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We Must Live By the Grace of God
We saw last week in the first three verses of chapter two that we must live by faith in the Lord.
In the rest of this chapter we see that we must live by the grace of God.
By faith Ruth set out to glean in the fields.
When Ruth set out that morning to glean in the fields, she was looking for someone who would show her grace (v. 2, and see vv. 10 and 13).
Grace is favor bestowed on someone who doesn’t deserve it and can’t earn it.
As a woman, a poor widow, and an alien, Ruth could have no claims on anyone.
She was at the lowest rung of the social ladder.
The channel of that grace was Boaz.
How good it is to know that God has good people living in bad times!
If you knew only the record in the Book of Judges, you might conclude that the righteous had perished from the earth (Ps.
12:1–2; Isa.
57:1; 1 Kings 19:10; Micah 7:2).
But there were still people like Boaz who knew the Lord and sought to obey His will.
Boaz was concerned about his workers and wanted them to enjoy the blessing of the Lord (Ruth 2:4).
Let’s read our text this morning...
No sooner had Boaz greeted his workers than his eye caught the presence of a stranger in the field, and a lovely stranger at that.
I get the impression that when he saw her, it was love at first sight; for from that point on, Boaz focuses his interest on Ruth and not on the harvest.
Though an alien, Ruth was an eligible young woman whom the young men of the town would notice (3:10).
Ruth 2:11 indicates that Boaz had already heard about Ruth, but now he was about to meet her personally.
Again, we marvel at the overruling providence of God.
The Lord led Ruth to the field of Boaz and then led Boaz to visit his field while Ruth was there.
When Boaz arrived, Ruth might have been resting in the shelter house that Boaz provided for his workers; or she might have grown weary and gone home to Naomi.
When we commit our lives to the Lord, what happens to us happens by way of appointment and not by accident.
Ruth was still a poor widow and an alien, but God was about to create a new relationship that would completely alter her circumstances.
Bible students have seen in Boaz a picture of our Lord Jesus Christ in His relationship to His bride, the church.
Like Ruth, the lost sinner is outside the covenant family of God, bankrupt, with no claim on God’s mercy.
But God took the initiative and provided a way for us to enter His family through faith in Jesus Christ.
(See Eph.
2:10–22.)
I will have more to say about this relationship when we get to the next chapter and we consider the “kinsman redeemer.”
Now let’s notice the evidences of God’s grace in the way Boaz related to Ruth:
Boaz Took the Initiative (8)
Boaz addressed Ruth as my daughter (cf.
3:10–11) in reference to the age difference between them.
He was closer to the age of Naomi (cf.
“younger men,” 3:10).
When he told Ruth to continue gleaning in his field, he apparently meant that she should glean there throughout the several weeks of harvesting (cf.
v. 23) barley (March–April) and wheat (June–July).
Normally the gleaners would move in after the harvesters had left an area.
But Ruth was invited to follow along with the servant girls as they worked in the reaping.
Boaz assured Ruth that she would be protected from any remarks or other embarrassing incidents that might have come from the male workers (cf.
v. 15).
But notice that Boaz made the first move.
He took the initiative.
That is a picture of God’s grace toward us.
Grace means that God makes the first move to come to our aid, not because we deserve anything, but because He loves us and wants us for Himself.
“We love, because He first loved us” (1 John 4:19, NKJV).
God took the initiative in salvation when we were spiritually dead (Eph.
2:1–10), without strength (Rom.
5:6) sinners (5:8), and His enemies (5:10).
Salvation was not an afterthought of God but that which He planned from eternity.
We have every reason to believe Boaz loved Ruth and therefore took the first steps to meet her needs.
Next we see that...
Boaz Spoke to Ruth (8)
It was he who first spoke to her, for she would not have dared to speak to a man, especially one who was a stranger and “the lord of the harvest.”
What right did a widow and an alien have to address a great man like Boaz?
Yet he interrupted his conversation with his foreman to speak to a poor stranger gleaning in his field.
Think about if you were on vacation in England and the queen’s motorcade was passing by.
What if the motorcade slowed to a stop, and you hear a window rolling down.
And from the window you hear the queen’s voice and she calls out your name.
Then says, “I’ll tell my guards to take care of you!” Wow, that would be something wouldn’t it?
Queen Elizabeth has never spoken to me, and probably never will; but Almighty God has spoken to me in Jesus Christ and through His Word! “God … has in these last days spoken to us by His Son” (Heb.
1:1–2, NKJV).
In spite of all that a world of sinners has done to the Lord, He still speaks to us in His grace.
He not only speaks the word of salvation, but He also gives us the guidance we need for everyday life.
Just as Boaz instructed Ruth, so the Lord also shares His Word of wisdom to direct our daily lives.
He is the “Lord of the harvest” and assigns to us our place in His field.
Thirdly...
Boaz Promised to Protect Ruth and Provide For Her Needs (9, 14-16)
Boaz called Ruth “my daughter” because she was younger than he (see 3:10), but it was also a term of endearment.
He would treat her like a member of his family.
(This is what David did for Mephibosheth.
See 2 Sam.
9.) Boaz instructed his young men to protect her and the young women to work with her.
She was to walk with the female servants who followed immediately after the reapers.
In other words, Ruth had first chance at the best of the gleanings!
Boaz even instructed his workers to allow her to glean among the sheaves and told them to deliberately drop some of the harvest so she could pick it up.
If she was hungry or thirsty, she could refresh herself with his workers.
In fact, Boaz ate with her and personally handed her the food!
(Ruth 2:14)
What a picture of the grace of God!
The master became like the servants that he might show his love to a foreigner.
Ruth had no idea that Boaz had commanded his workers to be generous to her, but she believed his word and found that her needs were met.
Jesus Christ came to this earth as a servant (Phil.
2:1–11) that He might save us and make us a part of His family.
He has shared with us the riches of His mercy and love (Eph.
2:4), the riches of His grace (v.
7), the riches of His wisdom and knowledge (Rom.
11:33), His riches in glory (Phil.
4:19), and yes, His “unsearchable riches” (Eph.
3:8, NIV).
We, undeserving “foreigners,” are members of the family of God and have all of His inheritance at our disposal.
Boaz Encouraged Ruth (10-13)
Ruth’s response to Boaz was one of humility and gratitude.
She acknowledged her own unworthiness and accepted his grace.
She believed his promises and rejoiced in them.
There was no need for Ruth to worry, for the wealthy lord of the harvest would care for her and Naomi.
How did she know he would care for her?
He gave her his promise, and she knew he could be trusted.
Ruth neither looked back at her tragic past nor did she look at herself and consider her sorry plight.
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