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Making Room for Her: A Study of the Most Famous In-Law RelationshipUzorak

Making Room for Her: A Study of the Most Famous In-Law Relationship

DAN 3 OD 5

DAY 3

In today’s Scripture reading, we see Naomi full of regrets and love. She tells her daughter-in-law to stay behind. The life of widows in Moab is hard enough. But how could her daughters-in-law possibly survive as foreign widows in Israel? No one would want to marry them there. If they stayed in Moab, they’d have a better shot at remarrying and starting a new life. Orpah agrees. But Ruth surprises Naomi, insisting she will go with her.

What can Ruth hope to gain from staying with Naomi? Ruth is not naive. She knows life will be hard. But she loves her mother-in-law and she loves her mother-in-law’s God. And now she acts on that love.

What if you have been hurt? Or your in-law is disagreeable? Maybe she’s even unkind. How can you love a woman so unlike you? She’s nothing like the person you dreamed she’d be. Is there any hope of developing a loving relationship with her?

We enter the mother-in-law, daughter-in-law relationship expecting what we want—the best. Instead of the dream come true, suddenly it seems we’ve ended up in a nightmare. What can we do? Our unrealistic expectations have only made us super-sensitive. The ugliness of sin smacks us in the face. Our inconsistent feelings mislead us. How can we help but go in the wrong direction? Love has disappeared.

We’ve been hurt. We pull away. Self-protectively, we watch for more ways she’ll miss the mark. We begin to justify ourselves. She deserves my emotional distance. Our hearts say, “I’ll love my in-law when she stops hurting me.” As if love could ever be pain-free! We pretend to love our in-law, but we talk about her behind her back. We find ways to punish her or we take it out on our husbands. Bitterness and cynicism grow. How did we ever think we could stir up love? We give up.

Committed love—what is it? Ruth teaches us the hard truth: committed love is more than a feeling. For love to be true, it has to be fueled by commitment. And when we honor the commitment to honor our in-law no matter what, when we show up to what love requires regardless of what the other person is doing, this habit eventually pulls our feelings along toward true love.

Whether it’s an argument or harsh words, committed love has no room for endless exceptions. True love does not withdraw. Our commitment moves us toward the other person in hardship, not away. Love accepts inconsistencies. Ruth loved the real Naomi, not a dream of what she thought she should be.

By God’s grace and for his glory, we can live out our commitment to love. Because he loved us no matter what, we really can love our in-law that way, too.

For reflection:

  • How do you typically define love? Are you living up to that definition? How does the story of Naomi and Ruth encourage or challenge your view?
  • When you think of your in-law relationship, where might you be refusing to show up to what love requires, regardless of the other person’s actions? Why do you think this is the case?
Dan 2Dan 4

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Making Room for Her: A Study of the Most Famous In-Law Relationship

No matter your age or stage, every daughter-in-law and mother-in-law needs help navigating their relationship sometimes. Whether the struggle is one of feeling unseen, unheard, or unvalued, authors and in-laws Barbara and Stacy Reaoch have been there, and as they’ve put the Bible’s wisdom to practice over the years, they’ve found that the mother-in-law and daughter-in-law really can thrive in the midst of difficulty.

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