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Emmanuel, Our Redeemer

As we prepare to celebrate the birth of our Redeemer, the opening words from a beautiful hymn keep running through my mind: “There is a redeemer, Jesus God’s own Son.” Redemption isn’t a word we use often in everyday life, unless we’re talking about turning in a coupon to save money, or exchanging points for merchandise. Some of us remember saving green stamps in books and redeeming them for just about anything. We sometimes talk about redeeming time, particularly making up for a misspent youth or wasted opportunities.

However, even when we think of redemption as a churchy word, we might not be so clear on the meaning. One well-known story of redemption is found in the book of Ruth (a biblical love story, if you will), of a young widow’s tragedy and triumph, and her hero-kinsman-redeemer, Boaz. Perhaps you know the story. Ruth’s experience helps us understand what it means to be redeemed.

Under the laws of ancient Israel, the closest relative of a widow (enter Ruth) could, upon her request, marry her and thus restore the land belonging to the family, as well as continue the family line of the deceased husband. When Ruth lay at Boaz’s feet on the threshing floor, she wasn’t being inappropriate; she was claiming her right to make him her kinsman-redeemer. A closer relative who had the first prerogative declined to marry Ruth and the rest is history; Ruth took her place in the genealogy of Jesus.

 By marrying Ruth, who was a gentile daughter-in-law of the wife of one of his relatives, a “nobody” to him, Boaz restored her honor, dignity, land and inheritance. By extension, Naomi, Ruth’s mother-in-law, also got back her life and was given a future and hope.

Boaz was a type of Christ, pointing to Jesus as the kinsman-redeemer of all humanity who would buy us back from sin and death. Jesus gave himself for us, restoring our hope and future. His sacrifice saves us from bondage to the wrong master and frees us to be in him, with blessings now and hope for eternal life with him.

The most beautiful thing about our redemption is that it wasn’t a transaction. Just as Ruth had nothing to offer Boaz but herself, we have nothing to offer Jesus but ourselves, sins and all, no coupon or green stamps required. It was a plan God formulated before the foundation of the universe, and it was motivated and shaped by one thing: his amazing love.

By becoming human just as we are human, yet remaining God; from zygote to embryo to fetus, then infant to child to preteen and on to teenage and adulthood, Jesus redeemed us entirely, healing our sin and alienation and taking us into himself. Just as Boaz changed Ruth’s life, making her part of his family and no longer an outsider, so Jesus has brought us into the life of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit and, in him, we are outsiders no more. Our Kinsman-Redeemer became one of us to make us one with him.  

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Christian Odyssey Articles by Various Authors

  • Bystander, by Joyce Catherwood
  • Articles by Sue Berger
  • Thinking Out Loud - Articles by Barbara Dahlgren
  • Home Base - a Series by Jeb Egbert
  • Christian Odyssey articles by J. Michael Feazell
  • Articles by Sheila Graham
  • Articles by Kerry Gubb
  • Christian Odyssey Editorials, by John Halford
  • In Other Words - a Series by James Henderson and Kalengule Kaoma
  • Look Again - articles by Baxter Kruger
  • Articles by Nan Kuhlman
  • Articles by John McKenna
  • For the Love of God - a pastor's notebook - articles by Rick Shallenberger
  • Tammy's Turn - Articles by Tammy Tkach
    • Afraid of God?
    • He Knows Us Like That
    • God Is in Our Moments
    • Is God in Control?
    • Like a Weaned Child
    • More Than a Tool
    • Rain to Rainbows
    • Responding to God
    • Up, Down, and Content Through It All
    • The Greatest Birth Story
    • Surviving the Wilderness
    • Emmanuel, Our Redeemer
  • Articles by Greg Williams
  • Hmm... Quotes From the Back Page of Christian Odyssey
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