Chapter 9 / You Don’t Have to Wait to Be Accepted
High School is wrapping up what’s
next. For many it’s continuing their
education at a college. You will scoured
the literature from several universities, finally narrowing your choices. You visit campuses, narrow the gap by
choosing a few schools to focus on. Make
applications. Fill out forms. Write essays.
For anyone who hasn’t “been
there, done that,” the filing of the application and financial aid forms is
nothing compared to the waiting. It’s
like the first time you look at your girlfriend or boyfriend and say, ‘I love
you.” You’ve made the first move. And then you wait. You wait to see if they respond in turn.
Finally the waiting was
over. In your mailbox is a letter
informing you that you can enroll as a freshman. “YOU’VE BEEN ACCEPTED!” Relief washes over you!
We all have a desire to be
accepted, don’t we? In fact, that desire
made it into Maslow’s well-known hierarchy of needs. He theorized that acceptance is basic to our
nature and to our psychological health.
Ruth had the same need as we
do. She was a Moabite living in
Bethlehem who we meet in The Story. She ended up there with her mother-in-law
Naomi when her husband died. And she
found herself picking up the leftovers after the harvest in a field owned by
Boaz.
Boaz discovered she was an
outsider—a Moabite—the same people who would oppress his nation for eighteen
years. You’d expect fireworks when they
met. Instead, Boaz tells Ruth, “May you
be richly rewarded by the Lord, the God of Israel, under whose wings you have
come to take refuge.”
His acceptance of Ruth goes a
step further. Ruth finds him asleep on
the threshing floor and lies down at his feet.
When he awakens, Ruth asks him to “spread the corner of your garment
over me, since you are a family guardian.”
The word for “garment” is the same Hebrew word for “wings” in the
blessing Boaz had pronounced over Ruth.
God’s acceptance came to Ruth through Boaz.
Your acceptance did too. You see, Boaz and Ruth had a son named Obed,
the father of Jesse, the father of David.
In Matthew’s genealogy the lineage of Jesus is traced through David. Boaz is there too along with his mother Rahab
(Matt. 1:5). Yes, that Rahab. The prostitute that lived in Canaan and
sheltered the two spies Joshua sent into the land. Amazing!
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