Posted on 04/22/2015 7:31:12 AM PDT by Salvation
Recently I preached a retreat for a good number of women here in our Archdiocese. I based the retreat on the Book of Ruth, a beautiful love story that is a kind of allegory for Christ and the Church. More specifically it is an allegory of the individual’s salvation by Christ and in relationship to Him.
The detailed background to the text is too lengthy to go into here, but a few points will help. The story features three main characters: Boaz, Ruth, and Naomi. Boaz is clearly a picture (or “type”) of Christ. He is born and lives in Bethlehem; he ultimately acts as Ruth’s “kinsman-redeemer” by rescuing her from poverty and paying the price to cancel her debt. This of course is just what Christ does for us: He redeems us by His blood, canceling our poverty and debt. Ruth is a picture of the individual soul in need of Christ’s redemption and mercy. Naomi plays several roles in the book, but in the passage we will consider here she is a picture of the Church; she advises Ruth in what to do and draws her to Boaz (Christ), her redeemer.
Consider the following text and then let us see how Naomi symbolizes the Church.
Naomi said to Ruth, “Is not Boaz … a kinsman of ours? Tonight he will be winnowing barley on the threshing floor. Wash and perfume yourself, and put on your best clothes. Then go down to the threshing floor, but don’t let him know you are there until he has finished eating and drinking. When he lies down, note the place where he is lying. Then go and uncover his feet and lie down. He will tell you what to do.” “I will do whatever you say,” Ruth answered (Ruth 3:2-5).
The advice that Naomi gives is quite in line with the instruction that our Mother the Church gives us. For in our poverty and under the debt of our sin, we are exhorted by the Church to seek our “Boaz,” who is Christ. Note the advice given by Naomi and consider how it sounds so like our Mother the Church. Namoi advises,
1. Be Firmly Convinced – Naomi says, Is not Boaz … a kinsman of ours? Tonight he will be winnowing barley on the threshing floor. Ruth knows her poverty, her pain, and her debt. Naomi does too, and she exhorts Ruth to seek Boaz, for he is near and can help. Boaz is wealthy and thus has the power to save her, to draw her out of her overwhelming poverty. He has the capacity, unlike any other, to cancel Ruth’s debt. She is to seek him at the threshing floor where he is preparing and providing the bread that will sustain her. She must go, firmly convinced that Boaz will love her and save her.
And so, too, does the Church exhort us, Seek the LORD while he may be found; call on him while he is near (Is. 55:6). Yes, there is one among us, a near kinsman, who is not ashamed to call us his brethren (Heb 2:11). His name is Jesus and He, as God, has the power to save and cancel our debt. Cast your cares on him, for he cares for you (1 Peter 5:7). Jesus is at the threshing floor of His Church, preparing a banquet for you in the sight of your foe (Psalm 23:5). The grain He is winnowing is the Eucharistic Bread of His own flesh. “Yes,” says the Church, “Come to Jesus, firmly convinced of His love and power to save.”
2. Be Freshly Cleansed – Next, Naomi simply says, “Wash.” In other words, the first step in finding help from Boaz is to be washed, to be freshly cleansed.
So, too, does the Church draw us to Christ with the exhortation, “Wash.” That is, Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:38). Yes, the love of God will be poured forth on us and the cancellation of our debt will take place as we are cleansed of our sins.
Here are some other texts wherein the Church, our Naomi, our Mother, exhorts us to be washed:
3. Be Fragrantly Consecrated - Namoi says to Ruth, “and perfume yourself.” In other words, make yourself nice to be near. Come with an aroma that is sweet and pure.
So, too, does the Church, our Naomi, exhort us to to be fragrantly consecrated. The fragrance we are called to is that of a holy life, which we receive in baptism. Like a sweet incense or perfume should our life in God be. Consider some of the following texts that the Church gives us:
4. Be Fitly Clothed – Naomi says to Ruth, “and put on your best clothes.”
Here, too, does our Mother the Church advise us to be fitly clothed. For a Christian, to be fitly clothed is to be adorned in the righteousness that comes to us in Christ by Baptism. In the baptismal liturgy, the Church says to the newly baptized of the white garment that he or she wears, You have become a new creation and have clothed yourself in Christ. Receive this baptismal garment, and bring it unstained to the Judgment seat of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you may have everlasting life.
In other words, be fitly clothed. Wear well the garment of righteousness that Christ died to give you. Scripture, too, speaks of the garment in which we are to be fitly clothed:
5. Be Fully Committed - Naomi says, Then go down to the threshing floor, … until he has finished eating and drinking. When he lies down, note the place where he is lying. Then go and uncover his feet and lie down.
In other words, Ruth, place yourself at the feet of your redeemer. This action of Ruth’s was a way of saying to Boaz, “I put myself under your protection; I am fully committed to you.”
And so, too, the Church bids us to do the same: go to the threshing floor, to that place where the threshed and winnowed bread becomes the Eucharist.
Beneath or near every Catholic altar is the Cross, and on that Cross are the uncovered feet of Jesus Christ.
The most sacred place on earth is at the feet of Jesus Christ. At that place, at that altar, beneath the uncovered feet of Christ, the Church, our Naomi, bids us gather each Sunday. The Church says just what Naomi said, “Place yourself at the feet of your Redeemer.”
6. Be Faithfully Compliant - Naomi says to Ruth, confidently and succinctly, He will tell you what to do.
And here, too, the voice of the Church echoes what Mother Mary said long ago regarding her Son: Do whatever he tells you (Jn 2:5). How can our Naomi, the Church, say anything less or anything else? The Church has one message: do whatever Christ, your redeemer, tells you.
So Naomi is a picture of the Church, Boaz a picture of Christ, and Ruth a picture of the soul in need of salvation.
How does the story end? I’m tempted to tell you to read it for yourself, but since Boaz is a picture of Christ you already knows how it ends. Ruth, firmly convinced, freshly cleansed, fragrantly consecrated, and fitly clothed, fully commits herself to Boaz and is at his feet. Boaz, who saw and loved Ruth before she ever saw or loved him (cf Ruth 2:5), arises and takes her as his bride, paying off all her debt and giving her a new life. Sound familiar? It is the story of salvation, if we have eyes to see it.
Monsignor Pope Ping!
Good video
One of my favorite books. I used a reading from Ruth in my wedding.
It’s interesting to note that originally Ruth was part of the book of Judges. It was only separated out to accomodate scripture reading during Jewish liturgical rituals. So while there was all this really awful ugliness gong on all around as described in the rest of Judges, (”people did what was right in their own eyes”) we saw God moving his plan forward in the persons of the wonderful and innocent Ruth, Naomi and Boaz.
Great tagline. May I borrow it now and then?
Sure I borrowed it from someone as well.
Thanks for that. I did not know that is was originally in Judges.
In other words, the story related in the Book of Ruth didn't happen either. Isn't anything in the "old testament" true???
So tell us again about how John 6 is to be interpreted literally. [/sarcasm]
I don't see how this is possible. Judges is among the Prophets and was written under the spirit of nevu'ah (prophecy) while Ruth is one of the Five Megillot in the Writings and was therefore written under ruach haqodesh which is one step lower.
Don't tell me . . . you're going by "higher criticism," aren't you??? Do you subscribe to higher criticism of the "new testament" as well, or is that "different?"
The church is the people of God....not a denomination.
The Church is the bride not the mother.
For example, in the letter to the Galatians, Paul writes in chapter 4 about Abraham's children through Hagar and Sarah. At verse 4:24, he writes, ἅτινά ἐστιν ἀλληγορούμενα, which the RSV Catholic Edition translates as, "Now this is an allegory" (the full verse reads, "Now this is an allegory: these women are two covenants").
The translation "this is an allegory" does not mean that the Catholic translators construe Paul to mean that Hagar and Sarah are fictional characters, but merely that Paul is interpreting Hagar and Sarah allegorically.
Except the usual Ruth quotation is to her mother in law ...was the directed to your mother in law?
Amen
Amen. Here's the true "mother:" "Jerusalem above, which is the mother of us all," Gal. 4:26. The church you see in the Bible was born of her, born of the Spirit at Pentecost, the church you see in the book of Acts. The RCC bears no resemblance to that church. The Vatican at Rome is their mother, an earthly mother not the mother above. The RCC is an impostor.
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