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https://square.link/u/UHRU92rp - Donate Here
In Book of Ruth chapter 4, the story of redemption reaches its climax. A nearer redeemer steps forward—but ultimately cannot redeem. The law exposes the need, but it cannot fulfill it. Then Boaz steps in, willing to pay the price, willing to take the cost, and willing to redeem—not out of obligation, but out of love.
This chapter points straight to Christ. What the law could not do, Jesus did. He didn’t just have the power to redeem—He had the willingness. And it cost Him everything. The same God who redeemed Ruth is still redeeming today, writing stories far bigger than we can see. The question is not whether He is able—but whether you will trust the One who paid the price for you.
By Anthony Caldwellhttps://square.link/u/UHRU92rp - Donate Here
In Book of Ruth chapter 4, the story of redemption reaches its climax. A nearer redeemer steps forward—but ultimately cannot redeem. The law exposes the need, but it cannot fulfill it. Then Boaz steps in, willing to pay the price, willing to take the cost, and willing to redeem—not out of obligation, but out of love.
This chapter points straight to Christ. What the law could not do, Jesus did. He didn’t just have the power to redeem—He had the willingness. And it cost Him everything. The same God who redeemed Ruth is still redeeming today, writing stories far bigger than we can see. The question is not whether He is able—but whether you will trust the One who paid the price for you.