Ruth…is a woman beloved by all who read her
story. Some have found more in her than perhaps they might… But what a story!… Reading it,
studying it, never fails to yield something new and
enduring, robust and inspiring, sobering and compelling. –EDWARD F.
CAMPBELL, JR.
The most important demographic information about
Ruth is her ethnicity. She is from Moab, a country adjacent to Israel. Hold on
to this nugget as we consider the details of the Old Testament book that bears
her name: Ruth is 100% Moabite, 0% Jew.
The story begins in Israel in the thirteenth
century B.C. in the small town of Bethlehem. A severe drought plagues the whole
region, forcing Elimilech, his wife Naomi, and their two sons—a family 100%
Jewish—to seek refuge in Moab. While there, both boys marry Moabite women. The
oldest, Mahlon, takes Ruth as his wife. Orpah becomes the bride of Kilion, the
youngest.
Shortly thereafter, the bottom falls out of
Naomi's life. All three men die in Moab, leaving Naomi, Ruth, and Orpah widows.
To add to her woes, Naomi is years past childbearing age and has no male heir
to carry on the family name. It is, indeed, a tragedy for her beyond words.
Naomi decides to pick up the pieces of her life
back in Bethlehem, where the famine has now passed. She departs Moab with Orpah
and Ruth at her side, but a short distance down the road she lovingly
encourages them to turn back. Orpah takes her advice, but Ruth remains
determined to go with her to Israel. "Your people will be my people,"
she promises her mother-in-law, "and your God my God."
A few days later the two women receive a warm
welcome from the townspeople of Bethlehem. Naomi, however, is in no mood for
gaiety. She recounts her misfortune in Moab and asks that her name be changed
from Naomi ("pleasant") to Mara ("bitter"). The first
chapter ends with this summary verse: "So Naomi returned from Moab
accompanied by Ruth the Moabitess, her daughter-in-law, arriving in Bethlehem
as the barley harvest was beginning."
Needing food, Ruth receives permission from Naomi
to go to some local fields and gather leftover grain from the harvest. She
works from dawn to dusk with only a brief rest, so persistent in her duty that
even the foreman of the harvesters takes notice. When the owner of the field
inquires about her, the foreman compliments her diligence. That landowner, a
Jew named Boaz, has compassion on Ruth and gives her preferential treatment. He
allows her to pick grain with the servant girls, orders his men to look after
her, even offers her refreshment from his water jugs and supper at his table.
When asked by Ruth about his kindness toward her, Boaz makes it clear she has
earned it. "I've been told," he explains, "all about what you
have done for your mother-in-law since the death of your husband—how you left your
father and mother and your homeland and came to live with a people you did not
know before. May the Lord repay you for what you have done."
At day's end, Naomi can hardly believe the amount
of grain (22 liters plus) that Ruth brings back home. Then delight turns to amazement
when she hears that Boaz is Ruth's benefactor. "That man," Naomi
tells Ruth, "is our close relative, linked by blood to my deceased husband
Elimilech!"
Naomi sees in this good fortune a golden
opportunity. She knows under Jewish law that the next-of-kin is obligated to
father a male offspring for a childless widow, thereby ensuring continuation of
the family line. Although Naomi herself is too old to become pregnant, she sees
in Boaz and Ruth the possibility of restoration. With this end in mind, she
devises a plan. She instructs Ruth to wash and perfume herself then to boldly
lie beside Boaz as he sleeps on the threshing floor. When he awakens, she is to
remind him of his obligation to be Naomi's kinsman-redeemer.
Naomi's plan works to perfection. Boaz does agree
to assume the kinsman-redeemer role, but only after a relative closer than he
to Elimilech declines the offer to fulfill the obligation. He takes Ruth as his
wife. She bears him a son and gives Naomi, at long last, a male heir. They name
him Obed. Here is where Ruth's ethnicity becomes so important. Obed, this son
of Boaz and Ruth, is of mixed blood—50% Jewish and 50% Moabite.
The book of Ruth ends with this verse: "Obed
was the father of Jesse, and Jesse the father of David." Yes, that
David! The shepherd who becomes king, the ruler of Israel's golden age, is none
other than Ruth's great-grandson. This means, of course, that flowing through
David's veins is some Moabite blood. Future nationalistic generations would
choose to ignore this fact, but Jewish history reveals King David to be part
Jew, part Gentile.
Now fast-forward one thousand years to the
genealogy of Jesus recorded in the first chapter of Matthew's gospel. Among the
list of Jesus' ancestors are "Boaz, the father of Obed by Ruth, and Obed
the father of Jesse, and Jesse the father of David the king." Jesus,
Matthew reminds us, is also part Moabite.
Isn't it gloriously ironic that the Great
Redeemer was born in the same town in which Boaz played kinsman redeemer to
Naomi? And isn't it just as fascinating that the Savior of the whole world is
linked by race to every person? Jesus shed on the cross a mixture of Jewish and
Gentile blood, thanks to a young Moabite woman and middle-aged Jewish man who
chose to restore Naomi's family line.
SELF-REFLECT
1
Faithfulness was one of Ruth’s
best traits. On a scale of 1 to 10, rank your faithfulness to God and others.
2
Resilience and persistence
describe Naomi. On a 1 to 10 scale, rank your resilience and persistence in
serving God.
3
Boaz was charitable and
compassionate. On a 1 to 10 scale, how charitable and compassionate are you?
4
All three characters took the initiative at some point in the
story. How and when did each take control? Commit now to act in faithfulness,
persistence, resilience, and compassion when the situation arises.
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