Ruth 1:7
Context1:7 Now as she and her two daughters-in-law began to leave the place where she had been living to return to the land of Judah, 1
Ruth 3:1
Context3:1 At that time, 2 Naomi, her mother-in-law, said to her, “My daughter, I must find a home for you so you will be secure. 3
Ruth 3:6
Context3:6 So she went down to the threshing floor and did everything her mother-in-law had instructed her to do. 4
Ruth 3:17
Context3:17 She said, “He gave me these sixty pounds of barley, for he said to me, 5 ‘Do not go to your mother-in-law empty-handed.’” 6
1 tn Heb “and she went out from the place she had been, and her two daughters-in-law with her, and they went on the way to return to the land of Judah.”
2 tn The phrase “sometime later” does not appear in Hebrew but is supplied to mark the implicit shift in time from the events in chapter 2.
3 tn Heb “My daughter, should I not seek for you a resting place so that it may go well for you [or which will be good for you]?” The idiomatic, negated rhetorical question is equivalent to an affirmation (see 2:8-9) and has thus been translated in the affirmative (so also NAB, NCV, NRSV, TEV, CEV, NLT).
4 tn Heb “and she did according to all which her mother-in-law commanded her” (NASB similar). Verse 6 is a summary statement, while the following verses (vv. 7-15) give the particulars.
5 tc The MT (Kethib) lacks the preposition אֵלַי (’elay, “to me”) which is attested in the marginal reading (Qere).
6 sn ‘Do not go to your mother-in-law empty-handed.’ In addition to being a further gesture of kindness on Boaz’s part, the gift of barley served as a token of his intention to fulfill his responsibility as family guardian. See R. L. Hubbard, Jr., Ruth (NICOT), 225-26, and F. W. Bush, Ruth, Esther (WBC), 187.