Verse 1
Ruth 1:1. There was a famine in
the land — This makes it
probable that the things here
recorded came to pass in the
days of Gideon, for that is the
only time when we read of a
famine in the days of the
judges; namely, when the
Midianites, Amalekites, &c.,
came and destroyed the increase
of the earth, and left no
sustenance for Israel, nor for
their cattle, 6:3-4.
Verse 2
Ruth 1:2. Ephrathites of Beth-lehem-judah
— Bethlehem was otherwise called
Ephratha. Naomi signifies my
amiable or pleasant one; Mahlon
and Chilion signify sickness and
consumption. Probably they were
sickly children, and not likely
to be long-lived. Such are the
products of our pleasant things,
weak and infirm, fading and
dying. They came into the
country of Moab, and continued
there — Settled their habitation
in that country, which it would
not have been lawful for them to
have done, unless it had been in
a time of great public calamity,
or great private necessity, as
Maimonides observes.
Verse 4
Ruth 1:4. They took them wives
of the daughters of Moab —
Either these women were
proselytes when they married
them, which what is afterward
recorded of Ruth (Ruth 1:16)
renders very probable, or they
sinned in marrying them, and
therefore might be punished with
short lives and want of issue.
The Chaldee paraphrast declares
for the latter opinion. “Their
days were cut short,” says he,
“because they married strange
women.”
Verse 5-6
Ruth 1:5-6. The woman was left
of her two sons and her husband
— Loss of children and widowhood
are both come upon her. By whom
shall she be comforted? It is
God alone who is able to comfort
those who are thus cast down.
The Lord had visited his people
in giving them bread — That is,
food: so she stayed no longer
than necessity forced her.
Verse 8
Ruth 1:8. Return each to her
mother’s house — She desires
them to accompany her no
farther, but to go back to their
own home. And it seems it was
usual in Moab, as well as in
Israel, for widows to dwell with
their parents. But she says,
mother’s, rather than father’s
house, because daughters used to
converse more frequently with
their mothers, and to dwell in
the same apartments with them,
which then were distinct from
those parts of the house where
the men dwelt. The dead — With
my sons, your husbands, while
they lived.
Verses 9-11
Ruth 1:9-11. That ye may find
rest, &c. — That ye may be
happily settled in houses of
your own, with good husbands.
That they may be your husbands —
According to the ancient custom,
(Genesis 38:8,) and the express
law of God, (Deuteronomy 25:4,)
which doubtless she had
acquainted them with before,
among other branches of the
Jewish religion.
Verse 13
Ruth 1:13. It grieveth me — That
you are left without the comfort
of husbands or children; that I
must part with such affectionate
daughters; and that my
circumstances are such that I
cannot invite you to go along
with me. For her condition was
so mean at this time that Ruth,
when she came to her mother’s
city, was forced to glean for a
living. It is with me that God
has a controversy. This language
becomes us when we are under
affliction; though many others
share in the trouble, yet we are
to hear the voice of the rod, as
if it spake only to us. But did
not she wish to bring them to
the worship of the God of
Israel? Undoubtedly she did. But
she would have them first
consider upon what terms, lest,
having set their hand to the
plough, they should look back.
Verse 14
Ruth 1:14. Kissed — Departed
from her with a kiss. Bade her
farewell for ever. She loved
Naomi; but she did not love her
so well as to quit her country
for her sake. Thus many have a
value for Christ, and yet come
short of salvation by him,
because they cannot find in
their hearts to forsake other
things for him. They love him,
and yet leave him, because they
do not love him enough, but love
other things better.
Verse 15
Ruth 1:15. Is gone back to her
people and to her gods — By this
it appears, if Orpah had been a
proselyte to the Jewish
religion, she afterward
apostatized. Those that forsake
the communion of saints will
certainly break off their
communion with God. Return thou
after thy sister-in-law — This
she said to try Ruth’s sincerity
and constancy, and in order that
she might intimate to her that
if she went with her she must be
firm in her attachment to the
true religion.
Verse 16-17
Ruth 1:16-17. Entreat me not to
leave thee — For all thy
entreaties cannot shake that
resolution which thy
instructions, formerly given,
have wrought in me. Whither thou
goest, I will go — Though to a
country I never saw, which I
have been taught to despise, and
far distant from my own country.
Where thou lodgest, I will lodge
— Though it be in a cottage;
nay, though it be no better a
lodging than Jacob had when he
put the stones for his pillow.
Thy people shall be my people —
For, judging from what I have
seen in thee, I conclude they
must be a wise and understanding
people, and I shall think myself
happy if I may be reckoned one
of them, may be associated with
them, and conformed to them. And
thy God shall be my God —
Farewell to Chemosh and all the
gods of Moab, which are vanities
and lies. I will adore the God
of Israel, the only living and
true God; will trust in him
alone, will love and serve him
alone, and in every thing be
commanded and ruled by him.
Where thou diest will I die — In
the same place, in token of my
dying in the same spirit. Let me
die the death of the righteous
Naomi, and let my last end be
like hers! And there will I be
buried — Not desiring to have so
much as my dead body carried
back to the country of Moab, in
token of any remaining regard
for it. But I will be buried in
the same grave with thee, and my
bones shall lie by thine, that,
as we have joined souls, our
dust may be mingled, and we may
rise together, and remain
together for ever. Happy Naomi,
though deprived of her husband
and her sons, that has such a
daughter-in-law to comfort her
in her widowhood and amidst her
bereavements! And happy Ruth,
who has profited so much by the
instructions of her
mother-in-law, and who has so
fully imbibed the genuine
principles and spirit of the
true religion! Surely she was a
glorious instance of the grace
of God inclining the soul to a
resolute choice of the good
part. The Lord do so to me, and
more also — An ancient form this
of imprecation, by which Ruth
confirms, with a solemn oath,
her resolution to adhere to
Naomi till death. She knew that
death would part them for a
time, but was resolved that
nothing else should; not any
kindness from her own family and
people, nor any hope of
preferment among them; nor any
unkindness from Israel, nor the
fear of poverty and disgrace
among them. No; I will never
leave thee.
Verse 18
Ruth 1:18. That she was
steadfastly minded to go with
her, &c. — Was not this the very
thing that Naomi aimed at in all
she said, namely, to bring Ruth
to be of this steadfast mind?
Then she left off speaking —
Having gained her point. For she
could desire no further
confirmation of it than that
solemn protestation which Ruth
had just now made. See the power
of resolution, how it puts
temptation to silence! Those
that are but half resolved, and
go on in the ways of religion
without a steadfast mind, stand
like a door ajar, which invites
a thief. But resolution shuts
and bolts the door, and then the
devil flees from us.
Verses 19-21
Ruth 1:19-21. Is this Naomi? —
Is this she that formerly lived
in so much plenty and honour?
How marvellously is her
condition changed! Call me not
Naomi — Which signifies
pleasant, and cheerful. Call me
Mara — Which signifies bitter,
or sorrowful. I went out full —
With my husband and sons, and a
plentiful estate for our
support. Testified — That is,
hath borne witness, as it were,
in judgment, and given sentence
against me. Thus she
acknowledges that the affliction
came from God, and that God was
contending with and correcting
her; and she is willing to
accommodate herself to the
afflictive and bitter
dispensation; and as a token
thereof to have her name changed
from Naomi to Mara. “It well
becomes us,” says Henry, “to
have our hearts humbled under
humbling providences. When our
condition is brought down, our
spirits should be brought down
with it. And then our troubles
are sanctified to us, when we
thus comport with them: for it
is not an affliction in itself,
but an affliction rightly borne,
that doth us good.” |