
Text -- Ruth 4:1-3 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Rut 4:2 - -- To be witnesses: for though two or three witnesses were sufficient, yet in weightier matters they used more. And ten was the usual number among the Je...
To be witnesses: for though two or three witnesses were sufficient, yet in weightier matters they used more. And ten was the usual number among the Jews, in causes of matrimony and divorce, and translation of inheritances; who were both judges of the causes, and witnesses of the fact.

Wesley: Rut 4:3 - -- Both Naomi and Ruth had an interest in this land during their lives, but he mentions only Naomi, because all was done by her direction; lest the menti...
Both Naomi and Ruth had an interest in this land during their lives, but he mentions only Naomi, because all was done by her direction; lest the mention of Ruth should raise a suspicion of the necessity of his marrying Ruth, before he had given his answer to the first proposition.
JFB: Rut 4:1 - -- A roofed building, unenclosed by walls; the place where, in ancient times, and in many Eastern towns still, all business transactions are made, and wh...
A roofed building, unenclosed by walls; the place where, in ancient times, and in many Eastern towns still, all business transactions are made, and where, therefore, the kinsman was most likely to be found. No preliminaries were necessary in summoning one before the public assemblage; no writings and no delay were required. In a short conversation the matter was stated and arranged--probably in the morning as people went out, or at noon when they returned from the field.

JFB: Rut 4:2 - -- As witnesses. In ordinary circumstances, two or three were sufficient to attest a bargain; but in cases of importance, such as matrimony, divorce, con...
As witnesses. In ordinary circumstances, two or three were sufficient to attest a bargain; but in cases of importance, such as matrimony, divorce, conveyancing of property, it was the Jewish practice to have ten (1Ki 21:8).

JFB: Rut 4:3 - -- That is, entertains the idea of selling. In her circumstances she was at liberty to part with it (Lev 25:25). Both Naomi and Ruth had an interest in t...
That is, entertains the idea of selling. In her circumstances she was at liberty to part with it (Lev 25:25). Both Naomi and Ruth had an interest in the land during their lives; but Naomi alone was mentioned, not only because she directed all the negotiations, but because the introduction of Ruth's name would awaken a suspicion of the necessity of marrying her, before the first proposition was answered.
Clarke: Rut 4:1 - -- Then went Boaz up to the gate - We have often had occasion to remark that the gate or entrance to any city or town was the place where the court of ...
Then went Boaz up to the gate - We have often had occasion to remark that the gate or entrance to any city or town was the place where the court of justice was ordinarily kept. For an account of the officers in such places, see the note on Deu 16:18

Clarke: Rut 4:1 - -- Ho, such a one! - sit down here - This familiar mode of compellation is first used here. The original is שבה פה פלני אלמני shebah poh...
Ho, such a one! - sit down here - This familiar mode of compellation is first used here. The original is

Clarke: Rut 4:2 - -- He took ten men - Probably it required this number to constitute a court. How simple and how rational was this proceeding
1. The m...
He took ten men - Probably it required this number to constitute a court. How simple and how rational was this proceeding
1. The man who had a suit went to the city gates
2. Here he stopped till the person with whom he had the suit came to the gate on his way to his work
3. He called him by name, and he stopped and sat down
4. Then ten elders were called, and they came and sat down
5. When all this was done, the appellant preferred his suit
6. Then the appellee returned his answer
7. When the elders heard the case, and the response of the appellee, they pronounced judgment, which judgment was always according to the custom of the place
8. When this was done, the people who happened to be present witnessed the issue
And thus the business was settled without lawyers or legal casuistry. A question of this kind, in one of our courts of justice, in these enlightened times, would require many days’ previous preparation of the attorney, and several hours’ arguing between counsellor Botherum and counsellor Borum, till even an enlightened and conscientious judge would find it extremely difficult to decide whether Naomi might sell her own land, and whether Boaz or Peloni might buy it! O, glorious uncertainty of modern law!

Clarke: Rut 4:3 - -- Naomi - selleth a parcel of land - She was reduced to want; the immediate inheritors were extinct, and it was now open for the next heir to purchase...
Naomi - selleth a parcel of land - She was reduced to want; the immediate inheritors were extinct, and it was now open for the next heir to purchase the land, and thus preserve the inheritance in the family according to the custom of Israel.

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Rut 4:1 - -- The gate is the place of concourse, of business, and of justice in Oriental cities (see Jdg 19:15 note; Gen 34:20; Deu 16:18). Ho, such a one! ...

Barnes: Rut 4:2 - -- Every city was governed by elders (see Deu 19:12; Jdg 8:14). For the number "ten,"compare Exo 18:25. Probably the presence of, at least, ten elders ...

Barnes: Rut 4:3 - -- According to the law Lev 25:25-28, if any Israelite, through poverty, would sell his possession, the next of kin (the גאל gā'al ) had a r...
According to the law Lev 25:25-28, if any Israelite, through poverty, would sell his possession, the next of kin (the
Poole: Rut 4:1 - -- The gate the place where controversies were decided, and the people assembled, and where they used to go out and come in to the town; where he was m...
The gate the place where controversies were decided, and the people assembled, and where they used to go out and come in to the town; where he was most likely to find his kinsman. Ho, such a one! doubtless Boaz both knew his name, and called him by it; but it is omitted by the holy writer, partly because it was unnecessary to know it; and principally in way of contempt, as is usual, and as a just punishment upon him, that he who would not preserve his brother’ s name might lose his own, and be buried in the grave of perpetual oblivion.
Sit down here I have some business of importance with you.

Poole: Rut 4:2 - -- He took two men to be umpires or witnesses between them; for though two or three witnesses were sufficient, yet in weightier matters they used more. ...
He took two men to be umpires or witnesses between them; for though two or three witnesses were sufficient, yet in weightier matters they used more. And
ten was the usual number among the Jews, in causes of matrimony and divorce, and translation of inheritances; who were both judges of the causes, and witnesses of the fact. See 1Ki 21:8 .

Poole: Rut 4:3 - -- Both Naomi and Ruth had an interest in this land during their lives, but he mentions only Naomi, partly because all was done by her direction, to wh...
Both Naomi and Ruth had an interest in this land during their lives, but he mentions only Naomi, partly because all was done by her direction, to which Ruth wholly submitted herself; and partly lest the mention of Ruth should raise a suspicion of the necessity of his marrying Ruth, before he had given his answer to the first proposition.
Selleth a parcel of land which she might do because of her poverty, Lev 25:25 .
Haydock: Rut 4:1 - -- Gate, where justice was administered. ---
Calling. Hebrew Ploni Almoni. (Calmet) ---
Protestant, " Ho! such a one." (Haydock) ---
This form ...
Gate, where justice was administered. ---
Calling. Hebrew Ploni Almoni. (Calmet) ---
Protestant, " Ho! such a one." (Haydock) ---
This form of speech is used concerning a person whose name we know not, or will not mention, 1 Kings xxi. 2. (Calmet) ---
The name of this man is buried in eternal oblivion, perhaps because he was so much concerned about the splendour of his family, that he would not marry the widow of his deceased relation. (Tirinus)

Haydock: Rut 4:2 - -- Here, as witnesses, not as judges, ver. 9. (Calmet) ---
This number was requisite in matters of consequence. (Grotius)
Here, as witnesses, not as judges, ver. 9. (Calmet) ---
This number was requisite in matters of consequence. (Grotius)

Haydock: Rut 4:3 - -- Will sell. Some Latin copies read, "sells, or has sold." But the sequel shews that she was only now disposed to do it. But what right had Noemi or...
Will sell. Some Latin copies read, "sells, or has sold." But the sequel shews that she was only now disposed to do it. But what right had Noemi or Ruth to the land, since women could not inherit? The latter might indeed retain her title, as long as she continued unmarried. But Noemi only acted in her behalf. Selden thinks that their respective husbands had made them a present of some land. Josephus (ver. 11) asserts, that the person whom Booz addressed had already possession, and that he resigned his claim, as he would not take au other wife. (Calmet) ---
Our brother. He was his nephew, and calls him brother, as Abraham did Lot. (Worthington)
Gill: Rut 4:1 - -- Then went Boaz up to the gate,.... In the middle of the day, as Josephus d says, to the gate of the city, where people were continually passing and re...
Then went Boaz up to the gate,.... In the middle of the day, as Josephus d says, to the gate of the city, where people were continually passing and repassing to and from the country, and where he was most likely to meet with the person he wanted to see and converse with, and where courts of judicature were usually held, and where it was proper to call one to determine the affair he had in hand; so the Targum,"and Boaz went up to the gate of the house of judgment of the sanhedrim:''
and set him down there; waiting for the person or persons passing by, with whom be chose to speak:
and, behold, the kinsman of whom Boaz spake came by; the kinsman that was nearer than he, of whom he had spoke to Ruth, that if he would not redeem her, he would; a "behold" is prefixed to this, to observe the providence of God that ordered it so, that he should come that way just at the time Boaz was sitting there, and waiting for him; who perhaps was going into his field to look after his threshers and winnowers, as Boaz had been:
unto whom he said, ho, such an one; calling him by his name, though it is not expressed; which the writer of this history might not know, or, if he did, thought it not material to give it, some have been of opinion that it is purposely concealed, as a just retaliation to him, that as he chose not to raise up seed to his kinsman, to perpetuate his name, so his own is buried in oblivion; though it might be done in his favour, that his name might not be known, and lie under disgrace, for refusing to act the part he ought according to the law to have done; hence the plucking off the shoe, and spitting in his face, were done to such an one by way of contempt and reproach. The words are "peloni almoni", words used by the Hebrews of persons and places, whose names they either could not, or did not choose to mention, which two words are contracted into "palmoni" in Dan 8:13. The name of this man was "Tob" or "Tobias", according to some Jewish writers; see Gill on Rth 3:13, to him Boaz said,
turn aside, and sit down here; and he turned aside, and sat down; instead of going right forward, as he intended, about his business, he turned on one side as he was desired, and sat down by Boaz.

Gill: Rut 4:2 - -- And he took ten men of the elders of the city,.... Who were such, not merely in age but in office, who were the heads of thousands, fifties, and tens;...
And he took ten men of the elders of the city,.... Who were such, not merely in age but in office, who were the heads of thousands, fifties, and tens; ten of whom were a quorum to do business in judiciary affairs, to determine such matters as Boaz had propose, as to whom the right of redemption of a brother and kinsman's widow, and her estate, belonged, and who were the proper witnesses of the refusal of the one to do it, and of the other's doing it and from hence the Jews e gather, that the blessing of the bride and bridegroom at their marriage is not to be done by less than ten persons:
and said, sit down here, and they sat down; and so made a full court.

Gill: Rut 4:3 - -- And he said unto the kinsman,.... That is, Boaz said to the kinsman he called to, and who sat down by him before the ten elders that were present:
...
And he said unto the kinsman,.... That is, Boaz said to the kinsman he called to, and who sat down by him before the ten elders that were present:
Naomi, that is come again out of the land of Moab, selleth a parcel of land; meaning, that she was determined upon it, and was about to do it, and would do it quickly, and he had it in commission to propose it to a purchaser:
which was our brother Elimelech's; not in a strict sense, but being akin to the kinsman and himself, and having been a neighbour of them all, and an inhabitant of the place, he is called their brother; though some Jewish writers f say, that he was in a strict sense a brother of Boaz and this kinsman, and that Tob, Elimelech, and Boaz, were brethren, and so Tob was reckoned the nearest kinsman, and had the first right to redeem, because he was the elder brother but this does not seem likely; See Gill on Rth 3:13.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes


NET Notes: Rut 4:3 Naomi…is selling. The nature of the sale is uncertain. Naomi may have been selling the property rights to the land, but this seems unlikely in l...
Geneva Bible -> Rut 4:1
Geneva Bible: Rut 4:1 Then went Boaz up to the ( a ) gate, and sat him down there: and, behold, the kinsman of whom Boaz spake came by; unto whom he said, ( b ) Ho, such a ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Rut 4:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Rut 4:1-22 - --1 Boaz calls into judgment the next kinsman.6 He refuses the redemption according to the manner in Israel.9 Boaz buys the inheritance.11 He marries Ru...
MHCC -> Rut 4:1-8
MHCC: Rut 4:1-8 - --This matter depended on the laws given by Moses about inheritances, and doubtless the whole was settled in the regular and legal manner. This kinsman,...
Matthew Henry -> Rut 4:1-8
Matthew Henry: Rut 4:1-8 - -- Here, 1. Boaz calls a court immediately. It is probable he was himself one of the elders (or aldermen) of the city; for he was a mighty man of wealt...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Rut 4:1-5
Keil-Delitzsch: Rut 4:1-5 - --
"Boaz had gone up to the gate, and had sat down there." Thiscircumstantial clause introduces the account of the further development ofthe affair. Th...
Constable -> Rut 4:1-22; Rut 4:1-6
Constable: Rut 4:1-22 - --III. GOD'S PROVISION ch. 4
The climax of this fascinating story and the resolution of the problem laying in the ...
