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Text -- Ruth 1:11 (NET)

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Context
1:11 But Naomi replied, “Go back home, my daughters! There is no reason for you to return to Judah with me! I am no longer capable of giving birth to sons who might become your husbands!
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Naomi wife of Elimelech; mother-in-law of Ruth the Moabitess


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Women | Widow | Ruth | Readings, Select | Naomi | Love | HUSBAND'S BROTHER | Daughter-in-Law | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , PBC , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Rut 1:11 - -- According to the ancient custom, Gen 38:8, and the express law of God, Deu 25:5, which doubtless she had acquainted them with before, among other bran...

According to the ancient custom, Gen 38:8, and the express law of God, Deu 25:5, which doubtless she had acquainted them with before, among other branches of the Jewish religion.

JFB: Rut 1:11 - -- This alludes to the ancient custom (Gen 38:26) afterwards expressly sanctioned by the law of Moses (Deu 25:5), which required a younger son to marry t...

This alludes to the ancient custom (Gen 38:26) afterwards expressly sanctioned by the law of Moses (Deu 25:5), which required a younger son to marry the widow of his deceased brother.

Clarke: Rut 1:11 - -- Are there yet any more sons - This was spoken in allusion to the custom, that when a married brother died without leaving posterity, his brother sho...

Are there yet any more sons - This was spoken in allusion to the custom, that when a married brother died without leaving posterity, his brother should take his widow; and the children of such a marriage were accounted the children of the deceased brother. There is something very persuasive and affecting in the address of Naomi to her daughters-in-law. Let us observe the particulars: -

1.    She intimates that she had no other sons to give them

2.    That she was not with child; so there could be no expectation

3.    That she was too old to have a husband

4.    That though she should marry that night, and have children, yet they could not wait till such sons were marriageable; she therefore begs them to return to their own country where they might be comfortably settled among their own kindred.

TSK: Rut 1:11 - -- are there : This alludes to the custom that when a married brother died, without leaving posterity, his brother should take his widow; and the childre...

are there : This alludes to the custom that when a married brother died, without leaving posterity, his brother should take his widow; and the children of such marriages were accounted those of the deceased brother. This address of Naomi to her daughter-in-law is exceedingly tender, persuasive, and affecting.

that they : Gen 38:11; Deu 25:5

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Rut 1:11-13 - -- See marginal references and notes. The Levirate law probably existed among the Moabites, and in Israel extended beyond the brother in the strict sen...

See marginal references and notes. The Levirate law probably existed among the Moabites, and in Israel extended beyond the brother in the strict sense, and applied to the nearest relations, since Boaz was only the kinsman of Elimelech Rth 3:12.

Poole: Rut 1:11 - -- According to the ancient custom, Ge 38 , and the express law of God, Deu 25:5 , which doubtless she had acquainted them with before, among other bra...

According to the ancient custom, Ge 38 , and the express law of God, Deu 25:5 , which doubtless she had acquainted them with before, among other branches of the Jewish religion, wherein she did instruct them.

PBC: Rut 1:11 - -- Naomi intreated them to go back to their own lands and their own families because they wouldn't be Jews in Israel.  There was a curse upon the Moabi...

Naomi intreated them to go back to their own lands and their own families because they wouldn't be Jews in Israel.  There was a curse upon the Moabitess - they could not come into the house of God.  Great affliction would they have.  Orpah turned back but Ruth said, "Intreat me not to leave thee ... whether thou goest, I will go ...  Where thou diest, I will die.  Thy God shall be my God."

Haydock: Rut 1:11 - -- Of me. Hence it appears that the Rabbins are under a mistake, when they say that those children who are born after the death of their brothers, are ...

Of me. Hence it appears that the Rabbins are under a mistake, when they say that those children who are born after the death of their brothers, are not obliged to take their widows.

Gill: Rut 1:11 - -- And Naomi said, turn again, my daughters,.... Supposing this resolution of theirs only arose from a natural affection, and not from any love to the Go...

And Naomi said, turn again, my daughters,.... Supposing this resolution of theirs only arose from a natural affection, and not from any love to the God or people of Israel; at least doubting whether it was so or not, and willing to try whether anyone, or both of them, were really from a principle of religion inclined to go with her; and desirous that they would thoroughly consider what they did, lest they should repent and apostatize, and bring a reproach upon the true religion:

why will ye go with me? what reason can you give? this she said in order to get out of them if there was any real inclination in them to the true worship and service of God; though she keeps out that from her own questions put to them as follows, that it might come purely from themselves:

are there yet any more sons in my womb, that they may be your husbands? is there any likelihood that I should ever have any sons to be instead of husbands, or really husbands to you? can it be thought that at my age, supposing I had an husband, or an husband's brother to marry me, that there is in me a natural power of conceiving and bearing children? this therefore can surely be no inducement to you to go along with me; for some, as Jarchi, think she refers to the law of a husband's brother marrying his widow, and raising up seed to him, which was known among the Gentiles before it was given to Israel; see Gen 38:8, to which Aben Ezra rightly objects, that that law respects a brother by the father's side, and not by the mother's only; to which may be added, that this law was not binding on a brother unborn, but on one that was living before the death of his brother; besides if this law had been in her mind, it would rather have furnished out an encouraging reason them to go with her, since there were kinsmen of her sons, to whom they might be married, as one of them afterwards was.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Rut 1:11 Heb “Do I still have sons in my inner parts that they might become your husbands?” Again Naomi’s rhetorical question expects a negat...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Rut 1:1-22 - --1 Elimelech, driven by famine into Moab, dies there.4 Mahlon and Chilion, having married wives of Moab, die also.6 Naomi, returning homeward,8 dissuad...

MHCC: Rut 1:6-14 - --Naomi began to think of returning, after the death of her two sons. When death comes into a family, it ought to reform what is amiss there. Earth is m...

Matthew Henry: Rut 1:6-18 - -- See here, I. The good affection Naomi bore to the land of Israel, Rth 1:6. Though she could not stay in it while the famine lasted, she would not st...

Keil-Delitzsch: Rut 1:11-13 - -- Naomi endeavoured to dissuade them from this resolution, by settingbefore them the fact, that if they went with her, there would be no hope oftheir ...

Constable: Rut 1:1-22 - --I. NAOMI'S PREDICAMENT ch. 1 As is often true in literature, the structure of the piece sometimes reveals the pu...

Constable: Rut 1:6-14 - --B. Naomi's inability to provide husbands for Ruth and Orpah 1:6-14 God eventually withdrew the famine fr...

Guzik: Rut 1:1-22 - --Ruth 1 - Ruth's Journey A. Background: Elimelech and his sons. 1. (1) A sojourn in Moab. Now it came to pass, in the days when the judges ruled, t...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Ruth (Book Introduction) RUTH is properly a supplement to the preceding book, to which, in fact, it was appended in the ancient Jewish canon. Although it relates an episode be...

JFB: Ruth (Outline) ELIMELECH, DRIVEN BY FAMINE INTO MOAB, DIES THERE. (Rth 1:1-5) NAOMI RETURNING HOME, RUTH ACCOMPANIES HER. (Rth 1:6-18) THEY COME TO BETH-LEHEM. (Rth...

TSK: Ruth (Book Introduction) This book is evidently a supplement to the book of Judges, and an introduction to that of Samuel, between which it is placed with great propriety. In...

TSK: Ruth 1 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Rth 1:1, Elimelech, driven by famine into Moab, dies there; Rth 1:4, Mahlon and Chilion, having married wives of Moab, die also; Rth 1:6,...

Poole: Ruth 1 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 1

MHCC: Ruth (Book Introduction) We find in this book excellent examples of faith, piety, patience, humility, industry, and loving-kindness, in the common events of life. Also we see ...

MHCC: Ruth 1 (Chapter Introduction) (Rth 1:1-5) Elimelech and his sons die in the land of Moab. (Rth 1:6-14) Naomi returns home. (Rth 1:15-18) Orpah stays behind, but Ruth goes with Na...

Matthew Henry: Ruth (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Ruth This short history of the domestic affairs of one particular family fitly follows the ...

Matthew Henry: Ruth 1 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter we have Naomi's afflictions. I. As a distressed housekeeper, forced by famine to remove into the land of Moab (Rth 1:1, Rth 1:2). ...

Constable: Ruth (Book Introduction) Introduction Title This book received its title in honor of the heroine of the story. ...

Constable: Ruth (Outline) Outline I. Naomi's predicament ch. 1 A. The deaths of Naomi's husband and sons 1:1-5 ...

Constable: Ruth Ruth Bibliography Ap-Thomas, D. R. "The Book of Ruth." Expository Times 79 (October-September 1968):369-73. ...

Haydock: Ruth (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION. This Book is called Ruth , from the name of the person whose history is here recorded; who, being a Gentile, became a convert to the...

Gill: Ruth (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO RUTH This book is called Ruth, not because she was the author of it, but because she is the principal subject of it. In the Syriac ...

Gill: Ruth 1 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO RUTH 1 This chapter treats of a family that removed from the land of Canaan to the land of Moab on account of a famine, where the f...

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