St. Moses Church

Ruth: Ruth Ch 1


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This lecture introduces the book of Ruth as a story that asks whether God’s love can reach people in grief, displacement, and loss. It contrasts Ruth with a tragedy and notes that, very early in the narrative, the stage is emptied of men and the focus falls on three women.

The speaker outlines the setting as the period of the judges, described as a time of rebellion, violence, and instability in Israel. Elimelech, Naomi, and their two sons leave Bethlehem because of famine and go to Moab, where Elimelech dies and later both sons also die after marrying Moabite women, Orpah and Ruth.

The lecture emphasizes the depth of Naomi’s loss: she is left in a foreign land without husband, sons, or grandchildren, after years of childlessness and waiting. The speaker highlights the biblical honesty of the story, which places suffering and blessing side by side without resolving the tension.

A major theme is the Hebrew word chesed, translated as lovingkindness or steadfast love. Naomi uses this language to bless her daughters-in-law, and the speaker presents Ruth’s loyalty as a striking example of clinging commitment, especially in a context where marriage and children were normally seen as a woman’s security and future.

Ruth’s speech to Naomi is presented as one of the book’s central moments: she pledges to stay with Naomi, adopt her people, and share her future and burial. Naomi returns to Bethlehem in bitterness, saying that the Lord has dealt harshly with her, and the speaker notes that Scripture often gives space to this kind of lament.

The lecture closes by pointing forward to God’s continued work through human relationships and to Jesus as the fullest expression of all-in love. It concludes with an invitation to bring prayer for oneself or for others who are in a Naomi-like season of loss.
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St. Moses ChurchBy St. Moses Church

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