
Text -- Ruth 4:22 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Rut 4:18-22
JFB: Rut 4:18-22 - -- That is, his descendants. This appendix shows that the special object contemplated by the inspired author of this little book was to preserve the memo...
That is, his descendants. This appendix shows that the special object contemplated by the inspired author of this little book was to preserve the memory of an interesting domestic episode, and to trace the genealogy of David. There was an interval of three hundred eighty years between Salmon and David. It is evident that whole generations are omitted; the leading personages only are named, and grandfathers are said, in Scripture language, to beget their grandchildren, without specifying the intermediate links.
Clarke: Rut 4:22 - -- And Obed begat Jesse - "Who,"says the Targum, "also is called Nachash, נחש because neither iniquity nor corruption was found in him, that he sh...
And Obed begat Jesse - "Who,"says the Targum, "also is called Nachash,

Clarke: Rut 4:22 - -- And Jesse begat David - To this no comment is added by the Targumist, as the history of this king is found in the following book
The ten persons who...
And Jesse begat David - To this no comment is added by the Targumist, as the history of this king is found in the following book
The ten persons whose genealogy is recorded in the five last verses, may be found, with a trifling change of name, in the genealogical list in Mat 1:3-6, as forming important links in the line of the Messiah. To introduce this appears to have been the principal object of the writer, as introductory to the following books, where the history of David, the regal progenitor and type of the Messiah, is so particularly detailed
For the account of the birth of Pharez and his brother Zarah, the reader is requested to refer to Genesis 38:12-30, and to the notes there; and for several particulars in the genealogy itself, to the notes on Matthew 1:1-16 and Luke 3:23-38, where the wisdom, goodness, and providence of God, in the preservation of this line, are particularly noticed
Masoretic Notes on Rut
Number of verses in Ruth is 85
Middle verse is Rth 2:21
We have already seen that Archbishop Usher places the event mentioned here in A.M. 2686, about one hundred years after the conquest of Canaan.
Defender -> Rut 4:22
Defender: Rut 4:22 - -- David was evidently born near the end of the Judges period and Salmon near the beginning. The four generations between Salmon and David thus seem to h...
David was evidently born near the end of the Judges period and Salmon near the beginning. The four generations between Salmon and David thus seem to have spanned the entire period "when the judges ruled" (Rth 1:1) although it is possible that there are gaps in this genealogy. Note also that ten names are listed in the genealogy from Pharez to David. Deu 23:2 says that an illegitimate son could "not enter into the congregation of the Lord;" even to his "tenth generation." Pharez was the illegitimate son of Judah and Tamar, but this genealogy indicates that David was free from this exclusion, even if there are no gaps in the genealogy."
TSK -> Rut 4:22

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Poole -> Rut 4:22
Poole: Rut 4:22 - -- How can this be a true genealogy, seeing by this means four persons take up three hundred and eighty years, which were between Salmon and David, and...
How can this be a true genealogy, seeing by this means four persons take up three hundred and eighty years, which were between Salmon and David, and consequently every one of them must beget a son when he was very old?
Answ 1. It is not certain that each of these was the immediate parent of him whom he is said to beget; for sometimes grandfathers are said in Scripture to beget their grandchildren, to wit, by the intervention of their immediate sons; whereof instances have been given. And sometimes in genealogies whole generations are omitted, as may appear by Ezr 7:2 , compared with 1Ch 6:3 and by Mat 1:8 , which might be done here for divers reasons now unknown.
2. There are many examples even in profane writers, both ancient and modern, of persons that have not only lived one hundred and twenty and one hundred and thirty years and upwards, but have been vigorous and have begotten children at above one hundred years old; and of women that have conceived and born children at the age of fifty, sixty, yea, seventy years. And therefore if it were so in these more ancient times, when men were longer lived, and under the law, when long life was expressly promised to the obedient, and in persons of strong constitutions and sober conversations, such as some of these are known to have been, and the others may justly be presumed to be such, it is not strange, nor in the least incredible.
Haydock -> Rut 4:22
Haydock: Rut 4:22 - -- David, the king, whom Samuel crowned, though he did not live to see him in the full enjoyment of his power, (Haydock) as he died before Saul. (Calme...
David, the king, whom Samuel crowned, though he did not live to see him in the full enjoyment of his power, (Haydock) as he died before Saul. (Calmet) ---
Thus the greatest personages have people of mean condition among their ancestors, that none may be too much elated on account of their high birth. Ruth, notwithstanding her poverty, was a striking figure of the Christian Church. (Haydock) ---
The Gentiles were strangers to Christ, on account of their errors, but related to him in as much as they were his creatures. Their miserable condition pleaded hard for them, that Jesus would receive them under his protection, espouse and give them rest and peace. Booz would, not marry Ruth till the nearer relation had refused, and thus brought dishonour on himself; (Deuteronomy xxv.) so Jesus was principally sent to the lost sheep of the house of Israel, and did not send his apostles to the Gentiles till the Jews had rejected their ministry. (Calmet) ---
See St. Ambrose, de fide, iii. 5. (Du Hamel) ---
Ruth was also a pattern of the most perfect virtues. See Louis de Puente. (Tirinus)
Gill -> Rut 4:22
Gill: Rut 4:22 - -- And Obed begat Jesse,.... The Bethlehemite, the father of David:
and Jesse begat David; the Targum adds, the king of Israel; and so the Syriac and ...
And Obed begat Jesse,.... The Bethlehemite, the father of David:
and Jesse begat David; the Targum adds, the king of Israel; and so the Syriac and Arabic versions add, the king; from whence it is by some concluded that this book was written by Samuel, not only after the birth of David, but after he had been anointed king by him: here being but four generations mentioned, from the coming of the Israelites into Canaan, to the birth of David, which was three hundred and sixty years, each of the four persons, Salmon, Boaz, Obed, and Jesse, must beget a son when one hundred years old and upwards; and which is not at all incredible, as appears by instances in later times, and therefore not at all improbable, that in those ancient times men of sobriety and good constitutions should have children at such an age.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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 4:13-22
MHCC: Rut 4:13-22 - --Ruth bore a son, through whom thousands and myriads were born to God; and in being the lineal ancestor of Christ, she was instrumental in the happines...
Matthew Henry -> Rut 4:13-22
Matthew Henry: Rut 4:13-22 - -- Here is, I. Ruth a wife. Boaz took her, with the usual solemnities, to his house, and she became his wife (Rth 4:13), all the city, no doubt, cong...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Rut 4:18-22
Keil-Delitzsch: Rut 4:18-22 - --
"These are the generations of Perez," i.e., the families descended fromPerez in their genealogical order ( toledoth : see at Gen 2:4). The genealogy...
Constable -> Rut 4:1-22; Rut 4:18-22
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 ...
