Page 6 - Fundamentals Ebook
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The Book of Ruth begins with Naomi’s family who started
        off in Bethlehem (Bethlehem is translated from the Original Hebrew
        as “house of bread”), and because of a famine they left the House of
        Bread in order to go to Moab to find bread.  They stayed in Moab
        ten years, and the record shows that it was a very difficult ten years.
        Naomi loses her husband, and she loses her two sons.  Then, finally,
        in the land of Moab she hears that there is blessing in the House of
        Bread.  She heard that the Lord had visited His people in Bethlehem.
        So when she hears that, her heart is attracted and she begins her trek
        back to Bethlehem.

        When she came back after ten years, she said: “I went out full, but
        the LORD has brought me back empty.”  When she left ten years
        earlier she did not say, “I am leaving full.”  When she left ten years
        earlier she said, “I am leaving empty.”  I am leaving because there
        is no bread in the House of Bread.  There is a famine here.  But after
        ten years she discovered that she had left full at the beginning.

        You see, Bethlehem is a picture of Christ, the House of Bread; the
        place of fullness.  And sometimes, even though we all start out in
        Bethlehem, when famine comes or things get a little tough, we leave
        fullness (of course, we think it is emptiness) to find fullness.  When
        you leave fullness to find fullness, you only find emptiness.  God
        instructed this family for ten years in that truth that there is only
        emptiness  outside  the  House  of  Bread.    In  the  House  of  Bread,
        famine  is  fullness.    Outside  the  House  of  Bread,  abundance  is
        poverty.

        There  is  no  fullness  outside  the  House  of  Bread.    Fullness  is  in
        Christ.  It is not in Moab.  It is not in Christian service and it is not
        in Christian fellowship.  Those things are wonderful in their place,
        but they are not fullness.  If you look for fullness in Christian or
        spiritual gifts, you will only find emptiness.  If you look for fullness
        in scholarship and academics or even Bible knowledge, you will
        only find emptiness.  Fullness is in Bethlehem; it is in Christ; it is in
        the House of Bread.  Until we go back to Bethlehem, we cannot
        begin to have the union with our heavenly Boaz that results in the
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