THE GOEL
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Ruth 3
06/26/60 8:15 a.m.
To you who listen on the
radio, you are sharing with us the early morning services of the First Baptist Church in Dallas. This is the Pastor bringing the morning message from the Book
of Ruth, from the middle chapters of the Book of Ruth. And if you would
turn in your Bible to that beautiful short story, you can easily follow the
message of the hour.
Last Sunday morning we left
off at the eighth verse of the second chapter. Ruth is by the providence
of God in the field of Boaz gleaning, picking up little bits that have been
overlooked by the harvesters. And as she gleans in the field of Boaz that
kinsman of Naomi's husband, Elimelech notices her and speaks graciously to
her. And says to her: “Glean not in another field but here in my field
abide.” And he instructed his workers to be gracious to her.
Then in the conversation
Boaz says to her in the twelfth verse of the second chapter of Ruth: “The Lord
recompense thy work, and a full reward be given thee of the Lord God of Israel, under whose wings thou art come to trust.”
That is one of the most
beautiful figures to be found in the Word of God. “The Lord bless thee under
whose wings thou art come to trust.” Of course the imagery that lies back
of the figure is to be found in the wings of the cherubim whose wings covered
the mercy seat in the Holy of Holies.
All through this Book, you
will find that figure. At the east gate of the Garden of Eden, the
cherubim were there guarding the way of the tree of life. In the holy of
all holy places in the tabernacle and in the Temple, the cherubim were made of
one beaten piece with the mercy seat that covered over the ark that held the
Ten Commandments. And the wings of the cherubim covered the mercy seat
and their faces looked full upon the blood of propitiation and expiation.
And the cherubim were woven into the curtains of the gate and of the door and
of the veil. And they were emblems of mercy and of grace and all who
entered in found shelter under their gracious merciful wings.
And Ruth the Moabitess
cursed to the tenth generation approaches the Lord God of Israel. And Boaz pronounces a blessing upon her. “The Lord recompense thee, and a
full reward be given thee of the Lord God of Israel, under whose wings thou art
come to trust.” [Ruth
2:12]
And that symbolism you will
find in the Word of God so frequently. For example in Psalm 17:8; “Keep me
as the apple of Thine eye; hide me under the shadow of Thy wings.” And
again, in Psalm 61 and 4: “I will abide in Thy tabernacle forever; I will trust
in the covert of Thy wings;” in the protective hiding place of Thy wings. And
again in Psalm 63 and 7: “Because Thou hast been my help, therefore in the
shadow of Thy wings, will I rejoice.” And again, in this ninety-first
Psalm:
He that dwelleth in the
secret place of the Most High shall abide unto the shadow of the
Almighty.
I will say of the Lord, He
is my refuge and my fortress; my God; in Him will I trust.
Surely He shall deliver
thee from the snare of the fowler, and from the noisome pestilence.
He shall cover thee with His
feathers, and under His wings shall thou trust; His truth shall be thy shield
and buckler.
[Psalm
91:1-4]
All
of that from the imagery of the wings of the cherubim.
So here in the Book of
Ruth: “The Lord recompense thy work, and a full reward be given thee of the
Lord God of Israel, under whose wings thou art come to trust.” And if we
had time this morning, we would have had someone sing for us one of the most
beautiful of Christian songs: “Under His Wings, Safely Abiding.”
Now as the story continues
in the seventeenth verse of the second chapter: “So she gleaned in the
field until even, and beat out that she had gleaned; and it was about an ephah
of barley.” Now how much is that?
Back there in the
wilderness when the people of the Lord went out to gather manna, it says they
gathered each man an omer, a day’s provision. Then it says an omer is a
tenth of an ephah. So when she gleaned in the field, she gleaned not only
enough for the day but ten times as much. So much so that when she took it up
and went into the city and her mother-in-law saw what she had gleaned, she was
astonished that she had been able to glean so
much.
All of which reminds us
following the sermon of last Sunday morning that when we glean in the right
field, God's blessings and favor are always upon us. When we glean in the
wrong field however it comes out, it is no blessing. It has in it a black
drop. It has in it a worm and a canker. But when we glean in the
right field, when our work is in the will of God, when we're doing what the
Lord wants us to do, His blessings always are abundantly upon us.
So when Naomi sees it she
says, “Blessed be he of the Lord who hath not left off his kindness to the
living and to the dead.” [Ruth 2:20] And how different that is for Naomi in the
first chapter had said, “The hand of the Lord is gone out against me.” [Ruth
1:13] But
here in the second chapter she sees that in the providences of God, that the
hand of the Lord is not against her but all of these circumstances are
conspiring to bless her just like the providences of life are conspiring
together to bless you.
“All things work together
for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to His
purpose.” [Romans
8:28] So
Naomi comes to see that these sorrows, and tragedies, and disappointments that
overwhelmed her life are not the evidences of the hand of God against her but
they are the providences of the Lord to bless her.
Then in the third chapter: “Naomi
her mother-in-law said to Ruth, My daughter, shall I not seek rest for thee,
that it may be well with thee?” [Ruth 3:1] Now what it is that
Naomi has in her mind, in her plan, in her heart when she says to Ruth, “My
daughter, shall I not seek rest for thee?”
Now she is referring to a
part of the law. And I read it in Deuteronomy 25:5 and following, “If
brethren dwell together, and one of them die, and have no child, the wife of
the dead shall not marry without unto a stranger;” the widow shall not go
seeking a home with a stranger.
Her husband's brother shall
go in unto her, and take her to him to wife, and perform the duty of an
husband's brother unto her.
And it shall be, that the
firstborn which she beareth shall succeed in the name of his brother which is
dead, that his name be not put out of Israel.
And if the man like not to
take his brother's wife, then let his brother's wife go up to the gate unto the
elders, and say, My husband's brother refuseth to raise up unto his brother a
name in Israel, he will not perform the duty of my husband's brother.
Then the elders of his city
shall call him, and speak unto him; and if he stand to it, and say, I like not
to take her;
Then shall his brother's
wife come unto him in the presence of the elders, and loose his shoe from off
his foot, and spit in his face, and shall answer and say, So shall it be done
unto that man that would, will not build up his brother's house.
And his name shall be
called in Israel, The house of him that hath his shoe loosed.
[Deuteronomy
25:5-10]
Now isn't that an unusual,
unusual provision? That is what you call “the levirate marriage.”
Lest a family's name be blotted out in Israel, the brother of the one who had
died was to take his brother's widow and raise up children to his brother lest
his name die out in Israel.
It is that to which Naomi
is referring when she says, “Shall I not seek rest for thee, that it may be
well with thee?” Naomi's husband had died. Naomi's two sons had
died. Mahlon, the husband of Ruth had died. And the name was about
to perish in Israel and the family.
So Naomi has in her mind to
seek a husband for Ruth according to this ancient law. Now the order of
that ancient law was this. First, the kinsman is to be a brother. Then
next if there is no brother or he would be unwilling then it is to be an uncle.
Then next it is to be an uncle's son. Then if there is neither brother,
nor uncle, nor uncle's son that is willing then any that is nigh of kin unto
him of his family.
Now that's the law as you find it spelled out
in Leviticus 25:48 and 49. So Naomi has it in her mind to get a husband
for Ruth and to raise up children unto him that is dead according to this law
of the levirate marriage, and according to the law of redemption.
Now this brings us to—and I could not begin to
encompass it into this sermon this morning so I divided it into two parts, into
the sermon this morning and the sermon that is coming Lord's Day morning.
And may I say I have never gotten into anything in my life as interesting to me
as I fell into when I came into this subject. It is an astonishing thing
to me.
So let's look at it.
The Hebrew word for “kinsman,” and the Hebrew word for “redeemer” is the same
word; goel. Goel means “to redeem, to buy back, to
re-purchase.” And the participial form of that verb, goel, is your
word for “redeemer” or “kinsman.”
Now, this word “redeem”—and we're going to talk
about now the redemption of the family of Naomi; the redemption of her
inheritance and the redemption of her family name that has been lost in
death. And Boaz is going to be a symbol of resurrection and our hope in
God. Now, that word goel, goel is translated sometimes “redeem,”
sometimes “kinsman.” It's the same word. And in the Book of Ruth
you find it used again, and again, and again: kinsman, kinsman, redeemer, to
redeem.
I have it marked in my Bible here; the use of that
word kinsman and redeemer and redeeming and redeemed. And it's almost red
where I have marked the use of that word. That is the word that you will
find over here in Job 19:25,
For I know that my Goel liveth—I
know that my Redeemer liveth and that He shall stand at the latter day upon the
earth.
And though after my skin or
through my skin worms destroy this body, yet, in my flesh, shall I see God;
Whom I shall see for
myself, and mine eyes shall behold.
[Job
19:25-27]
That is one of the great passages
in all of the Book. And of course it is a prophecy of our own personal
resurrection. “I know that my Redeemer, my Goel, I know that my Kinsman,
I know that my Near Kinsman, I know that my Elder Brother, I know that my
Redeemer, liveth and that He shall stand in the latter days upon the earth.” Our
Lord Jesus, our Kinsman, our Near of Kin, our Redeemer in whom we have hope of
resurrection, I know that He lives.
And though my name be
blotted out from the earth and though I die, “and worms destroy this body”—don't
you sometimes wonder when this body's been buried in the depths of the sea and
the fish have eaten it, or when it's buried in the ground and a great oak sends
its roots down and the substance of your body turns into leaves and flowers and
wood, don't you wonder?
“But I know though after my skin worms destroy this
body, yet, in my flesh”—now, that doesn't mean spirit or soul—“yet in my flesh
shall I see God, whom I shall see for myself, and mine eyes shall behold”—these
eyes. I tell you when you get into that doctrine of redemption, the Goel,
the Redeemer what we're coming into now in this Book of Ruth, you just opened
the whole vista of the whole revelation and mercy and grace and power of
God.
So we have here our
introduction to this unusual law of redemption here in the Book of God.
Now before we go further with it, I want us to read about that law of
redemption. First of all, all Israel was taught from the beginning that
they were a redeemed people. And especially was that inculcated upon them
and impressed upon them the night of the Passover when they were delivered out
of Egypt.
Now here is an instance of
it in the third chapter of the Book of Numbers beginning at the forty-fourth
verse,
And the Lord spoke unto
Moses, saying,
Take the Levites instead of
all the firstborn of the children of Israel, and the cattle of the Levites
instead of their cattle; and the Levites shall be Mine; I am the Lord.
And for those that are to
be redeemed of the two hundred and threescore and thirteen of the firstborn of
the children of Israel, which are more than the Levites;
Thou shalt even take five
shekels apiece by the poll, after the shekel of the sanctuary shalt thou take
them;
And thou shalt give the
money, wherewith the odd number of them is to be redeemed, unto Aaron and unto
his sons.
[Numbers
3:44-48]
What God was saying was
this that the children of Israel were just like all of the people of Egypt. And that night when the death angel passed over, the firstborn of cattle, of
beasts, of human family, the firstborn was to be taken away. It belonged
to God. They had sinned. They were unto the judgment and wrath of
God and this was to be in payment; death, the wages of sin, the payment of
sin.
The death of sin is
death. When a man sins he owes a debt: death. And it's in death
that sin is paid for. The man that sins owes the penalty of death.
So that night the angel of
death is collecting his debt. But there was a way of escape. That
lamb that was slain was a substitute. When the blood was sprinkled on the
lintels and the doorposts, it was a sign that a life had been forfeited in this
home. The debt had been paid. Blood had been shed. And so Israel escaped by the forfeiture of a life in substitution in the lamb.
Then thereafter the
firstborn of all Israel belonged to God and was to be forfeited to the
Lord. And the way God provided for that forfeiture was God said, “Instead
of your firstborn son, I will take a Levite and he can be substituted for your
firstborn, and your firstborn can be kept for yourself at home.”
So when they numbered all of
the firstborn of Israel, there were 273 more firstborn in Israel than there
were Levites. Then what should they do because there was 273 more
firstborn in the congregation of Israel than there were Levites? So God
said, for the 273 that number beyond the number of the Levites, you are to take
silver shekels, five apiece and redeem them with the silver shekels. And
that money is called redemption money. And that redemptive silver was
used to make the sockets in which the bases of the tabernacle boards were
placed. The foundation of our house of faith is built upon
redemption.
Now that thing of
redemption was applied in three areas: first, the redemption of an inheritance;
second, the redemption of a man's life; and third, the redemption of a man's
family. Now this is the law of redemption regarding a man's
inheritance.
The land shall not be sold
forever.
Ye are strangers and
sojourners with Me. And in all the land of your possession ye shall grant
a redemption of the land.
If my brother be waxen poor
and have sold away some of his possessions, and if any of his kin come to
redeem it, then shall he redeem that which his brother sold.
[Leviticus
25:23-25]
If
a man was poor and he sold his inheritance, the next of kin was to redeem it for
the land could never be sold. They were strangers and pilgrims in the
earth and the land belonged to God.
Isn't that an unusual
thing? The land of Israel, the land of Palestine, doesn't belong to
anybody but God. And God allotted it, parceled it out, divided it up
between the families of Israel. And God said, “And they can't sell it.”
And if because of poverty, there is an Israelite that sells his inheritance,
the next of kin—the brother, the uncle, the uncle's son—the next of kin shall
buy it back. It shall never be sold.
Now, over here in the Book
of Jeremiah, the thirty-second chapter of the Book of Jeremiah:
Jeremiah said, The Word of
the Lord came unto me, saying,
Behold, Hanameel the son of
Shallum thine uncle shall come unto thee, saying, Buy thee my field that is in
Anathoth; for the right of redemption is thine to buy it.
So Hanameel mine uncle's
son came to me in the court of the prison according to the Word of the Lord,
and said to me, Buy my field, I pray thee, that is in Anathoth, which is in the
country of Benjamin; for the right of inheritance is thine, and the redemption
is thine; buy it… . Then I knew this was the Word of the Lord.
And I bought the field of
Hanameel my uncle's son, that was in Anathoth, and weighed him the money, even
seventeen shekels of silver.
[Jeremiah
32:6-9]
That
is the redemption of the inheritance.
All right now the second,
in this same twenty-fifth chapter of the Book of Leviticus, says; the law of
the redemption of a man's body if he sold himself,
And if a sojourner or
stranger waxed rich by thee, and thy brother that dwelleth by him be poor, wax
poor, and sell himself unto the stranger or sojourner by thee, or to the stock
of the stranger's family:
After that he is sold he
may be redeemed again; one of his brethren may redeem him;
Either his uncle, or his
uncle's son, may redeem him; or any that is nigh of kin unto him of his family
may redeem him
[Leviticus
25:47-49]
All right now that's the
second part, the redemption of a man's life. Here is a poor fellow that
doesn't have any money and out of the misery of his life, he sells himself to
work for as a slave, to work for a well-to-do man. And his brother sees
that or his next of kin sees that and he can redeem the man. He can pay
the purchase price and liberate the man and he's no longer in the slavery of
the one to whom he sold himself. Now that's the second one.
Now the third one is the
redemption of a man's family. If a man dies and he doesn't leave a child and
that means his family name will die out in Israel then his brother is to take
the widow and raise up children to his brother.
Now it was that law of Israel that gave rise to one of the most unusual things in the Bible that is used by a
certain group of people to say that God is against birth control; one of the
strangest turns of fortune I ever ran onto in my life. Now this thing is
in the thirty-eighth chapter of the Book of Genesis:
And Judah took a wife for Er his firstborn, whose name was Tamar. And Er, Judah's firstborn, was wicked in the sight of the Lord; and the Lord slew him
[Genesis
38:6, 7]
Then,
he didn't have any child. “And Judah said unto Onan” now, that's the
brother. “And Judah said unto Onan,” the second son,
Go in unto thy brother's
wife, and marry her, and raise up seed to thy brother.
And Onan knew that the seed
should not be his; and it came to pass, when he went in unto his brother's
wife, that he spilled it on the ground, lest that he should give seed to his
brother.
And the thing which Onan
did displeased the Lord; wherefore he slew him also.
[Genesis
38:8-10]
Now
all that is this, according to that law when that first son died and he left no
heir, the second son was to take his wife and raise up seed lest his brother's
name perish in the earth.
Now that gave rise to this
story of the Sadducees, when they came to Jesus and said, “There was a family
and the eldest brother married a wife and didn't have any heir so the second
son took her and he didn't have any, then the third son, and then the seventh; all
seven of them. Now in the resurrection,” said the Sadducees with a snare
and ridicule, “now in the resurrection, whose wife shall she be because all
seven of the brethren had her?” Now that's what this is.
Now Onan, here in the
thirty-eighth chapter of Genesis; Onan for some reason despised his eldest
brother; despised him and wanted his name to die out in the earth. So
according to this law when he should have raised up a child unto his eldest
brother, he wouldn't do it.
Why? Because he had
any scruples about this thing of birth control? It's a million miles
folly wide of the mark. That never enters into it one way or
another. It is ridiculous. It is absolute inane silliness to refer to
any such thing as this.
And isn't it strange that
the denomination that does it is so much against looking at the Bible as their
ultimate authority. But what these hierarchical leaders say is the Word
of God, not what's in the book. Yet when it comes to carrying through a
political movement like this why, then they refer to the Word of God. It
doesn't have anything to do with it at all. It's a strange far-fetched
imagination that even could make it begin to apply.
What this boy Onan did was that
child was not going to be his. It was going to belong to his brother.
His brother's dead and the child was to bear his brother's name. And he was to
receive his brother's inheritance and Onan would have nothing of it. “I'm not
going to do it.”
And the thing displeased
God for God didn't want his brother's name to die out in the earth. And
the Lord slew Onan also. All of this is a part of that ancient law of
redemption and inheritance.
So Ruth is a widow now and
her husband is dead. And there is no other male in the family. And
the name is about to perish in the earth. So according to that ancient
law of redemption Naomi said, “Shall I not find rest for thee that it may be
well with thee?”
So she says to Ruth, “You
go to Boaz. And when he's asleep, uncover his feet and lay yourself at
his feet.” And when Boaz awakened in the night behold a woman lay at his
feet. And he said, “Who are you?”
And she answered, “I am
Ruth, thine handmaid. Spread therefore thy skirt over thine handmaid for
thou art a near kinsman;” [Ruth 3:9] for thou art a redeemer, for thou art a goel.
She laid herself upon the mercies of Boaz and in this action directed by Naomi
asked Boaz to do for her the office of a redeemer, a near kinsman to raise up
seed to her dead husband's name and to take her to be his wife and to redeem
the inheritance of the family of Elimelech.
Now it took a whole lot of faith to do that.
It took a whole lot of commitment to do that. It took a whole lot of
courage to do that.
I think the reason that
Boaz had not said anything already to Ruth for one thing was on account of the great
difference of age apparently between Boaz and Ruth. I think Boaz loved
Ruth in his heart and did when he first saw her and when he first looked upon
her. And in confidence and in faith, Ruth lays herself at his feet and
asked him to do for her the office of a kinsman redeemer, a goel.
And Boaz responds nobly,
Blessed be thou of the
Lord, my daughter, for thou hast showed more kindness in the latter end than at
the beginning, inasmuch that thou followest not young men.
[Ruth
3:10]
That
is the reason I think Boaz was an older man: “Inasmuch as thou followest not
young men,” panting after the ephemeral pleasures of a moment but giving
herself to the faith and trust of the Lord. And he said, “Bring the veil
that thou hast upon thee and hold it. And when she held it, he measured
six measures of barley.” [Ruth 3:15] And she took it into the city.
Why six? Six is the
number of incompletion. Why didn't he measure seven? Why didn't he
give her seven measures of barley, the number of fullness, the number of
completion? Why didn't he do it?
I'll tell you why he didn't
do it. I'll tell you next Sunday morning. There is a beautiful and
wonderful reason why he gave her six measures instead of seven. You be
back Sunday morning.
Now while we sing our hymn
of invitation, somebody this morning coming down this aisle to give his heart
openly and publicly to the Lord; somebody to put his life with us in the
church; a family to join us in this marvelous ministry, in the heart of this
great city. As the Spirit of Jesus shall open the door and lead the way, would
you make it now while we stand and while we sing?