Ruth and
Lovingkindness
Rabbinic tradition
sees her as a virtuous woman who is rewarded for her behavior.
By Leila Leah Bronner
Excerpted from "A Thematic Approach to Ruth in
Rabbinic Literature," which appears in A Feminist
Companion to Ruth, edited by Athalya Brenner and published by Sheffield
Academic Press. Reprinted with permission of The Continuum International
Publishing Group.
The book of Ruth presents the sages of the Midrash and
Talmud with a unique social and religious problem. In the figure of Ruth, they
are faced with a Moabite woman, a descendant of a people that the Pentateuch
emphatically proscribes from entering the congregation of the Lord (Deuteronomy
23.1). In the biblical verses, she is depicted from the start as an exemplary
woman--a heroine by the merit of her own actions--before she enters the
Israelite fold.
The problem of when the story was actually put into written
form remains unresolved and bears on our concerns here, but what matters more
for this discussion is the fact that the Talmudic sages generally accept the
traditional claim that it was written by Samuel (Talmud, Baba Batra14a).
Yet they place Ruth not after Judges in the biblical canon, but among the
Writings, indicating that they too are unsure of its date. [The classical
definition of Ruth is that it is part of the Wisdom literature dating between
the fourth and third century BCE.]
Faced with the cognitively dissonant exemplary character of
this foreign woman, who will also become the ancestress of the Davidic line,
the rabbis of the Talmud feel that they have to halakhically [legally]
legitimize Ruth's conversion. Then, having accomplished her acceptance into the
fold, they wish to underscore her merit and extraordinary kindness and valor,
which make her a suitable figure to stand at the beginning of the Davidic
(messianic) line.
They study the book closely and take any good characteristic
of Ruth, enlarging and embellishing it to portray her as a very special woman,
a paragon of piety and virtue. Ruth is the only convert to have a biblical book
named after her--a profound and unparalleled honor. Moreover she is, with
Esther, one of only two women to have this distinction. [Judith, another book
named after a woman, did not make it into the Jewish canon.]
I shall examine several themes in the Midrash related to the
life and character of Ruth, which will reveal a Ruth possessing the feminine
virtues the rabbis want to hold up for emulation. In her introduction to the
section on Ruth in the Interpreter's Bible, Louise Pettibone Smith
remarks that, "Ruth acts always for love and trust of Naomi…doing all that
she bade her." [L.P. Smith, The Interpreter's Bible, II (New York:
Abingdon Press, 1954).] I would expand that to say that Ruth, in both the
original biblical narrative and in the midrashic retellings, is seen to act out
of love for Naomi, but also out of a more general love and generosity,
embodying the quality known in Hebrew as hesed,a term generally
rendered in English as 'loving kindness' and discussed further below.
The Theme of Hesed
The theme of kindness is central to the book of Ruth. Rabbi
Ze'ira stresses this characteristic of the narrative. "This scroll [of
Ruth] tells nothing either of cleanliness or of uncleanliness, neither of
prohibition or permission. For what purpose then was it written? To teach how
great is the reward of those who do deeds of kindness" (Midrash Ruth
Rabbah 2.13).
Hesedis indeed one of the key words controlling the
text. The word occurs three times: at the beginning, in the middle, and at the
end of the story (Ruth 1.8, 2.20, 3.10). The scroll commences with the hesedRuth does for Naomi--from gleaning in the fields to bringing food--and the
hesedshe does in honoring the
memory of the dead in Naomi's family (which becomes, by marriage, her
own). "And Naomi said to her daughter-in-law, 'blessed be he of the Lord,
who has not left off his kindness [hesed]from the living and from the
dead'" (Ruth 2.20). Boaz says to
Ruth, "Your last act of hesedis better than your first that you did not go after the young
men whether rich or poor." He promises to look after her needs [Ruth
3:10].
Every character acting in this brief story--from Naomi to
Ruth to Boaz to the minor characters--behaves in a manner that demonstrates this heroic concept of some
form of hesed.The main
actors of the story all act in the spirit of hesed; some perform ordinary hesed, and
some--especially Ruth--extraordinary hesed.Their exemplary behavior is
somewhat reminiscent of that of the patriarchs and matriarchs.
The Ruth narrative resembles the older narratives in
language, content, and style (Ruth 3.3-9; cf. Genesis 24.12-14). Ruth, like
Abraham--the founder of the nation, the first of the proselytes--leaves the
house of her father and mother and goes to join a people who, as far as she
knows, will not accept her because of her foreign origins (Midrash GenesisRabbah
59.9; Talmud, Sukkah 49b). Yet
she will not be dissuaded and joins the Israelite nation, with no thought of
reward for this act of affiliation, and
in this lies her great hesed.The rabbinic sources emphasize the superabundancy of hesed,its
"more- than-enoughness." As Maimonides puts it, the concept of hesed:
"Includes two notions, one of them consisting in the exercise of
beneficence toward one who deserves it, but in a greater measure than he
deserves it. In most cases, the prophetic books use the word hesed in the sense of practicing
beneficence toward one who has no right
at all to claim this from you" [Guide for the Perplexed].
Ruth's mode is the
second, to practice benevolence toward people who have no claim on her
for it.
Copyright 1993 by Sheffield Academic Press