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IN THE FIELD OF BOAZ
Rth 1:19-22; Rth 2:1-23
WEARY and footsore the two travellers reached Bethlehem at
length, and "all the city was moved about them." Though ten years
had elapsed, many yet remembered as if it had been yesterday the
season of terrible famine and the departure of the emigrants. Now
the women lingering at the well, when they see the strangers
approaching, say as they look in the face of the elder one, "Is this
Naomi?" What a change is here! With husband and sons, hoping for
anew life across in Moab, she went away. Her return has about it no
sign of success; she comes on foot, in the company of one who is
evidently of an alien race, and the two have all the marks of
poverty. The women who recognise the widow of Elimelech are somewhat
pitiful, perhaps also a little scornful. They had not left their
native land nor doubted the promise of Jehovah. Through the famine
they had waited, and now their position contrasts very favourably
with hers. Surely Naomi is far down in the world since she has made
a companion of a woman of Moab. Her poverty is against the wayfarer,
and to those who know not the story of her life that which shows her
goodness and faithfulness appears a cause of reproach and reason of
suspicion.
Is it too harsh to interpret thus the question with which Naomi is
met? We are only using a key which common experience of life
supplies. Do people give sincere and hearty sympathy to those who
went away full and return empty, who were once in good standing and
repute and come back years after to their old haunts impoverished
and with strange associates? Are we not more ready to judge
unfavourably in such a case than to exercise charity? The trick of
hasty interpretation is common because every one desires to be on
good terms with himself, and nothing is so soothing to vanity as the
discovery of mistakes into which others have fallen. "All the
brethren of the poor do hate him," says one who knew the Hebrews and
human nature well; "how much more do his friends go far from him. He
pursueth them with words, yet they are wanting to him." Naomi finds
it so when she throws herself on the compassion of her old
neighbours. They are not uninterested, they are not altogether
unkind, but they feel their superiority.
And Naomi appears to accept the judgment they have formed. Very
touching is the lament in which she takes her position as one whom
God has rebuked, whom it is no wonder, therefore, that old friends
despise. She almost makes excuse for those who look down upon her
from the high ground of their imaginary virtue and wisdom. Indeed
she has the same belief as they that poverty, the loss of land,
bereavement, and every kind of affliction are marks of God’s
displeasure. For, what does she say? "Call me not Naomi, Pleasant,
call me Mara, Bitter, for the Almighty hath dealt very bitterly with
me The Lord hath testified against me and the Almighty hath
afflicted me." Such was the Hebrew thought, the purpose of God in
His dealings with men not being apprehended. Under the shadow of
toss and sorrow it seemed that no heat of the Divine Presence could
be felt. To have a husband and, children appeared to Naomi evidence
of Gods favour; to lose them was a proof that He had turned against
her. Heavy as her losses had been, the terrible thing was that they
implied the displeasure of God.
It is perhaps difficult for us to realise even by an imaginative
effort this condition of soul-the sense of banishment, darkness,
outlawry which came to the. Hebrew whenever he fell into distress or
penury. And yet we ourselves retain the same standard of judgment in
our common estimate of life; we still interpret things by an
ignorant unbelief which causes many worthy souls to bow in a
humiliation Christians should never feel. Do not the loneliness, the
poverty, the testimony of Christ teach us something altogether
different? Can we still cherish the notion that prosperity is an
evidence of worth and that the man who can found a family must be a
favourite of the heavenly powers? Judge thus and the providence of
God is a tangle, a perplexing darkening problem which, believe as
you may, must still overwhelm. Wealth has its conditions; money
comes through some one’s cleverness in work and trading, some one’s
inventiveness or thrift, and these qualities are reputable. But
nothing is proved regarding the spiritual tone and nature of a life
either by wealth or by the want of it. And surely we have learned
that toss of friends and loneliness are not to be reckoned the
punishment of sin. Often enough we hear the warning that wealth and
worldly position are not to be sought for themselves, and yet, side
by side with this warning, the implication that a high place and a
prosperous life are proofs of divine blessing.
On the whole subject Christian thought is far from clear, and we
have need to go anew to the Master and inquire of Him Who had no
place where to lay His head. The Hebrew belief in the prosperity of
God’s servants must fulfil itself in a larger better faith or the
man of tomorrow will have no faith at all. One who bewails the loss
of wealth or friends is doing nothing that has spiritual meaning or
value. When he takes himself to task for that despondency he begins
to touch the spiritual.
In Bethlehem Naomi found the half-ruined cottage still belonging to
her, and there she and Ruth took up their abode. But for a living
what was to be done? The answer came in the proposal of Ruth to go
into the fields where the barley harvest was proceeding and glean
after the reapers. By great diligence she might gather enough day by
day for the bare sustenance that contents a Syrian peasant, and
afterwards some other means of providing for herself and Naomi might
be found. The work was not dignified. She would have to appear among
the waifs and wanderers of the country, with women whose behaviour
exposed them to the rude gibes of the labourers. But whatever plan
Naomi vaguely entertained was hanging in abeyance, and the
circumstances of the women were urgent. No kinsman came forward to
help them. Loath as she was to expose Ruth to the trials of the
harvest field, Naomi had to let her go. So it was Ruth who made the
first move, Ruth the stranger who brought succour to the Hebrew
widow when her own people held aloof and she herself knew not how to
act.
Now among the farmers whose barley was falling before the sickle was
the land owner Boaz, a kinsman of Elimelech, a man of substance and
social importance, one of those who in the midst of their fruitful
fields shine with bountiful good humour and by their presence make
their servants work heartily. To Ruth in after days it must have
seemed a wonderful thing that her first timid expedition led her to
a portion of ground belonging to this man. From the moment he
appears in the narrative we note in him a certain largeness of
character. It may be only the easy kindness of the prosperous man,
but it commends him to our good opinion. Those who have a smooth way
through the world are bound to be especially kind and considerate in
their bearing toward neighbours and dependants, this at least they
owe as an acknowledgment to the rest of the world, and we are always
pleased to find a rich man paying his debt so far. There is a
certain piety also in the greeting of Boaz to his labourers, a
customary thing no doubt and good even in that sense, but better
when it carries, as it seems to do here, a personal and friendly
message. Here is a man who will observe with strict eye everything
that goes on in the field and will be quick to challenge any lazy
reaper. But he is not remote from those who serve him, he and they
meet on common ground of humanity and faith.
The great operations which some in these days think fit to carry on,
more for their own glory certainly than the good of their country or
countrymen, entirely preclude anything like friendship between the
chief and the multitude of his subordinates. It is impossible that a
man who has a thousand under him should know and consider each, and
there would be too much pretence in saying, "God be with you," on
entering a yard or factory when otherwise no feeling is shown with
which the name of God can be connected. Apart altogether from
questions as to wealth and its use, every employer has a
responsibility for maintaining the healthy human activity of his
people, and nowhere is the immorality of the present system of huge
concerns so evident as in the extinction of personal good will. The
workman of course may adjust himself to the state of matters, but it
will too often be by discrediting what he knows he cannot have and
keeping up a critical resentful habit of mind against those who seem
to treat him as a machine. He may often be wrong in his judgment of
an employer. There may be less hardness of temper on the other side
than there is on his own. But, the conditions being what they are,
one may say he is certain to be a severe critic. We have
unquestionably lost much and are in danger of losing more, not in a
financial sense, which matters little, but in the infinitely more
important affairs of social sweetness and Christian civilisation.
Boaz the farmer had not more in hand than he could attend to
honestly, and everything under his care was well ordered. He had a
foreman over the reapers, and from him he required an account of the
stranger whom he saw gleaning in the field. There were to be no
hangers on of loose character where he exercised authority; and in
this we justify him. We like to see a man keeping a firm hand when
we are sure that he has a good heart and knows what he is doing.
Such a one is bound within the range of his power to have all done
rightly and honourably, and Boaz pleases us all the better that he
makes close inquiry regarding the woman who seeks the poor gains of
a common gleaner.
Of course in a place like Bethlehem people knew each other, and Boaz
was probably acquainted with most whom he saw about; at once,
therefore, the new figure of the Moabite woman attracted his
attention. Who is she? A kindly heart prompts the inquiry for the
farmer knows that if he interests himself in this young woman he may
be burdened with a new dependant. "It is the Moabitish damsel that
came back with Naomi out of the country of Moab." She is the
daughter-in-law of his old friend Elimelech. Before the eyes of Boaz
one of the romances of life, common and tragic too, is unfolding
itself. Often had Boaz and Elimelech held counsel with each other,
met at each other’s houses, talked together of their fields or of
the state of the country. But Elimelech went away and lost all and
died; and two widows, the wreck of the family, had returned to
Bethlehem. It was plain that these would be new claimants on his
favour, but unlike many well to do persons Boaz does not wait for
some urgent appeal; he acts rather as one who is glad to do a
kindness for old friendship’s sake.
Great was the surprise of the lonely gleaner when the rich man came
to her side and gave her a word of comfortable greeting. "Hearest
thou not, my daughter? Go not to glean in another field, but abide
here fast by my maidens." Nothing had been done to make Ruth feel at
home in Bethlehem until Boaz addressed her. She had perhaps seen
proud and scornful looks in the street and at the well, and had to
bear them meekly, silently. In the fields she may have looked for
something of the kind and even feared that Boaz would dismiss her. A
gentle person in such circumstances is exceedingly grateful for a
very small kindness, and it was not a slight favour that Boaz did
her. But in making her acknowledgments Ruth did not know what had
prepared her way. The truth was that she had met with a man of
character who valued character, and her faithfulness commended her.
"It hath been fully showed me, all that thou hast done unto thy
mother-in-law since the death of thine husband." The best point in
Boaz is that he so quickly and fully recognises the goodness of
another and will help her because they stand upon a common ground of
conscience and duty.
Is it on such a ground you draw to others? Is your interest won by
kindly dispositions and fidelity of temper? Do you love those who
are sincere and patient in their duties, content to serve where
service is appointed by God? Are you attracted by one who cherishes
a parent, say a poor mother, in the time of feebleness and old age,
doing all that is possible to smooth her path and provide for her
comfort? Or have you little esteem for such a one, for the duties so
faithfully discharged, because you see no brilliance or beauty, and
there are other persons more clever and successful on their own
account, more amusing because they are unburdened? If so, be sure of
your own ignorance, your own undutifulness, your own want of
principle and heart. Character is known by character, and worth by
worth. Those who are acquainted with you could probably say that you
care more for display than for honour, that you think more of making
a fine figure in society than of showing generosity, forbearance,
and integrity at home. The good appreciate goodness, the true honour
truth. One important lesson of the Book of Ruth lies here, that the
great thing for young women, and for young men also, is to be
quietly faithful in the service, however humble, to which God has
called them and the family circle in which He has set them. Not
indeed because that is the line of promotion, though Ruth found it
so; every Ruth does not obtain favour in the eyes of a wealthy Boaz.
So honourable and good a man is not to be met on every harvest
field; on the contrary she may encounter a Nabal, one who is
churlish and evil in his doings.
We must take the course of this narrative as symbolic. The book has
in it the strain of a religious idyl. The Moabite who wins the
regard of this man of Judah represents those who, though naturally
strangers to the covenant of promise, receive the grace of God and
enter the circle of divine blessing - even coming to high dignity in
the generations of the chosen people. Itis idyllic, we say, not an
exhibition of everyday fact; yet the course of divine justice is
surely more beautiful, more certain. To every Ruth comes the
Heavenly Friend Whose are all the pastures and fields, all the good
things of life. The Christian hope is in One Who cannot fail to mark
the most private faithfulness, piety and love hidden like violets
among the grass. If there is not such a One, the Helper and
Vindicator of meek fidelity, virtue has no sanction and well doing
no recompense.
The true Israelite Boaz accepts the daughter of an alien and
unfriendly people on account of her own character and piety. "The
Lord recompense thy work, and a full reward be given thee of the
Lord, the God of Israel, under Whose wings thou art come to take
refuge." Such is the benediction which Boaz invokes on Ruth,
receiving her cordially into the family circle of Jehovah. Already
she has ceased to be a stranger and a foreigner to him. The boundary
walls of race are overstepped, partly, no doubt, by that sense of
kinship which the Bethlehemite is quick to acknowledge. For Naomi’s
sake and for Elimelech’s as well as her own he craves divine
protection and reward for the daughter of Moab. Yet the beautiful
phrase he employs, full of Hebrew confidence in God, is an
acknowledgment of Ruth’s act of faith and her personal right to
share with the children of Abraham the fostering love of the
Almighty. The story, then, is a plea against that exclusiveness
which the Hebrews too often indulged. On this page of the annals the
truth is written out that though Jehovah cared for Israel much He
cares still more for love and faithfulness, purity and goodness. We
reach at last an instance of that fulfilment of Israel’s mission to
the nations around which in our study of the Book of Judges we
looked for in vain.
Not for Israel only in the time of its narrowness was the lesson
given. We need it still. The justification and redemption of God are
not restricted to those who have certain traditions and beliefs.
Even as a Moabite woman brought up in the worship of Chemosh, with
many heathen ideas still in her mind, has her place under the wings
of Jehovah as a soul seeking righteousness, so from countries and
regions of life which Christian people may consider a kind of rude
heathen Moab many in humility and sincerity may be coming nigh to
the kingdom of God. It was so in our Lord’s time, and it is so
still. All along the true religion of God has been for
reconciliation and brotherhood among men, and it was possible for
many Israelites to do what Naomi did in the way of making effectual
the promise of God to Abraham that in his seed all families of the
earth should be blessed. There never was a middle wall of partition
between men except in the thought of the Hebrew. He was separated
that he might be able to convert and bless, not that he might stand
aloof in pride. The wall which he built Christ has broken down that
the servants of His gospel may go freely forth to find everywhere
brethren in common humanity and need, who are to be made brethren in
Christ. The outward representation of brotherhood in faith must
follow the work of the reconciling Spirit-cannot precede it. And
when the reconciliation is felt in the depth of human souls we shall
have the all-comprehensive church, a fair and gracious dwelling
place, wide as the race, rich with every noble thought and hope of
man and every gift of Heaven.
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