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The Godly Woman: A Role Model
Contributed by Bishop Prof. Julius Soyinka on Jul 31, 2014 (message contributor)
Summary: Every godly woman is to be a role model to their children and to other woman of various age categories. Their lives and character should attract other people to God and influence their commitment to the work of the kingdom positively.
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A Godly Role Model
Study Text: Ruth 1: 8 - 10
“Then Naomi said to her two daughters-in-law, ‘Go back, each of you, to your mother’s home. May the Lord show kindness to you, as you have shown to your dead and to me. May the Lord grant that each of you will find rest in the home of another husband.’ Then she kissed them and they wept aloud and said to her, ‘We will go back with you to your people.’” — Ruth 1:8–10
Introduction:
When we think of role models, we think of those who we look up to, admire, and respect. We think of those that set an example for us to follow. We think of those that portray values and virtues that should be imitated. We live in a culture and society where there is a desperate need for good role models.
- Who are the role models who have inspired you during your life?
- Who has influenced you on a personal level?
- Who helped you to overcome obstacles and encouraged you throughout life?
- Who did you want to be like when you grew up?
- Everyone, regardless of age, needs good role models. Role models are an important part of our personal development.
- They are the people who come alongside us, give us guidance, and offer encouragement throughout our lives.
- Maybe you’ve been fortunate to have several of those types of people in your life. It’s a blessing to have one.
1. Naomi: A Godly Role Model:
- If you’re familiar with the biblical story of Ruth, then you know that Naomi and her family left Bethlehem during a famine and went to the land of Moab, where her husband and two sons died.
- Naomi’s two sons had married Moabite wives, so the three widows decided to head back to Bethlehem because God had blessed the land with fertility again.
- Childless widows usually returned to the home of their parents (see Genesis 38:11; Leviticus 22:13), but Naomi’s godly character must have impressed her daughters-in-law because both young women wanted to go with her.
- Although Naomi urged them to return to their families, her daughter-in-laws initially refused.
- Naomi was the type of woman — a role model — that they would follow anywhere, even to a foreign land.
- Eventually one of her daughter-in-laws returned home. But Ruth remained steadfast in her desire to follow Naomi.
- Ruth even left behind the Moabite gods of her culture and accepted Naomi’s God by converting to her God.
- In a beautiful statement of loyalty and love, Ruth told her mother-in-law: “Your people will be my people and your God my God” (Ruth 1:16).
- As you think about the godly influence Naomi had over these two young women, it is important to remember being a role model doesn’t always have to look flashy.
- Naomi was a mother and a wife. She kept the household running. Yet, in carrying out her responsibilities and duties, she had exerted an influence over all who knew her and observed how she lived.
- Who are the people in your life right now watching you? What is your life teaching others?
2. Hannah: A Godly Role Model :
- It's Hannah, the mother of the prophet Samuel, an emblem of the grace of womanhood. You can read all about her in 1 Samuel 1 and 2.
- Hannah became a mother by faith. In the opening verses of 1 Samuel, she is introduced as a childless woman. But God granted her a precious gift and she became the mother of one of the greatest men who ever walked the earth.
a. Devoted to Her Husband
- Contrary to popular opinion, the most important characteristic of a godly mother is her relationship, not with her children, but with her husband.
- What you communicate to your children through your marital relationship will stay with them for the rest of their lives.
- By watching you and your husband, they are learning the most fundamental lessons of life--love, self-sacrifice, integrity, virtue, sin, sympathy, compassion, understanding, and forgiveness. Whatever you teach them about those things, right or wrong, is planted deep within their hearts.
- That emphasis on marriage was very evident between Elkanah and Hannah. They were dedicated to the faithful worship of God (1:3), and they were dedicated to loving one another (1:4-8).
- Their situation--being unable to have children together--was like an open wound. But it was an experience that drew out of Elkanah tender expressions of love for his wife.
- At a particularly low point in Hannah's discouragement, Elkanah comforted his wife with these words: "Hannah, why do you weep and why do you not eat and why is your heart sad? Am I not better to you than ten sons?" (1:8).