Ruth 4:1-12 · Boaz Marries Ruth
Respect: Lesson for Victorious Living
Ruth 4:1-12
Sermon
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Christian unity teaches respect for the whole Body of Christ. The ancient Hebrews learned ways of doing things and the necessity of valid transactions; this gave the early Christians a format from which they could move forward in the faith. Repect was at or near the top of the list. The characters of Boaz, the elders, Naomi, Ruth, and the others in our passage evidence this in ways that do not seem to be present in today’s striving for equality. Could they have known something that we don’t? As one reads and studies this passage the answer becomes "Yes," arrived at in an unhurried manner. Indeed, to have identical salaries, position, titles, membership in the same clubs, does not automatically mean persons repect each other.

In its far-reaching influence, Christian unity at its best is pervaded by respect. It is a precious ointment lending a fragrance before, during, and after all deliberations.

There is a triple dose of truth which provides shining passageways in the quest for Christian unity. These three principles are alive and must be acknowledged and continually taught along the way.

Past Reverenced

"The custom in former times" is the beginning of conveying to us the past is not just the past and better forgotten. The Lord of the universal church could be caustic about the abuses of his people, but he could not have meant to overthrow the goodness in Judaism. Otherwise, he would not have bothered to say, "Think not that I have come to abolish the law and the prophets; I have come not to abolish them but to fulfill them." (Matthew 5:17)

The Roman Catholic scholar, Eugene J. Fisher, in his book entitled, Faith Without Prejudice, calls our attention to the Following: "Jesus is no more a modern existentialist than he was a Greek philosopher. He considered himself to be a faithful Jew. He was brought up to observe the Jewish Law, the Torah. Like other pious Jews of his day, he cherished that teaching as the inspired word to God." Our Lord reverenced his people’s past and, despite our latent images of him being an American, white, and even Protestant, he was most certainly a Jew.

Ecumenists, who work with authority and responsiblity as their guideposts, admit they have not, do not, and will not work in a vacuum. Jesus did not just drop out of the heavens, separate and apart from the heritage of Judaism. While the church universal may elect to proclaim Pentecost its birthday, it is done with the acknowledgment many wonderful and even salvific happenings preceded that date. Likewise, Christian unity always has more to offer than a few denominational executives sitting around a table planning mergers, with no attempt to look at the period between the fourth and fifteenth centuries.

What is ludicrous and myopic to those of us committed to the ecumenical movement is sometimes relished for the limited security and anti-Roman Catholic basis it offers. For example, Paul, Peter, John, John Wesley, John Calvin, and Martin Luther really were not contemporaries. For example, the Holy Scriptures were not lost and then found just in time for the King James Bible to be written.

"Universality" is not an easy term for us to bring into our vocabularies and then make a part of our religious perspectives. It is remarkable and surely a work of the Holy Spirit that the Holy Synod of the Church of Constantinople, in 1919, provided the key for the ecumenical movement as we know it today. The Orthodox churches are known for their nationalistic tendencies. This synod "officially decided to take steps to issue an invitation to all Christians to form a ‘league of churches’," according to W. A. Visser’t Hooft in his book, The Genesis and Formation of the World Council of Churches. The author further states, "Thus the Church of Constantinople became the first church to plan for a permanent organ of fellowship and cooperation between the churches." Dr. Visser’t Hofft was the first general secretary of the World Council of Churches.

Do you and I fully hold in reverence the past? Ecumenically, that is a serious inquiry in which the answer(s) decides - makes or breaks - our destinies in the movement for Christ’s followers to be One. How did you and I get where we are today in our pilgrimages? In reflection, the past includes a favorite Sunday school teacher, a chance reading of Fulton J. Sheen, a festive event at an Orthodox church, and many other experiences. The rabbis have always had much to say about learning and have never confined it to a classroom or synagogue. Jesus was a rabbi. He called upon Hebrew Scriptures over and over again to communicate his word and ways to his followers.

A similar, but somewhat different, aspect of our triple dose deserves our attention.

Generations Connected

Have you and I ever thought much about our ancestors? I mean, of course, beyond a generation or two. We can usually give a quick answer to the names of our parents and grandparents. There are those who jokingly relate stories about an ancestor back there who stole horses, one who was a Methodist circuit rider, and another who was the first woman to give birth to twins in the new territory. How much respect is there? We find irrelevant those who may have lived in the eighteenth century and before.

Christian unity views all of humanity related. In "Declaration on the Relationship of the Church to Non-Christian Religions," emerging from Vatican II, we read: "For all peoples comprise a single community, and have a single origin, since God made the whole race of men dwell over the entire face of the earth. One also is their final goal: God." Only God has the opportunity to observe and be a part of all this entails.

Christian unity loves to trace its witness throughout the Judeo-Christian heritage. Abraham is the father of both Christians and Jews; our Islamic relatives also claim him. To practice convenanting, in our quest for unity, is to borrow a marvelous understanding from God’s Word to us early in Hebrew Scriptures. The Apostle Paul, in good rabbinical style, says to Timothy, "I am reminded of your sincere faith, a faith that dwelt first in your grandmother Lois and your mother Eunice, and now, I am sure, dwells in you." (2 Timothy 1:5)

I have a strong feeling that the sooner Christians come to terms with the place of Abraham in our faith, the sooner we shall perceive God’s faithfulness to us through the generations. God called him to leave his country, kindred, and father’s house in order to make of him a great nation and be a blessing to all of humankind. Doesn’t Christ call his church out of the world so it may be a great nation and a blessing to all of humankind? In John’s Gospel, soon to be crucified, Christ prays: "They are not of the world, even as I am not of the world. Sanctify them in the truth; thy word is truth. As thou didst send me into the world, so I have sent them into the world." (17:16-18) His mother was also given a glimpse into this realm of respect connecting the generations; in the Magnificat, she declares, "He has helped his servant Israel, in remembrance of his mercy, as he spoke to our fathers, to Abraham and to his posterity for ever." (Luke 1:54-55)

This brings us to our third and final aspect.

Lineage Affirmed Leading to Jesus

Ruth gave birth to Obed. Naomi was his nurse. He was the father of Jesse and Jesse was the father of David. The New Testament emphasizes our Lord’s Davidic descent. The early Christians were respectfully insistent on this. Their own "Jewishness" may account for the fact.

The church universal approaches this lineage as a part of salvation history. Generally, there is no problem with the two accounts, Matthew and Luke, even though they differ in some details. The two Gospels are quite different in themselves, one would assume, primarily because of the personalities and aims of the authors.

Respect for life, while it has many connotations in today’s world, shows us the abiding ideal, for those of us professing Christ’s name, that all of life is sacred, with the infant Jesus and Mary providing a special context for us to ponder. The Lukan account communicates well: "But Mary kept all these things, pondering them in her heart." (2:19)

One of the major trouble spots in the cause of Christian unity is the role of Mary in our Faith. The problem is many Protestants have not so much shown her disrespect as they have disregard. The problem with Roman Catholics is two-fold. One, they have centuries of adoring her. Two, since Vatican II they have attempted to give her some small place in the hopes their, sometimes labeled, excesses would be corrected. I find the Orthodox, through their concept of the theotokos and their seemingly infinite number of icons of Mary and Jesus, to be helpful. The respect shown Mary is truly sublime and, yet, Jesus as God is clearly understood. The Society of Mary, and Anglican society, also provides assistance. It is "dedicated to the glory of God and in honour of the Holy incarnation, under the invocation of Our Lady, Help of Christians." Its "Studies and Commentaries," published both in 1982 and 1984 are worth careful reading. Those denominational families tracing their origins to John Wesley would do well to read, with care, his "A Letter to a Roman Catholic," especially when he writes of Christ’s birth in terms of "being conceived by the singular operation of the Holy Ghost and born of the blessed Virgin Mary, who, as well after as before she brought him forth, continued a pure and unspotted virgin."

The ecumenical movement has remained surprisingly free from technicalities which would terminate its progess. Genealogies have been no exception. When flexibility is needed, the Holy Spirit provides it. Even for those who would utilize Holy Scripture in a prooftext manner, ways have still been found to prevent a loss of common allegiance to Christ’s call to be One. Evangelicals are tending in the direction of catholicity and away from a rigid fundamentalism that would negate the contributions they are making to the universal church. Their new appreciation for liturgy is a trademark among those finding denominationalism a strangling force better avoided. Jesus the Christ is Lord of his church, and theological nitpicking does not add much, if any, quality to the ecumenical dialogue.

THERE IS GREAT JOY in discovering the respect so beautifully ingrained in our passage. It is as though an entire way of life speaks to us anew.

Christian unity continues irresistibly forward because it teaches respect all along the way. Our pilgrimage is punctuated at every juncture by it. In more focused ways, it is seen by reverencing the past, connecting the generations, and affirming the lineage leading to Jesus.

Christ’s people come up against one another in harsh ways, even un-Christian acts and thinking. In retrospect, they wonder why they didn’t respect one another, as one friend to another, within the Body. Satan does his bidding. We are sometimes led down the path of injuring brothers and sisters in Christ who also, in reality, want him and only him. It can be a mere matter of a denominational shibboleth that awakens our own desire to be right, totally and unequivocally right. Respect can carry the day, as we throw our arms around one anther and admit God never gave anyone or denomination the fullness of his wisdom.

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