A foreign widow gleans in a field — and becomes the great-grandmother of King David
Whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge: thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God.
Ruth 1:16Ruth is set 'in the days when the judges ruled' — the same dark period covered in the book of Judges, when 'every man did what was right in his own eyes.' Against that grim backdrop, the book of Ruth tells a small, intimate story: a famine drives an Israelite family to Moab. The father dies. The two sons marry Moabite women and then die also. Three widows are left in a foreign land. One mother-in-law, Naomi, decides to return to Bethlehem. One daughter-in-law, Ruth, refuses to leave her side.
What follows is one of the most beautifully constructed narratives in all of literature. Ruth, a foreigner with no rights and no future, gleans in the fields of a relative named Boaz. Boaz notices her, protects her, blesses her, and ultimately — through the intricate working out of the kinsman-redeemer (goel) law — marries her. They have a son named Obed. Obed becomes the father of Jesse. Jesse becomes the father of David. A Moabite widow becomes the great-grandmother of Israel's greatest king.
Then comes the New Testament: Matthew opens his Gospel with a genealogy that names Ruth (along with Tamar, Rahab, and Bathsheba) as ancestors of Jesus Christ. The book of Ruth is a four-chapter miniature of the entire biblical story: a foreigner is brought in, a kinsman-redeemer steps forward, and the line of redemption flows through what looked like ruin. Boaz prefigures Christ — the wealthy relative who has the right and the willingness to redeem those who cannot redeem themselves.
One chapter per day · read aloud in one sitting if possible
Hebrew law (Leviticus 25:25-55, Deuteronomy 25:5-10) provided for a goel — a kinsman-redeemer. If an Israelite fell into poverty and had to sell land, his nearest relative could 'redeem' it — buy it back to keep it in the family. If a widow had no son, her late husband's brother was to marry her to preserve the family line. Boaz performs both functions for Ruth and Naomi: he buys back Elimelech's field and marries the widow Ruth. The pattern points unmistakably to Christ. He is our kinsman (he became one of us in the incarnation), he is wealthy enough to redeem (the wealth of heaven), and he is willing (he did not despise the cost). The book of Ruth is a four-chapter sermon on redemption.
The typological details accumulate quickly. Boaz appears in the fields at harvest time — at the threshing floor where wheat is separated from chaff (a recurring biblical image of judgment). He shows favor to a foreigner with no claim on him. He provides food, protection, and rest. He pays the price of redemption willingly and publicly at the city gate. He brings the foreigner into the people of God by marriage, and through that union the line of David — and the line of Christ — proceeds. Boaz is not Christ, but his every action is a small picture of what the greater Redeemer would do for those who 'were once not a people, but now are the people of God' (1 Peter 2:10).
The last five verses of Ruth seem like a quiet afterthought — a genealogical list. But these are the most consequential verses in the book. 'And Boaz begat Obed, and Obed begat Jesse, and Jesse begat David.' The book that began with three widows in a foreign land ends with the lineage of Israel's greatest king. The point is not coincidence — it is providence. The quiet, faithful actions of ordinary people are woven into God's grand redemptive plan. A Moabite widow gleaning in a field becomes the great-grandmother of David and a named ancestor of Jesus Christ. God works through small things to accomplish enormous ones.
When Naomi urges Ruth to return to her own people, Ruth's response is one of the most beautiful declarations of loyalty in all of Scripture: 'Whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge: thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God: where thou diest, will I die, and there will I be buried: the LORD do so to me, and more also, if ought but death part thee and me.' This is hesed — the Hebrew word for covenant loyalty, the kind of love that goes beyond what is required. The verse is often read at weddings; it was originally a daughter-in-law's vow to a mother-in-law who had nothing left to offer her. Real loyalty makes commitments without expecting return.