What We Learn from Naomi’s Story

People often face situations in their personal lives they didn’t expect. Those times when life fails to deliver what they are aiming for, have planned on, and worked towards. Circumstances can change our future in ways we did not anticipate. Some of these events are quite painful.

Butte Creek CanyonWe learn who we are as we come to major forks in the road, when the job ends, the divorce happens, the child rebels, the illness side-lines, the business goes belly-up, or whatever the case may be.

In our story today, we meet one of those people who met disaster and personal loss with a logical, life-changing decision that demonstrates courage and grace. Scripture does not state the depth of this woman’s faith, but it is easy to tell that she has genuine faith. I see an amazing woman who grasps her reality, makes a conclusive decision, acknowledges the harshness of it all, doesn’t harbor self-pity, has the courage to move forward–without the crutch of leaning on others who are willing to help her–and moves on.

Side note: You know, it is okay to acknowledge the pain or difficulty instead of acting like it doesn’t exist (because that wouldn’t be Christian). It is not a sign of little faith or lack of spirituality, it is being genuine with others in the face of trying circumstances. We need to be real with others, show them how God is helping us face our personal crisis or tragedy by allowing them to see us in our hurting place during times of adversity and pain. People are allowed to comfort us and draw courage from us when we are being honest with them.

Life seems to be over for Naomi. She accepts it as such and then moves forward to meet it.  We will see how God answers her faith in a beautiful way, which has an important part to play in the future of the nation of Israel. I believe this woman’s life impacted her great-grandson’s life. The teachings were there, resident in her life, and they were taught and passed down, generation to generation. Naomi is great-grandmother to King David, a man after God’s own heart. Jesus would be born of the line of David.

We, as well, by how we live out our lives, demonstrate to others the depth of our courage and faith as we face obstacles that may halt our plans and force us to make difficult choices.

I encourage you to face the challenge, allow your fellow-participants the freedom of choice (without playing on their sympathies or forcing binding ties), and extend grace to those who also are impacted by your present circumstance. Trust God to see you through the difficulty and ask His help along the way.

PRAYER, PEOPLE, AND POWER (1)

Naomi

The first person we will meet in this series about prayer, people, and power, is part of a biblical account. This segment is about a Hebrew woman whose personal story unfolds for us in the book of Ruth found in the Bible’s Old Testament.  This woman lived in the land of Judah during her youth and married someone of like faith and race. A famine in the land forces her husband and her to move to a foreign land. They make a life for themselves in that land. While living there, she bears two strong strapping sons. Her sons marry women from the region. I think she probably feels sad in heart when each of her sons marries a woman from Moab rather than from her Hebrew race and religion. Naomi’s faith is important to her. We know this by the way she reacts to different situations and how she lovingly embraces her sons’ wives who are of a different culture and religious belief system.

Stop and think a minute. What if that were you? Many of us, including me, put much emphasis on our Christian beliefs. Our faith and Christian practices are the guiding force and guiding light for our lives. For those whom have been nurtured and lived life in the Christian womb of nurtured belief mixed with outward practice, it can be difficult to embrace and accept those who are of a different persuasion. That isn’t the message of the gospel. We love because God is love. We are strong because God is strong. We have hope because hope is found in God. Naomi does all of these. She loves her daughter-in-laws, and they love her back. It doesn’t lessen her faith at all. My guess is, she prayed for them that they would come to know God. Naomi’s loving her daughter-in-laws’ within the framework of unconditional love is a testament to her love of God and of others. Life didn’t turn out the way she had originally expected by the necessity of her family living in a land that was of a different race and belief system, but she doesn’t lose her faith. Her story is applicable. Many people, even today, must leave their homeland because of difficult circumstances.

Then the first major upset happens. Naomi’s husband dies.

Her sadness is great. There goes her security and life as she has known it. She is forced to face her future alone without her mate. In that culture and time, this is a major difficulty. There is little opportunity for a single woman. Thankfully, she has her grown sons and their wives. Now she depends on her two sons and their wives for her needs and comfort. It wasn’t supposed to turn out this way, but it has. I bet Naomi wished for the comfort of family from back in the home-land during this time of loss and grief. 

The other shoe drops. Not one, but both sons die. This leaves Naomi with no family other than her two daughter-in-laws. Grief overtakes her. Her sorrow is great. There is no husband; there are no sons, and no grandchildren to carry on the family legacy.

Naomi feels a heaviness like no other. She and her two daughter-in-laws pack up the house. She knows there is only one realistic option for her now. It is time for Naomi to return to her living relations back in Judah.  She has heard there is food back in the land. It is time to sever the ties with her daughter-in-laws. They are young and will marry again. They deserve a good life without the burden of being responsible for her care and happiness. Her daughter-in-laws are good girls and she loves them, but she knows she can not ask them to forfeit their lives and their family roots to join her in her journey to a land that is not their own.

With a heavy heart, she tells the girls “I will make the journey alone. Go back to your families. Marry another man. Make a new life for yourself. My life is over. God has been severe with me. You are under no obligation to me.  I will never marry again.” She is speaking her own truth and it is a hard one. Yet, she knows, it is the right one. I think we would all agree, that’s what we would do in her situation. We would return to our roots, spiritual and familial, and we would not wish to obligate someone to us.

How do the two young women react? Instead of rejoicing at the news that now they can have their life back and are under no obligation to care for their mother-in-law, they dissolve into tears and say to Naomi,“We can’t leave you. Let us come with you.”

Their reaction tells us a lot about Naomi. If she hadn’t loved them well and accepted them as her daughters, even though they were of foreign belief and race, they would not have reacted in this way. It is evident that there is connection and love between them. They love her and care for her. She, again, tells them to leave, that she can not give them more sons to marry and is unable to give them what they will need for their futures. Naomi is emphatic, trying to convince these young women of their own needs. She wants them to be happy and to start new lives for themselves.

I see in this that Naomi is unselfish, and she is practical.They must let go of the past to move into the future. It involves a separating in their relationship, a wrenching away from the past, a true and harsh letting go of what they have known as a family unit. Something must die in order for there to be new life in a different place. They are at a Y in the road. There is no continuing forward on the same path.

Choices often include cost. We die to old dreams but find new ones. We let go of what has ended to move forward to what is ahead. We trust God for the journey and believe He is in it. We sorrow with the pain of it but rejoice in the rightness of the choice. Sometimes it feels as if God has been harsh with us, for the dream that died took part of us with it. We may feel a sense of betrayal by others or God. Naomi is facing her new reality. She is saying goodbye to a good portion of her life and the people she has loved, and lost, and cared about. Three men in her life are buried here in this foreign adopted-land. To return to her people will require leaving part of herself, those she has loved the very most, where they now repose, at-rest. That had to be hard.

One of the girls decides to return to her kin, again weeping as she and Naomi embrace. I think they both know that this will be the last time they will ever see each other. The second daughter-in-law shows her spirit. She says these famous words to her mother-in-law “I am going with you. Your kin will be my kin and your God will be my God.”  This is powerful. Naomi accepts it. They return to Bethlehem. There Naomi explains the emptiness of her family, the loss of her husband and sons, how life has been harsh with her. She reenters her former life but this time she has little in worldly goods. Ruth, her daughter-in-law, is quick to help out. She is respectful of Naomi’s wishes and gleans in the fields to help them in their situation.

Everyone is quick to notice the goodness of Ruth. An astute male relative shows kindness to her as she gleans in his field. Not one to ignore a good sign and because Ruth needs a husband, Naomi becomes a match-maker. Boaz becomes Ruth’s kinsman redeemer. They marry and soon God blesses Naomi with a grandson. As she holds her grandson on her lap, she realizes that God has restored what she had lost. The amazing grace of God is obvious in this, Naomi’s grandson is from the same familial line.

From this amazing story and this amazing baby there will come a king who will lead the people of Israel, a man with love for God and fervor for enacting spiritual practices related to the reverence and respect of God’s ways through embracing the things of God. David, the shepherd boy turned king, will be her great-grandson one day.

Read the book of Ruth in the bible for the complete story.

Naomi showed great grace during times of hardship. She gives us insight in how our will can work with God’s will when He is in it. Her life demonstrates that God does indeed make beauty from ashes.

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Mystery Man in the Mojave Desert: A True Story

I have a friend who had an interesting experience with a spiritual twist to it. It happened around midnight. We’ll call my friend “Ben.” He called me the next morning to tell me about it because it astounded him. He wondered what I thought, which I will tell you in a minute.

IMG_0312One little bit about the story that is the backstory to this encounter. Ben had just suffered a broken relationship that went deep. He was hurting the night he drove onto the dirt road in the middle of the desert sands.

Ben was a new believer in Christ at the time. He was absorbing the Word and changing oh so very much. I once asked him how his new faith was affecting him. He answered, “I’m not so angry anymore.” I loved his answer. I had the privilege of sharing my faith with him and got to see him grow spiritually. It was a great privilege (I mention him in my book, The Meeting Place).

Back to the story. As Ben tried to makes sense of his hurt and deal with the anger and pain, he knew he needed to get off alone by himself. His work took him to the desert. He decided to use this time to pray and sort things out to try to make sense of it. He chatted with some people doing roadwork at a railroad crossing in the clear night air, and then he headed off by himself.

The next day he called me. There was wonder in his voice bordering on astonishment. His voice was sort of quivering. You must understand this about Ben, he is a very capable and strong personality, someone you don’t mess with, ever. He is a man in his early sixties. He was sitting in his pickup truck with the window down looking out at the desert typography and the bright stars in the indigo sky. Here’s what happened. . .

Verbatim, in Ben’s own words…

“I am going to share something I experienced a few weeks ago when I went for my night time drive in the Mojave Desert. I was parked up on a hill over looking highway 58. It was very dark, and I was seeking some one-on-one time with God. I was there for quite sometime, when I looked to my left and I could see a silhouette coming towards me.
I looked at this figure coming towards me, I put my pistol into my hand, not knowing what was about to unfold. When this person was a few feet away he smiled, I was still a bit unnerved. His clothes were very ragged, dirty, he looked very unkempt (but no odor as you would expect), and he had the whitest and brightest teeth, perfectly straight,
But it was his eyes that got me. Bright blue, and his pupils were “Star” shaped. He spoke very softly, clearly, and very eloquently. None of that matched his appearance. He asked if I had a dollar I could spare, usually I turn them away, but this time, without thinking I gave him my only $20.00 bill I had. (I only had the $20). He put his hand on my arm, thanked me and disappeared back into the darkness the way he had come.
A few minutes later I got this uncontrolled shiver, from head to toe, and a calmness came over me. I experienced some other things that night after he had left, but I am going to keep that to myself for now. I just thought I would share this part with you. GN GBU ALL
Ben Matthews  2013

 

I asked Ben to describe the man to me because I once had an encounter with a homeless man who sounded very similar. After my experience was over, I believed I had met Jesus or one of his angels on assignment (I’ll share that story next week). We compared notes and it was a perfect match. The whole happening seemed strange to him. The way the man arrived and then how he left. His shining teeth and bright eyes. How the man’s dress did not match his face and being. The way he looked at Ben with that penetrating look.

Later on I requested a copy of Ben’s encounter, which he then sent to me in an email, which is what you read above, word for word except for his name. Ben wondered what I thought. I couldn’t help but think he had encountered an angel or the Son of God. Those eyes and white teeth. They are the defining features. The uniqueness of the interaction. The request, odd in the middle of the desert (that was the same thing I was asked in my encounter). He knew it was something special, that also was telling.

I hope this story encouraged you. Scripture tells us that some have entertained angels unaware. Have you ever had an experience that may have been some sort of encounter with an angel or spirit being?