November 10, 2024, 5:00pm sermon, preached he Twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost (Proper 27B) by Mark Lloyd Taylor, Ph.D.
Ruth 3:1-5, 4:13-17; Mark 12:38-44
Every person’s life tells a story. Every life. And the stories a community, a people, hold on to and tell and retell shape the lives of generations to come. Sacred stories. Like the story of Ruth and her mother-in-law Naomi.
Now this evening, we heard just a snippet of the end of that story. We would have heard more last Sunday if the Feast of All Saints hadn’t taken precedence over the readings for the Twenty-fourth Sunday after Pentecost. Let me fill in what John Sutherland read to us a bit.
It’s a story of two women in a deeply patriarchal culture with virtually no rights and no way to provide for themselves without male next-of-kin: fathers or husbands or sons. It’s a story of insecurity. Food insecurity. Financial insecurity. Social insecurity.
Naomi was an Israelite woman back in the time of the judges – before Israel was ruled by a king. Naomi was married and had two sons. In a time of famine, the four emigrated to the neighboring, but foreign country of Moab in order to survive. Then, Naomi’s husband died – but she still had her two sons to support her. And they eventually married Moabite women named Orpah and Ruth. But then the sons also died. Leaving Naomi and Ruth and Orpah on their own as widows – threatened with being destitute. Naomi decided to go back to her extended family in Israel and told Orpah and Ruth to return to their own families. Orpah did, but not Ruth. She clung in love to Naomi, saying: “Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go, I will go; where you lodge, I will lodge; your people shall be my people, and your God my God” (Ruth 1:16).
Back in Israel, Bethlehem to be precise, Ruth – now she’s the immigrant! – takes bold and creative advantage of a little codicil in the law of Moses that prohibited Israelite farmers from harvesting their fields all the way to the edges. They were commanded to leave the corners and the windfall for foreigners, widows, and the poor to find some way to try and survive. And so Ruth followed the women of a man named Boaz to glean the grain that they had dropped or overlooked. When Boaz heard about Ruth’s care for Noami her mother-in-law, and his kinswoman, he gave Ruth additional barley for bread and invited her not just to glean the scraps left behind, but harvest as much good grain as she needed (2:1-23). And you heard the end of the story. Boaz marries Ruth, granting both widows security. And Ruth has a son, named Obed, to Naomi’s great joy.
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The story of Ruth and Naomi hardly feels ancient. It could have come right out of the newspapers of November 2024 and from our television and computer screens. To make that connection, I want to read you a children’s book, published five years ago, that tells the story of another woman, a woman of color, daughter of immigrant parents. Kamala Harris and her book Superheroes Are Everywhere.
[Now if you had been in the upstairs worship space at St. Paul’s the evening of November 10, you would have seen me step from behind the lectern, put a chair in front of those gathered in the pews, sit, and read the book like an elementary school teacher, showing the pictures on each page. Here, instead, I’ll just list the superheroes Kamala discovered across her lifelong search, and encourage you to find the book and read it – maybe read it to a child, or read it as a child: Her mom. Her sister Maya. Her dad. Her grandparents in India and Jamaica. Her best friend in kindergarten. Mrs. Wilson, her first-grade teacher. Her neighbor down the street, Mrs. Shelton. Aunt Lenore, Uncle Sherman, Aunt Mary, and Uncle Freddy. Her aunt Chris, who like Kamala attended Howard University; her mom the scientist, Uncle Balu the economist, Aunt Sarala the doctor, and Aunt Chinni who works with computers. Lawyers Kamala looked up to: Thurgood Marshall, Constance Baker Motley, and Charles Hamilton Houston. All the people she worked with to help kids as a lawyer and U.S. Senator; and the amazing kids themselves. Superheroes Are Everywhere, by Kamala Harris, illustrated by Mechal Renee Roe (New York: Philomel Books – an imprint of Penguin Random House, 2019).]
Kamala Harris’ children’s book concludes with what she calls “The Hero Code” (pages 27-28):
“Do you want to be a superhero?
It’s easier than you think.
The first thing to do is raise your right hand and say the words on the next page out loud.
If you want to wear a cape while you do this, you can – but you don’t have to.
I PROMISE TO:
make people feel special
be someone people can count on
help people be brave
stand up for what’s right
be a best friend
be a good teacher
be kind
explore with my friends and family
study and work hard
protect people who need it
make a difference when I can
I promise to be the very best me I can be!”
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This evening – surrounded by the many insecurities of November 2024 – I want to add a few promises to Kamala Harris’ hero code. I hope they might be our promises, not just as individuals but as a community, as we hold on to and tell and retell the sacred story of Ruth and Naomi.
Like those two poor widows – both foreigners in their own way:
We promise to endure.
We promise to claim our God-given dignity and agency.
We promise to harvest the gleanings from around the edges of our patriarchal and racist and homophobic culture for the flourishing of all God’s children.
For, remember, Ruth was King David’s great-grandmother. Her story continues in his life. And, twenty-eight generations later, David’s story and Ruth’s story and Naomi’s story lived on in Joseph and Mary and Jesus, the Anointed One (Ruth 4:17, Matthew 1:1-17).