Verse 2
Ruth 2:2. Let me go to the field
and glean — Which was permitted
to the poor and the stranger,
Leviticus 19:9; Deuteronomy
24:19. And Ruth was neither
ashamed to confess her poverty,
nor would she eat the bread of
idleness. After him in whose
sight I shall find grace —
Perhaps she did not know that
poor strangers had a right to
glean as well as the poor of
Israel; or rather, out of her
great modesty, she would not
claim it as a right, but as a
favour, which she would humbly
and thankfully acknowledge. And
she said, Go, my daughter — This
shows, that Naomi was in a very
poor and low condition as to
temporal things; for had she
been otherwise, it is not likely
that she would have suffered her
daughter- in-law to go and glean
among the lowest of the people.
Verse 3
Ruth 2:3. Her hap was, &c. — It
was a chance in appearance, and
in reference to second causes,
but ordered by God’s providence.
God wisely orders small events,
even those that seem altogether
contingent. Many a great affair
is brought about by a little
turn, fortuitous as to men, but
designed by God.
Verse 4
Ruth 2:4. And said unto the
reapers, The Lord be with you,
&c. — Such was the piety of
ancient times, that it
manifested itself even in men’s
civil conversation and worldly
transactions, and induced them
to pray to God for a blessing on
the labours of those whom they
saw to be honestly and usefully
employed, who were wont in
return to pray in a similar
manner for them. The Lord be
with you; and the Lord bless you
— This was the beautiful
language of religion in those
days; too little known, alas! in
ours.
Verse 7
Ruth 2:7. She said, I pray you,
&c. — She did not boldly intrude
herself, but modestly ask leave
of us. Till now — She is not
retired through idleness, for
she hath been diligent and
constant in her labours. The
house — In the little house or
tent, which was set up in the
fields at these times, and was
necessary in those hot
countries, where the labourers
might retire for a little repose
or repast. Being weary with her
continued labours, she comes
hither to take a little rest.
Verse 8-9
Ruth 2:8-9. Abide here by my
maidens — Not by the young men,
to avoid both occasion of sin,
and matter of scandal. Herein he
shows his piety and prudence.
That they shall not touch thee —
So as to offer any incivility or
injury to thee.
Verse 10
Ruth 2:10. Then she fell on her
face — This was the humblest
posture of reverence, either
civil, when performed to men, or
religious, when to God. And thus
she shows both the lowliness of
her mind and her gratitude. That
thou shouldest take knowledge of
me — That is, shouldest so much
as notice me, and especially
show me any respect or kindness.
Verse 12
Ruth 2:12. The Lord recompense
thy work, &c. — Thy dutiful
kindness to thy mother-in-law,
and thy leaving thy country and
kindred, and all things, to
embrace the true religion. This
implied such a work of divine
grace wrought in her, and such a
work of righteousness wrought by
her, as was sure to be crowned
with a full reward. Under whose
wings thou art come to trust —
That is, under whose protection
and care. An allusion, either to
hens, which protect and cherish
their young ones under their
wings; or to the wings of the
cherubim, between which God
dwelt.
Verse 13
Ruth 2:13. She said, Let me find
favour — Or, I find favour, &c.
For it is evidently an
acknowledgment of the kindness
she had already received, and
not a petition for a further
kindness. Though I be not like,
&c. — That is, though I have not
deserved it, being a person more
mean, obscure, and necessitous,
than one of thy handmaidens — A
stranger, and one born of
heathen parents, and not of the
holy and honourable people of
Israel, as they are.
Verse 14
Ruth 2:14. Eat of the bread, and
dip thy morsel in the vinegar —
In the term bread is
comprehended all the provision
which was made for the reapers,
with which they had vinegar for
sauce, it being very cooling and
refreshing in hot seasons, as
the time of harvest there was.
He reached her parched corn —
Which was a usual and no mean
food in those countries, as
appears from 2 Samuel 17:28.
Either Boaz, or the servant set
over the reapers, gave her this.
It is no disparagement to the
finest hand to be reached out to
the needy. And she sat by the
reapers — Not with or among
them, but at some little
distance, as one inferior to
them.
Verse 16
Ruth 2:16. Let fall also some of
the handfuls — What an amiable
picture of piety and virtue in
private life have we here in
Boaz! In the midst of riches he
is laborious, diligent in
husbandry, plain without luxury,
delicacy, sloth, or pride. How
affable, obliging, and kind to
his servants! The Lord be with
you, says he, even to his
reapers. What an obliging
humanity, as well as generosity,
does he show when he desires
Ruth not to go into any other
field to glean, but to abide
fast by his maidens, to eat and
drink with them; and in the
order he gives his reapers to
let her glean even among the
sheaves, and to let fall some of
the handfuls on purpose for her,
that she might gather them
without being ashamed! What a
noble pattern have we here to
instruct us in what manner to
bestow benefits, namely, so as
to spare those whom we oblige
the confusion of receiving, and
ourselves the temptation of vain
glory in giving.
Verse 17-18
Ruth 2:17-18. An ephah — About a
bushel of our measure. Gave to
her what she had reserved — At
dinner, after she had eaten, and
was sufficed — Or satisfied.
This shows Ruth’s care of her
mother-in-law, whom she had in
her mind when she was feasted
with the reapers with more than
she could eat, and therefore
brought what she left home for
her refreshment.
Verse 19
Ruth 2:19. Where hast thou
gleaned to-day? — It is a good
question to ask ourselves in the
evening, “Where have I gleaned
to-day?” What improvements have
I made in grace or knowledge?
What have I learned or done,
which will turn to account?
Verse 20
Ruth 2:20. His kindness to the
living and to the dead — That
is, the kindness which he
formerly showed to my husband
and his sons while they were
living, he now continues to us
their relicts.
Verse 21
Ruth 2:21. Thou shalt keep fast
by my young men — Or, young
people, as the word נערים,
negnarim, although of the
masculine gender, here
signifies, and particularly the
maidens, to whom he bid her keep
close, Ruth 2:8. And thus both
the Seventy and the Chaldee
expound it; and so Naomi, as
appears by the next verse,
understood it. Until they have
ended all my harvest — Both
barley-harvest and
wheat-harvest. She tells what
kindness Boaz had showed her;
but not how he had commended
her. Humility teaches not only
not to praise ourselves, but not
to be forward in repeating the
praise which others have given
us.
Verse 22
Ruth 2:22. That they meet thee
not in any other field — Whereby
thou wilt both expose thyself to
many inconveniences, which thou
mayest expect from strangers,
and incur his displeasure, as if
thou didst despise his kindness. |