Esther and Ruth
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About this ebook
In classic Interpretation Bible Studies style, Patricia Tull leads the reader through a ten-session study of the entire Old Testament books of Esther, with its stories of faithfulness, courage, and survival, and the ethical questions posed by its ending, and Ruth, with its themes of community, loyalty, and friendship.
Interpretation Bible Studies (IBS) offers solid biblical content in a creative study format. Forged in the tradition of the celebrated Interpretation commentary series, IBS makes the same depth of biblical insight available in a dynamic, flexible, and user-friendly resource. Designed for adults and older youth, Interpretation Bible Studies can be used in small groups, in church school classes, in large group presentations, or in personal study.
Patricia K. Tull
Patricia K. Tull is A. B. Rhodes Professor of Old Testament at Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky. An ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), she also serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Biblical Literature.
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Esther and Ruth - Patricia K. Tull
scriptures.
Introduction to Esther and Ruth
A staggering 38 of the 66 books of the Protestant Bible are known by the names of men, either men who appear in them (such as Joshua or Job), men whose speeches are contained in them (such as Isaiah and other prophets), men to whom tradition attributes their authorship (such as the four Gospels), or men to whom they are addressed (such as Titus and Philemon). Only two books of the canon, Esther and Ruth, fourteen chapters total, bear women’s names.
This disproportionate attention the Bible gives to men and male deeds may not have seemed strange to the ancient men who developed the biblical canon. But if modern people wonder what a lopsided view of human life has to offer contemporary communities of faith, their question is neither inappropriate nor too challenging to probe honestly.
Indeed, only a small percentage of the named characters in the Bible are women. Some of the most memorable women, such as the daughter of Jephthah (Judg. 11), the Levite’s concubine (Judg. 19–21), the Syrophoenician woman (Mark 7), and the woman at the well (John 4), are presented namelessly. The Bible pulls no punches about the fates of women: They are raped (Dinah in Gen. 34, Tamar in 2 Sam. 13), forced into marriage (the dancers at Shiloh in Judg. 21, Esther in Esther 2), offered to other men by their fathers (Michal in 1 Sam. 18) or husbands (Sarah in Gen. 12 and 20), abandoned (Hagar in Gen. 16 and 21, Samson’s wife in Judg. 14), dismembered (the Levite’s concubine in Judg. 19), and murdered (Jezebel in 2 Kgs. 9, Athaliah in 2 Kgs. 11). They must fight for property (daughters of Zelophehad in Num. 27). They must prove their worth by bearing sons (Leah and Rachel in Gen. 29–30). They must survive by their wits (Tamar in Gen. 38, Shiphrah and Puah in Exod. 1, Jael in Judg. 4, Abigail in 1 Sam. 25, the wise women of 2 Sam. 14 and 20) and by their tenacity (Moses’ mother in Exod. 2, Delilah in Judg. 16, Bathsheba in 1 Kgs. 1, the Shunammite woman in 2 Kgs. 4).
List of Characters in Esther
Narrator
King Ahasuerus (chapters 1, 3, 5–9)
Esther (chapters 4, 5, 7–9)
Haman (chapters 3, 5–7)
Mordecai (chapter 4 only)
Memucan (chapter 1 only)
King’s servants (chapters 2, 3, 6)
Zeresh and Haman’s friends (chapters 5 and 6 only)
Harbona (chapter 7 only)
Yet if the biblical world is a fairly unsafe place for women, it mirrors the experience of most women still. Women’s freedom even in the first world remains tenuous, constricted by the fear of attack by strangers, employers, and husbands. In many parts of the third world, women’s freedom hardly exists at all. That is why stories of courageous women still stand out disproportionately to their length in the biblical canon—because we still need them so very much. Stories of biblical women whose efforts are met by divine cooperation and community affirmation inspire hope for contemporary women, hope that even if women’s lives are constrained by what Carol Bechtel calls the possession of only limited power
and therefore the necessity to steer from the front of the canoe
(Bechtel, 11), in the end the effort to do so will pay off in the realization of a better world for both women and men.
The Uniqueness of Esther and Ruth
Esther and Ruth are unique in the biblical canon not only by virtue of their names and subject matter. They also stand out as freestanding narratives, springing from Judean history but independent of the primary biblical storyline. In a few short chapters, each introduces a setting and cast of characters, complicates the plot, then resolves it, developing in the course of events not only clear pictures of these women and men as memorable people, but a sense of the way the world works—a theology of providence, broadly speaking.
List of Characters in Ruth
Narrator
Naomi (chapters 1–3)
Ruth (chapters 1–3)
Boaz (chapters 2–4)
Orpah (chapter 1)
Women of Bethlehem (chapters 1, 4)
The reapers and the man in charge of them (chapter 2)
The other kinsman (chapter 4)
Witnesses at the gate (chapter 4)
This theology of providence is woven into both books in quite subtle ways. Despite their presence in the biblical canon, neither book is primarily concerned with what A. B. Rhodes called the mighty acts of God.
In Ruth, God is credited with the first and last acts of grace, but otherwise remains behind the scenes. In Esther, God is not mentioned at all, and any inferences about divine action must remain inferences. Both books reflect a subtlety of divine presence that resembles much more closely life in our own world than the pyrotechnics of Mount Sinai.
Like the rest of the Protestant Old Testament, Esther and Ruth are also canonical for the Jewish community. In the Christian Bible, each book was inserted into the place that seemed appropriate historically. Because Ruth begins, In the days when the judges ruled,
it was placed between Judges and 1 Samuel, where it provides a corrective to the horrifying story of the Levite’s concubine, as well as a counterpart to the peaceful story of Hannah and Elkanah. Because Esther begins, This happened in the days of Ahasuerus,
a Persian emperor, Esther was placed by Christians after Ezra and Nehemiah, which also concern the Persian era. These placements have suggested more strongly than they perhaps should that the stories be read as historical event, obscuring their richness as biblical parable.
The three-part canon of Jewish scripture includes the Torah (Genesis through Deuteronomy), Nevi’im, or Prophets (Joshua, Judges, 1–2 Samuel, 1–2 Kings, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the Twelve Minor Prophets), and Ketuvim, or Writings (Psalms, Job, Proverbs, the five Megilloth, Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah, and 1–2 Chronicles).
Jewish tradition, however, placed these stories within the third section of the Jewish Bible, or Tanakh, which is called Ketuvim, or Writings.
This section includes the Psalms, wisdom literature, late books such as Daniel, Chronicles, and Ezra-Nehemiah, and five short books—called the Megilloth, or Scrolls—which are traditionally read on important Jewish holy days. Ruth is the first of these Megilloth, and is read during the Feast of Weeks, or Pentecost, which celebrates not only the giving of the law on Mount Sinai but also the grain harvest. Esther is the last of the Megilloth, and celebrates the festival of Purim, which is instituted at the close of Esther’s narrative. Interestingly, Ruth, with its emphasis on the woman of strength
(Ruth 3:11), follows immediately the description in Proverbs 31 of the woman of strength.
Esther, the Jewish woman surviving by her wits among the Gentiles, immediately precedes the book of Daniel, with its similar setting in the courts of Gentile emperors.
Both Ruth and Esther have been rightly called by Johanna W. H. van Wijk-Bos women in alien lands.
Ruth is a Gentile woman from Moab who makes her home in Bethlehem. Esther is an Israelite living in exile among the Gentiles of Persia. Both books therefore are deeply involved in themes of inclusion and exclusion, not only in terms of gender but also in terms of ethnicity. Yet the situations of these two women are very different, and as a result, the narrative style unfolds with very distinct tones and purposes.
The Megilloth are Ruth (read on Pentecost), Song of Songs (read on Passover), Ecclesiastes (read on the Feast of Tabernacles, or Sukkot), Lamentations (read on the Ninth of Av, the date of the temple’s destruction), and Esther (read on Purim).
Esther’s is a world of danger from powerful and prideful enemies. As underdogs in this alien world, battling the immediate threat of genocide, Esther and her cousin Mordecai must survive by cunning and grit. Esther’s narrator spares no quarter in destroying the pretensions of Esther’s enemies by means of high satire and ribald humor. If readers are tempted both to laugh and cry as Esther unfolds, they are following the author’s lead. As Carol Bechtel says of the story’s dark humor, We not only laugh until we cry; we laugh so that we will not cry
(Bechtel, 26).
The dangers in Ruth’s environment are very different. The only enemy in her story is God, who, according to Ruth’s mother-in-law, Naomi, has left them destitute and empty. Humans are not contrasted by their role as friends or enemies, but rather by the extent to which they supersede the bounds of societal expectation, becoming conduits of hesed, or covenant loyalty, to the needy among them. In the end, not only the people but also the vision of the divine is redeemed in the course of Ruth’s story. Correspondingly, the narrative of Ruth is less funny, less angular, more pensive and gentle. In this study I have chosen, against conventional practice, to place Ruth last, not because it is a better story—each has its place—but because its harmonious picture of human community, while unfortunately seldom realized this side of the garden of Eden, leaves a more hopeful vision.
Suggestions for Beginning Study
Readers gathering to study Esther and Ruth for the first time would be well served to read through each book out loud as a group. Such a reading, which even for Esther takes less than an hour, allows participants to savor the suspenseful plots with all their twists and turns, before delving into the individual features of each story. Readers will enjoy the rich repetitions of plot elements, the foreshadowings and backward glances, and the insistent unfolding of ironic coincidence
as each plot moves to complexity and resolution.
Like most of the Bible’s narratives, Esther and Ruth lend themselves well to a reader’s theatre
approach. The leader may read the narrator’s parts, with others joining in the speaking parts. (See pp. 1–2 for a list of major characters in each book.)
Want to Know More?
About leading Bible study groups? See Roberta Hestenes, Using the Bible in Groups (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1983); Christine Blair, The Art of Teaching the Bible (Louisville, Ky.: Geneva Press, 2001).
About symbols in the Old Testament? See Paul J. Achtemeier, ed., HarperCollins Bible Dictionary, rev. ed. (New York: HarperCollins, 1996), 1076–79.
About divine providence in Ruth? See Katherine Doob Sakenfeld, Ruth, Interpretation (Louisville, Ky.: John Knox Press, 1999), 14–16.
About divine providence in Esther? See Carol Bechtel, Esther, Interpretation (Louisville, Ky: John Knox Press, 2002), 10–14.
Whenever readers immerse themselves in a biblical text, connections emerge between the Bible and contemporary life in unexpected ways. When teaching the book of Esther extensively for the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) a few years ago, I coined the phrase, having an Esther moment,
for the many times