THE REFORMED WITNESS
HOUR
"Ruth: Seeking Rest"
Rev. Carl Haak
(e-mail: Rev. Carl
Haak) |
Dear radio friends,
God had indeed worked all things together for good for Naomi and Ruth. God had chastened Naomi for forsaking Canaan in a
time of famine and had brought her back home again to the church where she belonged. God brought back with her a spiritual
daughter-in-law who loved the things of God and displayed a beautiful trust in God and
love to His church. And Gods grace had
broken through the dark clouds of gloom and hopelessness that hung above Naomis
heart. He was about to make her loss gain and
change her sorrow into joy and her hopelessness into rejoicing.
But there was so much more! Gods
purposes are vast and great and glorious. God
was working something no one knew. It was
beautiful and faithful. He was preparing the
coming of the Lord.
Ruth would be grafted into the line of Jesus Christ.
She would become the great-grandmother of David.
Thus, from her womb was to come forth the Christ.
God was preparing the way of the coming of the great Son of David, our Lord Jesus
Christ who would rule at Gods right hand and be the Savior.
Gods ways always involve more than just the individual. Gods ways are always centered in one grand
object: the salvation of His church in
Christ. Remember that. In your trials and testings there is more than
just you. The apostle Paul says in
Philippians 1:12
that the things that had happened to him had fallen out for the
furtherance of the gospel. Hard and difficult
things had happened to Paul. But he was
confident, and it comforted him to know that also those things were used of God in some
way for the good of the church. All that
happens in the life of a child of God, God fits together for eternal good. That is what He is showing to us in this beautiful
book of Ruth. And that is the truth that you
as a mother, father, parent, young man or woman, child are called to lay hold of by faith.
Recall from last weeks program that we saw Gods providence leading Ruth
to the field of Boaz. Ruth had placed her
trust in God and had gone out to do the next thing. She
had to supply her needs and the needs of her mother-in-law.
So she picked a field to glean. God
directed her steps to the field of Boaz. Now,
we will see in chapter 3, the events that follow.
Before we turn to that event in chapter 3, let us look first, for a moment, at the
law of the redeemer, so that we will be able to understand the thrust and the importance
of this chapter.
According to
Deuteronomy 25:5-10,
in the old dispensation a mans name and his
inheritance passed on through his son. That
would symbolize that he had a place in the covenant and inheritance of God. Now, if this man died without a son, the
mans brother was, according to the law, to marry his widow. And the first son of that marriage was to continue
the name and inheritance of the dead husband. If
there were no brother, then this responsibility would pass on to the next, or closest,
relative. This was the law of the redeemer. Elimelech, Naomis husband, had died. And so had her two sons. Therefore, if Elimelechs name and the name
of his sons are to be preserved among the people of God, a kinsman, a near relative, must
perform the task of redeemer, must marry Ruth
to raise up a son in order that the name of Elimelech might be preserved.
Returning now to our narrative, we find Ruth and Naomi together on that evening
when Ruth had returned from gleaning in the fields of Boaz.
We saw that when Naomi heard that Ruth had been in Boazs field, her heart was
lifted, for she knew that Boaz was a near relative, she believed the nearest
relative, and therefore the man required by the law to serve as the redeemer, to marry
Ruth and raise up a son in order that the name of her husband and his inheritance might be
preserved in the land of Israel.
So she says to her daughter-in-law, Shall I not seek rest for thee, that it
may be well with thee? And now is not Boaz of our kindred, with whose maidens thou wast?
(Ruth 3:1, 2).
She is suggesting, directing, that Ruth seek
marriage with Boaz. She is doing that not
simply because Boaz was a wealthy bachelor and eligible.
She is not doing it simply for personal reasons.
She is doing it because she wants the name of her husband, Elimelech, continued.
She was motivated, also, by love for her daughter-in-law, Ruth. She believes that marriage will be good for her
spiritually. She says, Shall I not seek
rest for thee, Ruth, that it may be well with thee?
She has pegged Boaz as a man in whom is the truth of a redeemer, a man who loved
God unashamedly, a man who loved his place in the church and loved Gods people and
Gods cause. Maybe Boaz was not what we
would call a heart-throb, a muscle-bulging, steel-chinned,
on-the-magazine-cover man. That did not
matter to her. She judged from his spiritual
qualities that Boaz was a man who could act in total selflessness and in love.
Naomi is an example of a Christian mother and a Christian parent. Parents must have an eye for what is best for
their childs soul. They must
guide their children and counsel them and speak to them about marriage. They must do that not just in generalities. They must point out those traits that are
necessary in a good husband and that character that is necessary in a Christian woman. Young people are to seek their parents
counsel. Ruth does not respond to her
mother-in-law by saying, Mother, please dont interfere. No, we sense that they were of one heart and one
soul. Shall I not seek rest for thee,
my daughter-in-law?
Among all the words in the Bible for marriage, there is none so expressive as
rest. Marriage is rest, that is,
settlement. It is a state that God wants you
to be in in this life. It is not simply a
human contrivance. It is not simply that you
hop into marriage and hop out of marriage. It
is a place of rest. It is a gift, a gift from
God expressing how we are now to spend our earthly days.
It should be a state of rest so that your affections do not wander all over, to one
woman after another, or to one man after another. Your
heart is at rest. Therefore, it is a state of
spiritual good for a believer, so that two, in the Lord, may journey together in the love
of God, practicing the love of God, forgiving one another, and hoping together for that
eternal rest. Marriage, then, is not to be a
battlefield, a place of hatred. But marriage
is designed of God to be a place of rest, a settlement for our spiritual good. Naomi is simply seeking a believing marriage for
Ruth.
Do you rest in your marriage? As a
wife, do you rest in the affection of your husband? Do
you look nowhere else? Are you satisfied? As a husband, do you safely rest in your wife? Are you satisfied with her, not lusting and
coveting after another and not complaining, saying,
Well, if only she would
or, as a woman, If only he was
. No, do you rest in what God has
given to you, in the love of God, which is self-emptying, which is humble? Marriage is a state of rest.
Young people, you must know spiritually the person you marry as best you can if you
are to enter into a state of rest with him or her. And
you do not get to know each other by tempting your passions. You do that by talking about spiritual things.
We see in this chapter that Boaz had done his investigating. He knew about Ruth, as we saw last week. And he was attracted to Ruths faith. Too often marriages are made without knowledge of
each others spiritual character, without settling the question of church membership
and commitment to the church. Infatuation can
cloud our souls. We must understand that we
must honor God first whenever we enter into marriage.
I am old-fashioned enough to believe that unity of faith, unity of spiritual life,
unity in the truth is the single most important thing when you begin your marriage. You should not look into marriage and expect
marriage in terms of sex, in terms simply of all that you are going to get out of it. I am old-fashioned enough to believe that
Christians cannot be happy in a marriage unless they begin that marriage where Christ and
the truth of the Scripture are supreme to them.
Naomi, as she counsels her daughter-in-law to seek marriage with Boaz, proposes a
rather unique way for Ruth to propose. Unusual
for that day, too, but one that was suited well for the purpose. The following was her counsel to Ruth. She suggested an opportune time. She says, Behold, Boaz winnoweth barley
tonight in the threshing floor. Winnowing
barley was something like the old-time threshing bee, when the wheat, the kernel, was
separated from the chaff. It would be
trampled upon the ground first and then pitchforked into the air. The chaff would be blown away and the kernel
would fall to the ground. It would be done at
night, perhaps to make use of moderate evening breezes.
But it was a time when the owner and the laborers would stay until the work was
done. So Boaz would provide food and drink. It would be a time of camaraderie and of
legitimate joy. Naomi says, Clean
yourself. Put off your drab clothing. Put on your best clothes. Dress in your very best. And go to the man.
But do not make yourself known to him. When
at last the work is done and he lies down, mark the place and go in and uncover his feet
and lay thee down and he will tell thee what to do.
Uncover his feet that is, not take his shoes off, but lie down at his feet
(at the foot of where he was sleeping).
And Ruth responds, All that thou sayest unto me, I will do.
Now how do we understand that? We
should see that as a discreet and straightforward proposal of marriage. By this Ruth was saying to Boaz, Will you
marry me? Deuter-onomy 25, to which I
have referred, gave the right to the widow to request the nearest kinsman to play the part
of the redeemer. She had the right to ask
him to marry her, to raise up a family in the name of her dead. That is what Ruth is going to do. And she does it in a discreet way. It was not immodest. She was not playing the role of a flirt. She was not trying to put Boaz in a compromising
position. Naomi, in her counsel, was not
trying to arrange for fornication, for something to happen, so that Ruth would catch her
man by seduction. No. Naomi is a god-fearing mother. And Boaz does not respond to it that way, either. In verse 10, he refers to the virtue that he sees
in Ruth. It was discreet, that is, it was
arranged at night when no one else could witness it just between Boaz and Ruth. And it was arranged in such a way that they could
discuss this privately. And it was
straightforward. It was made very plain to
Boaz that Ruth was proposing marriage.
We read that, at midnight, Boaz was startled awake with a woman lying at his feet
and he says, Who art thou? She
answered and said, I am Ruth, thy handmaid. Spread,
therefore, thy skirt over thy handmaid, for thou art a near kinsman. She was saying, Boaz, will you marry
me? Spread thy skirt. She was not saying, Cover me with your
blanket. Very interestingly, she uses
the very words that Boaz had used in chapter 2 when speaking about Ruth. There Boaz had said, You have come under the
wings of God to trust. She was asking
him to shadow her, to take responsibility for her, to be her protector, her head, her
guide, her shield, and her provider, to raise up with her a family in Israel. She was saying, Boaz, I seek the things of
God. I am deeply concerned with the covenant
of God. You are the near kinsman, I believe. Therefore, the Lord hath given you to me. Join with me in marriage before God.
And Boaz accepted. Blessed be
thou of the Lord, my daughter: for thou hast shewed more kindness in the latter
end than at the beginning, inasmuch as thou followest not young men, whether poor or rich. And now, my daughter, fear not; I will do to thee
all that thou requirest (vv. 10, 11). Boaz,
we see, is drawn to Ruth because of her faith.
He is attracted to her not simply on the basis of his flesh, but on the
basis of her faith.
Certainly there is every reason to believe, as we said last week, that Ruth was
attractive. David, king David, is known in
the Scriptures as a handsome man. And he got
his looks the same way we do, from his ancestors. And
Boaz no doubt a fine man, a commanding presence about him, and all the rest. There was no doubt a spark that had been kindled
between them. But the tie that would bind
them, the attraction that was iron-strong, the love that would endure, was the love
centered in their faith. That was unashamedly
present.
But there was a problem, a problem that was not known to Ruth and to Naomi, but
known to Boaz. He explains to Ruth that
although it is true that he is a near kinsman, a near relative of Elimelech, there was,
nevertheless, a kinsman, a relative, who was closer in position than he. He was aware of someone closer in the bloodline to
Elimelech than he was.
He does not tell her this to get out of marrying.
No, he promises that in the morning he is going to contact this nearest relative
and get a decision from him that very day whether that man will perform the duty of a
redeemer, yes or no.
The tie that would bind them,
the attraction that was iron-strong,
the love that would endure,
was the love centered in their faith.
Again we see that spiritual motives are dominating.
Boaz does not say, Well, Ruth, even though there is someone closer than I,
that doesnt matter because we love each other and Gods ordinances can just be
forgotten. It is very obvious that he
wants Ruth for his wife. It is very obvious
that he loves her and that he wants to take her to be his wife. But Boaz does not use that desire as an excuse to
set aside the ordinances of God. He says,
Ruth, let us observe and do what God has revealed in His Word. Thats everlasting life. Lets first of all be sure that we obey and
we follow the way and the will of the Lord. Ruth,
dont be afraid. In the morning light,
Im going to contact this nearer relative. If
he will not perform the part of a kinsman, I certainly will.
And Ruth returns home and tells Naomi all the events that transpired in that night. Naomi must have sensed certain anxiety and fear in
Ruth. So she responds, Sit still , my
daughter, until thou know how the matter will fall: for
the man will not be in rest, until he have finished the thing this day. The counsel was, Ruth, sit still. Wait. Yes,
you are anxious. You had hoped that after
that evening all would be settled and decided. Now
you have learned that, as far as we are concerned, there is a glitch, an obstacle to our
plans. Leave it to God, Ruth. Trust in the Lord and do good. Delight thyself in the Lord and He shall give thee
the desires of thy heart. Commit thy way to
the Lord. Trust also in Him and He will bring
it to pass. We could well hear Naomi reciting those words from
Psalm 37
to her daughter-in-law that night.
Take all your bereavements, all your hardships, all those obstacles that you think
are in the way of your desires; take them all and bring them to the Lord. Wait and see what God has in store for you. Is there anything more important than that? Ruth had sought to follow God. Ruth had sought to set the things of God first and
to live by the virtue of Jesus Christ to do Gods will. And as she seeks to do that, her future now, in a
certain sense to her, is uncertain. Maybe her
hopes will be realized, maybe not. She does
not know. What must she do? Must she rush about? Must she work herself up into anxiety? Must she, perhaps, try to take matters into her
own hands? No.
The counsel is: sit still. For God has good in store for her. And God has good in store for all of His people. God was working at what He loves the best: His promise in Jesus Christ. God was arranging all things in order that the
Word of His promise to send a Savior would indeed be fulfilled. God was leading everything in order that that
promise of Christ would be fulfilled. God
will do that. Therefore you may rest; you
may sit still; you may confide in God; you may believe His promises; you may place all
your cares upon Him, for He careth for you. For
this is absolutely certain: God, through
Jesus Christ, will accomplish the salvation of His church.
God will do more for you than you can think or ask.
Let us pray.
Father, we thank Thee for Thy Word. Give
us that faith to wait upon the Lord. Guide
and direct us as we enter into marriage that we may do so with the Lord before us always. Pardon graciously all of our sins, in Jesus
name. Amen.