Sermon Title: The Power of Loyalty
Bible
Reference: *Ruth 1:16-17* – "But Ruth replied, 'Don’t urge me to leave you
or to turn back from you. Where you go I will go, and where you stay I will
stay. Your people will be my people and your God my God. Where you die I will
die, and there I will be buried. May the Lord deal with me, be it ever so
severely, if even death separates you and me.'"
Good
morning, beloved.
Loyalty is a
word we hear often—in marriages, friendships, workplaces, and even sports
teams. But in today’s world, loyalty has become rare. People switch jobs for a
small raise, leave relationships when things get hard, and forsake commitments
for convenience. Yet the Bible elevates loyalty as a divine virtue. Today, we
will explore three things: the source of loyalty, the sacrifice of loyalty, and
the reward of loyalty—all through the lens of Ruth, a young widow whose loyalty
changed history.
1. The
Source of Loyalty: A Heart Bound by Love (5 minutes)
In Ruth 1,
Naomi loses her husband and two sons. She is bitter, empty, and tells her
daughters-in-law to leave her. Orpah leaves, crying. But Ruth
"clings" to her. The Hebrew word here is dabaq—the same word used in
Genesis 2:24, where a man "clings" to his wife. Ruth’s loyalty is not
duty; it is devotion.
Point:
True loyalty
doesn’t come from obligation—it comes from a heart that has experienced
steadfast love (hesed). Ruth had seen Naomi’s kindness. She had come to know
Naomi’s God. That covenant love became the source of her loyalty.
Application:
You cannot
manufacture loyalty in your own strength. It flows from knowing the God who is
faithful even when we are faithless (2 Timothy 2:13). When God’s loyal love
fills you, you can remain loyal to difficult people, imperfect churches, and
fading dreams.
2. The
Sacrifice of Loyalty: Staying When Leaving Is Easier (5 minutes)
Ruth had
every reason to leave. She was a Moabite widow—no status, no provision, no
future in Israel. Staying with Naomi meant poverty, danger, and social
rejection. Yet she said, "Where you go I will go... your God my God."
Point:
Loyalty
always costs something. It means staying when leaving is logical. It means
forgiving when bitterness feels justified. It means speaking well of someone
who cannot defend themselves. Ruth sacrificed her comfort, her homeland, and
her chances of remarriage among her own people.
Real-life
example:
Think of
Jonathan in 1 Samuel 20. He was loyal to David even though David was the rival
to his own throne. Jonathan risked his father’s rage. That is the power of
loyal love—it says, "Your victory is more important than my
position."
3. The
Reward of Loyalty: God’s Unexpected Multiplication (5 minutes)
Ruth did not
stay loyal because she saw the reward. But look at what loyalty produced:
Provision:
Boaz noticed her loyalty to Naomi (Ruth 2:11) and protected her.
Redemption:
Boaz married her and became her kinsman-redeemer.
Royalty:
From Ruth and Boaz came Obed, then Jesse, then David—and ultimately, Jesus
Christ (Matthew 1:5).
Point:
Loyalty
plants seeds that you may never see harvest. But God sees. God remembers. God
repays. You may be loyal to a spouse who never thanks you, a friend who never
reciprocates, a church that overlooks you, or a calling that brings no
applause. But heaven keeps the books.
Quote:
"Loyalty
is not a transaction; it is a testimony."
Conclusion
& Call to Action (3 minutes)
Ruth never
saw Jesus. But because of her loyalty, she became part of His lineage. Today,
who is the Naomi in your life? A parent? A pastor? A struggling friend? A
ministry that feels dry? God is calling you to dabaq—to cling, to stay, to be
loyal.
Let me ask
you three questions:
Where have
you abandoned loyalty because it got hard?
Where do you
need to repent and return?
Will you
trust God to honor your loyalty, even if no one else sees it?
Let us pray.
Prayer:
Lord, teach
us the power of loyal love. Forgive us for leaving when we should have stayed.
Fill us with Your hesed—Your covenant faithfulness—so that we can be loyal to
You, to Your people, and to Your purposes. In Jesus’ name, Amen.





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