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Genesis 38:8

Context

38:8 Then Judah said to Onan, “Have sexual relations with 1  your brother’s wife and fulfill the duty of a brother-in-law to her so that you may raise 2  up a descendant for your brother.” 3 

Genesis 38:11

Context

38:11 Then Judah said to his daughter-in-law Tamar, “Live as a widow in your father’s house until Shelah my son grows up.” For he thought, 4  “I don’t want him to die like his brothers.” 5  So Tamar went and lived in her father’s house.

Genesis 38:26

Context
38:26 Judah recognized them and said, “She is more upright 6  than I am, because I wouldn’t give her to Shelah my son.” He did not have sexual relations with her 7  again.

Deuteronomy 25:5-10

Context
Respect for the Sanctity of Others

25:5 If brothers live together and one of them dies without having a son, the dead man’s wife must not remarry someone outside the family. Instead, her late husband’s brother must go to her, marry her, 8  and perform the duty of a brother-in-law. 9  25:6 Then 10  the first son 11  she bears will continue the name of the dead brother, thus preventing his name from being blotted out of Israel. 25:7 But if the man does not want to marry his brother’s widow, then she 12  must go to the elders at the town gate and say, “My husband’s brother refuses to preserve his brother’s name in Israel; he is unwilling to perform the duty of a brother-in-law to me!” 25:8 Then the elders of his city must summon him and speak to him. If he persists, saying, “I don’t want to marry her,” 25:9 then his sister-in-law must approach him in view of the elders, remove his sandal from his foot, and spit in his face. 13  She will then respond, “Thus may it be done to any man who does not maintain his brother’s family line!” 14  25:10 His family name will be referred to 15  in Israel as “the family 16  of the one whose sandal was removed.” 17 

Ruth 1:11-12

Context

1:11 But Naomi replied, “Go back home, my daughters! There is no reason for you to return to Judah with me! 18  I am no longer capable of giving birth to sons who might become your husbands! 19  1:12 Go back home, my daughters! For I am too old to get married again. 20  Even if I thought that there was hope that I could get married tonight and conceive sons, 21 

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[38:8]  1 tn Heb “go to.” The expression is a euphemism for sexual intercourse.

[38:8]  2 tn The imperative with the prefixed conjunction here indicates purpose.

[38:8]  3 sn Raise up a descendant for your brother. The purpose of this custom, called the levirate system, was to ensure that no line of the family would become extinct. The name of the deceased was to be maintained through this custom of having a child by the nearest relative. See M. Burrows, “Levirate Marriage in Israel,” JBL 59 (1940): 23-33.

[38:11]  4 tn Heb “said.”

[38:11]  5 tn Heb “Otherwise he will die, also he, like his brothers.”

[38:26]  6 tn Traditionally “more righteous”; cf. NCV, NRSV, NLT “more in the right.”

[38:26]  7 tn Heb “and he did not add again to know her.” Here “know” is a euphemism for sexual intercourse.

[25:5]  8 tn Heb “take her as wife”; NRSV “taking her in marriage.”

[25:5]  9 sn This is the so-called “levirate” custom (from the Latin term levir, “brother-in-law”), an ancient provision whereby a man who died without male descendants to carry on his name could have a son by proxy, that is, through a surviving brother who would marry his widow and whose first son would then be attributed to the brother who had died. This is the only reference to this practice in an OT legal text but it is illustrated in the story of Judah and his sons (Gen 38) and possibly in the account of Ruth and Boaz (Ruth 2:8; 3:12; 4:6).

[25:6]  10 tn Heb “and it will be that.”

[25:6]  11 tn Heb “the firstborn.” This refers to the oldest male child.

[25:7]  12 tn Heb “want to take his sister-in-law, then his sister in law.” In the second instance the pronoun (“she”) has been used in the translation to avoid redundancy.

[25:9]  13 sn The removal of the sandal was likely symbolic of the relinquishment by the man of any claim to his dead brother’s estate since the sandal was associated with the soil or land (cf. Ruth 4:7-8). Spitting in the face was a sign of utmost disgust or disdain, an emotion the rejected widow would feel toward her uncooperative brother-in-law (cf. Num 12:14; Lev 15:8). See W. Bailey, NIDOTTE 2:544.

[25:9]  14 tn Heb “build the house of his brother”; TEV “refuses to give his brother a descendant”; NLT “refuses to raise up a son for his brother.”

[25:10]  15 tn Heb “called,” i.e., “known as.”

[25:10]  16 tn Heb “house.”

[25:10]  17 tn Cf. NIV, NCV “The Family of the Unsandaled.”

[1:11]  18 tn Heb “Why would you want to come with me?” Naomi’s rhetorical question expects a negative answer. The phrase “to Judah” is added in the translation for clarification.

[1:11]  19 tn Heb “Do I still have sons in my inner parts that they might become your husbands?” Again Naomi’s rhetorical question expects a negative answer.

[1:12]  20 sn Too old to get married again. Naomi may be exaggerating for the sake of emphasis. Her point is clear, though: It is too late to roll back the clock.

[1:12]  21 tn Verse 12b contains the protasis (“if” clause) of a conditional sentence, which is completed by the rhetorical questions in v. 13. For a detailed syntactical analysis, see F. W. Bush, Ruth, Esther (WBC), 78-79.



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