collapse all  

Text -- Ruth 1:16 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
1:16 But Ruth replied, “Stop urging me to abandon you! For wherever you go, I will go. Wherever you live, I will live. Your people will become my people, and your God will become my God.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Ruth The wife of Boaz; the mother of Obed; an ancestor of Jesus,Moabite wife of Boaz, and great grandmother of King David


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Women | Widow | WOMAN | Ruth | Readings, Select | Naomi | Mother-in-Law | Love | LODGE | JEZEBEL | INTREAT; INTREATY; (ENTREAT) | INTERCESSION | Friendship | FRIEND; FRIENDSHIP | Decision | Daughter-in-Law | Converts | Children | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Clarke , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Clarke: Rut 1:16 - -- And Ruth said - A more perfect surrender was never made of friendly feelings to a friend: I will not leave thee - I will follow thee: I will lodge w...

And Ruth said - A more perfect surrender was never made of friendly feelings to a friend: I will not leave thee - I will follow thee: I will lodge where thou lodgest - take the same fare with which thou meetest; thy people shall be my people - I most cheerfully abandon my own country, and determine to end my days in thine. I will also henceforth have no god but thy God, and be joined with thee in worship, as I am in affection and consanguinity. I will cleave unto thee even unto death; die where thou diest; and be buried, if possible, in the same grave. This was a most extraordinary attachment, and evidently without any secular motive

The Targum adds several things to this conversation between Naomi and Ruth. I shall subjoin them: "And Ruth said, Entreat me not to leave thee,"for I desire to become a proselyte. And Naomi said, We are commanded to keep the Sabbath and other holy days; and on it not to travel more than two thousand cubits. And Ruth said, "Whither thou goest, I will go."And Naomi said, We are commanded not to lodge with the Gentiles. Ruth answered, "Where thou lodgest, I will lodge."And Naomi said, We are commanded to observe the one hundred and thirteen precepts. Ruth answered, What thy people observe, that will I observe; as if they had been my people of old. And Naomi said, We are commanded not to worship with any strange worship. Ruth answered, "Thy God shall be my God."Naomi said, We have four kinds of capital punishment for criminals; stoning, burning, beheading, and hanging. Ruth answered, "In whatsoever manner thou diest, I will die."Naomi said, We have a house of burial. Ruth answered, "And there will I be buried.

It is very likely that some such conversation as this took place between the elders and those who were becoming proselytes. This verse is famous among those who strive to divine by the Bible. I should relate the particulars, but am afraid they might lead to a continuance of the practice. In my youth I have seen it done, and was then terrified.

Defender: Rut 1:16 - -- Naomi was such a faithful witness and godly mother-in-law that both Moabite daughters-in-law, Orpah and Ruth, loved her dearly even after their husban...

Naomi was such a faithful witness and godly mother-in-law that both Moabite daughters-in-law, Orpah and Ruth, loved her dearly even after their husbands were dead. However, when Orpah had to choose, she returned to her pagan nature-gods (centered in Chemosh, "the subduer"). Ruth evidenced true conversion to the God of creation, not only by taking God as her own Savior but by going with the people of God and entering the family of God's people."

TSK: Rut 1:16 - -- Ruth : A more perfect surrender of friendly feelings to a friend was never made. This was a most extraordinary and disinterested attachment. Entreat ...

Ruth : A more perfect surrender of friendly feelings to a friend was never made. This was a most extraordinary and disinterested attachment.

Entreat me not : or, Be not against me

to leave : 2Ki 2:2-6; Luk 24:28, Luk 24:29; Act 21:13

whither : 2Sa 15:21; Mat 8:19; Joh 13:37; Rev 14:4

thy people : Rth 2:11, Rth 2:12; Psa 45:10; Isa 14:1

thy God : Jos 24:18; Dan 2:47, Dan 3:29, Dan 4:37; Hos 13:4; 2Co 6:16-18; 1Th 1:9

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Poole: Rut 1:16 - -- I renounce those idols which my sister hath returned to, and I wilt worship no other God but thine, who is indeed the only true God.

I renounce those idols which my sister hath returned to, and I wilt worship no other God but thine, who is indeed the only true God.

Gill: Rut 1:16 - -- And Ruth said, entreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee,.... Do not make use of any arguments to persuade me to go back: o...

And Ruth said, entreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee,.... Do not make use of any arguments to persuade me to go back: or "do not meet me", or "be against me" h; do not meet me with objections, or be in my way, or an hinderance to me, in going along with thee; do not be against it, for to be against that was to be against her inclination, desires, and resolutions, and against her interest:

for whither thou goest I will go: let the country she was going to be what it would, though unknown to her, and though she should never see her own country any more:

and where thou lodgest I will lodge; though in ever so mean a cottage, or under the open air:

thy people shall be my people; whom I shall choose to dwell among, and converse with; whose religion, laws, and customs she should readily comply with, having heard much of them, their wisdom, goodness, and piety, of which she had a specimen and an example in Naomi, and by whom she judged of the rest:

and thy God my God; not Chemosh, nor Baalpeor, nor other gods of the Moabites, be they what they will, but Jehovah, the God of Naomi, and of the people of Israel. So a soul that is truly brought to Christ affectionately loves him, and heartily cleaves unto him, resolves in the strength of divine grace to follow him, the Lamb, whithersoever he goes or directs; and is desirous to have communion with none but him, and that he also would not be as a wayfaring man, that tarries but a night; his people are the excellent of the earth, whom to converse with is all his delight and pleasure; and Christ's God is his God, and his Father is his Father: and, in a word, he determines to have no other Saviour but him, and to walk in all his commands and ordinances.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Rut 1:16 Heb “do not urge me to abandon you to turn back from after you.” Most English versions, following the lead of the KJV, use “leave...

expand all
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...

Maclaren: Rut 1:16-22 - --Ruth 1:16-22 The lovely idyl of Ruth is in sharp contrast with the bloody and turbulent annals of Judges. It completes, but does not contradict, thes...

MHCC: Rut 1:15-18 - --See Ruth's resolution, and her good affection to Naomi. Orpah was loth to part from her; yet she did not love her well enough to leave Moab for her sa...

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 1:15-17 - -- To the repeated entreaty of Naomi that she would follow her sister-in-lawand return to her people and her God, Ruth replied: " Entreat me not toleav...

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 1:15-18 - --C. Ruth's profession of faith in Yahweh 1:15-18 Ruth concluded that her prospects for loyal love and res...

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...

expand all
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...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


TIP #15: Use the Strong Number links to learn about the original Hebrew and Greek text. [ALL]
created in 0.08 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA