Page 138 - BACK TO BETHLEHEM
P. 138

The first step, the first spiritual event, if we are going to
             become  an  oasis  in  the  desert,  is  returning  to  the  place  of
             fullness, coming back to Bethlehem, coming back to where we
             were when we first got saved. That is how the book of Ruth
             begins – in the place of fullness. You can never be an oasis
             until you begin there. Moab just represents everything outside
             of Christ. It can be good, it can be bad and it can sound quite
             spiritual. Anything except Jesus is Moab.
                    Bethlehem  is  a  picture  of  our  Lord  Jesus  Christ.
             Fullness is not a goal; fullness is the starting point. In this book
             fruit is the goal. We are moving toward the production of the
             Lord Jesus Christ and giving Him to the world, but it all starts
             in  fullness.  There  are  a  thousand  and  one  reasons  we  leave
             fullness  and  go  to  Moab.  Maybe  we  try  to  find  fullness  in
             spiritual gifts or in Christian service or in Christian fellowship
             or in education or in the world. We leave fullness and all we
             find is emptiness.  But once we come back, this is the beginning
             of the oasis in the desert.
                    Elimelech and Naomi and their two sons Mahlon and
             Chilion left the place of fullness because of a famine, because
             they said there was no bread in the House of Bread. They did
             not understand fullness and they went off to Moab, and they
             spent ten years in Moab and shed a lot of tears in the land of
             Moab. Naomi loses her husband, and she loses her two sons.
             Then, God finally opened Naomi’s eyes and she heard that the
             Lord had visited His people in Bethlehem. She lifted her head
             toward Bethlehem, and saw the visitation of God and that there
             was blessing in the land of fullness. So, she decided to go back
             to Bethlehem. As soon as she purposed in her heart to go back,
             God already began turning the curse into a blessing, and it was
             at that point that Naomi led Ruth, her daughter-in-law, to the
             Savior.
                    Now, Naomi was not planning to lead Ruth to Christ.
             You see, when you lead somebody to Christ you usually do not
             say to them, “Go back to your gods.” You usually do not use
             that sentence in order to win somebody to the  Lord. That is
             what Naomi said to Ruth. Ruth 1:15-17, “’Behold, your sister-
                                                                 136
   133   134   135   136   137   138   139   140   141   142   143