to preach at a Reformed
church in Pine Bluff. And I was like, yes. That sounds
like a great, great thing. So I'm here today. I'm thankful.
for you guys, and I look forward to meeting and greeting you guys
after the service. The book we're going through
is Ruth, which is a very exciting book, full of the glories of
the gospel and the riches of the loving kindness of Jesus
Christ, of our Lord. And I'm honored, I'm honored,
I really am, to preach it to you today, to preach it to God's
flock, His fold. All right, so starting in verse
one, It's the word the Lord says. Now, Naomi had a kinsman of her
husband, a mighty man of excellence, of the family of Elimelech, whose
name was Boaz. And Ruth, the Moabitess, said
to Naomi, Please let me go to the field and glean among the
ears of grain, after one whom I may find favor in his eyes.
She said to her, go my daughter. So she went. And she came and
gleaned in the field after the reapers. And it so happened that
she happened to come to the portion of the field belonging to Boaz,
who was of the family of Elimelech. Now behold, Boaz came from Bethlehem
and said to the reapers, may Yahweh be with you. And they
said to him, may Yahweh bless you. Then Boaz said to his young
man, who was in charge of the reapers, whose young woman is
this? The young man in charge of the reapers replied, she is
the young Moabite woman who returned with Naomi from the fields of
Moab. And she said, please let me glean and gather after the
reapers among the sheaves. Thus she came and has remained
from the morning until now. She has been sitting in the house
for a little while. Then Moab said to Ruth, have you not heard,
my daughter? Do not go to glean in another
field. Furthermore, do not go on from this one, but stay here
with my young women. Let your eyes be on the field
which they reap and go after them. Indeed, I have commanded
the young men not to touch you. And if you are thirsty, go to
the water jars and drink from what the young men draw. Then
she fell on her face, bowing to the ground, and said to him,
Why have I found favor in your sight, that you should take notice
of me, though I am a foreigner? Boaz replied to her, All that
you have done for your mother-in-law after the death of your husband
has been fully told to me, in how you forsook your father and
your mother and the land of your birth, and came to a people that
you did not previously know. May the Lord repay your work,
and may your wages be full from the Lord, the God of Israel,
under whose wings you have come to seek refuge. Then she said,
may I find favor in your eyes, my lord, for you have comforted
me and indeed have spoken to the heart of your servant woman,
though I am not like one of your servant women. At mealtime, Boaz
said to her, come here that you may eat of the bread and dip
your piece of bread in the vinegar. So she sat beside the reapers
and he served her roasted grain. And she ate and was satisfied
and had some left. Then she rose to glean, and Boaz
commanded his young man, saying, Let her glean even among the
sheaves, and do not dishonor her. Also, you shall purposely
pull out for her some grain from the bundles, and leave it that
she may glean, and do not rebuke her. So she gleaned in the field
until evening. Then she beat out what she had
gleaned, and it was about an ephah of barley. She took it
up and went into the city, and her mother-in-law saw what she
had gleaned. She also took it out and gave Naomi what she had
left after she was satisfied. Her mother-in-law then said to
her, where do you glean today and where did you work? May he
who took notice of you be blessed. So she told her mother-in-law
with whom she had worked and said, the name of the man with
whom I work today is Boaz. Naomi said to her daughter-in-law,
May he be blessed of the Lord, who has not forsaken his lovingkindness
to the living and to the dead. Then Naomi said to her, The man
is our relative. He is one of our kinsmen-redeemers.
Then Ruth the Moabitess said, Furthermore, he said to me, You
should stay close to my young men until they have finished
all my harvest. Naomi said to Ruth, her daughter-in-law,
it is good, my daughter, that you go out with his young women
so that others do not oppress you in another field. So she
stayed close by the young women of Boaz in order to glean until
the end of the barley harvest and the wheat harvest. And she
lived with her mother-in-law. Let us pray. Heavenly Father, Lord God, we
come before you in need of your grace, Lord. Lord, we are weak,
beggarly sinners, Lord God, and we need you to come. We need
your grace. We need your spirit, Lord God,
and I pray in this time that you would open our ears to hear
your word, Lord. I pray that we would see the
glories of Christ and his person and his work, Lord. I pray that
you would come to love him more, and I pray that it would lead
us to seek to obey him in all that we do. Father God, as we
look at this passage, I pray that whatever I say that's not
of You would be left behind, but that I would preach Your
Word, Lord God, and what You say, and that would remain, Lord.
I pray that You would be with me as I speak Your Word. and
that you would edify, you would feed your sheep, Lord God, and
that you would get all the glory of the Lord. So be with us now
as we look at this, at your word, Lord God, your holy word. In
Jesus' name I pray, amen. So I'll give you a quick lay
of the land of what we're going to look at in this sermon first.
First, we're going to look at just the first few verses of
the chapter, just to kind of get an idea of what's the setting
here, who are these characters, what's going on. Ruth is a complicated
story. And so there's a lot of different
things weaving in and out. And so it takes time to really
dig in and what's happening here. And so after we look at some
of the background, then we're going to look at our first point,
which is that God has a sovereign plan for us in the midst of trial. And then the next point will
be the comfort of God's loving kindness in the midst of trial.
And third, we'll look at the hope and praise that we have
in the midst of trial. And finally, the final point
will be to stay with Christ, to remain in Him in the midst
of our trials. So just a quick recap of what's
been going on in Ruth. So up to this point, in the first
chapter, we saw that you had a man named Elimelech, right?
And he went to the land of Moab because there was a famine of
land. He left Bethlehem, which is where he was at, which means
house of bread. He left the house of bread to
go to a pagan land, a foreign land, to try and find bread. which the land of Moab has been
a hindrance for Israel ever since they came to this land. And so
it didn't seem like the greatest idea. But while he's there, and
he's bringing along his wife Naomi, while he's there, we see
that his sons marry Moabite women, Ruth and Orpah. Eventually, we
see that Elimelech dies, as well as his two sons. They're judged
by the Lord. And Naomi is left bereaved of
her husband, no provider, no security there. And so it's a
really tough situation. But it says in verse 6 of chapter
1 that the Lord visited His people with bread. So Naomi gets word
that there's bread once again in Bethlehem, the house of bread.
And so this indicates that there's been some type of change because
the famine, we looked at in the past couple weeks, the famine
is a sign of God's judgment. This is one of the curses of
the old covenant that Deuteronomy talks about. If the people disobeyed
the Lord, he would bring famine upon the land. And so what we
have here is that There is a famine of bread, but what caused the
famine of bread? It was a famine of the Word of
God. A famine of people obeying God's Word is what caused the
famine of bread in the first place. But now that's all changed.
Naomi's gotten word that the Lord has visited His people and
given them food. So there's a revival that's taken
place in the land. Then we see that Naomi leaves
and she tries to bring... She leaves, and also Orpah and
Ruth are going with her. They want to come back to the
land with her. She discourages them greatly. She gives them
three reasons why, and she goes through. She's like, no, I'm
past the age of marrying. You wouldn't wait for a son,
even if I did have a son. And so she's trying to discourage
them from coming to the land of promise, to the land of salvation. But Ruth clings to Naomi. Ruth adopts her God, Naomi's
God, as her own God. And so she goes and devotes herself
and clings to Naomi in a great expression of faith. She becomes
one of the people of God. And so at the end of this chapter,
leading into Chapter 2, what we have is Ruth and Naomi coming
back right at the beginning of, it says here, right at the beginning
of the barley harvest. We have the revival in the land. There's bread once again in the
land. There's the barley harvest. And we now turn to the next main
character of the book, who the Lord brings in, which in verse
1, reading verse 1 here, it says, Now Naomi had a kinsman of her
husband, a mighty man of excellence, of the family of the Limelech,
whose name was Boaz. So Boaz is a kinsman. He's a
relative. He's a part of the family of a woman like, and by
extension, Naomi. They're a part of the family.
The text says that he's a mighty man of excellence or a worthy
man. And this phrase that's used,
it's used of warriors, such as Gideon in Judges. It's used of
him as well. So it paints this picture that
he is a great man in all facets of strength and might, and also,
I would say, his character. He's a strong man in character.
We see his name. What does the name Boaz mean?
His name literally means strength. And so he's a doubly strong man. He's a man of strength and a
mighty man as well, a man of excellence. And so it adds to
this idea that he is this kind of man. Other translations will
say he's a man of great wealth, which is also true, as we'll
come to see throughout the rest of this chapter, that he owns
land. He has a portion of the field here. And just to give
the context, so when Ruth says, to Naomi, please let me go to
the field, in verse 2, and glean among the ears of grain. She
says THE field, but then later we'll see she, in verse 3, she
came to the portion of the field of Boaz. So the way it worked
was there, you had the towns, like Bethlehem was the town,
right? That's where the people lived in, and then all around
the town there was this big field. And the field was divided up
amongst the family plans and their allotment. And it would
be divided by stones, and there would be portions of the field.
So Boaz has his own portion, which is where Ruth goes to.
And another bit of background that'll help us kind of see what's
going on here is that in Boaz's parents and his grandparents,
that Boaz comes from the line of this guy named Salmon. Salmon is his father, or Salmon. But his father was Salmon, but
his wife was Rahab, which Rahab It says this in Matthew 1.5.
If you want to go look later, it says in Matthew 1.5 that Salmon
was the father of Boaz by Rahab. So Rahab came into the biblical
story back in Judges. I'm sorry, excuse me, back in
Joshua, when the spies from Israel were coming into the land, which
was the promised land, which at that time was all the Canaanites.
So the spies came into the land, and she helped them out. She
allowed them to stay, and she covered their tracks when they
escaped. And so she identified with the people of God in that,
and she had faith in the Lord by hiding them and keeping them
from her own pagan people. And so we have a woman here,
a Gentile woman, a pagan woman. who helps the people of God and
comes to faith in God and is shown kindness by the people
of Israel. Because if you remember, she let down the scarlet cord
from her window. And when they came and destroyed
the city, that signified that she would be protected, that
they wouldn't destroy her house, her household. And so we have
this woman who now has faith in the true God. She left her
paganism and comes to the true worship of God. And so, when
we see this here, there's parallels even with Ruth, who's the same
way, a Gentile woman who's coming to faith in the Lord. And so,
as we see the interactions of Boaz and Ruth, he will probably
have this in mind that his mother, in a very similar way to Ruth,
did the same thing and had faith in God. Now, back to the beginning
of verse 1, when it said that Naomi had a kinsman of her husband. Like I said, it just means relative,
but it's pointing to the idea of a kinsman-redeemer, which
is a big theme. The kinsman-redeemer is a big
theme throughout the Book of Ruth. And it's important now
to define, what does kinsman-redeemer mean? What does this come from?
Well, there's different duties, there's different responsibilities
that the kinsmen redeemer would have. But the one that we're
going to look at in this passage is the duty of being a lever, which
comes from the leverite law. When I first heard that, I thought,
oh, that's probably something from Levi, the tribe of Levi,
or it has to do with that. But there's actually no connection
to Levi. It comes from, in Latin, the
word lever means the husband's brother. And so this is the law
that deals with the husband's brother. It's a law that has
to do with when a man dies, and him and his wife have no male
child, have no male children, to pass on the inheritance, pass
on the name. Then, when this husband dies, when this man dies,
his brother, his younger brother, will come and marry the widow
to raise up a child, a male child, to inherit his dead father's
name, his dead father's inheritance, and everything that comes with
that. And so this male child would then take the place of
the dead brother and carry on the name. And this law is very
important to the book. It's in the background of this
book. And in the later chapters, it'll come up more. And so we
have to understand the fact of what the Leverett Law is, which
lever just means husband's brother. And so it's when the man dies. The brother will come and marry
the wife so that they can have a child that will continue on
the family name of the brother who died. That his name would
not be blotted out. Then we come in verse 2 where
Ruth asks Naomi to go to the field to glean, right? She wants
to glean among the ears of grain. Now this may be a little unfamiliar
to us. What is gleaning involved? What
does it mean? We looked at, there's one verse
in our congregational reading which talks about the harvest
and gleaning and what that meant. But these gleaners, the people
who would come and glean the field, were those who were poor,
those who were disadvantaged, those who were afflicted, the
widows or even sojourners in the land, those who were from
other nations around who were living in the town, in the field. So they would come and they would
glean. Now, let me read again just what
Leviticus, what we read this morning. It says, now when you
reap the harvest of your land in Leviticus 19, 9-10. When you
reap the harvest of your land, you shall not reap to the very
corners of your field, nor shall you gather the gleanings of your
harvest, nor shall you glean your vineyard, nor shall you
gather the fallen fruit of your vineyard. You shall leave them
for the afflicted and for the sojourner. I am the Lord your
God. So as we see here, they leave
the corners of the fields for the gleaners. And they also leave
the gleanings, which the gleanings, which here's the picture of what
would go on during the harvest. You have the young men. So Boaz
has young men, these servants, who will go out. They will take
the grain, right? They will take the bundles of
grain, get a good-sized bundle, take the sickle, and cut off
the heads from the stalks, right, to gather the heads of the grain.
And what would happen after that, the young women would come behind
and gather up the stalks and bind them into the sheaves. But
this was a messy process. You're not going to always get
every single strand, every single stalk of grain. It's a messy
process. So this would allow the leaners
to come, the law states that you should let those, leave them,
let them fall, leave them behind, and the gleaners will come, those
who are poor, those who are needy, those who need it. And the loving
kindness of God, He provided this for them, that they could
come and make a living for themselves. So they were not to collect the
gleanings that happened. This is repeated again in Leviticus
23, 22, and then also in Deuteronomy 24, And in that passage in Deuteronomy,
it's alongside the command that they were to do this, remembering
that they were once slaves in the land of Egypt. They were
to remember that they were once themselves afflicted in the land
of Egypt. So they are to show kindness,
just as God showed kindness to them when they were slaves. And
this was a constant reminder. No, we need constant reminders
that we were once slaves, that we were once slaves in our sin,
slaves to sin, death, and the devil. But praise be to God that
Christ set us free. But we can never forget that
we were slaves and Christ has set us free in what he's done
for us. We should be constantly reminded of that. Then in verse
three of this passage, We'll come to our first point in this
verse, that God has a sovereign plan. He's a purpose in the midst
of our trials. So it says here that she came
to the portion of the field owned by Boaz. And once again, it mentions
he's from the house of the Limelech. He's related to Naomi, so it's
trying to get us the idea of potentially he could be a redeemer,
a hidden redeemer. But notice the language used
here. It says, she happened to come into the field. Literally,
in the original, it means she chanced upon, or her chance,
chanced upon the field that she came in. Out of all the portions
of the field that she could have come to, she came to Boaz as
her relative. There's no such thing as random
events. There's no such thing as flukes.
There's no such thing as, well, that just, you know, that was
all just happened by chance. No. The Lord, our God, is the
one who has declared the end from the beginning. He is the
one who works everything. after the counsel of His own
will. He has a purpose, and it will
all come to pass according to how He declared it. Think about
what would have happened if Ruth had not entered Boaz's field
first. She may have went into a different field, and she could
have been hurt, taken advantage of. The house of Elimelech and
Naomi, it could have ended right there. There may not have been
a marriage to Boaz. The line wouldn't have been redeemed.
There would have been no King David, because King David comes
from this line. There would have been no David to bless Israel.
And ultimately, there would have been no Christ who came through
the line of Ruth and Boaz. And what's truly amazing here
is that at this point, when Ruth steps foot in there, she had
no clue. She was still in the midst of the uncomfortable season.
She was still in the midst of this trial. But this is a great
reminder, brothers and sisters, that God is always working. He's always at move in the background,
even when we don't see it, even when we don't understand it,
or even when we don't feel his presence. We can be confident
that he is working in the midst of our trials, even when we don't
see it. Ruth didn't know whose field
she was stepping into. But God knew, and God had a purpose
and a plan. He's the master storyteller. He's writing a story that's greater
than any story that's ever been written. And we can trust Him
that He has a purpose, even when we don't understand. And I think
of one of the greatest verses in the Bible, I'm sure you know
it well, Romans 8, 28, how we know all things work together
for good for those who love God, who are called according to His
purpose. God is working all things for
our good. He's working it all out to grow us, to sanctify us,
to make us more like Christ, and it will result in all His
glory and praise. Amen. Now in verse four, moving
on, we see that Boaz comes onto the scene. It says, came from
Bethlehem and said to the reapers, may Yahweh be with you, the Lord
be with you. And they said to him, may the Lord bless you.
So he's coming and he's greeting his employees, his crew, right? Some churches and denominations,
they do a similar greeting in their worship service, if you've
ever heard of, or the pastor or whatever will say, the Lord
be with you. And then the congregation will
say back, and with your spirit. That's a greeting that comes,
is derived from this type of greeting that we have here. But
also we see here that Boaz is a righteous man, that he fears
the Lord, at least in word, that he gives honor and praise to
the Lord. And that his men also, that his
crew, that they fear the Lord as well. So Ruth, in these next verses,
in verse 5, Boaz comes, he says to this young man, whose young
woman is this? The young woman tells him, she is the young Moabite
woman who returned with Naomi from the fields of Moab. And
then she told him earlier, please let me glean and gather after
the reapers among the sheaves. And so she's been here since
morning. She's been sitting in the house just for a little while.
She's been taking her 15-minute water break from the field. And
so she's been working hard. She's been working hard out in
the field, getting the gleanings, gathering up. And the men have
noticed this. And now Boaz comes and notices
this. Then in verses 8 and 9, Boaz
then comes to Ruth and says, have you not heard my daughter?
Do not go to glean in another field. Do not go on from this
one, but stay here with my young woman. Stay in my field. Let
your eyes be on the field which they reap. Go after them. And
indeed, I have commanded the young men not to touch you. If
you are thirsty, go to the water jars and drink from what the
young men draw. so he's inviting her to stay
in his field, he's taking responsibility for her, his relative, and he
tells the young men not to... He says not to harm her, not
to touch her. And I think what would happen
is you would have the gleaners oftentimes, you know, they're
following behind the reapers. Sometimes they would come up
too close and try to grab some of the actual harvest. And so what
the reapers do, they, you know, swat them back, push them back.
And so he's saying, no, Ruth can come up even right up to
where y'all are working to gather up the first pickings in a sense.
And he also tells her what? That she can get water. The same
water that his servants drink from. So he's elevating her status.
He's showing the loving kindness to her. He's showing kindness
to her. And she isn't just going to be treated as this normal
gleaner. No, he's showing kindness to her. And this leads us into
our next point of the comfort of God's loving kindness for
us. Now, before we go on to the next
four verses and look, let me point out that we know the whole
Bible. We know from the New Testament,
Paul tells us that the whole Bible is the Word of God. that
all scripture is God breathed and profitable for teaching,
correction, reproof, and training in righteousness, so that the
man of God would be fully equipped for every good work. We know
that Jesus tells us in the Gospels, like we saw in Luke, the disciples
on the road to Emmaus, how he opens their eyes up to all the
scriptures and says to Moses, the prophets, and the Psalms,
which is showing that the entire word of God He opened their eyes
to it, the entire Word of God, to show that it's all about Him. It's all about Jesus. So, when
we come to the book of Ruth, it's going to be no different.
Ruth is going to point to Jesus. It's very, very important, especially
when it comes to the seed of the woman, as we kind of mentioned
earlier, the seed of the woman was going to crush the head of
the serpent, the promise back in Genesis 3.15. But the seed
of the woman was to crush the head of the serpent. So they're
tracing the line of this Messiah, this serpent crusher down through
history. And Ruth is tracking that. It gives the genealogy
of that. And especially it's focused on
David, that David's that type of Christ who is to come. And
so Ruth is narrowing down this sea. First it narrowed down through
Abraham, then through Isaac, then through Jacob, and then
through Judah. And so we see this narrowing
down through Judah and through the line of Ruth and Boaz now.
But this isn't the only way that this book points to Christ. It
also points to Christ just by the nature of the story and the
characters that we have in the story. They point to Christ as
well, and the loving kindness that's shown here, especially
by Boaz, who is the kinsman redeemer, and his love that he shows. And
he's already shown her kindness, as we've seen with the water
and not allowing her to lean closer up. And so in the next
couple verses, verse 10 and 12, Ruth responds, while I found
favor in your sight that you should take notice of me, though
I am a foreigner. Loa says, all that you have done
for your mother-in-law after the death of your husband has
been fully told to me, how you forsook your father and your
mother and the land of your birth, and you came to a people that
you did not previously know. May the Lord fully repay your
work. May your wages be full from the
Lord. the God of Israel, under whose wings you have come to
seek refuge." So Boaz has heard of Ruth's story. It's probably
been the top of the town at this point in Bethlehem. How Naomi
came back, and she's all bitter, and she wants to be called bitter
now. And about Ruth, who came. And so he's heard all that's
happened. He's probably, in the back of his mind too, we can
kind of see with Rahab, he's probably thinking of, oh, this
is a woman in like faith with my mother. A woman who has forsaken
her people and come to be with the people of God. The same faith
as his mother. And also he's showing kindness
to her because of her faith in God, because she stuck with Naomi,
she clung to Naomi. And Naomi is related to him,
she's part of the house of Naomi's dead husband. So Boaz is showing
that his love by taking care of her and his responsibility
over her, caring for her as a part of this, as if she was in his
own house. not just as a mere gleaner of grain, but also as,
you know, you're part of my household. And we see this beautiful picture
of the setting of the harvest, that as everybody in this chapter
is gathering grain, as everybody's gathering the grain, it says
here, Boaz wishes that the Lord would gather Ruth, that he would
gather her as the grain is gathered, that God would gather Ruth in
and give her rest, give her refuge. And in verse 13, the next verse,
Ruth responds as she asks, may I find favor in your eyes, for
you have comforted me, and indeed you have spoken to the heart
of your servant woman. So what we have here is the favor
that she wants, the grace that she wants in the eyes of Boaz.
The loving kindness that he showed her has been a comfort in this
hard season, has been a comfort to her in the midst of trial.
Boaz, who is this mighty man of excellence, a man of valor,
the eventual great-grandfather to David, he points here to Jesus
Christ. He points here to our Lord Jesus
Christ. We see in Boaz this picture of
our Lord, who gives grace to His bride, the church, and shows
abundant, loving kindness to her as it goes on. In verse 14,
at mealtime, Boaz said to her, Come here that you may eat of
the bread, and dip your piece of bread in the vinegar." So
she sat beside the reapers, she came up and sat with the reapers,
and he served her roasted grain, and she ate, and was satisfied,
and had some left. Just as Boaz tells Ruth to feast,
to come to the table, come up, draw near, come further up the
table, just as Boaz tells her this, the Lord tells His people
to come to Him, to draw near to Him, to feast with Him. just as Boaz serves her roasted
grain and vinegar, which vinegar is just sour wine, just as he
gives her these, Christ beckons his bride and gives her wine
and bread and the Lord's Supper and the covenant meal that we
come together and have communion with Jesus Christ in. So we see
this picture of Boaz, this picture of Christ in Boaz. We have been
joined, we have Now, Christ, He is our Redeemer. And it says that she ate, what
does it say? It says she ate, and then she
was satisfied, and what? She had more left over. There
was an abundance left over. It's not just, here's some pieces
of bread, you can have it over there, and here's a little bit
of vinegar. No, it's heaping. See, he sees her plate, and he
puts a big pile, you know, he gives heaps of grain, heaps of
vinegar, and he says, eat, may you be merry, may you enjoy yourself.
And this. This is our God. This is the
wonderful love of our God, our Lord Jesus Christ, who He gives,
and He gives, and He gives of Himself. He doesn't stop giving
Himself. He pours out His grace. Ephesians
1-3, it says He has given us what? Every spiritual blessing
in the heavenly places has been given to you, has been given
to us. It's the abundance of Christ. Every single blessing
has been given to us. We have been joined to Christ.
We have been united to Christ by faith in Him, by trusting
in Him. We become united with Him. We
become crucified with Him. We die with Him. We're buried
with Him. And then we're raised and seated in the heavenly places
with Him. All that He has is now true of
us as well. He invites us to come and be
a part of Himself. He not only has justified us,
but He has sanctified us. He has adopted us as His sons
and daughters. He has forgiven our sins. He
has thrown them into the depths of the sea. He remembers them
no more, and He has cleansed us from all our sins. There is
no blessing in heaven that has been withheld from you, Believer.
There is no blessing that has been withheld from you. He doesn't stop giving. He gives
us heaps, heaps up on our plates, food and nourishment. He gives
us a feast at His table. As Psalm 23 says, our cup overflows. It's filled to the brim, and
it's starting to pour over, but God's like, it's not done yet.
Let me pour in some more. Let me keep pouring on. It's not full
yet. And so, in verse 15, it keeps going on. It doesn't end
like we're saying. It doesn't end. In verse 15,
He commands His young men. He says, "...let her glean even
among the sheaves. Do not dishonor her. Also, you
shall purposely pull out for her some grain from the bundles,
and leave it that she may glean, and do not rebuke her." So He's
saying, hey, you see those grains falling out? Those wheat grains
and barley grains falling out? Yeah, pull some of those out
so it'll be easier on Ruth. You know, you see those, we don't
normally let people come up next to the sheaves, but you know,
that's Ruth's spot. She gets to come up next to the
sheaves and gather up some of the grain. So it's this abundant,
again, abundant loving kindness that he's showing here. And then
in verse 17, it says, she gleaned in the field until evening. She
beat out what she had gleaned, and it was about an ephah of
barley. Now, what's an IFA? How much
is that? Well, it's 30 pounds. 30 pounds of barley. Imagine
that. 30 pounds of barley. Sounds like
a lot. Yeah, it's a lot. But get this. 30 pounds of barley
would have been the pay for two weeks. For two weeks of a reaper
in the field, of one of his young men, it would have been the pay
for two weeks. So it would have been half a month's worth wages
that Ruth got in one day, just in one day. And this is what
loving kindness is. This is what hesed is. Hesed is the term used. And there's
not really a good equivalent in the English language of hesed. But when we say loving kindness,
we put two words together just to get to the idea of what this
is. But it's the covenant love of God. It's the love he shows
to those that are in his covenant, the faithfulness of God that
he has. And we see this in Boaz, the
picture of Christ. The love of Christ goes above
and beyond. It doesn't stop giving. And it
doesn't stop giving in the good times, but also in the trials. In the trials, His love is still
there for us. In our weakness, in our disappointments,
in our sin, look to the loving kindness of your Savior, shown
here in Boaz and Ruth. Be reminded that even in the
midst of trial, even when the world is changing around you,
and things are shifting and changing, God hasn't changed. His hesed,
His loving kindness hasn't changed. It's still the same, and He multiplies
His grace to you. He multiplies it in the midst
of even your pain, even your suffering. It's comforting, isn't
it? The loving kindness of God is
comforting. As we hear Ruth say back in verse 13, she says, your
words, you have comforted me with this. You've spoken to my
heart. And she's been in this extremely
uncomfortable situation, widowed. And there's no hope for the house.
She has to glean. She has to make this meager living. But yet, God gives her comfort. So brothers and sisters, be comforted
today. Be comforted with the loving-kindness of the Lord,
that He invites us to His table to come and feast. And as we
partake of the Lord's Supper, we're reminded each week of the
loving-kindness of God, that we are welcome at His table.
Even when we don't feel worthy, even when we're in the midst
of trial, loss, disappointment, the table is here. The table
is here for you. Come to Jesus Christ. Come and
welcome to Him. Receive His communion, His fellowship. That covenant love is there in
the bread and wine. And so now, when we've been comforted
by God, what do we do? God does that so we can comfort
others, so we can comfort one another. It doesn't just stick
with us, but it's so we can comfort the body of Christ, one another.
What does it look like to comfort others? Well, it's to follow
the example of Boaz here. It's to love, which love is not
so much of a good feeling or an emotion, which that can be
involved, but it's that decision that I am going to serve, that
I'm going to give myself. for the good of another, that
I'm going to give myself for their benefit, treating them
as better than I am. It's giving ourselves to our
brothers and sisters, our time, our talents, our skills, our
service. Things we can do is we bear one
another's burdens. This is how we comfort one another.
We confess our sins to one another. We forgive one another. We think
of how we can be a blessing to them in the week. Think, how
could I be a benefit to that brother this week? If the Lord
puts somebody on your mind, how can I comfort them this week?
Maybe it's cooking a meal, maybe it's having them over. Maybe
it's spending time with just those who maybe don't have family
or friends left, and just be with them. Maybe it's giving
them a word of encouragement, to give them thanks for the blessing
they've been in your life. Maybe it's praising them in front
of others. This is how we comfort one another in the body of Christ.
We imitate. This is how we do it. We imitate
the love that Boaz has shown here, which is ultimately reflecting
the love that Christ shows. So now we come to the next section
of the chapter, which is our third main point, where we see
Naomi's eyes are open to God's comforting hand, which gives
her hope and leads her to praise God in this trial. So after the
day at work, we look here in this passage in verse 18, that
after the day at work, she goes and heads back, heads back to
Naomi's house. It says, she took it up, took
her ephah barley, took it up and went into the city. And her
mother-in-law saw what she had gleaned. She also took it out
and gave Naomi what she had left after she was satisfied. Her
mother-in-law then said to her, where did you glean today, and
where did you work? May he who took notice of you be blessed.
So Naomi sees how much grain she's gotten. She asks, who is
this who let you get on this grain? This is two weeks worth
of wages. This is 30 pounds. This is, wow.
And so she notices how great kindness that she was given by
whoever let her glean there. And so she asks, who was this? But she also asks, because in
Deuteronomy 24, where it talks about the gleaning, it says there's
going to be a blessing on those who show kindness. There's going
to be a blessing for those who show obedience to the law. So
this is, she's asking because of that, and also just because
of the sheer amount of how much grain she's bringing back. The
sheer amount of grain. And up to this point in the story,
Naomi's been down on herself. When she came back, she was in
hopelessness. She came back, and everybody's
like, oh, it's Naomi Pleasant. She's like, don't call me Pleasant.
Call me Mara. I'm bitter. The Lord has dealt
bitterly with me. And so she's kind of a bit jaded. She's a
bit down on herself. And he's like, you can call me
Ole Miss Bitter. That's me. The Lord's against
me. He's out to get me, poor pitiful me, but what we see here
is that God is wooing her back. We see at this moment when Ruth
tells her that it's Boaz, their kinsman, that has shown her this
kindness. It's this moment that Naomi starts
to understand. It's here that she starts to
see the loving kindness of God. She came to this land with no
hope. She was in the bonds of despair. Nothing seemed like
it was going according to plan. Her husband had been judged.
Her husband died, and her sons have died. There's no line. There's
no future for her family. You couldn't see God's kindness,
but now through Boaz, God has revealed his kindness to Naomi.
Now she says here, to the living and to the dead. Her sons and
her husband were dead. She regarded herself probably
as who's dead, but God shows kindness to the dead. He showed
kindness to us even when we were dead. Even when we were dead
in trespasses and sins, Christ raised us up. And so, the Lord
here is wooing her back to Him. He's showing her His covenant
love, that this was His plan all along. That He has been good
this whole time. If you think about it, you had
Ruth. who Naomi formally really tried
to get her to go back to her own land. She's like, don't come
with me. There's nothing for you here. Go back to your land.
Go back there. She thought it was foolish of
Naomi to cling to her. But it's amazing that the very
thing that she thought was foolishness, which was Ruth's devotion to
Naomi, that very thing was what God used to bring blessing, to
bring blessing to Naomi once again. And when we are in trials, God
often works in these kind of ways. He often surprises us.
He often works in ways that we wouldn't have expected. There's
a temptation for us when we are in trials to say, OK, yeah, I
know this is a hard situation I'm in. But I know this is how
God's going to get me out. This is how God has to get me
out of this. And we start planning and saying,
this is the way that God has to work. This is the way that
he must rescue me. But, we can miss, and we can
get so caught up in our planned way of how He's rescuing us,
that we can miss what God's teaching us, even in the midst of that
trial. And we can miss that He knows best, that He has a plan
that often will surprise us of how He gets us out of the trial,
and how He gets us through, and eventually out of trials. So
we can be confident of two things when we're in hardship. That
God will reveal His loving kindness to us. And two, that the way
He brings us out of His trials will be on His terms. It'll be
in ways that we might not have expected. But, as we look at,
He's sovereign. He's the master storyteller.
He's writing a story that's better than we could have written. He
knows better than we know. He knows all things. And so,
we can trust Him. We can give ourselves to Him.
That He will bring us out in the way that He knows best. And
it will be for our greatest good. We can leave it in His hands.
Amen? And we can leave it in His hands. And one last thing
before we move on to the next section of the chapter. Notice
how Naomi responds. How does she respond to God's
kindness to her? And this is it. She responds
by what? She praises the Lord. She says,
may the Lord be blessed who has shown me loving-kindness. Or
may Boaz be blessed, and this is the Lord who has shown loving-kindness.
Praise be to Him. So she gives the Lord praise,
even When she hasn't yet been redeemed, the ending of the story
has not come yet, but she is still praising the Lord, because
she has hope. The Lord has given her hope that
He is going to be faithful. And so even when we are in suffering,
in hard times, we should look to the loving kindness of the
Lord, and we should bless Him, we should praise Him, we should
thank Him. for all His many gifts to us.
Everything that we have is by His gift to us. Everything that
we have is by grace. Even in hardship, there are so
many things to be thankful for. And it's hard. It is hard to
see sometimes. I mean, it's hard to see that
our trial looms so large that we can neglect the good things
that God has given. But even in the midst of hardship,
God has shown kindness to us and gives us good things. And
the praise that we have for the Lord helps lead us through, helps
get us through the trials and the hardships. And so even if
we don't see the light at the end of the tunnel, even when
we don't know when the Lord will work and deliver us, we can be
confident that He is faithful and He will get us through every
trial successfully and that He will bring us out So we can praise,
we can thank, we can bless His name. We can cultivate this habit
of praising God, even when times are hard. There's one thing only
to praise God when the good times come, but in the hardship, it's
a whole other thing. We really depend on God and see
how much we do depend on God. We can follow in the footsteps
of Job, who said, the Lord gives and the Lord takes away. Blessed
be the name of the Lord. Even though he slay me, yet I
will hope in him. I will trust in him. So finally, with our last point,
which is staying with Christ, to remain in Christ. This will
finish the rest of chapter two. So verse 21 goes on to say Ruth
tells Naomi more about her day saying, he said to me, Boaz said
to me, you should stay close to my young men until they have
finished all my harvest. Naomi said to Ruth, her daughter-in-law,
it is good, my daughter, that you go out with his young women,
so that others do not oppress you in another field, or others
do not meet you in another field. This phrase is an interesting
phrase, unless they meet you in another field. What is this
all about? Some take it to mean that if Ruth goes to a different
part of the field, that they'll take advantage of her and harm
her. As some translations put it, lest they go and assault
you or harm you. While it's possible that this is what the text is
getting at, I think it's probably more likely that it's referring
to if Ruth were to go to another field after Boaz had already
said, I'm going to take care of you. You're a part of my house.
I will give you all you need. Here's all this grain. Here's
everything you need. If she were to reject his kindness,
word would have gotten out. The young woman would have seen.
Word would have gotten back to Boaz. And think about how he
would have felt. that she would reject him in
his great kindness that he showed her. So I think that's what Naomi's
getting at with staying in the field of Boaz. Do not reject
his great kindness that she has showed her. That's what she has
showed you. Looking at this through the lens
of the New Testament, this passage is showing us that we should
remain, we should stay in the field of Jesus Christ. That we
should stay in His loving-kindness. He is the greater Boaz. He provides
salvation and loving-kindness to all those who are in Him.
And there's no other field. There's no other field that can
satisfy us. There's no other field. Christ
is the One. He's the One who gives us our
daily bread. He is the One who is the Bread
of Life. All other bread is useless. There's no other bread anywhere
else. It's only in Him. Life is found in Him. In Him
alone, He is the way, the truth, and the life. Ruth being told
here to stay in the field of Boaz, it's a warning. It's a
warning for us to remain, to stay in the love of Christ. Don't
forsake him. Don't go looking for love in
other places. Don't go to other things when
trials come or whenever hardship comes. But say with Peter, who
told the Lord when all the other disciples were leaving, he said,
to whom shall we go, Lord? You have the words of eternal
life. You have the words of eternal
life. There's nowhere else to go. So when we're pressed down
by our afflictions and our trials, The enemy will come and tempt
us. He will question the character
of our Master and Lord. He will say, no, he's not really
that good, is he? He's not really that good. He
can be stingy. He can withhold some love from
you. He can withhold the kindness to you. How could God be kind
to you? Look at you and where you're
at in this situation. God did this to you. But may it never
be. But how can we reject? the kindness
of Christ, which He has already shown us by bringing us to faith
in Him, by redeeming us and cleansing us of our sin. How could we then
go looking for love in other places? How could we go to other
fields? It's unthinkable. How could we
leave the field of the Lord and Savior who gave Himself, who
gave His life up to the point of death on a cross for you?
There is no other master like Him. All other fields, all other
fields will leave us empty. All other fields will leave us
empty. All other masters, they can call out with sweet words,
promising satisfaction, promising pleasure and delight, but in
the end, if you are in Christ, they will never satisfy. They
could never satisfy you. In the end, they will turn on
you. That satisfaction and pleasure they promised, it will turn to
bitterness. They will be the ones who give you bitterness,
all the false idols and all the empty and worthless masters of
this world. God gives us His own word in
John 10 that Christ is the true shepherd, that He gives life
to His sheep, that He takes care of His sheep and feeds His sheep.
All others are robbers and thieves. They only come to steal, kill,
and destroy. They only come to seek your harm.
They say, your life for mine. They say, your life is in the
service of mine. Give to me. Give, give. But Christ
says, my life for yours. I'm going to give to you. we can look to Christ, we can
go to Christ. Even in the midst of our darkest
times, tragedy, sorrow, and loss and hardship, we can go to the
field of the Lord Jesus Christ, who perfectly provides for all
those who take refuge in Him. He shows His kindness to the
dead and to the living. He comforts us and gives abundant
grace. He invites us to feast with Him,
as we saw, to come and have fellowship with Him. And He is sovereignly
working all things out for our good, for His ultimate glory.
So this is the charge, this is what I give to you. Hold fast,
cling to Christ. The night will not be forever.
But the day is coming, the Lord will bring the day when He will
turn all our sorrow and crying into joy. He will turn all our
mourning into joy. And then when we come to the
end, He will guide us over death and we will be with Him forever.
And so I'm confident, my brothers and sisters, I'm confident that
as it says here in this last verse, that Ruth stayed in the
field of Boaz, that you will stay in the field of Christ and
you will Come to thank and praise Him and find joy and satisfaction
in your Savior, in your Lord, for all of your days. For all
of your days that you would find your satisfaction in Him and
in Him alone. There's nowhere else for you. There's nowhere else for us to
go. There's nowhere else. So let us pray. Oh Lord God, or be crazy that
you are a sovereign God, that you are working all things out
according to your will.
The Comfort Of The Lord In Uncomfortable Seasons
Series Ruth
| Sermon ID | 728241732127618 |
| Duration | 53:52 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | Ruth 2 |
| Language | English |
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