The story of Ruth and Boaz is most captivating.
I am sold. Boaz is my main man! And Ruth, well, what more
can be said of her? A power couple, I think. If you hang with me for a minute,
you’ll get to see why………….
Few men are known or remembered for the women they marry.
Not many are known for their marital choice. It is normally the other way round
- a woman will be known for the man she marries. But in this story, we get to
meet a powerful man, who if it were not for his choice of a woman, we would
probably know very little about. But before I rave about Boaz, let’s go back a
little bit and give his story some context.
So there’s a man named Elimelek. He has a wife, Naomi
(beautiful name), and two sons, and they all live in Bethlehem. In the passing
of time, drought hits their land, and this pushes the small family of four to
move to the land of Moab. The couple’s sons are still bachelors when the family
migrates to Moab. And it is here, in Moab, that the two sons find themselves
two lovely local (Moabite) women.
During the 10 years of living in Moab, tragedy strikes the
family. All three men die. We do not know the causes of the deaths, or whether they all died around the same time. All we know is that first died the father,
and the two sons followed. The sons leave no children behind. And that’s the
tragedy of life - a woman is left without a husband. Her deceased sons leave
her with two young wives.
The matriarch makes a difficult decision – she is going
to go back home, and face the world she had left behind. She and her husband
with their two sons left their home with the hope of finding a better life in
exile – in Moab. But here she is, coming back with no husband or son. In a
sense, she is coming back poorer than when she left. I think one of the reasons
why I admire Naomi is her tenacity to face life head-on. Whatever the town will
say when she gets back, she will face it. Be it, scorn, pity, shame or even sympathy,
she’ll face it.
On the way back with her two daughters-in-law, she says
to them: “Listen girls, I’ve got nothing to give you. You married my sons, but
they’re both dead now. And look at you, you’re still young and have lives ahead
of you. There are no prospects for me that I’ll get married again, but that
doesn’t apply to you. Now go back home to Moab, to your families, you might get
lucky and find men who would marry you”. She is, in today’s context, giving
them her blessing to move on with their lives. She’s a very realistic and kind
woman, this Naomi. I love her.
One of them, Orpah, accepts this blessing. She turns back
and goes home and we hear nothing about her again. The other, Ruth, makes a
bold move – “not a chance, I’m not going
back. Let’s not argue about this, I’m going with you. Husband or not, I’m going
with you. Foreign as your country might be, I’m sticking by my decision”,
and it is here that she utters those famous words – “where you go, I will go. Where you stay I will stay. Your people will be my people and your God
my God”. {I pause and take this in - wow}. Now I love Ruth.
Naomi can’t counter such staunchness and determination
from her daughter-in-law. Ruth knows what she wants.
Anyway, they arrive back in Bethlehem with very little in
terms of possessions, and it is here that we get to meet our man.
Boaz, it is said, was a man of means – he was rich. He
owned land and had workers tilling his land. Our first experience of Boaz is
when he arrives at the field. He is a powerful man – rich, with authority. He
arrives to oversee how the workers are doing, and he impresses me with how he
interacts with his workers. He greets the harvesters, “The LORD be with you!”
he says to them. “The LORD bless
you”, they respond. (Such beautiful
exchanges!!!).This was probably a normal way of greeting in those times, but it
somehow gives me an impression of a man who is powerful, yet full of humility
and grace.
And note that he noticed her before he knew anything
about her.
He asks about her, who she is and so forth. They tell him
of her little history – she is a young widow who refused to let her widowed
mother-in-law come back from exile alone. She is a woman who left her home, her
place of birth, and followed her mother-in-law to a foreign land, thereby
embracing a new life and people, and to serve a foreign God.
I think this is where he really sits up and takes a
closer look. For most men, this would
probably have been where it all stopped.
A turn-off, if you will. “Nah,
she’s got a history”. Perhaps she might have even appeared to be a little
intimidating to other men. “What woman
leaves her people, where she has prospects of remarriage, but goes to a foreign
land with her widowed mother-in-law? Nah,
she’s too attached to her mother-in-law”
No, not Boaz. Boaz is, in fact, impressed with Ruth and
develops compassion for this lady. So enthralled by her history, and humanity
that he goes to her and they have their first recorded encounter. And thus
begins a love-story that will change the course of Christian history…..
My next post will show why I admire Boaz……
Mmmmm ya neh. It is quite a captivating story indeed. I wish you gave us the platform to predict your admire to Boaz ... :) ('part 2') *hides*.
ReplyDeleteWoow this is a very beautiful and captivating story, i cant wait for part 2 and i think i will be walking away with a life leasson from this.
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