Lesson 4
Heir Indeed
Ruth 4:1-22
When one looks at history it is interesting to note the number of famous men who never had a son to carry on their name. If we consider the thought that has permeated the book of Ruth that God is working out His purpose then it may not come as a surprise that He allows for some families to end. It is almost as if the men stepped onto the scene of history for a short period of time to accomplished what was needed. Have many times have we seen children spoiled by the successes of their famous fathers and have become a burden to society. Three examples in the secular world come to mind. Neither George Washington nor Thomas Jefferson had sons. Alexander the Great had no children to carry on his work. In the Bible there is no mention of Joshua having a son to carry on the leadership role held by him.
Having said all that it does bring happiness when a son or grandson is born. Certainly there is nothing wrong with daughters and granddaughters. We have two grandsons born about twenty-six years apart. In between there were eight granddaughters so it was about time for another boy in the family. Maybe it is a little selfish but it is also neat to know that the family name will be carried on for another generation. Of course I have to realize that all of this has been in God’s hands from the beginning.
The church is like individual families. It needs descendants to carry on the work that God has given it to do. This will not happen in the first place if there is no initial birth into the kingdom. For two thousand years the church has been through good times and bad has kept on regenerating itself through successive generations. We have been aware of the importance of passing on the good news of Christ so that all who are going to be saved will be saved. Sadly, today we are letting many in our own families leave the church never to return again. This can present a real problem for them and the world into which they will go unequipped. Every generation has its challenges but this may be the one less able to meet them and do something about them. Thankfully God is still working in the hearts of those in His church who will not give up. Their faith will produce those who in spite of all that is happening around them will carry on the good fight.
Last week’s lesson provided us with two lessons. One is the boldness of Ruth in approaching the one who held her future in his hands. The second is the integrity of Boaz who promised to do all he could to provide for the security of Naomi and Ruth.
This week will show whether he was successful and was Ruth willing to accept the results.
Ruth 4:1
Boaz wasted no time in carrying through on his promise to Ruth. He went up to the place at the entrance of the city where all formal business was handled. All types of legal and religious matters were brought to the leaders of the city at the gate. Boaz knew if he were to make contact with the other relative the entrance to the city would be the most logical place to find him as the workers pass that way to go into the field to work. The man picked that time to come to where Boaz was waiting. He called to him to join him, which he did. As has been seen throughout the book, the hand of God brought the man there at that particular time.
- What does Boaz’s actions show us about him?
- In what ways have you shown that you are a person of your word?
- In what ways have you done just the opposite and not kept your word?
- Why did Boaz go to the gate of the city?
- What took place in that location?
- How did the writer identify the other man? (As the go’el, the kinsman/redeemer.)
- How was God working in bringing the two men together?
Ruth 4:2
Once Boaz had gotten the man to join him, he called the ten men who were the elders of the city to join them. The ten were those chosen to make decisions affecting the life of the citizens. Boaz needed witnesses for what he was about to propose.
- Why did Boaz wait to call the other men to join him and the close relative?
- Who were those men?
- How are the elders modeled after what we read here?
- In what ways are they different? (The elders of today are not a legal body but are to provide leadership to the church.)
- Why are witnesses so important?
Ruth 4:3-4
Immediately Boaz gives them the reason for the meeting. According to him Naomi needed to sell the land of Elimelech. There are a couple of things that need to be explained here. In that culture land was not really sold or bought. All the land belonged ultimately to God. The men of that day bought the harvests that would be produced over a period of time. Boaz was telling the man that he would be buying the right to use the land during his lifetime and that of his children up to the year of Jubilee Year when the land would revert back to the family of Elimelech. He was telling the man that he had the right of redemption on the land because he was the closest relative. By doing so the land would remain in the family from which Elimelech had come. He then said to the man, if you do not want to redeem it I will do so.
The man immediately agreed to take the land. Of course this would have increased his land holdings. At that point he would have felt relatively safe in making the deal because Elimelech had no prospects of having male heirs. He would also be agreeing to providing for Naomi.
- Why did Boaz call the meeting?
- In what way was this arrangement not about selling the actual land?
- What happened in the Year of Jubilee? (All land reverted back to those who had originally received it from God as an inheritance. No land was to remain permanently with another tribe or family.)
- Why would the man feel comfortable redeeming the land?
- How did Naomi fit into the picture?
Ruth 4:5-6
Once the man had agreed to redeem the land, Boaz then explained to him how Ruth fit into the picture. When the man obtained the land he would also need to agree to marry the widow of Mahlon, Elimelech’s deceased son. Although this arrangement was not a legal one in the case of Ruth it would be in the spirit of the levirate law to do so. Actually, the law stated that when a man died his brother was to take the man’s widow in marriage. The first male child of that marriage would be named for the deceased man so that his family would not disappear from history. It is interesting that Boaz again referred to Ruth as the Moabitess. He wanted to make sure the man understood what was involved in the land exchange.
Upon hearing that news the kinsman/redeemer deferred to Boaz. His reasoning was that to raise up a child under the name of Mahlon in the long run could jeopardize his own inheritance. Potentially, all the property he possessed might be inherited by the descendant of Mahlon, leaving his own family without anything.
- Why did Boaz withhold the information about Ruth at the beginning of the conversation? (He was hoping that the other man would allow him to acquire the land without the mention of Ruth.)
- How did Boaz alter the levirate law? (The law as it was written involved brothers only and not other relatives. Boaz was looking at the spirit of the law and not the letter.)
- What was the levirate law?
- Why did the other relative refuse to acquire the land?
- How was God working in this situation? (Boaz had the attitude that God would honor. The negotiations between the two men showed that the closer relative would not be willing to raise another man’s descendant.)
- What would the man lose by marrying Ruth?
Ruth 4:7-10
Once the man agreed to allow Boaz the redemption rights Boaz laid out the terms of the contract before the witnesses sitting in the gate. According to tradition the unnamed man took off his sandal and gave it Boaz as a sign of sealing the agreement. Boaz then gave the details of the contract. He stated that he
- was acquiring everything that belonged to Elimelech and Mahlon.
- was going to take Ruth as his wife.
- was willing to if they had a son to raise him under the name of Mahlon.
- would give what had belonged to Elimelech and Mahlon to the child who would carry Mahlon’s name.
Turning to the witnesses he wanted to make sure they understood the conditions of the contract to which both men were agreeing.
- What is the way that contracts are completed today?
- What is the equivalent today of the a person removing of the sandal to complete the agreement? (In our day the contract is witnessed to by a notary public.)
- What were the terms of the contract?
- Why was the levirate law an important part of the contract? (Boaz, unlike the other, man was willing to give up land to the child raised according to Mahlon’s name.)
- Why was it so important for the elders to understand what was transpiring between the two men? (So there would be no questions later as what had taken place.)
- What are some events you have witnessed that you had to recount what had happened?
- What does it mean to be a witness for Jesus?
Ruth 4:11-12
Not only did the men affirm the transaction but went further by blessing Boaz and Ruth. They shared with him their hopes that.
- Ruth would be like the matriarchs of the nation of Israel, Rachel and Leah, who gave birth to the twelve sons of Jacob. Although Bilhad and Zilpah gave birth to some of the children by legal rights they belonged to Rachel and Leah who were the wives of Jacob.
- Boaz gain greater wealth than he already possessed
- He would be famous in Bethlehem.
- He and Ruth would continue the lineage begun by Judah and Tamar who had Perez under the levirate law.
- Why did the elders go beyond just affirming the contract between the two relatives?
- What did the blessing entail?
- In your mind which was the most important part of the blessing? (The continuation of the lineage that ultimately would lead to the birth of Jesus.)
- What in these verses would indicate that God made the right choice in selecting Boaz to be an ancestor of Jesus? (His willingness to allow the child born to be named for Mahlon and to then give him the inheritance of his father. From what we have read, the other man did not have those qualities and may have very well have refused to have a child in someone else’s name.
Ruth 4:13-15
God blessed the marriage of Boaz and Ruth with the birth of a boy. The women of the city from a human perspective saw the value of his coming in the world as a blessing from God and the kinsman/redeemer who would take care of her in her old age. For the child they desired that he become famous in Bethlehem. Little did they know that he would be in the line of Jesus who would make the name of Obed live forever in God’s word.
Finally they acknowledged Ruth’s role. She had shown all along the idea behind the word hesed. She had been a loyal compassionate daughter-in-law who had loved Naomi, as the Bible says, better than if Naomi had seven sons, in a humble and unselfish way. Now she had given birth to a son to carry on the name of Mahlon.
- How do we see the hand of God working in this marriage?
- Why was the fact that a boy was born so important to Naomi?
- What could the women not know about the boy? (His fame would be beyond their time because he was part of the lineage of Jesus.)
- In what ways do we see that the community had finally accepted Ruth as part of them?
- What does it take for a person to be accepted in the church, school or the community in which you live?
- Why should we treat others with respect? (We never know how God may be using a person to carry out His purpose.)
Ruth 4:16-17
Like most parents and grandparents Naomi immediately wanted to be part of the child’s life. The neighbors took part in naming the child Obed which means, one who serves. It must be noted that there is no Hebrew word for grandson thus the writer calls Obed the son of Naomi. For Naomi the birth of her grandson gave the hope that she had lost. God had filled her empty life with new opportunity. It was in a way her salvation and rebirth. What a perfect example for mankind of what Christ did for the world through the lineage of Perez. He brought hope, light and a new life to all who are lost. The writer then told the listener that Obed was the father of Jesse and the grandfather of David. Obed’s birth continued the lineage started in Genesis that foretold the coming of the descendant of David.
- In what ways can you compare the response of Naomi to your own at the birth of your children and grandchildren?
- How can you compare what Obed meant to Naomi to what Jesus, his descendant in the flesh has done for all mankind?
- In the words of the women what can we say about the birth of a new child? (There is hope and promise wrapped up in the little person.)
- What does the name given to Obed say about the expectations for the child?
- Why did the writer begin listing the descendant’s of Obed? (He was the grandfather of David who would lead Israel. )
Ruth 4:18-22
The writer goes back to Perez, who like Obed, was born according to the levirate law to begin the genealogy of David. From the very beginning of Genesis is seen the care in which God chose those individuals who would be the ancestors of David. The only answer to why those particular men made up the line of David on to Jesus is that God did it according to His sovereign power. Of most of those men listed very little is known, God however knew who they were and what they would become. Thankfully, because of Boaz and Ruth through extraordinary circumstances the line was preserved.
- Why did God inspire the writer to begin the genealogy with Perez? (He was the product of another carrying out of the levirate law.)
- Why did God choose those men to be a part of the lineage of His Son? (Because He is God and has the right to choose whomever He wants.)
- How do you believe you fit into the continuing family of God?
- Why did He choose you to be part of His forever family?
- In what ways should we want to be like Boaz and Ruth? (They were not looking out for themselves but others even in marriage.)
- What are the ways you can make the relationships you have with others God honoring?
- Look at those areas in your life you have done what is easy rather than what God wants you to do and change in a way that is pleasing to Him.
- In the same vein never look to cut corners in the way you serve others.
- The child in the Ruth was called Obed, one who serves, that should be your own heart’s desire.
- Medicate on the fact that Jesus has brought more to mankind than Obed could ever hope to provide for Naomi.
Christmas is a celebration of new birth. A baby was born to a simple peasant woman. That baby would become a king but before that could occur He must suffer and die to carry out the purpose for which He came. Unlike any other person who has ever been born to has provided hope and rebirth for each of us. The church today is to be a witness to the good news that Jesus has come and the world can never be the same. Let each of us take part in making sure that God’s message to us is spread out among the nations. One day we too may be included in the long list of saints that have gone on before us. They found courage to continue in the faith no matter what the world has thrown at them so that the news of the new baby is and will continued to be proclaimed. Let us find encouragement in the fact that God has kept alive His message through the centuries. May each of be able with our whole heart, Jesus is born therefore have a merry Christmas.