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Ultimate Favor
Text: Ruth 1:6 6 Then she arose with her daughters in law, that she might return from the country of Moab: for she had heard in the country of Moab how that the LORD had visited his people in giving them bread.
There are only two books in the entire Bible that are named after women: Ruth and Esther.
My goal is for us to all see that God has a plan. God has the interwoven details of your life ironed out. God can use what we think are horrific happenings in our lives. Sometimes when we think an event is marking the end, it really is marking the beginning.
Our very own United States First Lady, Laura Bush, endured a very difficult tragedy in her youth. At the age of 17, she was borrowing her parents car with 3 of her friends driving across Midland, Texas. They were on a “farm to market road” only driving 55 in a 65 zone. Laura was not breaking the speed limit, but she did not see the stop sign. Laura went through the intersection and hit a car broadside.
Laura and her friends had only minor injuries, and they went to the hospital for the night. Laura’s parents had the horrific duty of telling her that the person she hit passed away. Laura was devastated to say the least, but the bad news was not over.
Two days later she learned that the man who died was not just any man, but it turned out to be a young man by the name of Michael Douglas who was her high school sweetheart.
Laura Bush had hit her own boyfriend and he died. Laura did not come out of her bedroom for weeks. She had been an honor student, but she could not bear going back to school.
We look back on this many years later and President Bush says, “Laura Bush is the strength and balance of my life. I don’t know what I would do without her.”
Fate would have been different perhaps if the accident had never happened, because at that time she felt like she was totally in love with that young man. She had no idea who George W. Bush was.
What you sometimes may think is destiny for your life may take a drastic turn. Somehow God will work through our worst storms in life and become our destiny.
There are some interesting facts about Ruth that are noteworthy:
**Ruth is the only book in the Bible that is entirely written about a woman as the central figure. As opposed to Esther being a book containing a lot of other characters of detail, with much other than Esther.
***Ruth is a ten-generation redemptive story.
· From Adam to Jesus there are sixty generations named; sixty men
and women who were in the genealogy of Christ; six groups of ten
each.
· If there are sixty and six is the number for man, or flesh… Ten is
the number for redemption. When it’s multiplied, that shows that
God is involved.
· So sixty is six times ten, which means man’s redemption being
worked by God.
· It starts with Adam. He falls. It ends with Jesus. He redeems.
But every group of ten was a pronounced and distinguished
redeemer.
· Start with Adam, you read nine more names that you hardly know,
then you get to Noah. Noah was the first tenth generation
redeemer.
· Then you go nine more names that you hardly know and you come
to a second huge name with implications for our faith and that’s
Abraham.
· Then you go through nine more names and you come to the name,
Boaz.
· Do that six times you will end with the name of Christ. So the
third group of ten ends with the name, Boaz.
Our story takes place in the days when the judges ruled.
Ruth was David’s great-grandmother, even though she was a gentile.
In the listing of the genealogy, it ends with David.
Ruth was written at a very low time in Israel’s history, which was the time of the judges.
This was the era of Samson when some very foolish people tried to lead who were very dysfunctional themselves.
The first verse of the book says this: Now it came to pass in the days when the judges ruleda, that there was a famine in the land. And a certain man of Bethlehem judah went to sojourn in the country of Moab, he, and his wife, and his two sons. [1]
We want to make some identities and understand meanings:
· The city of Bethlehem means house of bread. Beth meaning the house, and le hem means bread
· Bethlehem proves to be prophetically significant throughout the Bible because of heavenly Bread coming out of Bethlehem. Mathew 2:1 tells us that Jesus was born in Bethlehem. In John 6:35 Jesus said, “I am the Bread of Life.”
· Bethlehem was a place of bakeries.
Ruth 1:2: The name of the man was Elimelech, the name of his wife was
Naomi, and the names of his two sons were Mahlon and Chilion –
Ephrathites of Bethlehem, Judah And they went to the country of Moab
and remained there.
· Ephratites came from the tribe of Ephraim
· (Genesis 19:37) Moab was one of the sons of Lot.
· The Moabites were a nation of people who came from Lot’s
lineage.
· They were not under Abraham’s covenant so they were Gentiles.
· Gentile means “one who has no covenant with God.”
· The Moabites were Gentiles and they lived east of the Dead Sea
· and they lived worshipping many gods and did not know or
· worship the one true God of Israel.
d. Ruth 1:3-9: Then Elimelech, Naomi’s husband, died; and she was left,
and her two sons. Now they took wives of the women of Moab: the name
of one was Orpah, and the name of the other Ruth. And they dwelt there
about ten years. Then she arose with her daughters-in-law that she might
return from the country of Moab, for she had heard in the country of
Moab that the Lord had visited His people by giving them bread.
Therefore she went out from the place where she was, and her two
daughters-in-law with her; and they went on the way to return to the land
of Judah. And Naomi said to her two daughters-in-law, “Go, return each
to her mother’s house. The Lord deal kindly with you, as you have dealt
with the dead (their two husbands) and with me. The Lord grant that you
find rest, each in the house of her husband.
· This word “rest” is a Hebrew word that means the protection or
covering of your husband’s house.
· Naomi was inviting her daughters-in-law to go back to Moab and
remarry, as young women, and start another life.
e. We need to understand the prophetic implications and meanings of these
names.
1. Elimelech was Naomi’s husband, in Hebrew you see the root word Eli, which Eli means God.
· “Me lech” meaning “our King.”
· Elimelech, the father of this family, meant, My God is
King.
2. Naomi means “Favored of God” or “the favor of God.” “Naomi” means
Favor. We also find that she desires to be called “Mara”, which
mean Bitterness. The Favor of God, Naomi, was changed to Bitterness because of her experience.
3. The first son, Mahlon, means “Joy” and/or “Song,” according to
how it is used. So it means “Joyful Song.”
4. The second son, “Chilion,” means “Perfectness,” or in religious
terms we would use the word, “Righteousness.” The root word of
righteousness is right. So, “Rightness before God” or Perfectness
is the name, “Chilion.”
5. “Ruth” means “comeliness” or “beauty.”
1. Apparently Ruth grew up to be a beautiful woman. Most
accounts that talk about her looks at all tell us that Ruth
was taller than the average woman, and that she was strikingly beautiful.
What are some of the prophetic implications?
a. Naomi represents the favor of God, but the whole system that Naomi
represented is Israel, as the ancient covenant people of God.
b. Ruth comes to represent a latecomer, or a chosen outsider, which has to be
the church of Jesus Christ, which becomes the bride of Boaz.
c. Boaz is a type of Christ.
i. “Boaz” means “Redeemer” and, in fact, he is called the “kinsman
redeemer” because he is relative to Ruth
d. Elimelech means God is King and is the father of the family, so it’s
natural that he would marry a woman called The Favor of God, because
when your God is King you will come into a place of favor.
i. Because God was King then Naomi brought the favor of God to
the family.
ii. Then borne of that union, they have a son named Joy or a Joyful
Song
iii. Then the second son that they give birth to is called Perfectness or
Righteousness.
iv. So we have a family whose God is King, living with the favor of
God and birthing Joy and Righteousness.
e. Everything is wonderful but then Bethlehem ran out of bread.
i. When The House of Bread ran out of bread, which is an irony in
itself, that a place could be called The House of Bread and have no
bread, then they looked to the more fertile fields of Moab.
ii. Sometimes your faith will be tested and this is where they failed
the test.
f. The geography of Moab.
i. From Bethlehem, which is just out of Jerusalem, Moab is about
fifty miles away.
ii. If you went south to the Dead Sea and across, crossing the Dead
Sea, north or south of it, it’s only twenty or thirty miles long, you
could go to the high plateau on the other side that you can see.
iii. For instance, if you have been there and you have gone to Masada,
if you look due east from Masada to the plateau on the other side
of the Dead Sea, there’s Moab, the ancient land of Moab.
iv. So it was a fifty-mile journey. It only took a few days to get there.
g. There’s always a Moab waiting when you run out of bread in the house of
bread.
i. The point is, in the place of Bethlehem, the place of their covenant,
the place of their origin, the place of their blessing; they made a
mistake that is so easy for you and I to make and that is: “I’m
doing well. I’m doing okay. I have a nice house. We have some
nice threads. I’ve got a nice car to drive. I live in the United
States. How bad can life be?”
ii. You forget all about the fact that you’re not doing well because
you live in the United States. You are doing well because you made
God King in your life and when you made God King in your life
the favor of God came on you.
h. They could have realized this and said “This God that we’ve made King is
the God that sustained our people for forty years without a grocery store or
a mall, or an economy system or a government. He took care of us by
manna falling out of the sky. So what we’ve run out of bread in
Bethlehem. We’ll make it. We’re going to stay with the house of bread.”
i. Instead they ran to Moab.
ii. You can follow the path of their compromise, they moved into a
place of marrying women who didn’t know the God they served.
iii. Elimelech died first, which is My God is King.
iv. When God as your King dies as your faith statement of life and
your value system, then what happens? Then your Joy and your
Song goes. Then your Righteousness goes.
v. Notice the Favor of God didn’t lift, but later she moved out.
j. The Favor of God will stay on your life as long as it can but when we
make a decision God is not King in our lives anymore…
i. When they moved to Moab they made that decision.
ii. They didn’t understand the cost even though they thought they
were moving to a place where provision was since where they
were was in a state of famine.
iii. There was a huge spiritual cost and family cost.
iv. This is not unlike many of our lives when we are offered positions,
raises etc and it is then that we need to count the costs associated
with it that are not economical ones.
v. You make sure that God is in any kind of move that you make.
Life moves people on and that things will happen.
vi. Sometimes you have got to hang in here and say, “I would rather
sit right here and starve in Bethlehem than to move to a foreign
place where there is no God that I serve and no covenant and no
promise because this looks like a perfect environment for me, for
“my God who will supply all my needs according to His riches in
glory by Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 4:19) Not according to how
the economy is doing locally.
vii. Sometimes God needs to be put in remembrance of His word to
you. You do not doubt His word; you believe His word. Quote
His own Bible back to Him.
1. Remind him like Moses did who said, “Lord, I will do it if
You go with me. If You do not go with me I am not
going.”
2. I do not think that is disobedience because you do not have
any business out there if God is not with you.
k. So, when they got out there where God was not King, then they started
suffering losses and reversals.
i. There are things you will go through in your life that are losses that
are not directly attributable to disobedience, so do not take this
wrong.
ii. In the greater picture losses and reversals are always because of the
disobedience of man. It may not be you directly but we are in a
fallen state.
iii. Reversals and losses and grievous things are not the will of God
for us. God is trying to work us through this place where those
things are over. Right now we suffer losses.
iv. Sometimes we lose a battle but we will not lose the war. In every
loss you can learn something valuable and precious that you will
never ever forget. It becomes a part of your life.
l. So, when they left the faith that God was King, then they lost their Joy and
their Joyful Song and they lost their Righteousness.
i. Naomi finds herself with no men left in her family and makes the
decision to go back to the land of bread
Ruth’s Test
a. Naomi, upon leaving Moab, says, “Don’t follow me any further.”
i. She is telling them that she has nothing left for them, her sons were
gone and she had no other sons to marry them and she was telling
them to go back to the Moabites and find themselves men to marry
and carry on their lives.
b. What happened:
i. Ruth 1:14: Then they lifted up their voices and wept again; and
Orpah kissed her mother-in-law, but Ruth clung to her.
ii. Ruth is a type of the church.
iii. There has to be something under your beauty because something
about the bride of Christ is beautiful to Jesus.
iv. There has got to be a bulldog tenacity inside of you that goes
deeper than beauty.
v. Ruth was not just tall and beautiful. Ruth had something in her
that I love.
1. She had loyalty.
2. She had faithfulness
vi. Ruth said, “I know we have been through some things but I am
going to stick with you.”
vii. Ruth said, “Naomi, I know both of us will have to make a decision.
You are doing what you can to force us away.”
viii. Ruth desired the better thing that could not be seen on the surface
and God was testing her by trying to divert her attention.
1. Example: Moses, said to God, “God, show me Your glory.”
(Exodus 33:18)
2. God said, “Meet Me tomorrow morning on the mountain.”
Moses was up there bright and early. Scripture says that
God came and blew with an unbelievable hurricane-type
wind. The wind stopped and Moses said, “That ain’t
nothing. You’re not in that. You did that but that is not
what I am asking for.” Then God sent an earthquake and
shook the mountain, the boulders fell and there were
landslides. Moses was hanging on and then every thing
was quiet. Then God sent a fire and sat down on the
mountain and burned everything and then the fire was
sucked back up into the heavens. God said, “What do you
think of that?” Moses said, “Not much. That was just
something You can do, that is not Your glory.” Scripture
says that Joshua fell down in the doorway of the tent. He
was out. He was slain in the Spirit. Because that is what
he settled for, that is all he got. But God said, “Moses, you
really want to see it, don’t you?” He said, “I do, God, more
than life.” And God said, “Then early in the morning, you
can come and meet me.” The Bible says God set him in the
cleft of a rock and God marched by in all of His glory, His
history, His times, His beginning. Maybe that is a hint we
can get as to how Moses found the inspiration and anointing to write the first five books of the Bible that we
call the Pentateuch. God showed Moses his glory, his
history and his plans and ways. But if
Moses would have settled for a little windstorm that is all
he would have gotten.
c. This story is just like favor.
i. Notice the nature of favor.
1. Remember now, Naomi represents the favor of God. The
Favor of God was saying to these girls, “Go on back where
you came from. I am going to a place you cannot go. You
do not want to go. I do not have any more sons. If all you
want out of me is another son, I do not have any more
sons.”
2. See this is a test of favor.
a. God is going to test you to see, “Do you want My
favor or do you want what My favor gives? Do you
want My favor on your life or do you want another
husband out of Me? I don’t have any more sons.”
3. Orpah kissed the favor of God and moved away, maybe
tearfully, but you never hear from her again.
4. But Ruth fell at her feet and clung to her. This is when
Ruth uttered that famous appeal.
a. Entreat me not to leave you Or to turn back from
following after you; For wherever you go (Favor of
God), I will go; And wherever you lodge (Favor of
God), I will lodge; Your people (Favor of God)
shall be my people, Ruth 1:16
Closing:
“People that know to stay under the favor of God, that’s the people I want to hang
with. I don’t want to go back where I came from. Everything where I came from was lost. I don’t have anything to go back to.”
…and your God, my God. Where you die, I will die, And there I will be buried.
The Lord do so to me, and more also, If anything but death parts you and me.
When she saw that she was determined to go with her, she stopped speaking (about that) to her.
Ruth 1:16-18
The favor of God, you want it in your life. Make God King and Favor comes. Then
everything borne of that relationship will be Joy and a Joy filled Song and Righteousness
and Perfection. It will be Comely bride, a beautiful bride that Jesus is preparing.