The Book of Ruth: Faith, Friendship, & Ordinary Righteousness
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When you hear the words, "Where you go, I will go. Where you stay, I will stay." You might think marriage vows. Or wall art. But these words from the widow Ruth to her widowed mother-in-law aren't romantic. They're loyalty.
The book of Ruth is a story about two women, both grieving, one a foreigner, both vulnerable, navigating a world that offered them very little protection, and choosing each other anyway.
Ruth sits tucked inside one of the darkest periods in Israel's history. The era of the Judges is a slow moral collapse, and women fare especially badly in it. Into that context, Ruth arrives not with miracles or burning bushes, but with something quieter: ordinary faithfulness. God is present in this book without ever speaking. There are no dramatic interventions. Instead, it's a widow who renames herself Bitter, a daughter-in-law who makes a legal and theological declaration, and a landowner who notices a vulnerable woman decides to protect her. And a slow, unannounced movement from famine toward fullness, from Mara (bitter) back to Naomi (delightful).
And this arc ultimately leads to the line of David and Jesus Christ.
In this episode, we move between the ancient text and our own friendships, working through what Ruth actually models: willing loyalty that costs something, protection of people vulnerable or overlooked, and the way God often does his most visible work in hidden ways. The arc of this book is quiet. But it shows us how God wants us to treat each other, using a foreign woman to upset norms and give birth to King David's grandfather.