Read In the Field of Grace Online

Authors: Tessa Afshar

In the Field of Grace (35 page)

Boaz raised a dark eyebrow. “Where did you learn to use a sling with such expertise, Dinah?”

“As a child, my lord.”

“Did you beat Adin?”

She scuffed her toe in the dirt. “And his brother.”

“No wonder the man took so long to ask you to wife. You could put the fear of God into a man’s heart.”

“I suppose you will forbid me from teaching Ruth, now.”

“Certainly not. Teach away. I like to know my wife can bring down a bandit from twenty paces. And I can’t think of a better teacher.” He turned to leave.

“Husband?”

“Yes?”

“Congratulate Dinah. She and Adin are going to have a child.”

Boaz groaned. “Not another one. Is there any woman in Bethlehem under the age of seventy not so blessed?”

 

Ruth pulled out the old roll of parchment that contained her story, and grabbing stylus and ink, sank on a cushion near the latticed window to write. It had been some weeks since she had taken the time to work on this particular parchment. She spent most of her days learning the accounts from Boaz. Now, with the advent of her pregnancy, she felt inspired to continue her story, recording God’s indescribable kindness to her.

“What are you working on?” Boaz grabbed a date, sucking on its sweetness as he bent over her.

Ruth bit her lip. “The last time you did that, you almost made my heart stop.”

“Do what? Read your writing? I do that every night.” He sank
next to her and pulled the parchment close.

“Not this parchment.”

He frowned. “These are not the accounts. Or your practice.”

“No. I’m writing my story.”

“Are you? May I read it?”

Ruth sighed. “If you promise not to laugh. I am not very good.”

“What did you mean
the last time
? I’ve never seen this.”

“You have. That afternoon you came to Naomi’s house to pick up a jar of capers. Remember?”

“Yes. I saw you writing that day. You had an ink stain right there.” He leaned over and kissed her warmly on the corner of her mouth. “I remember wanting desperately to do that then.”

Ruth shook her head. “You never showed it.”

“I showed it most conspicuously in spite of my best efforts. You, my love, were too blind to see.”

“Well, you, my love, were too blind to see that!” She showed him his name, and her plaintive prayer.

“You cared for me even then?”

“Desperately. And you made me suffer endless torment with your show of indifference.”

“When did I ever show you indifference?”

“Dutiful kindness, then. Worse than indifference.”

He pulled her onto his lap and kissed her thoroughly. “I shall have to make up for it the rest of our lives. Now be still and let me read this fascinating story. If it has my name in it, it must be riveting.”

He unrolled the parchment to its beginning and began to read. “You never told me much about your grandfather,” he said after reading for some time. Come to think of it, you rarely speak of Moab.”

“There isn’t much to say. In many ways my real life did not start until I met Naomi. And yet I sometimes think even the hardness of my parents’ hearts had a role to play in my happiness, for if they had been a little more loving, I might not have found the strength
to leave them and Moab. I owe them a debt you see. For bringing me to you.”

Boaz pulled his hand through her long hair for a reassuring caress. “How could they not have seen your worth? Were they blind?”

Ruth smiled and shook her head. “Too busy, too disappointed, too tired.”

“Well, I should dispatch a messenger with my thanks, if that is what brought you to me.” He gave her a kiss and turned back to his reading. She had to be patient, for he seemed to forget about her presence as he read. Once in a while he would make a small sound, a noise deep in his throat, or an exclamation of shock.

Before he came to the end of her account, he rolled the parchment closed. “How hard it must have been for you, all those years of barrenness.”

She grew still. “It was like a wound that never healed. I learned not to allow it to rule my life. I learned to accept. After I came to Bethlehem, God asked more of me.”

“More than acceptance?”

“Yes. He taught me to accept with joy. Accept His will, even though it meant that I could have no children of my own, not with mere resignation but with joy. The Lord taught me that even if I don’t receive the desires of my heart, in Him, I can be content. That’s why this baby is such a miracle. After accepting that I could have no children of my own, after learning contentment and even joy without the fulfillment of that dream, God gave me a child.”

Boaz caressed her face. “Acceptance with joy. That’s a lesson I wish to learn. I’m not as good a student as you seem to be. But I want you to know that I am happy God has given us this child, Ruth.”

 

Boaz and Ruth fell into a routine of daily prayer. Often Naomi joined them. At first, Boaz’s petitions tended toward a desperate
kind of pleading. He begged for Ruth’s health, for the babe, for the birth. Ruth realized that beseeching God helped him escape the anxiety that still plagued him on occasion.

As time passed, Boaz’s prayers changed. He began to sink into an increasing assurance. The tenor of his words took on a thankful tone, as though he already counted on God’s answer. He seemed more convinced that the Lord would see his family through, and that the past would not write his future. Ruth loved when Boaz prayed over her like this. His new assurance seeped into Ruth and Naomi as well. The peace of God would settle over them like a refreshing breeze.

It was during these weeks of expectation that Naomi started to rise fully out of her grief. When they prayed, her countenance would change. Ruth noticed that once again she laughed often and with ease. The haunted look that had dogged her steps for over a year left her.

By the time Ruth was seven months pregnant, her belly stretching large enough to show her pregnancy to the world, she felt well enough to attend her normal duties as Boaz’s wife. Her nausea had long since abated, and with a little extra rest, she found herself equal to most of her usual tasks. Except for an occasional twinge in her back and belly, she found pregnancy easy. Boaz was amazed at her health and praised her as though she had accomplished some great task, even though she had no more to do with the state of her health than the color of her eyes.

In those months, their joy knew no bounds. They celebrated another bountiful crop. Barley and wheat grew thick and green, slowly turning golden, assuring the people of Judah that God’s provision would see them through another year of comfort. Ruth could not believe that last year at this time she had been gleaning in the fields to feed herself and Naomi. Those days of uncertainty and backbreaking labor seemed a lifetime ago. Her world had changed as if overnight.

As Ruth’s time grew near, however, a new fear seemed to replace the old. Boaz never spoke of it, but Ruth could sense it in him. The gloom of dread cast its long shadow over her husband once again.

Chapter
Twenty-Six

He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High
will abide in the shadow of the Almighty.
I will say to the LORD, “My refuge and my fortress,
my God, in whom I trust.”
For he will deliver you from the snare of the fowler
and from the deadly pestilence.
He will cover you with his pinions,
and under his wings you will find refuge.
PSALM 91:1–4

 
 

N
aomi crooned a song under her breath as her needle flew over the edge of new swaddling cloths, hemming in neat stitches. From her seat near the window where Ruth was weaving, she joined in the song. She only knew a short snatch, and partway through the song stumbled over the words, making Naomi lose her place. They both laughed.

“You seem happy, Mother.”

“I suppose I am. I miss my sons every day. They are like an ache in the marrow of my bones. And yet the Lord has shown me that I am still capable of joy. It’s so odd, carrying so much pain inside, but carrying happiness too.”

“What made you decide to return to Bethlehem all those months ago? I try to imagine our lives if you hadn’t made that choice.”

“When I heard about the bountiful harvest here, I knew the Lord had spread His wings over His people. He had visited us. I thought that I might take refuge in His provision.”

“But you were so angry with Him then!”

“Angry or not, He is my God. Who have I in heaven but the Lord?”

“You tried so hard to prevent me from coming with you. I was terrified that you would leave me at the side of the road.”

“I believed that you would only suffer deprivation and loss if you stayed with me. I wanted to save you from more pain.”

“I know. And yet the Lord had so much good waiting for us here. You were born here, and now my child shall be born here also.”

Naomi spread the cloths over her knees and straightened. “It seems no less than a miracle to me. When I consider the past year, I grow convinced that the Lord chose to guide us every step of the way. He kept us safe as we traveled. He brought you to Boaz’s field. He shielded you from every harm that could have befallen you.”

“You do realize, Mother, that I am the least qualified of all the women in Bethlehem to be Boaz’s wife? I am a Canaanite. A nobody. And yet God chose me for him. He imported me all the way from Moab, as if I were ivory from the distant shores of Egypt, and dropped me in the man’s lap. You would think there was a shortage of women in Judah.”

“I only know that until you came, no woman took his fancy. He would have lived his life as a widower and been content with his lot. It was you he wanted. It was you God wanted for him.”

“Why do you think that is? I cannot work it out.”

Naomi pulled the fabric close to the light to adjust a stitch. “You still measure yourself by the standards of this world, daughter. God has other measures. What does He care for wealth and connections? The cattle on a thousand hills belong to Him. You have what He looks for, Ruth: Love. Faithfulness. Compassion. For such treasures, He searches the heart of man. In you, He found a treasure trove.”

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