
Text -- Ruth 2:2 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Rut 2:2 - -- Which was permitted to the poor, and the stranger, Deu 24:19, nor was she ashamed to confess her poverty, nor would she eat the bread of idleness.
Which was permitted to the poor, and the stranger, Deu 24:19, nor was she ashamed to confess her poverty, nor would she eat the bread of idleness.

Wesley: Rut 2:2 - -- For though it was their duty to permit this, yet she thought it might perhaps be denied her; at least, that it became her modestly and humbly to ackno...
For though it was their duty to permit this, yet she thought it might perhaps be denied her; at least, that it became her modestly and humbly to acknowledge their kindness herein.
JFB -> Rut 2:2
JFB: Rut 2:2 - -- The right of gleaning was conferred by a positive law on the widow, the poor, and the stranger (see on Lev 19:9 and Deu 24:19). But liberty to glean b...
The right of gleaning was conferred by a positive law on the widow, the poor, and the stranger (see on Lev 19:9 and Deu 24:19). But liberty to glean behind the reapers [Rth 2:3] was not a right that could be claimed; it was a privilege granted or refused according to the good will or favor of the owner.
Clarke: Rut 2:2 - -- Glean ears of corn - The word glean comes from the French glaner , to gather ears or grains of corn. This was formerly a general custom in England a...
Glean ears of corn - The word glean comes from the French glaner , to gather ears or grains of corn. This was formerly a general custom in England and Ireland; the poor went into the fields and collected the straggling ears of corn after the reapers; and it was long supposed that this was their right, and that the law recognized it. But although it has been an old custom, I find that it is now settled, by a solemn judgment in the court of common pleas, that a right to glean in the harvest field cannot be claimed by any person at common law; see Law Dictionary, article gleaning. Any person may permit or prevent it in his own grounds. By the Irish acts, 25 Hen. VIII., c. 1, and 28 Hen. VIII., c. 24, gleaning and leasing are so restricted as to be in fact prohibited in that part of the United Kingdom. See the note on Lev 19:9

Clarke: Rut 2:2 - -- After him in whose sight I shall find grace - She did not mean Boaz; but she purposed to go out where they were now reaping, and glean after any per...
After him in whose sight I shall find grace - She did not mean Boaz; but she purposed to go out where they were now reaping, and glean after any person who might permit her, or use her in a friendly manner. The words seem to intimate that, notwithstanding the law of Moses, the gleaners might be prevented by the owner of the field.
TSK -> Rut 2:2
glean ears : Lev 19:9, Lev 19:16, Lev 23:22; Deu 24:19-21

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Poole -> Rut 2:2
Poole: Rut 2:2 - -- Gleaning was permitted to the poor and the stranger, Deu 24:19 , both which she was; nor was she ashamed to confess her poverty, nor would she eat t...
Gleaning was permitted to the poor and the stranger, Deu 24:19 , both which she was; nor was she ashamed to confess her poverty, nor would she eat the bread of idleness; whereby she showeth herself to be a prudent, and diligent, and virtuous woman, as she is called, Rth 3:11 .
In whose sight I shall find grace for though it was their duty to permit this, Lev 19:9 23:22 , yet either she was ignorant thereof, or thought that, being a stranger, it might be grudged or denied to her; or, at least, that it became her modestly and humbly to acknowledge their kindness herein.
Haydock -> Rut 2:2
Haydock: Rut 2:2 - -- To me. It was the privilege of the poor and of strangers to glean, Deuteronomy xxiv. 19., and Leviticus xix. 9. Yet Ruth asks leave, through civili...
To me. It was the privilege of the poor and of strangers to glean, Deuteronomy xxiv. 19., and Leviticus xix. 9. Yet Ruth asks leave, through civility. (Calmet) ---
This law is no longer in force, but it would be inhuman for the rich to deny this liberty to those who are in distress, and willing rather to work than to beg. (Tirinus)
Gill -> Rut 2:2
Gill: Rut 2:2 - -- And Ruth the Moabitess said to Naomi,.... After they had been some little time at Bethlehem, and not long; for they came at the beginning of barley ha...
And Ruth the Moabitess said to Naomi,.... After they had been some little time at Bethlehem, and not long; for they came at the beginning of barley harvest, and as yet it was not over, nor perhaps for some time after this; and knowing and considering the circumstances they were in, and unwilling to live an idle life, and ready to do any thing for the support of her life, and of her ancient mother-in-law; which was very commendable, and showed her to be an industrious virtuous woman: she addressed her, and said:
let me now go to the field; she did not choose to go any where, nor do anything, without her advice and consent; so dutiful and obedient was she to her, and so high an opinion had she of her wisdom and goodness; she desired to go to the field which belonged to Bethlehem, which seems to have been an open field, not enclosed, where each inhabitant had his part, as Boaz, Rth 2:3 though Jarchi interprets it of one of the fields of the men of the city; hither she asked leave to go, not with any ill intent, nor was she in any danger of being exposed, since it being harvest time the field was full of people: her end in going thither is expressed in the next clause:
and glean ears of corn after him, in whose sight I shall find grace; or "in" or "among the ears of corn" o; between the ears of corn bound up into sheaves, and there pick up the loose ears that were dropped and left. This she proposed to do with the leave of the owner of the field, or of the reapers, whom she followed; she might be ignorant that it was allowed by the law of God that widows and strangers might glean in the field, Lev 19:9 or if she had been acquainted with it by Naomi, which is not improbable, such was her modesty and humility, that she did not choose to make use of this privilege without leave; lest, as Jarchi says, she should be chided or reproved, and it is certain she did entreat the favour to glean, Rth 2:7.
and she said unto her, go, my daughter; which shows the necessitous circumstances Naomi was in; though perhaps she might give this leave and direction under an impulse of the Spirit of God, in order to bring about an event of the greatest moment and importance, whereby she became the ancestor of our blessed Lord.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Rut 2:2 Heb “she”; the referent (Naomi) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
Geneva Bible -> Rut 2:2
Geneva Bible: Rut 2:2 And Ruth the Moabitess said unto Naomi, Let me now go to the field, and ( b ) glean ears of corn after [him] in whose sight I shall find grace. And sh...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Rut 2:1-23
TSK Synopsis: Rut 2:1-23 - --1 Ruth gleans in the field of Boaz.4 Boaz takes notice of her,8 and shews her great favour.18 That which she got, she carries to Naomi.
MHCC -> Rut 2:1-3
MHCC: Rut 2:1-3 - --Observe Ruth's humility. When Providence had made her poor, she cheerfully stoops to her lot. High spirits will rather starve than stoop; not so Ruth....
Matthew Henry -> Rut 2:1-3
Matthew Henry: Rut 2:1-3 - -- Naomi had now gained a settlement in Bethlehem among her old friends; and here we have an account, I. Of her rich kinsman, Boaz, a mighty man of we...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Rut 2:1-7
Keil-Delitzsch: Rut 2:1-7 - --
The account of this occurrence commences with a statementwhich was necessary in order to make it perfectly intelligible, namely thatBoaz, to whose f...
Constable: Rut 2:1--3:18 - --II. NAOMI AND RUTH'S PLANS chs. 2--3
Chapter 1 in a sense prepares for chapters 2-4 that constitute the heart of...

Constable: Rut 2:1-23 - --A. The plan to obtain food ch. 2
Chapter 2 has its own chiastic structure.41
A R...
