The Barefoot Presence of God (Part 2)
“Now this was the manner in former time in Israel concerning redeeming and concerning changing, for to confirm all things; a man plucked off his shoe, and gave it to his neighbor: and this was a testimony in Israel.” Ruth 4:7
The Bible shows us that in covenant, shoes represented rights. When a man removed his shoe and gave it to another, he was surrendering authority, releasing ownership, and transferring responsibility. In the story of Ruth, the next of kin took off his shoe and gave it to Boaz, signifying that he was releasing his right to redeem her. Boaz then stepped into that place as the kinsman redeemer. This is the language of covenant: when the shoe comes off, surrender begins.
When you get your shoes off, God steps in them. What Moses could not do in his own strength, God did when he stepped into his life. When Moses lifted that staff over the Red Sea, the impossible opened. When that same rod was lifted, plagues struck Egypt, and deliverance came to Israel. God took what was in Moses’ past. He took the forty years of shepherding in the desert and turned it into a tool of deliverance. The very thing shaped in obscurity became the instrument of freedom. God never wastes your past. He redeems it for His purpose.
God asked Moses, “What is that in your hand?” It was just a staff, but in God’s hands it became a miracle. That is what happens when you surrender your shoes. Your past, your pain, your broken seasons, and even your wilderness can yield something powerful. God steps into it and uses it for His glory. The enemy meant it for bondage, but God turns it into breakthrough. You can praise Him even for the dark days, because nothing He allows is wasted in His plan.
This is the power of covenant. Joshua was told that every place the sole of his foot would tread, God would give him. Not the shoe, but the foot. And again in Joshua 14:9, Caleb declares that the land he walked on would become his inheritance. The promise was connected to surrender and movement in God’s direction. When you are barefoot in obedience, wherever you stand becomes holy ground and promised ground.
This is the call today: take off your shoes. Stop trying to control what only God can redeem. Let Him step into your past, your weakness, and your future. Because when you surrender your rights, God steps into your place and what you could never do alone, He does through you.
Prayer: Lord, I surrender my rights, my past, and my control to You. Step into every area of my life and redeem what I could never fix on my own. Use my story for Your glory and lead me in full obedience to Your will. Amen.
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