|
Shalom [FIRSTNAME],
Thank you for being part of this
year's prayer campaign through the days of the Omer. I will be back with
a report on the Shavuot offering after I return from Israel, but for now I'd
like to share a word from Scripture.
On Erev Shavuot, our chavurah
read the book of Ruth together, as is customary during the festival. We had
only gotten to verse two-"The man's name was Elimelech, his
wife's name was Naomi, and his two sons were named Mahlon and
Chilion"-when one of our Israeli members spoke up. "Those are
terrible names," he said. "Mahlon means, like, a sick person, and
Chilion means someone who is going to be destroyed." We found it hard to
imagine that these were the names, or the meanings of the names, that their
mother intended for them at birth. But they certainly add to the drama of the story.
As we went on, we saw that every name in Ruth contributes to the unfolding
drama. Mahlon and Chilion do indeed die early in the story; their widows are Orpah,
whose name means something like "back of the neck," which is what
she soon shows her mother-in-law, and Ruth. Ruth's name sounds like a
feminine form of rea, meaning neighbor, acquaintance, or friend, and she soon
utters unforgettable words of near friendship: "Do not urge me to leave
you, to turn back and not follow you. For wherever you go, I will go; wherever
you lodge, I will lodge; your people shall be my people, and your God my God. Where
you die, I will die, and there I will be buried" (Ruth 1:16-17a, NJPS).
As we read Ruth together,
we considered each name as a foundation stone for the whole narrative. As if to
reassure us that we were not wandering too far afield by focusing on names and their
meaning, the text of Ruth does the same. Naomi returns with Ruth to her home
town of Bethlehem or "House of bread"-not a good place to
leave during a famine, as Naomi's family did, but a good place to return
to when all your resources run out. She says to her friends who greet her there
on her return, "Do not call me Naomi [or pleasantness] . . . Call me Mara
[bitterness], for Shaddai has
made my lot very bitter" (Ruth 1:20). Perhaps the bitter Naomi is resorting
to sarcasm in calling God "Shaddai," which is related to the word
for "breast." "Why shouldn't I be bitter? The God who
is supposed to nourish and sustain me has left me hungry and poor."
But, of course, as the
story progresses God does sustain Naomi, through her kinsman Boaz or
"strength is in him." The first person named in the book of Ruth was
the family's patriarch Elimelech. He dies early in the story, but not
before reminding us through his name that God is his, and our, king. Boaz,
another family patriarch, combines with Elimelech to speak of divine strength
and sovereignty, which come to dominate the whole story in the end. Before we
get to that end, however, we come across another character who, in this
narrative of names, explicitly does not have a name. Boaz is a kinsman of
Naomi, in a position to redeem her and Ruth from their poverty by purchasing
Elimelech's share of the family's land holding from Naomi, taking
Ruth as his wife, and raising children through her "so as to perpetuate
the name of the deceased upon his estate" (Ruth 4:6). There is, however,
another, even closer, relative, who has the first right of refusal on this act
of redemption. Boaz goes to the gate of the city to find this kinsman and
summon the town elders, so the matter can be legally resolved without delay.
Oddly, when the other kinsman comes on the scene, he is not named; or rather he
receives a non-name, "P'loni-Almoni." My Israeli friend says
this Hebrew phrase is like "John Doe," or we might say, "Old what's-his-name."
Why, in a book that is
all about names, does this character not merit a name? He doesn't seem to
do anything wrong, but then he doesn't do much of anything at all! He has
the opportunity to step boldly into the tale of redemption, to not only restore
property to its rightful place in the family holdings, but to lift Naomi and
her daughter-in-law out of poverty, and to acquire a young wife, an eshet chayil or woman of valor (Ruth
3:11), for himself. But the opportunities for redemption don't speak to
him; he decides it is all too risky and might endanger his existing estate.
P'loni-Almoni comes to the threshold of destiny, steps back from the edge
. . . and remains P'loni-Almoni.
The lesson for us is that
sometimes doing the right thing requires boldness. Obedience to God is not
usually the lowest-risk option. P'loni-Almoni is interested in redeeming
the property of Elimelech because it is probably a decent investment, but
acquiring Ruth and raising a family on behalf of another man's legacy is
a whole different matter. His story reminds us that we cannot substitute
self-improvement, even with spiritual packaging, for the self-sacrifice that
following God will inevitably demand. Yeshua will teach us later on in
Scripture that we become someone, we get a name, when we lose ourselves for
him.
As if to underline all
the names of the book of Ruth, and its lesson about acquiring a name, the
account ends with a name. In the original Hebrew, David is the last word in the
book. All its characters have a name as they contribute to the story of this
great name in Israel, who in turn becomes the ancestor of the Son of David, the
one whose name is above all names.
Thanks and blessings,
RR
Rabbi Russell Resnik
UMJC Executive Director
Welcoming
Messiah Home among His Jewish People
You
can still contribute to the Shavuot offering at www.umjc.org.
Your gift will go up to the land of Israel, to support Messianic Jewish efforts
there, including:
- Helping Hands Coalition, serving elderly Holocaust survivors
throughout Israel;
- Jerusalem Institute for Justice, which recently won a big case in
favor of Messianic Jewish aliyah (see "Latest News: Court Victory in
Israel" at www.umjc.org):
- Netivyah Ministries' aid programs for the hungry and homeless;
- A special English edition of the Hebrew-language Messianic journal Kivun.
- Other Messianic individuals and families working at a grassroots
level in Israel.
Needs
and opportunities among the Messianic community in Israel are great, and your
share in the Shavuot offering can make a real difference. As we help the
Messianic community reach out to those in need, it enhances the reputation of
Messiah Yeshua in the land of Israel.
|