What can we learn from Boaz's role in God's redemptive plan? Boaz in God’s Line of Redemption “Boaz was the father of Obed, and Obed was the father of Jesse.” (1 Chronicles 2:12) • A simple verse anchors Boaz between Judah’s tribe and Israel’s greatest king, David—then on to the Messiah (Matthew 1:5-6). • God preserves a pure, traceable line; every name matters, showing His meticulous faithfulness. • Boaz’s inclusion proves that choices made in the book of Ruth echo through Scripture’s overarching rescue plan. Boaz, the Living Picture of the Kinsman-Redeemer • Ruth 2:1 calls Boaz “a man of standing,” prefiguring Christ’s sinless worthiness. • By redeeming Naomi’s land and marrying Ruth (Ruth 4:9-10), he fulfills Leviticus 25:25 and Deuteronomy 25:5-6, illustrating: – A willing relative (Boaz) pays the price others cannot. – The redeemed (Naomi, Ruth) receive restored inheritance and security. • Jesus, born from this very line, becomes our ultimate “near relative,” purchasing us with His blood (Ephesians 1:7). Character Lessons Worth Imitating • Compassionate generosity—Boaz leaves extra grain for Ruth (Ruth 2:14-16). • Integrity—he follows legal process at the city gate, witnesses present (Ruth 4:1-12). • Courageous obedience—no shortcuts, no compromise, just patient submission to God’s law. God’s Faithfulness Across Generations • Rahab to Boaz, Moabite Ruth to Obed, shepherd Jesse to King David—the Lord weaves outsiders into covenant blessing (Galatians 3:8). • Every act of faith today can launch ripples far beyond our lifetime. • Boaz shows that God works through ordinary farmers to fulfill extraordinary promises. Take-Home Applications • Value your place in God’s ongoing story; small decisions echo eternally. • Practice redeeming love—step into others’ brokenness at personal cost. • Trust God’s timing; Boaz waited overnight before acting (Ruth 3:13), modeling patience and purity. |