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Deuteronomy 25:5-10

Hebrew Key Terms:

  • H2992 יָבָם (yavam) - "to perform levirate duty"
  • H2993 יָבָם (yavam) - "brother-in-law, levir"
  • H2994 יְבֵמֶת (yevemeth) - "sister-in-law"
  • H1060 בְּכוֹר (bekhor) - "firstborn"
  • H6965 קוּם (qum) - "to rise, establish"
  • H8034 שֵׁם (shem) - "name"
  • H4229 מָחָה (machah) - "to blot out, wipe away"
  • H5275 נַעַל (naʿal) - "sandal"
  • H2502 חָלַץ (chalats) - "to remove, draw off"

Context: The levirate marriage law (from Latin levir, "brother-in-law") requires that when brothers live together and one dies childless, "his brother's wife must not marry outside the family. Her husband's brother is to take her as his wife and fulfill the duty of a brother-in-law to her" (v. 5). The purpose: "The first son she bears will be named after the dead brother, so that his name will not be blotted out from Israel" (v. 6). If the brother refuses, the widow may publicly shame him by removing his sandal and spitting in his face (vv. 9-10).

OT-to-OT Development:

  • Genesis 38 records Judah's family practicing levirate obligation with Tamar, before Sinai legislation. The institution predates Moses.
  • Ruth 4:7-8 adapts the sandal ceremony: the nearer kinsman removes his sandal and gives it to Boaz, transferring redemption rights. Ruth extends levirate-type duty beyond brothers to wider kinsmen.
  • Matthew 22:23-28 shows the Sadducees using levirate law to challenge Jesus about resurrection.

Connections:

  • TO OT: Genesis 38:8 (Onan's duty to Tamar), Genesis 38:26 (Judah acknowledges Tamar's righteousness)
  • FROM OT: Ruth 4:5-10 (Boaz combines goel and levirate elements), Ruth 4:7-8 (sandal ceremony adapted)
  • FROM NT: Matthew 22:23-28 (Sadducees' question about resurrection and levirate marriage)

Christological Connection: The levirate law points to Christ in multiple ways. (1) Raising Up the Name of the Dead: The firstborn "will be named after the dead brother." Christ raises up spiritual offspring for those dead in sin—"the children God has given Me" (Heb 2:13). (2) Brother's Duty: The living brother represents the dead. Christ became our "brother" (Heb 2:11-12) to represent us. (3) Sandal Transferred: The nearer kinsman in Ruth gives Boaz his sandal, transferring redemption rights. The law was unable to redeem (Rom 8:3); Christ received what the law could not accomplish. (4) Preservation of Inheritance: The levirate ensures inheritance continuity. Christ ensures believers' eternal inheritance (1 Pet 1:4). (5) Seed Continuation: The law guarantees descendants; Christ guarantees "a great multitude that no one could number" (Rev 7:9).

Connection Method(s): Typology (Direct, Forward-Looking) — The levirate marriage law requiring a kinsman to raise up offspring for the deceased prefigures Christ who through His death and resurrection raises up a people (spiritual offspring) for God.

Trajectory Table: 015 - Boaz (Kinsman-Redeemer)