LEAD. April 2020 | Page 8

is one of the greatest love stories in history. Movies, novels, and books have been written about this beautiful story, but there would have been no love story had it not been for Ruth’s loyalty. What comes as an even greater shock is that the whole story begins with and is built around the loyalty of a daughter-in-law to her mother-in-law. Understanding in-law dynamics is nearly impossible until you either have one or become one. I would be less than honest if I did not tell you in my ministry I’ve heard enough in-law stories that make me think sometimes that in- laws ought to be outlawed! Comedians have made fortunes off of in-law jokes. I read about a magic show where after one particularly amazing trick, someone screamed out to the magician, “How did you do that?” The magician replied, “I would tell you, but then I would have to kill you.” The same voice came back and said, “Well, then would you tell my mother-in-law?” Many in-laws get a bad rap. I could not have asked for a better, sweeter, finer father-in- law and mother-in-law than God gave me. I will also tell you that when we read about the relationship between this daughter-in-law and her mother-in-law, it makes me think of my wife, Teresa, and the wonderful daughter-in- law she was to my mom and dad. The book of Ruth is basically a pamphlet. The entire account is given in only eighty-five verses and it concerns ordinary people living ordinary lives who face ordinary problems. The story begins with three funerals and it ends with a 8 marriage and the birth of a baby. But this was no ordinary baby. The story takes you from the agony of defeat to the thrill of victory, and it makes you appreciate your family, friends, future, and faith more than ever. Two Israelites, Elimelek and his wife, Naomi, and their two sons, Mahlon and Kilion, live in Bethlehem where a great depression is occurring. Food and money have run out, so Elimelek decides to take his family to the land of Moab. Soon after, Elimelek dies, his two sons marry two Moabite women, Orpah (not Oprah) and Ruth. After about ten years, the two sons die, and now Naomi is left with out a husband or her sons. In that culture, this was an impossible situation. No way could three women, particularly widows with no children and no relatives, hope to survive for long in a time of famine. Naomi, this precious mother-in-law, proves to be as much a mother as a mother-in-law in what she tells Orpah and Ruth. She has heard from her relatives back home that life is better in Bethlehem and she intends to go back, but it would be bad, if not perhaps dangerous, for two Moabite women to go to a country where they were not welcome. Naomi knows they will have a better chance of meeting a man, remarrying, and having children in Moab, plus they will be with their friends and family they have grown up with. Orpah takes her up on the offer and hightails it back home, but Ruth digs in her heels. She says to her mother-in-law words that have become so famous they are used in weddings and put