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Ordinary People Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 3, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Everybody in this book is ordinary. Obed, the baby who gives the book a happy ending, does not grow up to do anything of significance that we know of. There are no great battles, no miracles, and no profound theological statements in this book. Not one person in this book was above ordinary.
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What woman do you know who has had a thousand men
propose to her from fisherman to millionaires; from the penniless
on the bowry to the prince of a royal European
family? And who was still getting regular proposals after
she was 70 years old? There was such a woman, and her
name was Evangeline Booth. She was the first woman to be
the general of the Salvation Army. She was a very unique
and extraordinary woman. At the age of 63 she swan
across Lake George in 4 hours. At age 70 she broke a wild
horse that the owner was afraid to ride. There is much
literature on this woman, for she was not one in a million,
but one in a billion.
When gold was discovered in Alaska before the turn of
the century, masses of men rushed to the Yukon. She knew
the Salvation Army would be needed there, and so with a
few trained nurses she was on her way. All the talk when
she arrived was about "Soopy Smith" the killer of the
Klondike. Soopy and his gang would ambush minors
coming back from the gold fields, shoot them down, and
take their gold. The U. S. government sent a posse after
him, but he shot them all and escaped. It was not a nice
place for a lady. Five men were killed the day Evangeline
arrived.
That night she held a meeting on the banks of the Yukon
River. She preached to 25 thousand men, and got them all
singing songs they had heard their mothers sing, such as,
Jesus, Lover Of My Soul, and Nearer My God To Thee.
They sang until one in the morning. When it was over, and
they sat around the camp fire to keep warm, five men with
guns approached her. One said, "I'm Soopy Smith, and I've
come to tell you how much I enjoyed your singing."
Evangeline talked with Soopy in the white light of the
midnight sun for 3 hours. He admitted he use to attend the
Salvation Army with his grandmother and sing these songs.
Evangeline finally asked him to kneel with her, and the
most notorious bandit that ever terrorized the North got
down on his knees and prayed and wept, and vowed to stop
killing, and give himself up. This kind of thing does not
happen to just ordinary women. This is rare and unique,
and way beyond the ordinary. Her life and gifts are the
kind that keep Hollywood going, and which sell books and
magazines, for her life is filled with thoughts and actions
which are spectacular and amazing.
There are only two books in the Bible named after
women. One of them is Esther, and she was in this category
of extraordinary. She was a dazzling beauty, and she
played a role in history that was public and spectacular,
and she saved the lives of thousands of people.
Hers too was a movie type life. But the other book of the
Bible named after a woman is Ruth, and what a radical
difference. Ruth was as ordinary as they come. Apart from
a few words of beautiful commitment to follow Naomi, and
a part from being a hard worker in the fields, she never did
anything, or said anything spectacular. She is not described
as being beautiful or brilliant. There is no great event of
which she was a part. There is no great influence she had
on her day that is recorded. She had no outstanding gift
that ministered to people.
Ruth was just one of the vast majority of the human race
of ordinary people. She lived in the time of the judges, but
she was not Deborah leading the people of Israel to victory
over her enemies. Boaz, the leading man in this story, was
also no Gideon or Samson, doing wonders as a military
genius or man of strength. Everybody in this book is
ordinary. Obed, the baby who gives the book a happy
ending, does not grow up to do anything of significance that
we know of. There are no great battles, no miracles, and no
profound theological statements in this book. Not one
person in this book would have ever escaped form under the
blanket of obscurity that covers over most of human history
had this book not been written. Yet these ordinary people
are the people we see in the genealogy of the Messiah. The
judges, who were very gifted people, who made the
headlines of their day, are not the people in the blood line to
the Messiah. What is God trying to tell us by this? I think
He is simply revealing-
I. THE IMPORTANCE OF THE ORDINARY.
We have a tendency to think that history revolves
around great events, and that to understand history we