Ruth

Introduction

The book of Ruth is a short, exquisite narrative set "in the days when the judges ruled" (Ruth 1:1). It was likely written during or after the time of David, since it concludes with David's genealogy (Ruth 4:17-22). The author is unknown, though Jewish tradition attributes it to the prophet Samuel. The book provides a striking counter-narrative to the chaos and violence of Judges — showing that even in Israel's darkest era, faithful individuals practiced covenant loyalty. While the book of Judges ends with the horrifying abuse of a woman and civil war (Judges 19:1--Judges 21:25), Ruth tells the story of two women who survive devastating loss through mutual devotion and the kindness of a godly man.

Ruth is one of only two biblical books named after a woman (the other being Esther). Remarkably, Ruth is a Moabitess — a foreigner from a nation historically hostile to Israel (Deuteronomy 23:3) — yet she becomes the great-grandmother of King David and an ancestor of Jesus Christ (Matthew 1:5). Her inclusion in the messianic line demonstrates that God's redemptive purposes have always extended beyond ethnic Israel. The book's central Hebrew word, חֶסֶד — covenant loyalty, loving-kindness, faithful love — appears three times (Ruth 1:8, Ruth 2:20, Ruth 3:10) and describes the action of every major character: Naomi's daughters-in-law show it to her, God shows it through Boaz, and Ruth shows it to both Naomi and Boaz.

Structure

The book of Ruth has a beautifully symmetrical four-chapter structure that moves from emptiness to fullness, from loss to restoration:

Key Themes

Chapters

  1. 1Naomi loses her husband and sons in Moab; Ruth refuses to leave her mother-in-law and pledges total loyalty; they return together to Bethlehem at the start of the barley harvest.
  2. 2Ruth gleans in the field of Boaz, a kinsman of Elimelech; Boaz shows her favor and protection, and Naomi recognizes him as a potential kinsman-redeemer.
  3. 3Following Naomi's plan, Ruth goes to Boaz at the threshing floor and asks him to act as her redeemer; Boaz agrees but reveals a nearer kinsman must be consulted first.
  4. 4Boaz negotiates with the nearer kinsman at the city gate, acquires the right to redeem, and marries Ruth; she bears Obed, and the book concludes with the genealogy leading to David.