During a television news report on the plight of refugees displaced from
a war-torn country, I was struck by the words of a 10-year-old girl. Despite
there being little possibility of returning to their home, she showed a
resilient spirit: “When we go back, I’m going to visit my neighbors; I’m going
to play with my friends,” she said with quiet determination. “My father says we
don’t have a house. And I said we are going to fix it.”
There is a place for tenacity in life, especially when it is rooted in
our faith in God and love for others. The book of Ruth begins with three women
bound together by tragedy. After Naomi’s husband and two sons died, she decided
to return to her home in Bethlehem and urged her widowed daughters-in-law to
stay in their country of Moab. Orpah remained but Ruth vowed to go with Naomi,
saying, “Your people shall be my people, and your God, my God” (Ruth 1:16).
When Naomi saw that Ruth “was determined to go with her” (v.18), they began
their journey together.
Stubbornness is sometimes rooted in pride, but commitment grows from
love. When Jesus went to the cross, “He steadfastly set His face to go to
Jerusalem” (Luke 9:51). From His determination to die for us, we find the
resolve to live for Him.