Grace Evangelical Society

P.O. Box 1308, Denton, TX 76202
  • About
    • Home
    • Beliefs
    • Staff
    • Board of Directors
  • Resources
    • Grace in Focus Blog
    • Grace in Focus International Blogs
    • Grace in Focus Radio
    • Grace in Focus Magazine
    • Free eBooks
    • Journal of the GES
    • Book Reviews
    • Partners in Grace Newsletter
    • Audio Messages
    • Videos
    • Email Subscription
    • Online Tracts
  • Store
    • Main Page
    • On Sale
    • Return Policy
    • Your Cart
    • Your Account
  • Events
  • Seminary
    • Seminary Info
    • GES Seminary Curriculum
    • GES Seminary Faculty
  • Connect
    • Contact Us
    • Free Grace Church and Bible Study Tracker
    • Free Grace Jobs
    • Ministry Links
  • Donate
    • One Time Donation
    • Monthly Donation
    • Your Account
  • Search
Home
→
Blog
→
Introduction: Ruth and Redemptive History

Introduction: Ruth and Redemptive History

March 20, 2018 by Shawn Lazar in Blog

At first glance, Ruth seems to be a very personal story about a struggling widow and her daughter-in-law trying to survive in the world.

It’s a relatable story, about real people, facing real trials, who go through a tragedy.

We all know a story like that. You read about them in the papers. See them on TV. Maybe you’re living that story right now.

At first, Ruth may seem out of place in the grand narrative of the Old Testament.

How does the story of a local widow in a backwater town compare with the stories of creation and fall?

Of the rise and demise of peoples, nations, and empires?

With God’s great acts of deliverance?

Ruth can be deceptively small.

It has a big story to tell.

If you take a step back, Ruth is not just about tragedy, but also a great love story—not just romantic love, but the bonds of love between family. It is about the love between a mother and her daughter-in-law; between a young widow and her prospective husband; and between a grandmother and her new grandson.

Step back even further, and Ruth is also a book about redemption. Poverty is a terrible reality for many. In the Old Testament, if a man had to sell his lands or himself because of poverty, the Mosaic Law allowed for both to be redeemed and restored by a near family member. This person was called a “kinsman redeemer” (cf. Lev 25:23-25; 47-48). The book of Ruth shows how this redemption worked out in practice. It is about the kinsman redeemer.

But Ruth has an even bigger story to tell.

If you step even further back, it turns out that Ruth is a story of love and redemption between God and His people.

It turns out the main character in Ruth is God Himself.

Ruth begins by setting the stage during a time of national decline and apostasy “in the days when the judges governed…” (Ruth 1:1). What would God do? How would He save His people from national destruction? Ruth tells the tale. Despite the darkness of the times, Ruth ends with the promise of a coming king, David:

Then Naomi took the child and laid him in her lap, and became his nurse. The neighbor women gave him a name, saying, “A son has been born to Naomi!” So they named him Obed. He is the father of Jesse, the father of David (Ruth 4:16-17).

The redemption of Israel is coming!

So don’t be fooled by Ruth. It is a little book that tells a very big story.

Ruth begins with widowhood and ends in marriage.

It begins in grief, and ends in celebration.

It begins with bondage and ends with redemption.

It begins with death and ends with birth.

It begins with a time of national decline and ends with the promise of national greatness.

It begins with the explicit struggle for temporal salvation and ends with the implicit promise of eternal salvation through David’s greater Son, the Messiah.

Ruth seems small, at first. But the deeper you dig, the more you find. No wonder the Plymouth Brethren called Ruth the gospel in the Old Testament.

Subscribe by Email

  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
Shawn_L

by Shawn Lazar

Shawn Lazar (BTh, McGill; MA, VU Amsterdam) was the Editor of Grace in Focus magazine and Director of Publications for Grace Evangelical Society from May 2012 through June 2022. He and his wife Abby have three children. He has written several books including: Beyond Doubt: How to Be Sure of Your Salvation and Chosen to Serve: Why Divine Election Is to Service, Not to Eternal Life.

If you wish to ask a question about a given blog, email us your question at ges@faithalone.org.

Recently Added

December 22, 2025

What Is Christian Apologetics? 

Bible college and seminary students learn about a subject called apologetics.   In our online seminary, GES is offering a free thirteen-week elective on apologetics, taught by Dr. Jeff Spencer.i   New students can apply to...
December 22, 2025

Who Are the Two Witnesses of Revelation 11?

Welcome to the Grace in Focus podcast. Today, Bob Wilkin and Philippe Sterling are continuing a short series about Eschatology. What is the scene that...
December 19, 2025

Abimelech Reaped What He Sowed 

Abimelech was an evil man. He killed sixty-nine of his half-brothers to rule unchallenged over the area around the town of Shechem. The men of Shechem wanted Abimelech to rule over them and supported him in the...

Grace in Focus Radio

All Episodes

Listen on Apple Podcasts

Listen on Spotify

Listen on YouTube

Grace In Focus Magazine

Grace In Focus is sent to subscribers in the United States free of charge.

Subscribe for Free

The primary source of Grace Evangelical Society's funding is through charitable contributions. GES uses all contributions and proceeds from the sales of our resources to further the gospel of grace in the United States and abroad.

Donate

Grace Evangelical Society

(940) 270-8827 / ges@faithalone.org

4851 S I-35E Suite 203, Corinth, TX 76210
P.O. Box 1308, Denton, TX 76202

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram