Belinda wrote: ↑Sat Feb 20, 2021 11:55 pm
My agreement is not a big deal as I am not really a Biblical scholar.
Well, that's not really a problem, B. As one literature professor pointed out to me, the Bible has been studied pretty intensively by all kinds of people, far more than any other book in the history of the world. And still there are things to discover about it. It's got that much content and depth there. On the other hand, it is also so comprehensible that practically nobody is incapable of getting the basic meaning of what it teaches, so it's also been a guide to the simple. And most of us, we must confess, are somewhere between those extremes.
The Story of Ruth was at one time explained to me sentimentally as about affection between a daughter in law and her mother in law.
On one narrative level, it is that.
Later on the same story was explained to me as an example of duty to Levirate marriage rules.
Yes, it is also a demonstration of Levitical Law. That is also true.
But that is not all. It is also several other things, depending on which narrative "strand" you reach for, because they all run through it. It's an exposition of matrilineage, as well -- Ruth being a progenitor of Israel's great king, David, and through him, of the Messiah. Or you can think about it nationalistically, because Ruth is saved, blessed and brought into Israel's mainline, purely by her faith in the Jewish God -- though a Gentile herself by birth. It's also a prophetic foretelling of the salvation of Israel, with implications even future today. There is a lot that can be said about that book.
That's the point, B. There's a level on which you can "get into" the narrative, merely by thinking about the relationship between the two women. But there's another level when you think about their nationalities. There's another when you think about their religions. There's another when you realize who the women actually are, and another if you think about what they symbolize...and so on. All of these are legit strands of the same narrative, and all are agreeing. When you look at it that way, it becomes quite obvious that something very special is going on in that book, short as it is.
I suggest there's simply no book like the Bible on Earth. I have read the works of Shakespeare, and complex as they are, they are actually simple by comparison. Shakespeare himself paid frequent tribute to his greater source, quoting its words and themes frequently in his plays. So have most great authors of the Western tradition, actually. Its reach and range are quite unique.
The Bible is like a mountain with its top in the clouds. You can get ahold of it firmly at the base, or climb a bit and get more, or climb higher still and get more...but the top, the absolute completeness of it has been eluding the worlds brightest scholars for thousands of years, so there's always more to get.