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THE MARRIAGE AT THE GATE
Ruth 4
A SIMPLE ceremony of Oriental life brings to a climax the history
which itself closes in sweet music the stormy drama of the Book of
Judges. With all the literary skill and moral delicacy, all the
charm and keen judgment of inspiration the narrator gives us what he
has from the Spirit. He has represented with fine brevity and power
of touch the old life and custom of Israel, the private groups in
which piety and faithfulness were treasured, the frank humanity and
divine seriousness of Jehovah’s covenant. And now we are at the gate
of Bethlehem where the head men are assembled, and according to the
usage of the time the affairs of Naomi and Ruth are settled by the
village court of justice. Boaz gives a challenge to the goal of
Naomi, and point by point we follow the legal forms by which the
right to redeem the land of Elimelech is given up to Boaz and Ruth
becomes his wife.
Why is an old custom presented with such minuteness? We may affirm
the underlying suggestion to be that the ways described were good
ways which ought to be kept in mind. The usage implied great
openness and neighbourliness, a simple and straightforward method of
arranging affairs which were of moment to a community. People lived
then in very direct and frank relations with each other. Their
little town and its concerns had close and intelligent attention.
Men and women desired to act so that there might be good
understanding among them, no jealousy nor rancour of feeling.
Elaborate forms of law were unknown, unnecessary. To take off the
shoe and hand it to another in the presence of honest neighbours
ratified a decision as well and gave as good security as much
writing on parchment. The author of the Book of Ruth commends these
homely ways of a past age and suggests to the men of his own time
that civilisation and the monarchy, while they have brought some
gains, are perhaps to be blamed for the decay of simplicity and
friendliness.
More than one reason may be found for supposing the book to have
been written in Solomon’s time, probably the latter part of his
reign when laws and ordinances had multiplied and were being
enforced in endless detail by a central authority; when the manners
of the nations around, Chaldea, Egypt, Phoenicia, were overbearing
the primitive ways of Israel; when luxury was growing, society
dividing into classes, and a proud imperialism giving its colour to
habit and religion. If we place the book at this period we can
understand the moral purpose of the writer and the importance of his
work. He would teach people to maintain the spirit of Israel’s past,
the brotherliness, the fidelity in every relation that were to have
been all along a distinction of Hebrew life because inseparably
connected with the obedience of Jehovah. The splendid temple on
Moriah was now the centre of a great priestly system, and from
temple and palace the national and, to a great extent, the personal
life of all Israelites was largely influenced, not in every respect
for good. The quiet suggestion is here made that the artificiality
and pomp of the kingdom did not compare well with that old time when
the affairs of an ancestress of the splendid monarch were settled by
a gathering at a village gate.
Nor is the lesson without its value now. We are not to go back on
the past in mere antiquarian curiosity, the interest of secular
research. Labour which goes to revive the story of mankind in remote
ages has its value only when it is applied to the uses of the
moralist and the prophet. We have much to learn again that has been
forgotten, much to recall that has escaped the memory of the race.
Through phases of complex civilisation in which the outward and
sensuous are pursued the world has to pass to a new era of more
simple and yet more profound life, to a social order fitted for the
development of spiritual power and grace. And the church is well
directed by the Book of God. Her inquiry into the past is no affair
of intellectual curiosity, but a research governed by the principles
that have underlain man’s life from the first and a growing
apprehension of all that is at stake in the multiform energy of the
present. Amid the bustle and pressure of those endeavours which
Christian faith itself may induce our minds become confused.
Thinkers and doers are alike apt to forget the deliverances
knowledge ought to effect, and while they learn and attempt much
they are rather passing into bondage than finding life. Our research
seems more and more to occupy us with the manner of things, and even
Bible Archaeology is exposed to this reproach. As for the scientific
comparers of religion they are mostly feeding the vanity of the age
with a sense of extraordinary progress and enlightenment, and
themselves are occasionally heard to confess that the farther they
go in study of old faiths, old rituals and moralities the less
profit they find, the less hint of a design. No such futility, no
failure of culture and inquiry mark the Bible writers’ dealing with
the past. To the humble life of the Son of Man on earth, to the life
of the Hebrews long before He appeared our thought is carried back
from the thousand objects that fascinate in the world of today. And
there we see the faith and all the elements of spiritual vitality of
which our own belief and hope are the fruit. There too without those
cumbrous modern involutions which never become familiar, society
wonderfully fulfils its end in regulating personal effort and
helping the conscience and the soul.
The scene at the gate shows Boaz energetically conducting the case
he has taken up. Private considerations urged him to bring rapidly
to an issue the affairs of Naomi and Ruth since he was involved, and
again he commends himself as a man who, having a task in hand, does
it with his might. His pledge to Ruth was a pledge also to his own
conscience that no suspense should be due to any carelessness of
his; and in this he proved himself a pattern friend. The great man
often shows his greatness by making others wait at his door. They
are left to find the level of their insignificance and learn the
value of his favour. So the grace of God is frustrated by those who
have the opportunity and should covet the honour of being His
instruments. Men know that they should wait patiently on God’s time,
but they are bewildered when they have to wait on the strange
arrogance of those in whose hands Providence has placed the means of
their succour. And many must be the cases in which this fault of man
begets bitterness, distrust of God, and even despair. It should be a
matter of anxiety to us all to do with speed and care anything on
which the hopes of the humble and needy rest. A soul more worthy
than our own may languish in darkness while a promise which should
have been sacred is allowed to fade from our memory.
Boaz was also open and straightforward in his transactions. His own
wish is pretty clear. He seems as anxious as Naomi herself that to
him should fall the duty of redeeming her burdened inheritance and
reviving her husband’s name. Possibly without any public discussion,
by consulting with the nearer kinsman and urging his own wish or
superior ability, he might have settled the affair. Other
inducements failing, the offer of a sum of money might have secured
to him the right of redemption. But in the light of honour, in the
court of his conscience, the man was unable thus to seek his end;
and besides the town’s people had to be considered; their sense of
justice had to be satisfied as well as his own.
Often it is not enough that we do a thing from the best of motives;
we must do it in the best way, for the support of justice or purity
or truth. While private benevolence is one of the finest of arts,
the Christian is not unfrequently called to exercise another which
is more difficult and not less needful in society. Required at one
hour not to let his left hand know what his right hand doeth, at
another he is required in all modesty and simplicity to take his
fellows to witness that he acts for righteousness, that he is
contending for some thought of Christ’s, that he is not standing in
the outer court among those who are ashamed but has taken his place
with the Master at the judgment bar of the world. Again, when a
matter in which a Christian is involved is before the public and has
provoked a good deal of discussion and perhaps no little criticism
of religion and its professors, it is not enough that out of sight,
out of court, some arrangement be made which counts for a moral
settlement. That is not enough, though a person whose rights and
character are affected may consent to it. If still the world has
reason to question whether justice has been done, -justice has not
been done. If still the truthfulness of the church is under valid
suspicion, -the church is not manifesting Christ as it should. For
no moral cause once opened at public assize can be issued in
private. It is no longer between one man and another, nor between a
man and the church. The conscience of the race has been empanelled
and cannot be discharged without judgment. Innumerable causes
withdrawn from court, compromised, hushed up or settled in corners
with an effort at justice, still shadow the history of the church
and cast a darkness of justifiable suspicion on the path along which
she would advance.
Even in this little affair at Bethlehem the good man will have
everything done with perfect openness and honour, and will stand by
the result whether it meet his hopes or disappoint them. At the town
gate, the common meeting place for conversation and business, Boaz
takes his seat and invites the goal to sit beside him and also a
jury of ten elders. The court thus constituted, he states the case
of Naomi and her desire to sell a parcel of land which belonged to
her husband. When Elimelech left Bethlehem he had, no doubt,
borrowed money on the field, and now the question is whether the
nearest kinsman will pay the debt and beyond that the further value
of the land, so that the widow may have something to herself.
Promptly the goel answers that he is ready to buy the land. This,
however, is not all. In buying the field and adding it to his estate
will the man take Ruth to wife, to raise up the name of the dead
upon his inheritance? He is not prepared to do that, for the
children of Ruth would be entitled to the portion of ground and he
is unwilling to impoverish his own family. "I cannot redeem it for
myself, lest I mar my own inheritance." He draws off his shoe and
gives it to Boaz, renouncing his right of redemption.
Now this marriage custom is not ours, but at the time, as we have
seen, it was a sacred rule, and the goal was morally bound by it. He
could have insisted on redeeming the land as his right. To do so was
therefore his duty, and to a certain extent he failed from the ideal
of a kinsman’s obligation. But the position was not an easy one.
Surely the man was justified in considering the children he already
had and their claims upon him. Did he not exercise a wise prudence
in refusing to undertake a new obligation? Moreover the
circumstances were delicate and dispeace might have been caused in
his household if he took the Moabite woman. It is certainly one of
those cases in which a custom or law has great weight and yet
creates no little difficulty, moral as well as pecuniary, in the
observance. A man honest enough, and not ungenerous, may find it
hard to determine on which side duty lies. Without, however, abusing
this goal we may fairly take him as a type of those who are more
impressed by the prudential view of their circumstances than by the
duties of kinship and hospitality. If in the course of providence we
have to decide whether we will admit some new inmate to our home
worldly considerations must not rule, either on the one side or the
other.
A man’s duty to his family, what is it? To exclude a needy
dependant, however pressing the claim may be? To admit one freely
who has the recommendation of wealth? Such earthly calculation is no
rule for a true man. The moral duty, the moral result are always to
be the main elements of decision. No family ever gains by relief
from an obligation conscience acknowledges. No family loses by the
fulfilment of duty, whatever the expense. In household debate the
balance too often turns not on the character of Ruth but on her lack
of gear. The same woman who is refused as a heathen when she is
poor, is discovered to be a most desirable relation if she brings
fuel for the fire of welcome. Let our decisions be quite clear of
this mean hypocrisy. Would we insist on being dutiful to a rich
relation? Then the duty remains to him and his if they fall into
poverty, for a moral claim cannot be altered by the state of the
purse.
And what of the duty to Christ, His church. His poor? Would to God
some people were afraid to leave their children wealthy, were afraid
of having God inquire for His portion. A shadow rests on the
inheritance that has been guarded in selfish pride against the just
claims of man, in defiance of the law of Christ. Yet let one be sure
that his liberality is not mixed with a carnal hope. What do we
think of when we declare that God’s recompense to those who give
freely comes in added store of earthly treasure, the tithe returned
ten and twenty and a hundred fold? By what law of the material or
spiritual world does this come about? Certainly we love a generous
man, and the liberal shall stand by liberal things. But surely God’s
purpose is to make us comprehend that His grace does not take the
form of a percentage on investments. When a man grows spiritually,
when although he becomes poorer he yet advances to nobler manhood,
to power and joy in Christ-this is the reward of Christian
generosity and faithfulness. Let us be done with religious
materialism, with expecting our God to repay us in the coin of this
earth for our service in the heavenly kingdom.
The marriage of Ruth, at which we now arrive, appears at once as the
happy termination of Naomi’s solicitude for her, the partial reward
of her own faithfulness, and the solution, so far as she was
concerned, of the problem of woman’s destiny. The idea of the
spiritual completion of life for woman as well as man, of the woman
being able to attain a personal standing of her own with individual
responsibility and freedom, was not fully present to the Hebrew
mind. If unmarried, Ruth would have remained, as Naomi well knew and
had all along said, without a place in society, without an asylum or
shelter. This old-world view of things burdens the whole history,
and before passing on we must compare it with the state of modern
thought on the question.
The incompleteness of the childless widow’s life which is an element
of this narrative, the incompleteness of the life of every unmarried
woman which appears in the lament for Jephthah’s daughter and
elsewhere in the Bible as well as in other records of the ancient
world had, we may say, a two-fold cause. On the one hand there was
the obvious fact that marriage has a reason in physical constitution
and the order of human society. On the other hand heathen practices
and constant wars made it, as we have seen, impossible for women to
establish themselves alone. A woman needed protection, or as the law
of England has it, coverture. In very exceptional cases only could
the opportunity be found, even among the people of Jehovah, for
those personal efforts and acts which give a position in the world.
But the distinction of Israel’s custom and law as compared with
those of many nations lay here, that woman was recognised as
entitled to a place of her own, side by side with man, in the social
scheme. The conception of her individuality as of individuality
generally was limited. The idea of what is now called the social
organism governed family life, and the very faith that was
afterwards to become the strength of individuality was held as a
national thing. The view of complete life had no clear extension
into the future, even the salvation of the soul did not appear as a
distinct provision for personal immortality. Under these
limitations, however, the proper life of every woman and her place
in the nation were acknowledged and provision was made for her as
well as circumstances would allow. By the customs of marriage and by
the laws of inheritance she was recognised and guarded.
Now it may appear that the problem of woman’s place, so far from
approaching solution in Christian times, has rather fallen into
greater confusion; and many are the attacks made from one point of
view and another upon the present condition of things. By the nature
school of revolutionaries physical constitution is made a starting
point in argument, and the reasoning sweeps before it every
hindrance to the completion of life on that side for women as for
men. Christian marriage is itself assailed by these as an obstacle
in the path of evolution. They find women, thanks to Christianity,
no longer unable to establish themselves in life; but against
Christianity, which has done this, they raise the loud complaint
that it bars the individual from full life and enjoyment. In the
course of our discussion of the Book of Judges reference has been
made once and again to this propaganda, and here its real nature
comes to light. Its conception of human life is based on mere
animalism; it throws into the crucible the gain of the centuries in
spiritual discipline and energetic purity in order to make ample
provision for the flesh and the fulfilling of the lusts thereof.
But the problem is not more confused; it is solved, as all other
problems are, by Christ. Penetrating and arrogant voices of the day
will cease and His again be heard Whose terrible and gracious
doctrine of personal responsibility in the supernatural order is
already the heart of human thought and hope. There is turmoil,
disorder, vile and foolish experimenting; but the remedy is forward,
not behind. Christ has opened the spiritual kingdom, has made it
possible for every soul to enter. For each human being now, man and
woman, life means spiritual overcoming, spiritual possession, and
can mean nothing else. It is altogether out of date, an insult to
the conscience and common sense of mankind, not to speak of its
faith, to go back on the primitive world and the ages of a lower
evolution and fasten down to sensuousness a race that has heard the
liberating word, Repent, believe, and, live. The incompleteness of a
human being lies in subjection to passion, in existing without moral
energy, governed by the earthly and therefore without hope or reason
of life. To the full stature of heavenly power the woman has her way
open through the blood of the cross, and by a path of loneliness and
privation, if need be, she may advance to the highest range of
priestly service and blessing.
To the Jewish people, and to the writer of the Book of Ruth as a
Jew, genealogy was of more account than to us, and a place in
David’s ancestry appears as the final honour of Ruth for her
dutifulness, her humble faith in the God of Israel. Orpah is
forgotten; she remained with her own people and died in obscurity.
But faithful Ruth lives distinguished in history. She takes her
place among the matrons of Bethlehem and the people of God. The
story of her life, says one, stands at the portal of the life of
David and at the gates of the gospel.
Yet suppose Ruth had not been married to Boaz or to any other good
and wealthy man, would she have been less admirable and deserving?
We attribute nothing to accident. In the providence of God Boaz was
led to an admiration for Ruth and Naomi’s plan succeeded. But it
might have been otherwise. There is nothing, after all, so striking
in her faith that we should expect her to be singled out for special
honour; and she is not. The divine reward of goodness is the peace
of God in the soul, the gladness of fellowship with Him, the
opportunity of learning His will and dispensing His grace. It is
interesting to note that Ruth’s son Obed was the father of Jesse and
the grandfather of David. But was Ruth not also the ancestress of
the sons of Zeruiah, of Absalom, Adonijah, and Rehoboam? Even
though, looking down the generations, we see the Messiah born of her
line, how can that glorify Ruth? or, if it does, how shall we
explain the want of glory of many an estimable and godly woman who
fighting a battle harder than Ruth’s, with clearer faith in God,
lived and died in some obscure village of Naphtali or dragged out a
weary widowhood on the borders of the Syrian desert?
Yet there is a sense in which the history of Ruth stands at the
gates of the gospel. It bears the lesson that Jehovah acknowledged
all who did justly and loved mercy and walked humbly with Him. The
foreign woman was justified by faith, and her faith had its reward
when she was accepted as one of Jehovah’s people and knew Him as her
gracious Friend. Israel had in this book the warrant for missionary
work among the pagan nations and a beautiful apologue of the
reconcilation the faith of Jehovah was to effect among the severed
families of mankind. The same faith is ours, but with deeper
urgency; the same spirit of reconciliation, reaching now to farther
mightier issues. We have seen the Goal of the race and have heard
His offer of redemption. We are commissioned to those who dwell in
the remotest borders of the moral world under oppressions of
heathenism and fear, or wander in strange Moabs of confusion where
deep calleth unto deep. We have to testify that with One and One
only are the light, the joy, the completeness of man, because He
alone among sages and helpers has the secret of our sin and weakness
and the long miracle of the soul’s redemption. "Go ye into all the
world and preach the gospel to the whole creation: and lo, I am with
you." The faith of the Hebrew is more than fulfilled. Out of Israel
He comes our Menuchah, Who is "a hiding place from the wind and a
covert from the tempest, as rivers of water in a dry place, as the
shadow of a great rock in a weary land."
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