Ruth Part 2: The Parable of the Good Moabite

Scripture Readings: 
Genesis 5:28-29
Luke 10:25-37
Ruth 1:6-22

Last week we began our study of the book of Ruth.  We saw a man named Elimelech from Bethlehem lead his family to the land of Moab because of a famine.  The story indicates the famine is a punishment from God.  According to Deuteronomy, there was a solution to the problem of famine and that was repentance.  Elimelech devises his own solution by going to Moab.  

The problem is Elimelech is an Israelite and the Moabites were historical and bitter enemies of the Israelites.  Further Elimelech was from the tribe of Judah, the tribe that the future king of Israel would come from who would eventually bring peace and prosperity to the earth.  Elimelech shows his contempt for the promises of God and for the land God had given his family by leaving.  

When we arrive at our text today the situation has changed.  Elimelech and his two sons are dead leaving only Elimelech’s wife Naomi and the wives of his sons Ruth and Orpah.  The story will now shift focus away from Elimelech and to Naomi.  From now on what we have is the story of the redemption of Naomi.  

Our passage today starts with a gift to Naomi and her family from God.  Here God provides news to Naomi from Israel -  God has acted to relieve His people from the famine.  Verse 6 says that the Lord has visited His people and given them bread.  So, not only has God provided for them the basic necessity of food, but God has given them bread.  Most importantly verse 6 has God call Israel His people.  By using the term His people, the text lets us know that God has not abandoned His relationship with Israel.  Over and over again the Old Testament repeats the refrain, “I will be your God and you will be my people” to summarize God’s goal in His relationship with Israel.  Despite the famine, God still considers Israel His people.  The relationship has been restored.

Despite this evidence of God’s blessing, Naomi’s situation is perilous.  First, she is a widow which was not a good situation for those in the ancient near east.  Women had few independent means available to provide for themselves.  It is true that the torah commanded the Israelites to care for the widows and for this very reason that they were at a severe economic disadvantage.  Remember that this is the time of the Judges and if the book of Judges teaches us anything it is that the most vulnerable in Israelite society and especially women were taken advantage of, exploited, and oppressed.  Women were looked at property to be exploited for their sexuality and disposed of as the men around them saw fit.  The record of Judges is the record of men with power murdering innocent young women.  This is the world Naomi is returning to and for Naomi who is old, without a husband, and who has spent the last ten years in the country of the enemy and could potentially be viewed as a traitor, return is dangerous.  

On top of this, Naomi has lost her husband and her two sons and has no prospect of carrying on her family name.  There is only one conclusion that her fellow Israelites would draw from these occurrences.  They would not see this as a series of unfortunate events, but evidence that Naomi has been cursed by God Himself.  If Namoi would return, it is probable the Bethlehem community would view her as a under God’s curse and worthy of abuse.  

As precarious as return is for Naomi, the situation for Ruth and Orpah was worse.  Ruth and Orpah were actual Moabites and their connection with Naomi was a result of the sin of intermarriage by their dead ex husbands.  Ruth and Orpah were foreigners and refugees and though the torah commanded that foreigners and refugees be taken care of, Israel is not likely in a hospitable mood.  Ruth and Orpah are not going to Canada where Pierre Trudeau and a group of children are waiting to meet them.  They are going to a country that is hostile and understandably so since the Moabites had a history of opposing and oppressing the Israelites.    

So Naomi’s plea to Ruth and Orpah to release them from any obligation to remain with Naomi as she returns to Israel should be seen as a kindness on Naomi’s part.  Naomi asks that they return to the house of their mothers.  This is an odd expression, you would typically expect to hear house of your fathers.  However, from other uses of this phrase it seems to have to do with marriage.  Naomi is releasing her daughters-in-law to remarry and move on with their lives.  She even offers a blessing on them from the God of Israel.  

It is significant that Naomi offers this blessing on Ruth and Orpah in the name of YHWH because YHWH is the covenant name of God that is used by His people.  However, Naomi does not stop there.  Naomi asks that YHWH demonstrate the kindness that Ruth and Orpah have demonstrated.  YHWH is being asked to model His kindness after the kindness of these two Moabite women.  What is even more remarkable is the Hebrew word translated here as kindness is hesed.  

I have talked about hesed before and I will do so again.  It is really one of the few Hebrew words you really need to know.  The reason you need to know hesed is because no one English word is really adequate to communicate the concept of hesed.  So to understand what is being communicated we cannot rely on our translations.  Typical translations of hesed include kindness, mercy, faithfulness, love, lovingkindness.    The word hesed is most commonly used an attribute for God.  In fact when God reveals Himself to Moses, what is proclaimed is a God abounding in hesed.

Hesed is always used in a context of a relationship as it is used here describing the relationship between Naomi and her daughters-in-law.  I like to think of hesed in terms of loyalty and this makes since because it is always used in the context of a relationship like that of a subject to a king or among members of a clan or family.  It is a deep devotion resulting in action.  These actions go beyond requirements or duty.   So the love, mercy, and grace God shows to His people because of His relationship with them is all bound together in this concept of hesed.

It is Naomi’s prayer that YHWH’s hesed would result in rest.  Rest is another theologically important word.  The sabbath is a day of rest because it points to the goal of humanity’s work on earth.  We are to model our work after God who worked creating and filling the earth and then rested when His work was completed.  However, because of sin our work has been frustrated.  This is the whole point of Ecclesiastes.  The opposite of the habel in Ecclesiastes that we spent so much time talking about is rest.  Way back in Genesis 5 a man named Lamech who called upon the name YHWH, had a son he named Noah.  We are told that Lamech names him Noah in the hope that he would be the one who bring rest from the ground that YHWH had cursed.  If you remember last week, I made the point that the first five verses of Ruth paint a picture of family under a curse.  Naomi’s prayer for her daughters-in-law is that they will find relief.  

It is no coincidence that the text is using all of these theologically charged terms.  The Biblically attuned hearer would recognize echoes of God’s big plan of redemption for the cosmos and find it illustrated in this story of a woman who is under a curse and needs redemption.  What we have in Ruth is a parable told in a very relatable way about our  common human situation and God’s plan of salvation for humanity.  

I make this point because we need to introduce another important word in this story.  In Hebrew the word is shuv.  Shuv means return and is used 12 times in this passage.  Repetition is a key method Hebrew narrative uses to emphasize a point.  So whenever you hear a word repeated like this, we should pay attention.  At several points its even used in a weird way.  For example, you will notice that return is used with Ruth to describe her journey with Naomi to the land of Judah.  The problem is that Ruth had never been to Judah.  Until this point Ruth had lived her whole life in Moab.  So the question is why does the text use this specific word when others would work just fine?

The answer is found in the beautiful poem Ruth comprises to answer Naomi’s plea for her to return to Moab.  “For where you go I will go, and where you lodge I will lodge.  Your people shall be my people and your God my God. Where die I will die, and there I will be buried.”  Ruth has so completely identified herself with Naomi, she has so completely subordinated her own plans and agendas to Naomi, that she and Naomi are the same.  

Now here is the interesting point - the Hebrew word shuv is also the word for repent.  If you remember last week, I said that the famine that afflicts the land of Judah is not an ordinary natural event.  It is the result of a curse because of the disobedience of Israel.  God had entered into a sort of contract with Israel and Israel had broken their part of the deal.  Deuteronomy tells us there were a set of penalties if Israel failed to uphold their end of the covenant and this included famine.  However, I also said that Deuteronomy also anticipated that Israel would break the covenant and provided a solution.  The solution was repentance.  

So what we have is a picture of what repentance looks like.  Repentance is exemplified by Ruth who has completely abandoned her past, all previous connections, ties, opportunities, and plans and has reformulated her life completely to something else.  Ruth has even vowed to die where Naomi dies and be buried with her.  This is a stunning statement because the location of your burial was of supreme importance to those in the Ancient Near East culture. 

Ruth has completely identified with her mother-in-law, a follower of YHWH, an Israelite, God’s chosen people, from the royal tribe of Judah who will produce the king who will bring peace and prosperity to the whole world.  Elimelech had abandoned this plan.  Here Ruth the Moabite, who in this story is used as a picture of true repentance.  She has now reformulated her whole life to be a part of this plan.  

This was Israel’s job, to be the people who bring YHWH’s blessing to the rest of the world.  What is interesting is that we see Naomi,a true Israelite, performing this role in probably the most imperfect fashion possible.  She has left the promised land and allowed her sons to marry foreigners who have no interest in the promises given to her people.

We totally miss this point because we don’t understand what a small town Bethlehem was and how it must have been a slap in the face to every other villager who remained through the famine.  Then to return with a Moabite woman who had married her Israelite son something forbidden to the people of Israel.  You can imagine the self righteousness of the villagers was through the roof.  I can imagine when Naomi logged onto her Facebook and read the statuses from her Bethlehem friends it must have been like, “Hungry, but happy to be living in the land God gave us.”  “My father and grandfather didn’t suffer fighting Canaanites so we could leave at the first sign of famine,” “How soon we forget the evil of King Eglon of Moab.”

However, when Naomi returns the community does not spurn her as a traitor.  Instead the community takes pity on Naomi.  Time, grief, and sorrow had taken their toll on Naomi and it was apparent to those who had known her before.  Naomi means pleasant but Naomi insists that instead she be called Mara which means bitter.  Naomi’s insistence on a name change is consistent with her identity.  Her view of herself is so afflicted by sorrow it is too painful to hear the name pleasant.  Furthermore, Naomi places the blame for her state squarely on God.   

Interestingly, she uses the title Shadday twice which is translated Almighty.  Shadday is not a name of God, it is an adjective describing God.  The entomology of Shady is difficult and disputed, but I think the key is to see it as a reference to Genesis.  Shadday occurs six times in Genesis but at every point it is used in conjunction with the covenant promise of fertility and children.  Here is the root of Naomi’s bitterness.  She has no children and no prospect of carrying on the family of her husband.  In her culture that is pretty much her only purpose and now it has been taken from her by God Himself.  

Yet, Naomi is now back in the promised land where there is bread.  The townspeople do not hate her, instead they pity her.  Her daughter-in-law has shown amazing devotion to her.  On top of that Naomi has missed the point that Shadday the God who brings children and fertility in Genesis again and again did so despite barrenness.  A recurring theme throughout Genesis is God bringing life out of lifelessness.  

So Naomi represents a return but it is not a complete return.  We will have to wait for the redemption of Naomi.  Naomi is still under a curse and without joy.  We sense again the story shifting its focus.  At first the focus is Elimelech, here it is Naomi, but we see the spotlight moving to Ruth.  Listen to how this scene ends.  “So Naomi returned, and Ruth the Moabite her daughter in law with her, who returned from the country of Moab.  And they came to Bethlehem at the beginning of the barley harvest.”

The return of Naomi is stated briefly and succinctly almost in passing.  Barley is significant because you can make beer out of it, but more likely mentioned here because it was the first crop that was harvested.  The time is early spring and so the text is signaling that there is hope and renewal ahead.  However, the most remarkable feature is the length devoted to the return of Ruth.  Twice the verse mentions she has returned from Moab.  

If you were an ancient Israelite the transition from Elimelech to Naomi to Ruth as the hero of this story is beyond shocking.  Remember we said the story of the great fathers of the Israelites starts with a famine and so the reader would anticipate Elimelech following in their footsteps.  However, like in so many cases, God is working to subvert the normal order and is doing something completely unexpected.

Ruth’s actions and especially her song are portrayed as unbelievably virtuous.  Think of who gets to sing songs in the Old Testament.  Adam after seeing Eve, Moses after the defeat of the Egyptians at the Red Sea, Hannah at the birth of Samuel, David in the Psalms.  Ruth is being elevated by this story to this level and yet the text cannot stop reminding us she is a hated, despised Moabite, the enemies of God.

In fact we could rename the book of Ruth, the parable of the good Moabite.  Think about the parallels between the story of Ruth and the parable of the good Samaritan.  The Samaritans were a despised people that chose to assimilate with the Assyrians rather than fight them.  They intermarried and rejected the promises of YHWH and formed their own syncretic religion rejecting Jerusalem.  They were traitors and despised by the Jews.  However, Jesus shows the Samaritan exemplifying the virtues of Israel in a way above and beyond any obligation and duty.  

The Samaritan is a model of YHWH’s hesed as is Ruth.  He takes the beaten man to an Israelite inn and pays for his care.  This would be the equivalent of an Indian in the Old West showing up in a frontier town carrying a white man with two arrows in his back.  Ruth abandons everything to face potential hostility with almost no chance of a meaningful and prosperous life.  Notice Ruth’s poem mentions death three times.  Her future is to die with Naomi.  All of this because of her relationship to her mother-in-law.  

So its not a stretch to see the story of Ruth as the basis for the Parable of the Good Samaritan.  What I think is fun about making that parallel is it is in response to a teacher of the law that Jesus tells this parable.  At this time a teacher of the law would be like a Bible scholar.  The story is so radical to the teacher of the law and I would imagine the rest of the audience, yet they had probably had the story of Ruth for hundreds of years.  It was likely read every year during the Feast of Weeks.  Ruth is a great story and no doubt the ancient Israelites enjoyed it too.  Yet they probably heard the parable of the Good Samaritan and thought it came way out of left field.   Jesus must have seemed like such a radical.  Yet Jesus is not near the innovator He seemed.  

The other interesting thing is that the Parable of the Good Samaritan is told in the context of repentance.  The lawyer asks, “Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?”
We sort of miss the point because of the translation, but eternal life is a translation of the Greek phrase, zoe ainios.  Zoe is of course life such a zoology and ainios is like our word eon in the since of an epoch or age.  So a better translation might be life of the age.  You see in Hebrew thought there were two ages, the olam ha zeh or this life and the olam ha ba or life to come.  The olam ha ba or life to come is the time when YHWH comes to earth and establishes His rule conquering Israel’s enemies and creating peace and prosperity for His people.  This is what the lawyer wants to be part of.  The lawyer also knew based on the Deuteronomy passage we talked about last week that the olam ha ba would come when Israel returned to God and obeyed the torah again.  The word for the returnnis of course shuv or repent.  

Jesus turns the question on the lawyer and essentially asks the lawyer what repentance is all about.  The lawyer says obeying the law as summed up in the two great commandments.  It is one thing to give the right answer but it is another to actually do it and Jesus wants the lawyer to understand the radical nature of repentance.  His story of the good Samaritan paints a vivid picture of what is involved in hesed and to add insult to injury demonstrates by using a hated Samaritan.  So what Jesus’ simple story has done is subverted the lawyer’s entire worldview by showing that repentance is not about being a part of this people group and its not about simply following a few rules.  

So what we have in both stories is two models of what repentance looks like.  Naomi returns.  She fulfills the surface meaning of repentance.  The teacher of the law also fulfills the surface meaning of repentance.  However, Ruth and the Samaritan demonstrate real repentance in a far more meaningful way.  Repentance for the Samaritan and for Ruth means leaving it all behind, their background, their agenda, their commitments and their plans and radically reorienting them.  Jesus’ words to the teacher of the law are to go and do likewise.  

Ruth has demonstrated a fully fleshed out picture of what repentance looks like and I think its more difficult but also a more beautiful and meaningful picture than our typical high minded abstract theological definition of repentance.  For God’s people, the answer to the problem of the brokenness of the world, to the problem of the violence and oppression that surrounds us, the solution to the curse, the way we are to enter into rest, is repentance.  We must return if we are to be part of God’s people and enter the age to come.  It is a daunting task filled with danger and uncertainty.  It is not safe and it is not achieved by our own plans and schemes.  Instead we must identify with Christ to such an extent that we abandon our own identity.  He will lead us to true rest where we can find more than bread and relief but a home both in this age and the age to come. 

Ruth Part 1: Under a Curse (Dr. Trey Benfield)

Scripture Readings: 

Genesis 12:10-20
Deuteronomy 30:1-9
Ruth 1:1-5

For the next 7-8 weeks I will be preaching through the book of Ruth.  Ruth is a great story and the timing of our series could not be better.   In ancient Israel the start of the year began in spring with Passover which coincided with the start of the barley harvest.  For the next 7 weeks barley and then wheat would be harvested.  At the end of the wheat harvest was a festival called the Feast of Weeks.  Today we celebrate these holidays as Easter and then 7 weeks later as Pentecost.  The story of Ruth is set during the 7 weeks of the wheat and barley harvest and the book of Ruth is typically read during the Feast of Weeks even among Jews today.  So in a kind of neat way our lives will parallel the story of Ruth as we study Ruth for the next few weeks.

Ruth opens with the phrase “Now it happened in the time...”  This is a common way the Bible introduces a book similar to how a fairy tale might begin with “Once upon a time..”  or better yet “A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.”  However, the point of the phrase is to connect the book it opens with an earlier work.  For example, Leviticus begins the same way because it wants us to connect the Levitical law with the ending of Exodus which covers the building of the tabernacle so that we connect the book of Leviticus to the tabernacle.

Now we are told that the setting of Ruth is during the time the judges were judging.  So the author wants us to understand that is set during the time of the judges.  The judges were a series of tribal chieftains who were raised up by God in response to various threats the Israelites faced.  The time period the of judges followed Moses and Joshua and the Exodus when Israel began to establish themselves in the land of Canaan and before the monarchy which began with Saul and David.  If you like dates, this would place Ruth sometime between 1300 and 1050 B.C.  

The purpose of this phrase in Ruth is not to satisfy later historically minded reader’s curiosity.  The Old Testament historians did not write history the way we think of it.  History was meant to do more than communicate facts, but rather was written to make a theological point.  If you know anything about the book of Judges, you know it is generally a negative, depressing, and violent book.  It was a period of anarchy where those with power did whatever they wished without regard to any sort of ethics or morality.  This was exactly the situation the law of Moses was meant to remedy.  The book of Judges ends with these words, “There was no king in Israel.  Everyone did what was right in his own eyes.” Not only does Judges end with these words, but this refrain was repeated throughout the book.  

Here is how Moses in Deuteronomy describes God’s purpose for His selecting Israel from among the nations and for the purpose of giving them the law.  “See, I have taught you statutes and rules, as the Lord my God commanded me, that you should do them in the land you are entering to take possession of it.  Keep them and do them for that will be your wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the people, who, when they hear all these statutes, will say, ‘Surely this great nation is wise and understanding people.’ For what great nation is there that has a god so near to it as the Lord our God is to us, whenever we call upon Him?  And what great nation is there, that statutes and rules so righteous as all this law that I set before you today?”  

If you remember way back in Genesis 12, God’s plan for Abraham was to make his descendants a great people with a great land and that through them all the nations of the earth were to be blessed.   They were to be the shining city on the hill.  What Judges wants us to see is that Israel has failed to live up to this ideal.  Instead they are just like every other nation where the only rule is power brought about by violence.  

In light of this background we are to read the famine as no ordinary natural occurrence.  The text hints at this - famine is the subject not the object of the verb.  The proper force of the words are not that there was a famine in the land, but that literally famine stalked the land as if famine were personified.  This should not come as surprise since famine was one of the curses outlined in Deuteronomy if Israel did not live up to their part of the bargain and instead rejected YHWH as king by rejecting his laws.

Here is what Deuteronomy says will happen if Israel breaks the covenant YHWH had made with them:  “And the heavens over your head shall be bronze, and the earth under you shall be iron.  YHWH will make the rain of your land powder.  From heaven dust shall come down on you until you are destroyed.”  So what Ruth wants us to understand is that Israel is not suffering a series of unfortunate events.  The people are in effect under a curse.      

Now I feel I should stop here and say something about the concept of famine as punishment.  Namely are we today supposed to see the hand of God in places afflicted by famine?  Can we look back at Ethiopia and the 1980s or Biafra in the 1960s or China in the 1930s as under a curse sent by God.  My answer, despite many Christian teachers who have said so, is no we cannot say that.  Here is the reason why.  The curse of famine here is a result of the breaking of the covenant established with Israel at Mount Sinai. That covenant has been broken, the Israelites were removed from their land by the Babylonians and has been replaced by a New Covenant established by Christ by His death and resurrection.  Rejection of this covenant carries its own penalties.  Hebrews tell us there will be no sacrifice for sin and that we can expect judgment and the fury of fire that will consume adversaries of Christ.  

At this point in the the passage our attention shifts to a particular family suffering under the curse.  We are giving very few details about them.  All we know is that it is a man, his wife and their two children.  What we are told is that the family is from Bethlehem of Judah.  Many of you know that Bethlehem can be translated house of bread because it is a very fertile area.  The irony of the family leaving the house of bread for what is called the fields of Moab once again lets us know that there is an reversal of the natural order.  More importantly for the story of Ruth as a whole, this family is from Judah.

The way the text flows, their location is more important than even their names.  You see Judah is significant because according to Genesis 49, the king of Israel will come from the tribe of Judah.  Remember a lack of a king that would lead the people as a loyal vassal of YHWH is what the book of Judges identifies as the problem in Israel.  The violence, oppression, and depression of Israel at the time of Ruth is because there was no king in Israel and every man did what was right in his own eyes.  

However, this king to come from Judah was no ordinary ruler.  Genesis 49 says this the king who in the last days will rule not just Israel but the whole world.  This king will bring prosperity to Israel.  The book of Numbers takes this and elaborates further and says this king will bring the blessing to all the nations.  This is a fulfillment of the promise to Abraham that all the nations of the earth would be blessed through him.  

By leaving the promised land and his people, Elimelech is showing his disbelief and rejection of this promise.  Like Lot and Esau, Elimelech shows no interest in God’s promise and rejects his role in God’s plan to bring blessing to the world.  The pattern in the Bible is sin leading to exile from God’s presence.  Adam and Eve were expelled from the garden to live east of Eden.  Later Israel would be conquered by the Babylonians and marched into captivity.  I can list other examples because one of the ways the Old Testament makes its point is through repetition and one of the points it wants to make is the rejection of God’s law and promise leads to exile from His provision and presence.  

However, not only does Elimelech leave the promised land, he goes to Moab.  The Moabites were the product of an incestuous relationship between Lot and one of his daughters.  They opposed the Israelites entrance into Canaan and even hired the pagan sorcerer Balaam to curse the Israelites.  At the time of Ruth, Israel was forced to pay tribute to King Eglon of Moab.  So Moab was not just a foreign land but an enemy of Israel.  Here is what Deuteronomy has to say about the Moabites, “No Moabite may enter the assembly of YHWH.  Even to the tenth generation, none of them may enter the assembly of YHWH forever, because they did not meet you with bread and water on the way when you came out of Egypt, and because they hired against you Balaam the son of Beor from Pethor of Mesopotamia to curse you.”  

Moab worshipped a pagan called Chemosh and we know from 2 Kings that a king of Moab actually sacrificed his child to Chemosh.  However, not only did Elimelech and his family move to Moab, his sons took Moabite women as wife.  The action of taking Moabite wives is also forbidden by Deuteronomy.  The text lets us know it disapproves of this action by using not the normal verb for marry but an unusual verb that means to lift or carry.  In the rest of the Old Testament this expression always has negative associations.  

The result of all of these choices is that instead of finding prosperity and life, they find death.  Over the course of their ten years in Moab, Elimelech and his two sons die.  Also notice that since the family spent ten years in Moab it is likely that there was an issue with barrenness or sterility since Chilion and Mahlon die without producing children.

The picture presented here in these five verses is of a people under a curse.  Elimelech has rejected God’s law but ultimately God’s promise.  He and his sons are dead and buried outside their family lands.  Remember in this culture being buried in the land of your fathers was of supreme importance.  Jacob will make his sons promise that they would one day return his bones to the land of his fathers.  

The children died childless meaning there was no one left to continue Elimelech’s legacy.  This is another terrible result in the culture of the ancient world.  It is made worse because Elimelech was from Judah and specifically Bethlehem.  The text mentions Bethlehem specifically twice in these verses and in verse 2 we are told that Elimelech’s family were Ephrathites.  We are told this because there were two cities named Bethlehem and Ruth wants us to know that this is the Bethlehem in Judah which is the one King David comes from and which Micah tells us the messiah will come from.   We know Elimelech’s family had royal aspirations as evidenced by his name which contains the word king.  

However, the situation for the women is even worse.  Without children their lives are failures.  Without husbands their situation is dire.  The ancient world was no place for widows.  Since barrenness in the ancient world was always viewed as the problem of the woman no man would marry Orpah and Ruth since they had demonstrated they were incapable of bearing a child.  They are refugees, belonging neither to Moab or Israel and with no hope of Canada welcoming them in.  

The situation is bleak, but there are some hints that God is at work even in this story where His kingship, His law, His promise, and His plan has been rejected.  There is hope and we will conclude today by looking at two places where can see this hope and also two points of applications.  

First, you will remember earlier that I said that one of the ways the Old Testament makes its point is by repeating patterns.  So an ancient Israelite hearing the story of a man facing a famine would instantly recall a series of similar stories involving the great fathers of Israel, Abraham, Isaac, and Joseph.  Each of their stories starts with a famine.  Instantly, the Israelite hearers of this story would have drawn the connection to those stories and begin to speculate as to Elimelech’s role and what God was beginning to do to advance his people.  This is why our first reading was from the passage in Genesis 12.  

In the story, Abraham goes to Egypt, lets Pharaoh think his hot wife Sarai is really his sister, Pharaoh would give Abraham a bunch of stuff sheep, oxen, donkeys, and camels.  However Pharaoh is afflicted with plagues and sends Abraham away with all the loot.  Something similar happens to Isaac again as Isaac tries to pass off his wife as his sister.  This time the Philistine king Abimelech makes a peace treaty with him after seeing how YHWH continues to bless him despite Abimelech’s opposition.   The third time occurs after Jacob’s sons sell Joseph into slavery, Joseph becomes the vizier of the Pharaoh, saves his family from the famine and they become prosperous in the land of Egypt.  Each story begins with a moral failure on the part of the family of Abraham and ends in blessing as God’s promise for this chosen family is made more and more manifest.  

God’s kingdom is going to be built often in spite of His people rather than because of His people.  So the story of Ruth is not without hope and we are not without hope.  No matter what we have done and no matter the mistakes and despite all negative appearances -  despite ISIS, despite Putin, despite the Presidential race, despite all the world’s problems, God will build His kingdom. 

Second, after the book of Deuteronomy details the curses that will befall Israel if they break the covenant in Deuteronomy 28, a remedy is provided.  If Israel will repent God will restore his people.  Here is how Deuteronomy 30 puts it:  

“And when all these things come upon you, the blessing and the curse, which I have set before you, and you call them to mind among all the nations where the Lord your God has driven you, 2 and return to the Lord your God, you and your children, and obey his voice in all that I command you today, with all your heart and with all your soul, 3 then theLord your God will restore your fortunes and have mercy on you, and he will gather you again from all the peoples where the Lord your God has scattered you. 4 If your outcasts are in the uttermost parts of heaven, from there the Lord your God will gather you, and from there he will take you. 5 And the Lord your God will bring you into the land that your fathers possessed, that you may possess it. And he will make you more prosperous and numerous than your fathers. 6 And the Lord your God will circumcise your heart and the heart of your offspring, so that you will love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul, that you may live. 7 And the Lord your God will put all these curses on your foes and enemies who persecuted you. 8 And you shall again obey the voice of the Lord and keep all his commandments that I command you today. 9 The Lord your God will make you abundantly prosperous in all the work of your hand, in the fruit of your womb and in the fruit of your cattle and in the fruit of your ground. For the Lord will again take delight in prospering you, as he took delight in your fathers, 10 when you obey the voice of the Lord your God, to keep his commandments and his statutes that are written in this Book of the Law, when you turn to the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul.

Notice the first verse actually anticipates that the covenant will be broken and the curses will come upon the people of Israel.  However, the story does not end their.  Just as their fathers were blessed despite their morally questionable behavior, YHWH will not abandon His program of bringing prosperity to His people.  

The reader of these verse would then be reminded that despite the dire circumstance of God’s people, God will not abandon them.  The king is coming to establish God’s kingdom whose goal is to bring YHWH’s blessing not just to Israel but the whole world.  The blessing of the king would bring prosperity to all. 

Entrance into this kingdom would require a repudiation of all previous plans and schemes and instead would require loyalty to YHWH’s plan.  The word the Bible uses for this process is repentance.  The solution to the curse is not the solution of Elimelech.  Elimelech ignored the words of Deuteronomy and sought his own solution to the problem of famine.  He left the promised land and the house of bread and instead of life and prosperity found death.  

When we come to the New Testament we hear Jesus preaching the fulfillment of these promises given in Deuteronomy and anticipated by Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.  The gospels repeatedly sum up the teaching of Jesus in one sentence.  Jesus came preaching repentance and the kingdom of God.  

Like Elimelech we are people living in exile.  We are a people under a curse who left to our schemes will find nothing but despair and death.  We are people surrounded by a world ruled by power and violence.  The crazy thing about the story of Ruth and the crazy thing about the passage in Deuteronomy is that despite our efforts to solve the existential problems of life on our own, is that God is still at work.  As we saw in the lives of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, God will redeem His people.  We will see the way this works out in Ruth as we continue our study.  For us, just as much as for Elimelech, for Naomi and Ruth, for the Israelites, for those who would hear the teaching of believers the solution is to repent and hold fast to the promise of God’s kingdom that despite all appearance He will bring blessing to the whole world.