Eric Van Beek's sermon on Ruth presents the Old Testament narrative as a redemption typology that culminates in Christ's atoning work. The preacher emphasizes that Ruth is fundamentally not a moral instruction manual about loyalty or kindness, but rather a redemptive narrative demonstrating humanity's absolute helplessness and God's provision of a kinsman redeemer. Van Beek identifies three non-negotiable requirements for a kinsman redeemer established in Mosaic law: kinship (the redeemer must be a relative), sufficiency (the redeemer must possess resources to pay the redemptive price), and willingness (the redeemer must voluntarily choose redemption). He demonstrates how Christ fulfills all three qualifications—becoming incarnate to establish kinship with humanity (Hebrews 2:14), offering His precious blood as the sole acceptable payment for sin (1 Peter 1:18-19), and willingly embracing the cross through willing obedience to the Father (John 6:38). The sermon underscores the practical significance of substitutionary atonement by showing that the redeemed (Ruth, and believers generally) contribute nothing to their own redemption; the Redeemer accomplishes all. This doctrine directly opposes both legalism (the law cannot redeem, only condemn) and synergistic soteriology, establishing the total sufficiency of Christ's finished work.
“Redemption, by definition, is a costly act of buying back what is lost or restoring its life. But redemption is only meaningful when the situation is utterly hopeless. It's only meaningful when the situation is dire, is life and death... Redemption only has value when the situation is dire, hopeless. The person cannot save themselves.”
“Jesus became fully man, truly human. He stepped into hunger. He felt grief. He felt temptation. If Christ wasn't fully man, redemption would be not possible. He did not take our nature. If he did not take our nature, he could not take our place.”
“Where's Ruth when redemption happens? She's not even there. Ruth does nothing during redemption, during her own redemption... The redeemed, their only role is being the redeemed. Your salvation belongs to Christ. It was started by Him, it was finished by Him, and it was perfected by Him. He did it all.”
“Christ has settled your matter. He has redeemed his people. The redemption is fully successful and completely final.”
The Bible teaches that redemption is a costly act of buying back what is lost or restoring it to life, which is ultimately fulfilled in Christ.
Ruth 4:4, 1 Peter 1:18-19
Jesus is our Redeemer because He fulfills all the requirements of a kinsman redeemer: He is a near relative, able to pay the price, and willingly chooses to redeem us.
Hebrews 2:14, 1 Peter 1:18-19
The concept of a Kinsman Redeemer is vital for Christians as it illustrates our need for redemption and the fulfillment of that need in Christ.
Ruth 2:20, Ephesians 1:7
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