So Ruth gathered barley there all day, and when she beat out the grain that evening, it filled an entire basket. She carried it back into town and showed it to her mother-in-law. Ruth also gave her the roasted grain that was left over from her meal.
“Where did you gather all this grain today?” Naomi asked. “Where did you work? May the Lord bless the one who helped you!” So Ruth told her mother-in-law about the man in whose field she had worked. She said, “The man I worked with today is named Boaz.”
“May the Lord bless him!” Naomi told her daughter-in-law. “He is showing his kindness to us as well as to your dead husband. That man is one of our closest relatives, one of our family redeemers.” Ruth 2:17-20
{Remember}
To recall, be reminded of, look back. To remember is a purposeful choosing. It’s an action step on our journey toward our forever home. And I am mindful today, remembering is a privilege.
On this day 11 of our 31-day journey through Ruth, it seems fitting to take a rest stop and {remember}.
We began to walk with Naomi during a famine… and now she is experiencing harvest.
Naomi lost her husband and two sons to death in a foreign land… and now she is experiencing ‘family’ with Ruth and her kinspeople back at home in Judah.
Naomi changed her name to bitter – Mara… and now she is blessing Boaz as pleasant – Naomi.
Naomi poured out her heart and held out empty hands in her grief… and now she has her heart filled with the love of a daughter and holds out hands to receive abundant grain provision.
Naomi declared her inability to provide for her daughters in law… now she offers Ruth a home, a people, and most important the One True Almighty God.
Naomi’s life, understandably after such great loss, seemed doomed and hopeless. She had lost everything… except God had never left her. In a sense, she and her family may have left God. They may have believed they could make a plan of escape for themselves and avoid the famine season.
However, I believe God wants us to know there’s a desert walk, a famine season, a wilderness experience on every one of our paths toward HOME. God intends this part of our life experience to be purposeful. It’s part of our pioneer training. He leads us into it for our good – for our strengthening.
I was reminded this past weekend… Jesus, at the beginning of His earthly ministry, was led into the wilderness by the Spirit of God. If the wilderness experience was a part of Jesus’ training, strengthening and considered purposeful by the Father, why wouldn’t I think the same is true for me?
Lord Jesus, help me {remember} to put my eyes on You today. Help me to {remember} to follow You wherever You are walking and to stop and rest with You too. You are my Great Pioneer of faith. You are my Good Shepherd. I want to follow You. Thank You for reminding me to sing of Your goodness, to meditate on Your faithfulness in Your Word, and to recount Your abundant benefits and blessings I’ve received in my own life.
I bless You, Lord, O my soul and all that is within me. I bless Your Holy Name. Amen.
Ponders:
Below is a portion of Psalm 77: a prayer of anguish in the dark night where sleep will not be found. Let’s read through this Psalm either recognizing this scenario as our current circumstances all too familiar or {remember}ing a time in the past – a season of our lives when this could have been our own prayer.
- How good is it to cry aloud to the Lord? Have you? What release did you experience when you poured your heart out before the Lord? Do you think this is what Jesus meant by casting our cares on Him?
- The psalmist writes, “Let me remember my song in the night; let me meditate in my heart.” Do you have a go-to hymn or praise song for the middle of the dark night? Have you memorized certain Scripture on which to meditate, repeat, chew on during the long night of anguish?
- From Psalm 77 and from your own experience, what happens to us as we begin to {remember}? When we begin to sing that song in the dark? When we begin to repeat the Scripture we know? Or maybe the only word we can eek out in despair is the Name above all names, Jesus, what happens to our soul?
- If you haven’t made use of God’s limitless resources, His amazing benefits – will you begin today? If you are in this season, just choose to remember God’s goodness in the past. If you have come out of that season, maybe now is a good time to remember, the dryness, the pain, the wandering, and then the good and loving way your Shepherd led you through safely.
- This is your testimony. This is the story of your life God is writing. Will you write it down? Will you share something of your own experience with {remember}ing the goodness of the Lord?
I cry aloud to God,
aloud to God, and he will hear me.
In the day of my trouble I seek the Lord;
in the night my hand is stretched out without wearying;
my soul refuses to be comforted.
When I remember God, I moan;
when I meditate, my spirit faints. Selah
You hold my eyelids open;
I am so troubled that I cannot speak.
I consider the days of old,
the years long ago.
I said,“Let me remember my song in the night;
let me meditate in my heart.”
Then my spirit made a diligent search:
“Will the Lord spurn forever,
and never again be favorable?
Has his steadfast love forever ceased?
Are his promises at an end for all time?
Has God forgotten to be gracious?
Has he in anger shut up his compassion?” Selah
to the years of the right hand of the Most High.”
yes, I will remember your wonders of old.
I will ponder all your work,
and meditate on your mighty deeds.
Your way, O God, is holy.
What god is great like our God?
You are the God who works wonders;
you have made known your might among the peoples.
You with your arm redeemed your people,
the children of Jacob and Joseph. Selah
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