753 lines
52 KiB
XML
753 lines
52 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Ru.ii" n="ii" next="Ru.iii" prev="Ru.i" progress="22.34%" title="Chapter I">
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<h2 id="Ru.ii-p0.1">R U T H</h2>
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<h3 id="Ru.ii-p0.2">CHAP. I.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Ru.ii-p1">In this chapter we have Naomi's afflictions. I. As
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a distressed housekeeper, forced by famine to remove into the land
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of Moab, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.1-Ruth.1.2" parsed="|Ruth|1|1|1|2" passage="Ru 1:1,2">ver. 1, 2</scripRef>. II. As
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a mournful widow and mother, bewailing the death of her husband and
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her two sons, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.3-Ruth.1.5" parsed="|Ruth|1|3|1|5" passage="Ru 1:3-5">ver. 3-5</scripRef>.
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III. As a careful mother-in-law, desirous to be kind to her two
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daughters, but at a loss how to be so when she returns to her own
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country, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.6-Ruth.1.13" parsed="|Ruth|1|6|1|13" passage="Ru 1:6-13">ver. 6-13</scripRef>. Orpah
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she parts with in sorrow, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.14" parsed="|Ruth|1|14|0|0" passage="Ru 1:14">ver.
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14</scripRef>. Ruth she takes with her in fear, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.15-Ruth.1.18" parsed="|Ruth|1|15|1|18" passage="Ru 1:15-18">ver. 15-18</scripRef>. IV. As a poor woman sent back
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to the place of her first settlement, to be supported by the
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kindness of her friends, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.19-Ruth.1.22" parsed="|Ruth|1|19|1|22" passage="Ru 1:19-22">ver.
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19-22</scripRef>. All these things were melancholy and seemed
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against her, and yet all were working for good.</p>
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<scripCom id="Ru.ii-p0.1_1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1" parsed="|Ruth|1|0|0|0" passage="Ru 1" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Ru.ii-p0.2_1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.1-Ruth.1.5" parsed="|Ruth|1|1|1|5" passage="Ru 1:1-5" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Ruth.1.1-Ruth.1.5">
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<h4 id="Ru.ii-p1.9">Elimelech and Naomi; Death of Elimelech and
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His Sons. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ru.ii-p1.10">b. c.</span> 1312.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Ru.ii-p2">1 Now it came to pass in the days when the
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judges ruled, that there was a famine in the land. And a certain
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man of Beth-lehem-judah went to sojourn in the country of Moab, he,
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and his wife, and his two sons. 2 And the name of the man
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<i>was</i> Elimelech, and the name of his wife Naomi, and the name
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of his two sons Mahlon and Chilion, Ephrathites of
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Beth-lehem-judah. And they came into the country of Moab, and
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continued there. 3 And Elimelech Naomi's husband died; and
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she was left, and her two sons. 4 And they took them wives
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of the women of Moab; the name of the one <i>was</i> Orpah, and the
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name of the other Ruth: and they dwelled there about ten years.
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5 And Mahlon and Chilion died also both of them; and the
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woman was left of her two sons and her husband.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p3">The first words give all the date we have
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of this story. It was <i>in the days when the judges ruled</i>
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(<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p3.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.1" parsed="|Ruth|1|1|0|0" passage="Ru 1:1"><i>v.</i> 1</scripRef>), not in those
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disorderly times when <i>there was no king in Israel;</i> but under
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which of the judges these things happened we are not told, and the
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conjectures of the learned are very uncertain. It must have been
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towards the beginning of the judges' time, for Boaz, who married
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Ruth, was born of Rahab, who received the spies in Joshua's time.
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Some think it was in the days of Ehud, others of Deborah; the
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learned bishop Patrick inclines to think it was in the days of
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Gideon, because in his days only we read of a famine by the
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Midianites' invasion, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p3.2" osisRef="Bible:Judg.6.3-Judg.6.4" parsed="|Judg|6|3|6|4" passage="Jdg 6:3,4">Judges vi. 3,
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4</scripRef>. While the judges were ruling, some one city and some
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another, Providence takes particular cognizance of Bethlehem, and
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has an eye to a King, to Messiah himself, who should descend from
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two Gentile mothers, Rahab and Ruth. Here is,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p4">I. A famine in the land, in the land of
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Canaan, that land <i>flowing with milk and honey.</i> This was one
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of the judgments which God had threatened to bring upon them for
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their sins, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Lev.26.19-Lev.26.20" parsed="|Lev|26|19|26|20" passage="Le 26:19,20">Lev. xxvi. 19,
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20</scripRef>. He has many arrows in his quiver. In the days of the
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judges they were oppressed by their enemies; and, when by that
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judgment they were not reformed, God tried this, for when he
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<i>judges he will overcome.</i> When the land had rest, yet it had
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not plenty; even in Bethlehem, which signifies <i>the house of
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bread,</i> there was scarcity. A <i>fruitful land is turned into
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barrenness,</i> to correct and restrain the luxury and wantonness
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of those that dwell therein.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p5">II. An account of one particular family
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distressed in the famine; it is that of <i>Elimelech.</i> His name
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signifies <i>my God a king,</i> agreeable to the state of Israel
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when the judges ruled, for the Lord was their King, and comfortable
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to him and his family in their affliction, that God was theirs and
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that he reigns for ever. His wife was <i>Naomi,</i> which signifies
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my <i>amiable</i> or <i>pleasant</i> one. But his sons' names were
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<i>Mahlon</i> and <i>Chilion, sickness</i> and <i>consumption,</i>
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perhaps because weakly children, and not likely to be long-lived.
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Such are the productions of our pleasant things, weak and infirm,
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fading and dying.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p6">III. The removal of this family from
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Bethlehem into the country of Moab on the other side Jordan, for
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subsistence, because of the famine, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.1-Ruth.1.2" parsed="|Ruth|1|1|1|2" passage="Ru 1:1,2"><i>v.</i> 1, 2</scripRef>. It seems there was plenty in
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the country of Moab when there was scarcity of bread in the land of
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Israel. Common gifts of providence are often bestowed in greater
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plenty upon those that are strangers to God than upon those that
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know and worship him. <i>Moab is at ease from his youth,</i> while
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Israel <i>is emptied from vessel to vessel</i> (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p6.2" osisRef="Bible:Jer.48.11" parsed="|Jer|48|11|0|0" passage="Jer 48:11">Jer. xlviii. 11</scripRef>), not because God loves
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Moabites better, but because they have <i>their portion in this
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life.</i> Thither Elimelech goes, not to settle for ever, but to
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sojourn for a time, during the dearth, as Abraham, on a similar
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occasion, went into Egypt, and Isaac into the land of the
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Philistines. Now here, 1. Elimelech's care to provide for his
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family, and his taking his wife and children with him, were without
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doubt commendable. <i>If any provide not for his own, he hath
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denied the faith,</i> <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p6.3" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.5.8" parsed="|1Tim|5|8|0|0" passage="1Ti 5:8">1 Tim. v.
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8</scripRef>. When he was in his straits he did not forsake his
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house, go seek his fortune himself, and leave his wife and children
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to shift for their own maintenance; but, as became a tender husband
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and a loving father, where he went he took them with him, not as
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the ostrich, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p6.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.39.16" parsed="|Job|39|16|0|0" passage="Job 39:16">Job xxxix.
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16</scripRef>. But, 2. I see not how his removal into the country
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of Moab, upon this occasion, could be justified. Abraham and Isaac
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were only sojourners in Canaan, and it was agreeable to their
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condition to remove; but the seed of Israel were now fixed, and
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ought not to remove into the territories of the heathen. What
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reason had Elimelech to go more than any of his neighbours? If by
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any ill husbandry he had wasted his patrimony, and sold his land or
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mortgaged it (as it should seem, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p6.5" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.4.3-Ruth.4.4" parsed="|Ruth|4|3|4|4" passage="Ru 4:3,4"><i>ch.</i> iv. 3, 4</scripRef>), which brought him in to
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a more necessitous condition than others, the law of God would have
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obliged his neighbours to relieve him (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p6.6" osisRef="Bible:Lev.25.35" parsed="|Lev|25|35|0|0" passage="Le 25:35">Lev. xxv. 35</scripRef>); but that was not his case, for
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he went out full, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p6.7" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.21" parsed="|Ruth|1|21|0|0" passage="Ru 1:21"><i>v.</i>
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21</scripRef>. By those who tarried at home it appears that the
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famine was not so extreme but that there was sufficient to keep
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life and soul together; and his charge was but small, only two
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sons. But if he could not be content with the short allowance that
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his neighbours took up with, and <i>in the day of famine could not
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be satisfied</i> unless he kept as plentiful a table as he had done
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formerly, if he could not live in hope that there would come years
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of plenty again in due time, or could not with patience wait for
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those years, it was his fault, and he did by it dishonour God and
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the good land he had given them, <i>weaken the hands of his
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brethren,</i> with whom he should have been willing to take his
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lot, and set an ill example to others. If all should do as he did
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Canaan would be dispeopled. Note, It is an evidence of a
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discontented, distrustful, unstable spirit, to be weary of the
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place in which God hath set us, and to be for leaving it
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immediately whenever we meet with any uneasiness or inconvenience
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in it. It is folly to think of escaping that cross which, being
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laid in our way, we ought to take up. It is our wisdom to make the
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best of that which is, for it is seldom that changing our place is
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mending it. Or, if he would remove, why to the country of Moab? If
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he had made enquiry, it is probable he would have found plenty in
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some of the tribes of Israel, those, for instance, on the other
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side Jordan, that bordered on the land of Moab; if he had had that
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zeal for God and his worship, and that affection for his brethren
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which became an Israelite, he would not have persuaded himself so
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easily to go and sojourn among Moabites.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p7">IV. The marriage of his two sons to two of
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the daughters of Moab after his death, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.4" parsed="|Ruth|1|4|0|0" passage="Ru 1:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>. All agree that this was ill done.
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The Chaldee says, <i>They transgressed the decree of the word of
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the Lord in taking strange wives.</i> If they would not stay
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unmarried till their return to the land of Israel, they were not so
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far off but that they might have fetched themselves wives thence.
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Little did Elimelech think, when he went to sojourn in Moab, that
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ever his sons would thus join in affinity with Moabites. But those
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that bring young people into bad acquaintance, and take them out of
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the way of public ordinances, though they may think them
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well-principled and armed against temptation, know not what they
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do, nor <i>what will be the end thereof.</i> It does not appear
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that the women they married were proselyted to the Jewish religion,
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for Orpah is said to return to her gods (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.15" parsed="|Ruth|1|15|0|0" passage="Ru 1:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>); the gods of Moab were hers
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still. It is a groundless tradition of the Jews that Ruth was the
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daughter of Eglon king of Moab, yet the Chaldee paraphrast inserts
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it; but this and their other tradition, which he inserts likewise,
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cannot agree, that Boaz who married Ruth was the same with Ibzan,
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who judged Israel 200 years after Eglon's death, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p7.3" osisRef="Bible:Judg.12.8-Judg.12.10" parsed="|Judg|12|8|12|10" passage="Jdg 12:8-10">Judg. xii.</scripRef></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p8">V. The death of Elimelech and his two sons,
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and the disconsolate condition Naomi was thereby reduced to. Her
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husband died (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.3" parsed="|Ruth|1|3|0|0" passage="Ru 1:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>)
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and her two sons (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p8.2" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.5" parsed="|Ruth|1|5|0|0" passage="Ru 1:5"><i>v.</i>
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5</scripRef>) soon after their marriage, and the Chaldee says,
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<i>Their days were shortened,</i> because they transgressed the law
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in marrying strange wives. See here, 1. That wherever we go we
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cannot out-run death, whose fatal arrows fly in all places. 2. That
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we cannot expect to prosper when we go out of the way of our duty.
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<i>He that will save his life</i> by any indirect course <i>shall
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lose it.</i> 3. That death, when it comes into a family, often
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makes breach upon breach. One is taken away to prepare another to
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follow soon after; one is taken away, and that affliction is not
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duly improved, and therefore God sends another of the same kind.
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When Naomi had lost her husband she took so much the more
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complacency and put so much the more confidence in her sons. Under
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the shadow of these surviving comforts she thinks she shall live
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among the heathen, and exceedingly glad she was of these gourds;
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but behold they wither presently, <i>green and growing up in the
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morning, cut down and dried up</i> before night, buried soon after
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they were married, for neither of them left any children. So
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uncertain and transient are all our enjoyments here. It is
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therefore our wisdom to make sure of those comforts that will be
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made sure and of which death cannot rob us. But how desolate was
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the condition, and how disconsolate the spirit, of poor Naomi, when
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the woman <i>was left of her two sons and her husband!</i> When
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<i>these two things, loss of children and widowhood, come upon her
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in a moment,</i> come upon her <i>in their perfection, by whom
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shall she be comforted?</i> <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p8.3" osisRef="Bible:Isa.47.9 Bible:Isa.51.19" parsed="|Isa|47|9|0|0;|Isa|51|19|0|0" passage="Isa 47:9,51:19">Isa.
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xlvii. 9; li. 19</scripRef>. It is God alone who has wherewithal to
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comfort those who are thus cast down.</p>
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</div><scripCom id="Ru.ii-p0.3" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.6-Ruth.1.18" parsed="|Ruth|1|6|1|18" passage="Ru 1:6-18" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Ruth.1.6-Ruth.1.18">
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<h4 id="Ru.ii-p8.5">Naomi Returns to Canaan; Naomi and Her
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Daughters-in-Law; Ruth's Constancy to Naomi. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ru.ii-p8.6">b. c.</span> 1312.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Ru.ii-p9">6 Then she arose with her daughters in law, that
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she might return from the country of Moab: for she had heard in the
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country of Moab how that the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ru.ii-p9.1">Lord</span>
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had visited his people in giving them bread. 7 Wherefore she
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went forth out of the place where she was, and her two daughters in
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law with her; and they went on the way to return unto the land of
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Judah. 8 And Naomi said unto her two daughters in law, Go,
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return each to her mother's house: the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ru.ii-p9.2">Lord</span> deal kindly with you, as ye have dealt with
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the dead, and with me. 9 The <span class="smallcaps" id="Ru.ii-p9.3">Lord</span> grant you that ye may find rest, each <i>of
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you</i> in the house of her husband. Then she kissed them; and they
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lifted up their voice, and wept. 10 And they said unto her,
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Surely we will return with thee unto thy people. 11 And
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Naomi said, Turn again, my daughters: why will ye go with me?
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<i>are</i> there yet <i>any more</i> sons in my womb, that they may
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be your husbands? 12 Turn again, my daughters, go <i>your
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way;</i> for I am too old to have a husband. If I should say, I
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have hope, <i>if</i> I should have a husband also to night, and
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should also bear sons; 13 Would ye tarry for them till they
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were grown? would ye stay for them from having husbands? nay, my
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daughters; for it grieveth me much for your sakes that the hand of
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the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ru.ii-p9.4">Lord</span> is gone out against me.
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14 And they lifted up their voice, and wept again: and Orpah
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kissed her mother in law; but Ruth clave unto her. 15 And
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she said, Behold, thy sister in law is gone back unto her people,
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and unto her gods: return thou after thy sister in law. 16
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And Ruth said, Intreat me not to leave thee, <i>or</i> to return
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from following after thee: for whither thou goest, I will go; and
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where thou lodgest, I will lodge: thy people <i>shall be</i> my
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people, and thy God my God: 17 Where thou diest, will I die,
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and there will I be buried: the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ru.ii-p9.5">Lord</span>
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do so to me, and more also, <i>if ought</i> but death part thee and
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me. 18 When she saw that she was stedfastly minded to go
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with her, then she left speaking unto her.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p10">See here, I. The good affection Naomi bore
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to the land of Israel, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.6" parsed="|Ruth|1|6|0|0" passage="Ru 1:6"><i>v.</i>
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6</scripRef>. Though she could not stay in it while the famine
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lasted, she would not stay out of it when the famine ceased. Though
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the country of Moab had afforded her shelter and supply in a time
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of need, yet she did not intend it should be her rest for ever; no
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land should be that but the holy land, in which the sanctuary of
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God was, of which he had said, <i>This is my rest for ever.</i>
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Observe,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p11">1. God, at last, returned in mercy to his
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people; for, though he contend long, he will not contend always. As
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the judgment of oppression, under which they often groaned in the
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time of the judges, still came to an end, after a while, when God
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had raised them up a deliverer, so here the judgment of famine: At
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length God graciously <i>visited his people in giving them
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bread.</i> Plenty is God's gift, and it is his visitation which by
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bread, the staff of life, <i>holds our souls in life.</i> Though
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this mercy be the more striking when it comes after famine, yet if
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we have constantly enjoyed it, and never knew what famine meant, we
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are not to think it the less valuable.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p12">2. Naomi then returned, in duty to her
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people. She had often enquired of their state, what harvests they
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had and how the markets went, and still the tidings were
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discouraging; but like the prophet's servant, who, having looked
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seven times and seen no sign of rain, at length discerned a cloud
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no bigger than a man's hand, which soon overspread the heavens, so
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Naomi at last has good news brought her of plenty in Bethlehem, and
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then she can think of no other than returning thither again. Her
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new alliances in the country of Moab could not make her forget her
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relation to the land of Israel. Note, Though there be a reason for
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our being in bad places, yet, when the reason ceases, we must by no
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means continue in them. Forced absence from God's ordinances, and
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forced presence with wicked people, are great afflictions; but when
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the force ceases, and such a situation is continued of choice, then
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it becomes a great sin. It should seem she began to think of
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returning immediately upon the death of her two sons, (1.) Because
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she looked upon that affliction to be a judgment upon her family
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for lingering in the country of Moab; and hearing this to be the
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<i>voice of the rod, and of him that appointed it,</i> she obeys
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and returns. Had she returned upon the death of her husband,
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perhaps she might have saved the life of her sons; but, <i>when God
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judgeth he will overcome,</i> and, if one affliction prevail not to
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awaken us to a sight and sense of sin and duty, another shall. When
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death comes into a family it ought to be improved for the reforming
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of what is amiss in the family: when relations are taken away from
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us we are put upon enquiry whether, in some instance or other, we
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are not out of the way of our duty, that we may return to it. God
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||
<i>calls our sins to remembrance,</i> when he <i>slays a son,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p12.1" osisRef="Bible:1Kgs.17.18" parsed="|1Kgs|17|18|0|0" passage="1Ki 17:18">1 Kings xvii. 18</scripRef>. And, if
|
||
he thus hedge up our way with thorns, it is that he may oblige us
|
||
to say, We will <i>go and return to our first husband,</i> as Naomi
|
||
here to her country, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p12.2" osisRef="Bible:Hos.2.7" parsed="|Hos|2|7|0|0" passage="Ho 2:7">Hos. ii.
|
||
7</scripRef>. (2.) Because the land of Moab had now become a
|
||
melancholy place to her. It is with little pleasure that she can
|
||
breathe in that air in which her husband and sons had expired, or
|
||
go on that ground in which they lay buried out of her sight, but
|
||
not out of her thoughts; now she will go to Canaan again. Thus God
|
||
takes away from us the comforts we stay ourselves too much upon and
|
||
solace ourselves too much in, here in the land of our sojourning,
|
||
that we may think more of our home in the other world, and by faith
|
||
and hope may hasten towards it. Earth is embittered to us, that
|
||
heaven may be endeared.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p13">II. The good affection which her
|
||
daughters-in-law, and one of them especially, bore to her, and her
|
||
generous return of their good affection.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p14">1. They were both so kind as to accompany
|
||
her, some part of the way at least, when she returned towards the
|
||
land of Judah. Her two daughters-in-law did not go about to
|
||
persuade her to continue in the land of Moab, but, if she was
|
||
resolved to go home, would pay her all possible civility and
|
||
respect at parting; and this was one instance of it: they would
|
||
<i>bring her on her way,</i> at least to the utmost limits of their
|
||
country, and help her to carry her luggage as far as they went, for
|
||
it does not appear that she had any servant to attend her,
|
||
<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.7" parsed="|Ruth|1|7|0|0" passage="Ru 1:7"><i>v.</i> 7</scripRef>. By this we see
|
||
both that Naomi, as became an Israelite, had been very kind and
|
||
obliging to them and had won their love, in which she is an example
|
||
to all mothers-in-law, and that Orpah and Ruth had a just sense of
|
||
her kindness, for they were willing to return it thus far. It was a
|
||
sign they had dwelt together in unity, though <i>those</i> were
|
||
dead by whom the relation between them came. Though they retained
|
||
an affection for the gods of Moab (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p14.2" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.15" parsed="|Ruth|1|15|0|0" passage="Ru 1:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>), and Naomi was still faithful to
|
||
the God of Israel, yet that was no hindrance to either side from
|
||
love and kindness, and all the good offices that the relation
|
||
required. Mothers-in-law and daughters-in-law are too often at
|
||
variance (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p14.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.10.35" parsed="|Matt|10|35|0|0" passage="Mt 10:35">Matt. x. 35</scripRef>), and
|
||
therefore it is the more commendable if they live in love; let all
|
||
who sustain this relation aim at the praise of doing so.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p15">2. When they had gone a little way with her
|
||
Naomi, with a great deal of affection, urged them to go back
|
||
(<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.8-Ruth.1.9" parsed="|Ruth|1|8|1|9" passage="Ru 1:8,9"><i>v.</i> 8, 9</scripRef>): <i>Return
|
||
each to her mother's house.</i> When they were dislodged by a sad
|
||
providence from the house of their husbands it was a mercy to them
|
||
that they had their parents yet living, that they had their houses
|
||
to go to, where they might be welcome and easy, and were not turned
|
||
out to the wide world. Naomi suggests that their own mothers would
|
||
be more agreeable to them than a mother-in-law, especially when
|
||
their own mothers had houses and their mother-in-law was not sure
|
||
she had a place to lay her head in which she could call her own.
|
||
She dismisses them,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p16">(1.) With commendation. This is a debt
|
||
owing to those who have conducted themselves well in any relation,
|
||
they ought to have the praise of it: <i>You have dealt kindly with
|
||
the dead and with me,</i> that is, "You were good wives to your
|
||
husbands that are gone, and have been good daughters to me, and not
|
||
wanting to your duty in either relation." Note, When we and our
|
||
relations are parting, by death or otherwise, it is very
|
||
comfortable if we have both their testimony and the testimony of
|
||
our own consciences for us that while we were together we carefully
|
||
endeavoured to do our duty in the relation. This will help to allay
|
||
the bitterness of parting; and, while we are together, we should
|
||
labour so to conduct ourselves as that when we part we may not have
|
||
cause to reflect with regret upon our miscarriages in the
|
||
relation.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p17">(2.) With prayer. It is very proper for
|
||
friends, when they part, to part with prayer. She sends them home
|
||
with her blessing; and the blessing of a mother-in-law is not to be
|
||
slighted. In this blessing she twice mentions the name
|
||
<i>Jehovah,</i> Israel's God, and the only true God, that she might
|
||
direct her daughters to look up to him as the only fountain of all
|
||
good. To him she prays in general that he would recompense to them
|
||
the kindness they had shown to her and hers. It may be expected and
|
||
prayed for in faith that God will deal kindly with those that have
|
||
dealt kindly with their relations. <i>He that watereth shall be
|
||
watered also himself.</i> And, in particular, that they might be
|
||
happy in marrying again: <i>The Lord grant that you may find rest,
|
||
each of you in the house of her husband.</i> Note, [1.] It is very
|
||
fit that, according to the apostle's direction (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.5.14" parsed="|1Tim|5|14|0|0" passage="1Ti 5:14">1 Tim. v. 14</scripRef>), the younger women, and he
|
||
speaks there of young widows, should <i>marry, bear children,</i>
|
||
and <i>guide the house.</i> And it is a pity that those who have
|
||
approved themselves good wives should not again be blessed with
|
||
good husbands, especially those that, like these widows, have no
|
||
children. [2.] The married state is a state of rest, such rest as
|
||
this world affords, rest in the house of a husband, more than can
|
||
be expected in the house of a mother or a mother-in-law. [3.] This
|
||
rest is God's gift. If any content and satisfaction be found in our
|
||
outward condition, God must be acknowledged in it. There are those
|
||
that are unequally yoked, that find little rest even in the house
|
||
of a husband. Their affliction ought to make those the more
|
||
thankful to whom the relation is comfortable. Yet let God be the
|
||
rest of the soul, and no perfect rest thought of on this side
|
||
heaven.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p18">(3.) She dismissed them with great
|
||
affection: <i>She kissed them,</i> wished she had somewhat better
|
||
to give them, but silver and gold she had none. However, this
|
||
parting kiss shall be the seal of such a true friendship as (though
|
||
she never see them more) she will, while she lives, retain the
|
||
pleasing remembrance of. If relations must part, let them thus part
|
||
in love, that they may (if they never meet again in this world)
|
||
meet in the world of everlasting love.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p19">3. The two young widows could not think of
|
||
parting with their good mother-in-law, so much had the good
|
||
conversation of that pious Israelite won upon them. They not only
|
||
lifted up their voice and wept, as loth to part, but they professed
|
||
a resolution to adhere to her (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.10" parsed="|Ruth|1|10|0|0" passage="Ru 1:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>): "<i>Surely we will return with
|
||
thee unto thy people,</i> and take our lot with thee." It is a rare
|
||
instance of affection to a mother-in-law and an evidence that they
|
||
had, for her sake, conceived a good opinion of the people of
|
||
Israel. Even Orpah, who afterwards went back to her gods, now
|
||
seemed resolved to go forward with Naomi. The sad ceremony of
|
||
parting, and the tears shed on that occasion, drew from her this
|
||
protestation, but it did not hold. Strong passions, without a
|
||
settled judgment, commonly produce weak resolutions.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p20">4. Naomi sets herself to dissuade them from
|
||
going along with her, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.11-Ruth.1.13" parsed="|Ruth|1|11|1|13" passage="Ru 1:11-13"><i>v.</i>
|
||
11-13</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p21">(1.) Naomi urges her afflicted condition.
|
||
If she had had any sons in Canaan, or any near kinsmen, whom she
|
||
could have expected to marry the widows, to <i>raise up seed</i> to
|
||
those that were gone, and to redeem the mortgaged estate of the
|
||
family, it might have been some encouragement to them to hope for a
|
||
comfortable settlement at Bethlehem. But she had no sons, nor could
|
||
she think of any near kinsman likely to do the kinsman's part, and
|
||
therefore argues that she was never likely to have any sons to be
|
||
husbands for them, for she was too old to have a husband; it became
|
||
her age to think of dying and going out of the world, not of
|
||
marrying and beginning the world again. Or, if she had a husband,
|
||
she could not expect to have children, nor, if she had sons, could
|
||
she think that these young widows would stay unmarried till her
|
||
sons that should yet be born would grow up to be marriageable. Yet
|
||
this was not all: she could not only not propose to herself to
|
||
marry them like themselves, but she knew not how to maintain them
|
||
like themselves. The greatest grievance of that poor condition to
|
||
which she was reduced was that she was not in a capacity to do for
|
||
them as she would: <i>It grieveth me</i> more <i>for your sakes</i>
|
||
than for my own <i>that the hand of the Lord has gone out against
|
||
me.</i> Observe, [1.] She judges herself chiefly aimed at in the
|
||
affliction, that God's quarrel was principally with her: "<i>The
|
||
hand of the Lord has gone out against me.</i> I am the sinner; it
|
||
is with me that God has a controversy; it is with me that he is
|
||
contending; I take it to myself." This well becomes us when we are
|
||
under affliction; though many others share in the trouble, yet we
|
||
must hear the voice of the rod as if it spoke only against us and
|
||
to us, not billeting the rebukes of it at other people's houses,
|
||
but taking them to ourselves. [2.] She laments most the trouble
|
||
that redounded to them from it. She was the sinner, but they were
|
||
the sufferers: <i>It grieveth me much for your sakes.</i> A
|
||
gracious generous spirit can better bear its own burden than it can
|
||
bear to see it a grievance to others, or others in any way drawn
|
||
into trouble by it. Naomi could more easily want herself than see
|
||
her daughters want. "Therefore <i>turn again, my daughters,</i>
|
||
for, alas! I am in no capacity to do you any kindness." But,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p22">(2.) Did Naomi do well thus to discourage
|
||
her daughters from going with her, when, by taking them with her,
|
||
she might save them from the idolatry of Moab and bring them to the
|
||
faith and worship of the God of Israel? Naomi, no doubt, desired to
|
||
do so. But, [1.] If they did come with her, she would not have them
|
||
to come upon her account. Those that take upon them a profession of
|
||
religion only in complaisance to their relations, to oblige their
|
||
friends, or for the sake of company, will be converts of small
|
||
value and of short continuance. [2.] If they did come with her, she
|
||
would have them to make it their deliberate choice, and to sit down
|
||
first and count the cost, as it concerns those to do that may take
|
||
up a profession of religion. It is good for us to be told the
|
||
worst. Our Saviour took this course with him who, in the heat of
|
||
zeal, spoke that bold word, <i>Master, I will follow thee
|
||
whithersoever thou goest.</i> "Come, come," says Christ, "canst
|
||
thou fare as I fare? <i>The Son of man has not where to lay his
|
||
head;</i> know this, and then consider whether thou canst find in
|
||
thy heart to take thy lot with him," <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Matt.8.19-Matt.8.20" parsed="|Matt|8|19|8|20" passage="Mt 8:19,20">Matt. viii. 19, 20</scripRef>. Thus Naomi deals with
|
||
her daughters-in-law. Thoughts ripened into resolves by serious
|
||
consideration are likely to be kept always in the imagination of
|
||
the heart, whereas what is soon ripe is soon rotten.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p23">5. Orpah was easily persuaded to yield to
|
||
her own corrupt inclination, and to go back to her country, her
|
||
kindred, and her father's house, now when she stood fair for an
|
||
effectual call from it. They both <i>lifted up their voice and wept
|
||
again</i> (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.14" parsed="|Ruth|1|14|0|0" passage="Ru 1:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>),
|
||
being much affected with the tender things that Naomi had said. But
|
||
it had a different effect upon them: to Orpah it was a savour of
|
||
death unto death; the representation Naomi had made of the
|
||
inconveniences they must count upon if they went forward to Canaan
|
||
sent her back to the country of Moab, and served her as an excuse
|
||
for her apostasy; but, on the contrary, it strengthened Ruth's
|
||
resolution, and her good affection to Naomi, with whose wisdom and
|
||
goodness she was never so charmed as she was upon this occasion;
|
||
thus to her it was a savour of life unto life. (1.) <i>Orpah kissed
|
||
her mother-in-law,</i> that is, took an affectionate leave of her,
|
||
bade her farewell for ever, without any purpose to follow her
|
||
hereafter, as he that said he would follow Christ when he had
|
||
buried his father or bidden those farewell that were at home.
|
||
Orpah's kiss showed she had an affection for Naomi and was loth to
|
||
part from her; yet she did not love her well enough to leave her
|
||
country for her sake. Thus many have a value and affection for
|
||
Christ, and yet come short of salvation by him, because they cannot
|
||
find in their hearts to forsake other things for him. They love him
|
||
and yet leave him, because they do not love him enough, but love
|
||
other things better. Thus the young man that went away from Christ
|
||
went away sorrowful, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p23.2" osisRef="Bible:Matt.19.22" parsed="|Matt|19|22|0|0" passage="Mt 19:22">Matt. xix.
|
||
22</scripRef>. But, (2.) <i>Ruth clave unto her.</i> Whether, when
|
||
she came from home, she was resolved to go forward with her or no
|
||
does not appear; perhaps she was before determined what to do, out
|
||
of a sincere affection for the God of Israel and to his law, of
|
||
which, by the good instructions of Naomi, she had some
|
||
knowledge.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p24">6. Naomi persuades Ruth to go back, urging,
|
||
as a further inducement, her sister's example (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.15" parsed="|Ruth|1|15|0|0" passage="Ru 1:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>): <i>Thy sister-in-law has gone
|
||
back to her people,</i> and therefore of course gone back <i>to her
|
||
gods;</i> for, whatever she might do while she lived with her
|
||
mother-in-law, it would be next to impossible for her to show any
|
||
respect to the God of Israel when she went to live among the
|
||
worshippers of Chemosh. Those that forsake the communion of saints,
|
||
and return to the people of Moab, will certainly break off their
|
||
communion with God, and embrace the idols of Moab. Now, <i>return
|
||
thou after thy sister,</i> that is, "If ever thou wilt return,
|
||
return now. This is the greatest trial of thy constancy; stand this
|
||
trial, and thou art mine for ever." Such offences as that of
|
||
Orpah's revolt must needs come, that those who are perfect and
|
||
sincere may be made manifest, as Ruth was upon this occasion.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p25">7. Ruth puts an end to the debate by a most
|
||
solemn profession of her immovable resolution never to forsake her,
|
||
nor to return to her own country and her old relations again,
|
||
<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.16-Ruth.1.17" parsed="|Ruth|1|16|1|17" passage="Ru 1:16,17"><i>v.</i> 16, 17</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p26">(1.) Nothing could be said more fine, more
|
||
brave, than this. She seems to have had another spirit, and another
|
||
speech, now that her sister had gone, and it is an instance of the
|
||
grace of God inclining the soul to the resolute choice of the
|
||
better part. <i>Draw me</i> thus, and <i>we will run after
|
||
thee.</i> Her mother's dissuasions made her the more resolute; as
|
||
when Joshua said to the people, <i>You cannot serve the Lord,</i>
|
||
they said it with the more vehemence, <i>Nay, but we will.</i> [1.]
|
||
She begs of her mother-in-law to say no more against her going:
|
||
"<i>Entreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after
|
||
thee;</i> for all thy entreaties now cannot shake that resolution
|
||
which thy instructions formerly have wrought in me, and therefore
|
||
let me hear no more of them." Note, It is a great vexation and
|
||
uneasiness to those that are resolved for God and religion to be
|
||
tempted and solicited to alter their resolution. Those that would
|
||
not think of it would not hear of it. <i>Entreat me not.</i> The
|
||
margin reads it, <i>Be not against me.</i> Note, We are to reckon
|
||
those against us, and really our enemies, that would hinder us in
|
||
our way to the heavenly Canaan. Our relations they may be, but they
|
||
cannot be our friends, that would dissuade us from and discourage
|
||
us in the service of God and the work of religion. [2.] She is very
|
||
particular in her resolution to cleave to her and never to forsake
|
||
her; and she speaks the language of one resolved for God and
|
||
heaven. She is so in love, not with her mother's beauty, or riches,
|
||
or gaiety (all these were withered and gone), but with her wisdom,
|
||
and virtue, and grace, which remained with her, even in her present
|
||
poor and melancholy condition, that she resolves to cleave to her.
|
||
<i>First,</i> She will travel with her: <i>Whither thou goest I
|
||
will go,</i> though to a country I never saw and in a low and ill
|
||
opinion of which I have been trained up; though far from my own
|
||
country, yet with thee every road shall be pleasant.
|
||
<i>Secondly,</i> She will dwell with her: "<i>Where thou lodgest I
|
||
will lodge,</i> though it be in a cottage, nay, though it be no
|
||
better a lodging than Jacob had when he had the stones for his
|
||
pillow. Where thou settest up thy staff I will set up mine, be it
|
||
where it may." <i>Thirdly,</i> She will twist interest with her:
|
||
<i>Thy people shall be my people.</i> From Naomi's character she
|
||
concludes certainly that the great nation was a wise and an
|
||
understanding people. She judges of them all by her good mother,
|
||
who, wherever she went, was a credit to her country (as all those
|
||
should study to be who profess relation to the better country, that
|
||
is, the heavenly), and therefore she will think herself happy if
|
||
she may be reckoned one of them. "Thy people shall be mine to
|
||
associate with, to be conformable to, and to be concerned for."
|
||
<i>Fourthly,</i> She will join in religion with her. Thus she
|
||
determined to be hers <i>usque ad aras—to the very altars: "Thy
|
||
God shall be my God,</i> and farewell to all the gods of Moab,
|
||
which are vanity and a lie. I will adore the God of Israel, the
|
||
only living and true God, trust in him alone, serve him, and in
|
||
every thing be ruled by him;" this is to take the Lord for our God.
|
||
<i>Fifthly,</i> She will gladly die in the same bed: <i>Where thou
|
||
diest will I die.</i> She takes it for granted they must both die,
|
||
and that in all probability Naomi, as the elder, would die first,
|
||
and resolves to continue in the same house, if it might be, till
|
||
her days also were fulfilled, intimating likewise a desire to
|
||
partake of her happiness in death; she wishes to die in the same
|
||
place, in token of her dying after the same manner. "Let me die the
|
||
death of righteous Naomi, and let my last end be like hers."
|
||
<i>Sixthly,</i> She will desire to be buried in the same grave, and
|
||
to lay her bones by hers: <i>There will I be buried,</i> not
|
||
desiring to have so much as her dead body carried back to the
|
||
country of Moab, in token of any remaining kindness for it; but,
|
||
Naomi and she having joined souls, she desires they may mingle
|
||
dust, in hopes of rising together, and being together for ever in
|
||
the other world. [3.] She backs her resolution to adhere to Naomi
|
||
with a solemn oath: <i>The Lord do so to me, and more also</i>
|
||
(which was an ancient form of imprecation), <i>if aught but death
|
||
part thee and me.</i> An oath for confirmation was an end of this
|
||
strife, and would leave a lasting obligation upon her never to
|
||
forsake that good way she was now making choice of. <i>First,</i>
|
||
It is implied that death would separate between them for a time.
|
||
She could promise to die and be buried in the same place, but not
|
||
at the same time; it might so happen that she might die first, and
|
||
this would part them. Note, Death parts those whom nothing else
|
||
will part. A dying hour is a parting hour, and should be so thought
|
||
of by us and prepared for. <i>Secondly,</i> It is resolved that
|
||
nothing else should part them; not any kindness from her own family
|
||
and people, nor any hope of preferment among them, not any
|
||
unkindness from Israel, nor the fear of poverty and disgrace among
|
||
them. "No, I will <i>never leave thee.</i>" Now,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p27">(2.) This is a pattern of a resolute
|
||
convert to God and religion. Thus must we be at a point. [1.] We
|
||
must take the Lord for our God. "This God is <i>my God for ever and
|
||
ever;</i> I have avouched him for mine." [2.] When we take God for
|
||
our God we must take his people for our people in all conditions;
|
||
though they be a poor despised people, yet, if they be his, they
|
||
must be ours. [3.] Having cast in our lot among them, we must be
|
||
willing to take our lot with them and to fare as they fare. We must
|
||
submit to the same yoke and draw in it faithfully, take up the same
|
||
cross and carry it cheerfully, go where God will have us to go,
|
||
though it should be into banishment, and lodge where he will have
|
||
us to lodge, though it be in a prison, die where he will have us
|
||
die, and lay our bones in the graves of the upright, who enter into
|
||
peace and rest in their beds, though they be but the <i>graves of
|
||
the common people.</i> [4.] We must resolve to continue and
|
||
persevere, and herein our adherence to Christ must be closer than
|
||
that of Ruth to Naomi. She resolved that nothing but death should
|
||
separate them; but we must resolve that death itself shall not
|
||
separate us from our duty to Christ, and then we may be sure that
|
||
death itself shall not separate us from our happiness in Christ.
|
||
[5.] We must bind our souls with a bond never to break these pious
|
||
resolutions, and swear unto the Lord that we will cleave to him.
|
||
Fast bind, fast find. He that means honestly does not startle at
|
||
assurances.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p28">8. Naomi is hereby silenced (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p28.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.18" parsed="|Ruth|1|18|0|0" passage="Ru 1:18"><i>v.</i> 18</scripRef>): <i>When she saw that
|
||
Ruth was stedfastly minded to go with her</i> (which was the very
|
||
thing she aimed at in all that she had said, to make her of a
|
||
stedfast mind in going with her), when she saw that she had gained
|
||
her point, she was well satisfied, and <i>left off speaking to
|
||
her.</i> She could desire no more than that solemn protestation
|
||
which Ruth had just now made. See the power of resolution, how it
|
||
puts temptation to silence. Those that are unresolved, and go in
|
||
religious ways without a stedfast mind, tempt the tempter, and
|
||
stand like a door half open, which invites a thief; but resolution
|
||
shuts and bolts the door, resists the devil, and forces him to
|
||
flee.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p29">The Chaldee paraphrase thus relates the
|
||
debate between Naomi and Ruth:—Ruth said, <i>Entreat me not to
|
||
leave thee,</i> for <i>I will be a proselyte.</i> Naomi said, <i>We
|
||
are commanded to keep sabbaths and good days, on which we may not
|
||
travel above 2000 cubits</i>—a sabbath-day's journey. <i>Well,</i>
|
||
said Ruth, <i>whither thou goest I will go.</i> Naomi said, <i>We
|
||
are commanded not to tarry all night with Gentiles. Well,</i> said
|
||
Ruth, <i>where thou lodgest I will lodge.</i> Naomi said, <i>We are
|
||
commanded to keep 613 precepts. Well,</i> said Ruth, <i>whatever
|
||
thy people keep I will keep, for they shall be my people.</i> Naomi
|
||
said, <i>We are forbidden to worship any strange god. Well,</i>
|
||
said Ruth, <i>thy God shall be my God.</i> Naomi said, <i>We have
|
||
four sorts of deaths for malefactors, stoning, burning, strangling,
|
||
and slaying with the sword. Well,</i> said Ruth, <i>where thou
|
||
diest I will die. We have,</i> said Naomi, <i>houses of sepulchre.
|
||
And there,</i> said Ruth, <i>will I be buried.</i></p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Ru.ii-p0.4" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.19-Ruth.1.22" parsed="|Ruth|1|19|1|22" passage="Ru 1:19-22" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Ruth.1.19-Ruth.1.22">
|
||
<h4 id="Ru.ii-p29.2">Naomi's Reception at
|
||
Bethlehem. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ru.ii-p29.3">b. c.</span> 1312.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Ru.ii-p30">19 So they two went until they came to
|
||
Bethlehem. And it came to pass, when they were come to Bethlehem,
|
||
that all the city was moved about them, and they said, <i>Is</i>
|
||
this Naomi? 20 And she said unto them, Call me not Naomi,
|
||
call me Mara: for the Almighty hath dealt very bitterly with me.
|
||
21 I went out full, and the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ru.ii-p30.1">Lord</span> hath brought me home again empty: why
|
||
<i>then</i> call ye me Naomi, seeing the <span class="smallcaps" id="Ru.ii-p30.2">Lord</span> hath testified against me, and the Almighty
|
||
hath afflicted me? 22 So Naomi returned, and Ruth the
|
||
Moabitess, her daughter in law, with her, which returned out of the
|
||
country of Moab: and they came to Bethlehem in the beginning of
|
||
barley harvest.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p31">Naomi and Ruth, after many a weary step
|
||
(the fatigue of the journey, we may suppose, being somewhat
|
||
relieved by the good instructions Naomi gave to her proselyte and
|
||
the good discourse they had together), came at last to Bethlehem.
|
||
And they came very seasonably, <i>in the beginning of the
|
||
barley-harvest,</i> which was the first of their harvests, that of
|
||
wheat following after. Now Naomi's own eyes might convince her of
|
||
the truth of what she had heard in the country of Moab, that <i>the
|
||
Lord had visited his people in giving them bread,</i> and Ruth
|
||
might see this good land in its best state; and now they had
|
||
opportunity to provide for winter. Our <i>times are in God's
|
||
hand,</i> both the events and the time of them. Notice is here
|
||
taken,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p32">I. Of the discomposure of the neighbours
|
||
upon this occasion (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p32.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.19" parsed="|Ruth|1|19|0|0" passage="Ru 1:19"><i>v.</i>
|
||
19</scripRef>): <i>All the city was moved about them.</i> Her old
|
||
acquaintance gathered about her, to enquire concerning her state,
|
||
and to bid her welcome to Bethlehem again. Or perhaps they were
|
||
<i>moved about her,</i> lest she should be a charge to the town,
|
||
she looked so bare. By this it appears that she had formerly lived
|
||
respectably, else there would not have been so much notice taken of
|
||
her. If those that have been in a high and prosperous condition
|
||
break, or fall into poverty or disgrace, their fall is the more
|
||
remarkable. And they said, <i>Is this Naomi?</i> The <i>women</i>
|
||
of the city said it, for the word is feminine. Those with whom she
|
||
had formerly been intimate were surprised to see her in this
|
||
condition; she was so much broken and altered with her afflictions
|
||
that they could scarcely believe their own eyes, nor think that
|
||
this was the same person whom they had formerly seen, so fresh, and
|
||
fair, and gay: <i>Is this Naomi?</i> So unlike is the rose when it
|
||
is withered to what it was when it was blooming. What a poor figure
|
||
does Naomi make now, compared with what she made in her prosperity!
|
||
If any asked this question in contempt, upbraiding her with her
|
||
miseries ("is this she that could not be content to fare as her
|
||
neighbours did, but must ramble to a strange country? see what she
|
||
has got by it!"), their temper was very base and sordid. Nothing
|
||
more barbarous than to triumph over those that are fallen. But we
|
||
may suppose that the generality asked it in compassion and
|
||
commiseration: "Is this she that lived so plentifully, and kept so
|
||
good a house, and was so charitable to the poor? <i>How has the
|
||
gold become dim!</i>" Those that had seen the magnificence of the
|
||
first temple wept when they saw the meanness of the second; so
|
||
these here. Note, Afflictions will make great and surprising
|
||
changes in a little time. When we see how sickness and old age
|
||
alter people, change their countenance and temper, we may think of
|
||
what the Bethlehemites said: "<i>Is this Naomi?</i> One would not
|
||
take it to be the same person." God, by his grace, fit us for all
|
||
such changes, especially the great change!</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p33">II. Of the composure of Naomi's spirit. If
|
||
some upbraided her with her poverty, she was not moved against
|
||
them, as she would have been if she had been poor and proud; but,
|
||
with a great deal of pious patience, bore that and all the other
|
||
melancholy effects of her affliction (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p33.1" osisRef="Bible:Ruth.1.20-Ruth.1.21" parsed="|Ruth|1|20|1|21" passage="Ru 1:20,21"><i>v.</i> 20, 21</scripRef>): <i>Call me not Naomi,
|
||
call me Mara,</i> &c. "<i>Naomi</i> signifies <i>pleasant</i>
|
||
or <i>amiable;</i> but all my pleasant things are laid waste; call
|
||
me <i>Mara, bitter</i> or <i>bitterness,</i> for I am now a woman
|
||
of a sorrowful spirit." Thus does she bring her mind to her
|
||
condition, which we all ought to do when our condition is not in
|
||
every thing to our mind. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p34">1. The change of her state, and how it is
|
||
described, with a pious regard to the divine providence, and
|
||
without any passionate murmurings or complaints. (1.) It was a very
|
||
sad and melancholy change. She <i>went out full;</i> so she thought
|
||
herself when she had her husband with her and two sons. Much of the
|
||
fulness of our comfort in this world arises from agreeable
|
||
relations. But she now <i>came home again empty,</i> a widow and
|
||
childless, and probably had sold her goods, and of all the effects
|
||
she took with her brought home no more than the clothes on her
|
||
back. So uncertain is all that which we call fulness in the
|
||
creature, <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p34.1" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.2.5" parsed="|1Sam|2|5|0|0" passage="1Sa 2:5">1 Sam. ii. 5</scripRef>. Even
|
||
in the fulness of that sufficiency we may be in straits. But there
|
||
is a fulness, a spiritual and divine fulness, which we can never be
|
||
emptied of, a good part which shall not be <i>taken from those that
|
||
have it.</i> (2.) She acknowledges the hand of God, his mighty
|
||
hand, in the affliction. "It is the Lord that has <i>brought me
|
||
home again empty;</i> it is the Almighty that has afflicted me."
|
||
Note, Nothing conduces more to satisfy a gracious soul under an
|
||
affliction than the consideration of the hand of God in it. <i>It
|
||
is the Lord,</i> <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p34.2" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.3.18 Bible:Job.1.21" parsed="|1Sam|3|18|0|0;|Job|1|21|0|0" passage="1Sa 3:18,Job 1:21">1 Sam. iii.
|
||
18; Job i. 21</scripRef>. Especially to consider that he who
|
||
afflicts us is <i>Shaddai,</i> the <i>Almighty,</i> with whom it is
|
||
folly to contend and to whom it is our duty and interest to submit.
|
||
It is that name of God by which he enters into covenant with his
|
||
people: <i>I am God Almighty, God All-sufficient,</i> <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p34.3" osisRef="Bible:Gen.17.1" parsed="|Gen|17|1|0|0" passage="Ge 17:1">Gen. xvii. 1</scripRef>. He afflicts as a God in
|
||
covenant, and his all-sufficiency may be our support and supply
|
||
under all our afflictions. He that empties us of the creature knows
|
||
how to fill us with himself. (3.) She speaks very feelingly of the
|
||
impression which the affliction had made upon her: He has <i>dealt
|
||
very bitterly with me.</i> The cup of affliction is a bitter cup,
|
||
and even that which afterwards <i>yields the peaceable fruit of
|
||
righteousness,</i> yet, for the present, is <i>not joyous, but
|
||
grievous,</i> <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p34.4" osisRef="Bible:Heb.12.11" parsed="|Heb|12|11|0|0" passage="Heb 12:11">Heb. xii.
|
||
11</scripRef>. Job complains, <i>Thou writest bitter things against
|
||
me,</i> <scripRef id="Ru.ii-p34.5" osisRef="Bible:Job.13.26" parsed="|Job|13|26|0|0" passage="Job 13:26">Job xiii. 26</scripRef>. (4.)
|
||
She owns the affliction to come from God as a controversy: <i>The
|
||
Lord hath testified against me.</i> Note, When God corrects us he
|
||
<i>testifies against us</i> and contends with us (<scripRef id="Ru.ii-p34.6" osisRef="Bible:Job.10.17" parsed="|Job|10|17|0|0" passage="Job 10:17">Job x. 17</scripRef>), intimating that he is
|
||
displeased with us. Every rod has a voice, the voice of a
|
||
witness.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ru.ii-p35">2. The compliance of her spirit with this
|
||
change: "<i>Call me not Naomi,</i> for I am no more pleasant,
|
||
either to myself or to my friends; <i>but call me Mara,</i> a name
|
||
more agreeable to my present state." Many that are debased and
|
||
impoverished yet affect to be called by the empty names and titles
|
||
of honour they have formerly enjoyed. Naomi did not so. Her
|
||
humility regards not a glorious name in a dejected state. If God
|
||
deal bitterly with her, she will accommodate herself to the
|
||
dispensation, and is willing to be called <i>Mara, bitter.</i>
|
||
Note, It well becomes us to have our hearts humbled under humbling
|
||
providences. When our condition is brought down our spirits should
|
||
be brought down with it. And then our troubles are sanctified to us
|
||
when we thus comport with them; for it is not an affliction itself,
|
||
but an affliction rightly borne, that does us good. <i>Perdidisti
|
||
tot mala, si nondum misera esse didicisti—So many calamities have
|
||
been lost upon you if you have not yet learned how to suffer.</i>
|
||
Sen. ad Helv. <i>Tribulation works patience.</i></p>
|
||
</div></div2> |