

βͺ Lesson 11: Ruth and Esther
π 11.6 Summary
β¨ Godβs Saving Hand in the Great Controversy
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π¦ Introduction
When we read the stories of Ruth and Esther, we see how God writes history not only through spectacular revelations, but also through completely ordinary people. These biblical women lived in times of crisisβfar from home, threatened by loss or deathβand yet they became key figures in God’s plan of deliverance. Their life stories are not ancient fairy tales but prophetic reflections of our own lives in the 21st century.
Todayβs world is full of uncertainty, division, and threatβpolitically, morally, ecologically. And yet the same question arises as in Mordecaiβs day: βWho knows whether you have not come to your position for such a time as this?β Right here, right now. Where you live, work, and pray. Even today, God is looking for people who will carry light into the darknessβlike Ruth in the field, like Esther before the throne.
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π Key Content at a Glance
11.1 Famine in the βHouse of Breadβ β Ruth 1
β Godβs presence even in adversity: Even in times of scarcity and loss, God remains faithful.
11.2 Ruth and Boaz β Ruth 2β3
β Boaz as a symbol of Christ: Godβs provision and love come through someone who enters our life.
11.3 Boaz the Redeemer β Ruth 4
β The great exchange: Boaz redeems the inheritanceβsymbolizing Christβs redemptive work on the cross.
11.4 Haman and Satan β Esther 3β7
β Haman as a type of Satan: Pride, manipulation, and deceptionβyet unmasked and defeated.
11.5 For Such a Time as This β Esther 4β9
β Estherβs calling as a model: Courage, fasting, prayerβand trust that God will act for His people.
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β¨ Spiritual Principles
β Godβs providence may not be visibleβbut it is effective. In suffering and loss, God remains near. His plan does not fail, even when we do not see it.
β Calling happens in the everyday. Ruth gathered grain. Esther prepared for a dangerous encounter. Both served faithfully in the smallβand were used greatly.
β True redemption costs something. Boaz paid the price. Esther risked her life. Christ went to the cross. Those who love do not remain neutral.
β Satan lays claimβbut Christ is the true heir. Just as Boaz bypasses the βcloser relative,β Jesus overrides the enemyβs demands.
β Prayer and fasting prepare for spiritual battles. Courage rarely comes from the gutβit grows in quiet prayer.
β The past strengthens faith for tomorrow. Purim was instituted to remember God’s deliverance. Remembering is spiritual resistance against fear.
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π§© Application for Daily Life
Ask yourself each morning: What if I am meant to be a light todayβright where I am?
β Say this prayer: βLord, place me where I am needed todayβeven if Iβm afraid.β
Stay courageousβeven in small things.
β Confront lies with truth. Listen where others judge. Show mercy where injustice reigns.
Fast intentionally.
β Give up your phone, the news, or noise for a dayβto hear God’s voice.
Keep a rescue journal.
β Note every time you experience God’s helpβfor the days when you start to doubt.
Be a Boaz or Esther to others.
β Ask in your church if someone needs supportβin prayer, conversation, or practical help.
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β Conclusion
The stories of Ruth and Esther are testimonies of Godβs faithfulness in the shadow of the unseen. Of deliverance brought through people who didnβt choose their rolesβbut said yes. Their journeys through darkness and decision, loss and courage, reflect our own battle: To whom do we belong? Whom do we follow? What do we stand for?
God does not call us to comfortable safety, but to committed faith. Those who keep their eyes on Christ will see every trial as an opportunity to be faithfulβfor such a time as this.
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π Thought of the Day
You are not where you are by accident. It may look like coincidenceβbad luck, human failure. But perhaps God chose this very place, this very time, and your very voice to make hope visible. Be ready. He wants to use you.
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βοΈ Illustration β βBetween the Linesβ β A Story of Calling, Courage, and Quiet Miracles
Berlin, Present Day
Lina pushed the subway door open with her foot, balancing her coffee and overstuffed bag as she squeezed into the crowded train car. Rain clung to her hair, her mind on the meeting scheduled for 9 a.m. It was one of those days when she wondered if any of it really mattered. For six years she had worked as a policy adviser at the Ministry of Education, pushing papers, drafting proposals that rarely got read.
βYou have so much potential,β her professor once said. βGod will use you.β
But how? Between budgets and endless meetings?
That Tuesday, everything changed.
A young man, barely twenty, stood across from her in the train. Pale face, trembling hands, dark hoodie. He looked around nervously. Lina noticed himβshe had learned to watch for what others missed.
As she stepped off, she heard footsteps behind her. Then a quiet voice:
βExcuse meβ¦β
She turned. It was the young man.
βDo we know each other?β she asked cautiously.
He looked embarrassed. βNot exactly. I saw you two weeks ago during a school commission visit. You said, βEveryone carries a light, even if it flickers.β I… I was there. I wanted to talk to you afterward, but I was too scared.β
He looked her in the eye. βI was going to… end it all. But after what you said, I didnβt.β
Lina swallowed. Words failed her. Finally, she whispered, βThank you for telling me.β
He nodded and walked away.
In that moment, the world stood still.
And like an echo, the words came back to her:
βWho knows whether you have not come to your position for such a time as this?β
She didnβt feel it often. But now she knew: Calling doesnβt always look like a stage. Sometimes it carries gray binders. Sometimes it has rain in its face. Sometimes it whispers through a strangerβs voice on the subway.
Three weeks later, Lina sat in her churchβs prayer circle. The topic was βCalling in the End Times.β Someone mentioned the Book of Esther.
βShe had no idea she would write history,β someone said.
Lina looked up. She thought of Ruth. Of Esther. Of Boaz. Of the young man.
She remembered something she had once read:
βIf you donβt know why youβre here, go to the field in front of you. Maybe the miracle is already waiting there.β
The next morning, Lina stood in front of her office mirror. Her reflection stared back.
βYou are not just a policy adviser,β she said aloud. βYou are sent.β
She took her notebook, opened it, and wrote:
βFor such a time as this.β
ποΈ What this story shows:
Like Ruth, Lina was simply faithful in her work.
Like Esther, she didnβt plan everythingβbut her words came at the right time, led by the Spirit.
Like Boaz, she took responsibility and realized that even small roles can carry deep spiritual impact.
