Today we remember and give
thanks for Ruth. Ruth of Moab, the
subject of the biblical book that bears her name, is an inspiring example of
God’s grace. Although she was a Gentile, God made her the great grandmother of
King David (Ruth 4:17), and an ancestress of Jesus himself (Mt 1:5). A famine
in Israel led Elimelech and
Naomi of Bethlehem to emigrate to the neighboring nation of Moab with their two sons. The sons
married Moabite women, Orpah and Ruth, but after about ten years, Elimelech and
his sons died (Ruth 1:1–5). Naomi then decided to return to Bethlehem and urged her daughters-in-law to
return to their families. Orpah listened to Naomi’s but Ruth refused, replying
with the stirring words: “Where you go I will go, and where you lodge I will
lodge. Your people shall be my people, and your God my God” (Ruth 1:16). After
Ruth arrived in Bethlehem ,
Boaz, a close relative of Elimelech, agreed to be Ruth’s “redeemer” (Ruth
3:7–13; 4:9–12). He took her as his wife, and Ruth gave birth to Obed, the
grandfather of David (Ruth 4:13–17), thus preserving the Messianic seed. Ruth’s
kindness and selfless loyalty toward Naomi, and her faith in Naomi’s God, have
long endeared her to the faithful and redounded to God’s praise for his
merciful choice of one so unexpected.
Collect of the Day:
Faithful
God, you promised to preserve your people and save your inheritance, using
unlikely and unexpected vessels in extending the genealogy that would bring
about the birth of your blessed Son.
Give us the loyalty of Ruth and her trust in the one true God, that we,
too, might honor you through our submission and respect and be counted among
your chosen people.
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