Interesting Literature

A Summary and Analysis of the Book of Ruth

By Dr Oliver Tearle (Loughborough University)

The Book of Ruth is one of the shorter books of the Bible, but the story it tells is one of the most movingly ‘human’ in all of the Old Testament. However, how the story of Ruth should be interpreted is not an easy question to answer. Let’s delve deeper into the Biblical Book of Ruth to discover a world of outsiders, love, law, and mysterious customs involving shoes.

Before we come to the analysis, though, it might be worth summarising the plot of the story of Ruth as it’s laid out in the Bible. The Book of Ruth is thought to have been written some time between 450 and 250 BC.

Book of Ruth: summary

A man named Elimelech, from Bethlehem-Judah, left his hometown when a famine struck. He and his wife Naomi, along with their two sons Mahlon and Chilion, left for Moab. Elimelech died, leaving Naomi with her two sons.

These two sons married Moabite women: Orpah and Ruth. Ten years passed, and Mahlon and Chilion both died. Naomi decided to return to Judah, hearing that the famine had passed, but she entreated her sisters-in-law to remain in their homeland of Moab. After all, this was their home, and why should they accompany her back to her homeland now their husbands were dead? They have a house in Moab and will be provided for.

Although both women initially pledged to stay with Naomi, when she urged them to leave her, Orpah agreed. But Ruth stayed by Naomi’s side and vowed to accompany her back to Judah.

Back in Judah, there was wealthy relative of Naomi’s dead husband, a man named Boaz. Ruth went into the field to gather corn for the harvest, where she caught the eye of Boaz.

Boaz promised to treat Ruth, an outsider in the land of Judah, as an equal, and welcomed her. Ruth was overcome by his kindness, and asked what she, a stranger, had done to deserve it. Boaz replied that he had heard how she left behind her own parents in Moab to accompany her mother-in-law into a strange land.

Ruth went home to her mother-in-law that evening, and told her what had happened. Naomi told Ruth that Boaz was a near-kinsman, and as such he will protect and provide for them. Ruth went to Boaz that night and knelt at his feet. She told him she was his handmaid and they were kin.

Boaz replied that there was a man who was an even closer kinsman to her than he was, and this other man had, essentially, first refusal on whether he wished to marry Ruth. However, if this other man said he didn’t want to marry Ruth, Boaz declared he would happily do so. And he gave her six measures of corn to take back to Naomi as pledge.

Boaz called a counsel of elders, including this other kinsman of Ruth’s, and explained that Naomi had her dead husband’s parcel of land to sell, but that if the kinsman wished to claim it, he must also agree to marry Ruth.

There followed a strange custom involving a shoe, whereby a man ‘plucked off his shoe’ and handed it to his neighbour if he wished to forgo his claim to something. This was a kind of ‘testimony in Israel’ in those days, we are told, a legal ritual which sealed the deal.

So this other man took off his shoe and gave it to Boaz, signalling that he relinquished all claim to Ruth or her dead father-in-law’s land. Marrying Ruth would damage his own inheritance from his father (presumably for marrying a Moabite foreigner) so he declined. Boaz announced that he would marry Ruth, and they promptly got married, and Ruth had a son.

This son, we are told, in turn had a son named Jesse, who himself had a son, named David.

Book of Ruth: analysis

Many books of the Old Testament seem to have been written to counter the narrow nationalism of other books of the Old Testament. So the message of the Book of Jonah – in which the title character’s disdain for the people of Nineveh receives a sharp moral rebuke from God – functions as a sort of riposte to the Book of Obadiah. And we can analyse the Book of Ruth as a response, or counter-response, to those other stories in the Bible which endorse a nationalistic understanding of Israel.

Whichever interpretation of Ruth we choose to follow, we should bear in mind the key fact of the story, which is that Ruth is a Moabite who leaves her family and her own people behind to begin a new life, as the devoted companion to her widowed mother-in-law Naomi, in the land of Judah.

The Dictionary of the Bible emphasises this aspect of the story, and suggests that Ruth’s loyalty to her adopted nation of Judah is important because Ruth is the ancestor of David, the great King of Israel. (Ruth is David’s great-grandmother.) So one ‘meaning’ for the Book of Ruth, and its significance for Judaism and Christianity, lies in its genealogical quality, in providing the story of David’s ancestry. If Ruth had never left Moab and followed Naomi to Judah, David would never have been born.

All of our lives hinge on such chance happenings or vagaries that occurred somewhere in our ancestral history, but for Jews and Christians the story of Ruth’s adoption of Judah as her new home, and her union with Boaz, possesses greater importance because her descendants would include King David of Israel.

Ruth is an idyllic romance, and one of only two books of the Bible named after women (the other one is Esther). But it would be wrong to offer a feminist interpretation of the story of Ruth which saw her as somehow bucking the patriarchal customs and laws of her time.

After all, the patriarchal laws binding women to men are still present her: Ruth may wish to marry Boaz, but he is intent on observing the law which gives Ruth’s closer kinsman first dibs on her, as it were. Both Ruth and Naomi are survivors in this patriarchal landscape, but they are nevertheless constrained by its laws and traditions.

We should view the Book of Ruth firmly as fiction: it’s a ‘short story’, essentially, some two millennia before the ‘short story’ came into existence as a recognised genre. But the details of the narrative are too neat to be strictly historical.

For instance, the names of Elimelech’s children, Mahlon and Chilion, literally mean ‘sickness’ and ‘wasting’ respectively; these strike us as unlikely names for a parent to give to their children, and given the fates of the two sons, their names seem far too pat. They chime symbolically, however, with the famine which drives Elimelech to leave Judah behind for Moab.

Continue to explore the Bible with our summary and analysis of the Book of Esther .

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research paper on the book of ruth

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book: Identity and Ethics in the Book of Ruth

Identity and Ethics in the Book of Ruth

A social identity approach.

  • Peter Hon Wan Lau
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  • Language: English
  • Publisher: De Gruyter
  • Copyright year: 2011
  • Audience: Academics, Libraries, Institutes
  • Front matter: 12
  • Main content: 234
  • Keywords: Book of Ruth ; Social Identity ; Narrative Ethics ; Post-exilic Period ; Ezra-Nehemiah
  • Published: November 29, 2010
  • ISBN: 9783110247619
  • Published: November 16, 2010
  • ISBN: 9783110247602

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COMMENTS

  1. Ruth in Recent Research

    Ruth is a provocative book in the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament—deceivingly simple yet incredibly sophisticated. One of only two books in the entire biblical corpus named after a woman (the other being Esther), Ruth encompasses the most feminine dialogue in a complete story along with significant lexical ambiguity.

  2. (PDF) The Purpose of the Book of Ruth

    ORCID 0000-0001-7847-0203. The Purpose of the Book of Ruth. Abstract: Numerous scholars argue that the book of Ruth, with its story concerning. mixed marriages of Judahites with Moabite women ...

  3. Ruth in Recent Research

    Ruth is a provocative book in the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament—deceivingly simple yet incredibly sophisticated. One of only two books in the entire biblical corpus named after a woman (the other being Esther), Ruth encompasses the most feminine dialogue in a complete story along with significant lexical ambiguity.

  4. The Book of Ruth As Exegetical Literature

    1. The literary Form of the Book of Ruth: An Examination of. How the Genre is Determined. By characterizing the book as 'epic' and 'idyllic', Goethe already indicated something as regards its genre. As an idyll , the Book of Ruth would. primarily interested in creating a beautiful atmospheric setting. However,

  5. (PDF) The message of the book Ruth: A reflection on ...

    Drawing from contemporary studies in real-life persuasion, the present paper underscores its centrality in the book of Ruth. I investigate the persuasive elegance of the opening scene (1:6-18 ...

  6. A Summary and Analysis of the Book of Ruth

    Book of Ruth: summary. A man named Elimelech, from Bethlehem-Judah, left his hometown when a famine struck. He and his wife Naomi, along with their two sons Mahlon and Chilion, left for Moab. Elimelech died, leaving Naomi with her two sons. These two sons married Moabite women: Orpah and Ruth. Ten years passed, and Mahlon and Chilion both died.

  7. Identity and Ethics in the Book of Ruth

    The book of Ruth is used as a test case, employing a social identity approach for understanding the narrative, but also to model the approach so that it can be implemented more widely in study of the Old Testament and narrative ethics. Each of the protagonists in the book of Ruth is examined in regards to their personal and social self-components.

  8. The Book of Ruth

    The book of Ruth contains one of the Bible's best-known and most-loved stories. This major commentary by Robert L. Hubbard Jr. shows how the author of Ruth used, with great literary artistry, the story of Ruth and Naomi to convey important theological themes. In his introduction Hubbard discusses the issues of text, canonicity, literary criticism, authorship, date, purpose, setting, genre ...

  9. The book of Ruth

    'Ruth is an absolutely delightful little book' says R.L. Hubbard. 1 Sasson has observed that, 'even among the artful narratives of Scripture, Ruth stands out in the power of its concentration, in the limpidity of its vocabulary, in the versatility of its language, in the balanced proportion of its scenes, in the vividness and integrity of its ...

  10. (PDF) Reading and Teaching the Book of Ruth

    The book of Ruth is generally regarded as centring on the key figure of Ruth. It is claimed that this limits the narrative, influencing the interpretation. Several literary techniques suggest the author's intentional focus on Naomi, her faith struggles and God's gracious healing of an embittered mother. Whereas the paradigm of covenant ...

  11. Biblical Theology Brief: The Book of Ruth

    View PDF. Biblical Theology Brief 2: The Book of Ruth Kimberly Nicole Tanner March 6, 2017 Box #92 1848 Words f"May he be blessed by the Lord whose kindness has not forsaken the living or the dead!". - Ruth 2:20 Introduction "In those days there was no king in Israel; every man did what was right in his own eyes.".

  12. Identity and Ethics in the Book of Ruth: A Social ...

    The Book of Ruth (RB) is subjected under all of these forms of exegesis in order to illustrate how a single text can be interpreted in various, even divergent ways, depending on the approach ...

  13. PDF Structure and Intention of the Book of Ruth

    B. Ellen van Wolde on Ruth and Tamar Among the previous interpretations, an essay by Ellen van Wolde on the rela-tion between Tamar and Ruth gives new impetus to the discussion.8 Following a presentation of her method, intertextual research, van Wolde describes points of 288 Westermann

  14. PDF Topic: The Book of Ruth Historical Context (From Zondervan Study Bible)

    Microsoft Word - NCC-Womens-Bible-Study-Ruth_FINAL.docx. Topic: The Book of Ruth. Historical Context (From Zondervan Study Bible) • Author: Unknown. • Audience: God's chosen people, the Israelites. • Setting: A time of peace between Israel and Moab. The book is silent about the possible underlying hostility between the Judahites and the ...

  15. Ruth in Recent Research

    Abstract. From the early treatments focused on historical-critical methods to the interdisciplinary approaches of the social sciences today, Ruth research continues to speak to the current developments within interpretive conversations. This article briefly surveys major commentaries on Ruth, and then discusses the shifts in research from 2001 ...

  16. Book of Ruth Research Papers

    According to many scholars, the book of Ruth stands as an independent novella encouraging random acts of love and kindness. On the other hand, many Bible interpreters contend that the book of Ruth whispers daringly as a diatribe of two industrious women who manipulate a male-dominated society through sexual prowess in order to survive.

  17. PDF An Essay of the position of Ruth in the Old Testament books

    The book of Ruth comes out very clearly that God is guiding all the occurrences relating to us. That all the prayers have nothing to do with what is happening to them, but the one thing that is clear is you must have faith and you must put your trust in God. The story in the book of Ruth starts during the days when the Israeli's had no kings. At

  18. [PDF] The Book of Ruth

    Neither seeking to resolve legal details nor undertaking character studies is likely to aid our understanding of the book of Ruth. Rather, the work. is a 'story' which begins with multiple problems in Moab and ends with abundance in Judah. The book thus deals with the theme of providence which is effected by the actions ofboth Yahweh and various humans, especially Ruth and Boaz. The ...

  19. A Literary Analysis of the Book of Ruth

    The story of Ruth begins with death, moves toward marriage, and finds its ultimate fulfillment in birth. The Hebrew uses the same term ילד for sons to show in inclusio Naomi's loss of sons to her regaining of a child. The tension and tragedy lies in the empty and lonely Naomi.

  20. PDF 134

    The Book Of Ruth, by Carl Weaver, PM, Presented March 31, 2012 Page 43 The Book of Ruth By Carl Weaver, PM Presented to A. Douglas Smith, Jr. Lodge of Research, #1949 On March 31, 2012 The opinions presented in this paper are strictly those of the author and do not necessarily represent the opinions of the Master and Wardens of the A. Douglas Smith

  21. the Book of Ruth Research Papers

    The Book of Ruth: a literary gem The first of the Five Scrolls is a meticulously crafted numerical composition. Its numerical features show that it is a cohesive literary unity, which means that the Genealogy of Perez (4,18-22) is integral within the story as an...

  22. PDF Andrews University Seminary Studies, Spring 1985, Vol. 23, No. 1, 19-28

    IN THE BOOK OF RUTH LEIF HONGISTO Toivonlinna SF-21500 Piikkio, Finland ... Shea presented "The Chiastic Structure of the Book of Amos" as a paper to the Rhetorical Criticism Section, Society of Biblical Literature, annual meeting, ... Hebrew poetry-a point that has been observed by various research- ers, including J. M. Myemg There are, for ...