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    Ruth – Legacy Edition

    From the Greek Septuagint text as used by First Century Christians.

    This is the story of the events leading up to the birth of the grandfather of King David, which happened around 1300-BCE.
    Likely written by SamuEl around 1090-BCE, because it appears to have originally been a continuation of the book of Judges.

    Chapter 1

    1 Back in those days, during the time of the Judges, there was a famine that came to the land.
    As the result, a man from BethLehem of Judah traveled into the fields of Moab with his wife and two sons.
    2 The man’s name was EliMelech, his wife’s name was NaOmi, and his two sons were named MahLon and ChiLion… they were EphRathites.
    And after they had moved there from BethLehem of Judah, 3 EliMelech (NaOmi’s husband) died, leaving just her and her two sons.

    4 Thereafter, the sons married Moabite women; one was named Orpah, and the other was named Ruth (gr. Routh).
    Then, after [NaOmi] had been there for about ten years, 5 both MahLon and ChiLion (the sons of her and her husband) also died.
    6 So she got up and told her two daughters-in-law that she was going to return to her own country, because she’d heard (from someone in the land of Moab) that Jehovah had turned back to His people and that He was once again providing them loaves of bread to eat.

    7 Well, [as she was preparing] to leave the place where she was staying, both of her daughters-in-law came and met with her, because they wanted to go with her to the land of Judah.
    8 But NaOmi said to her daughters-in-law:
    ‘Go back home to your mothers… and may Jehovah show you as much mercy to you as you’ve shown to my dead ones.
    Thank you for meeting with me, 9 but may Jehovah now provide each of you rest in the house of a husband.’

    Then she kissed them and they both started to cry, 10 and they said to her:
    ‘We want to return with you to your people.’

    11 But NaOmi said:
    ‘No! Please, my daughters! Why do you want to go with me?
    Do you think that I still have sons in my belly that I can give as your husbands?
    12 Please go home, my daughters!
    Go, because I’ve grown too old to have a man anymore. I’ve asked myself,
    Might it be possible for me to marry again and to give birth to sons 13 for whom you should wait, and not marry again until they’ve grown into men?
    No, my daughters; for I’ve become very bitter since the hand of Jehovah has come against me.’

    14 Then they all started to cry again, and Orpah kissed her mother-in-law and returned to her family.
    However, Ruth continued to follow her; so NaOmi said:
    15 ‘Look, Ruth; your sister-in-law has returned to her people and to her gods. So, please turn back and catch up with your sister-in-law.’

    16 And Ruth replied:
    ‘Don’t force me to leave you and go back; for wherever you go, I will go, and wherever you stay, I will stay.
    Your people will be my people and your God will be my God.
    17 Where you die is where I will die, and that’s where I’ll be buried.
    May Jehovah [curse] me and add more to it if anything other than death will separate me from you.’

    18 Well when NaOmi saw that she was so determined to go with her, she no longer tried to discourage her.
    19 So they both traveled on together until they arrived at BethLehem.
    And when they got there, the whole city of BethLehem cheered for them, asking,
    ‘Is this really NaOmi?’

    20 And she said to them:
    ‘Please don’t call me NaOmi, call me Mary (Bitter), because [God] has made me very bitter.
    21 For after I left, Jehovah sent me back with nothing.
    So, why call me NaOmi (Pleasure), when Jehovah has humbled and persecuted me?’

    22 Thus NaOmi returned from the country of Moab with her Moabite daughter-in-law Ruth, arriving in BethLehem at the beginning of the barley harvest.

    Chapter 2

    1 Well, there was a very wealthy man [in BethLehem] that NaOmi knew (because he was a relative of her husband EliMelech) whose name was Boaz.
    2 So Ruth (the Moabite) said to NaOmi:
    ‘If he approves of me, should I go into his field to glean grain?’

    And NaOmi replied:
    ‘Go, my daughter.’
    3 So she went into the field and followed behind those that were doing the harvesting.
    And it so happened that the portion of the field she was in was being harvested by some of Boaz’s relatives at the time.

    4 Then {Look!} when Boaz came from the city (BethLehem), he said to those that were harvesting there:
    ‘May Jehovah be with you.’

    And they replied:
    ‘May Jehovah bless you.’

    5 Then Boaz asked the servant that was supervising the harvesting,
    ‘Whose young woman is that?’

    6 And the supervisor replied:
    ‘She’s the Moabite servant who just came here from the country of the Moabites along with NaOmi.’

    7 So [Ruth] then [went up] to him and said:
    ‘Please, may I collect grain here… I’ll just follow behind those that are doing the harvesting.’

    Well, she had been working all day long, from morning until evening, and she hadn’t stopped at all to rest.
    8 So Boaz said:
    ‘Hasn’t anyone told you, my daughter? You don’t have go into my field to just glean… [go and work] with the rest of the young women [who are my relatives].
    9 Look around the field and see where they are, and work along with them, for I’ve instructed my servants not to bother you;
    And when you get thirsty, you may go and drink from the water in the jugs that belong to my servants.’

    10 Well at that, she bowed low before him with her face to the ground, and then she asked him:
    ‘What have I done to find so much favor in your eyes that you should treat me this well, since I’m just a stranger?’

    11 And Boaz answered:
    ‘All the things you’ve been doing for your mother-in-law since the death of her son (your man) have been reported to me.
    For I’ve heard of how you arrived in this unfamiliar land just two days ago after leaving your father, your mother, and your country.
    12 So, may Jehovah repay your good deeds, and may the God of IsraEl that you’ve come here to serve shelter you under His wings.’

    13 Then she said:
    ‘I [hope] that may I find your favor, my master, and [that I can prove worthy] of the comfort that you’ve given to me; for your words have touched the heart of your slave girl.
    Look, I’m your servant!’

    14 Then Boaz said to her:
    ‘It’s almost suppertime.
    Here, take some of my bread… and here’s some vinegar to dip it in.’

    15 And at that, Ruth sat down next to the rest of the harvesters, and Boaz gave her a large amount of toasted grain, which she ate.
    Then, after she had eaten enough, she left.

    16 Well, when she got up [the next day] to collect grain, [she found that] Boaz had indeed instructed his servants to allow her to harvest from the midst of the grain and for them to set aside a portion of the field just for her, and not to give her any trouble.
    17 So she worked all day long; and when she beat out the grain, she found that she had collected a heaping bushel full, 18 which she then carried back to the city.
    And when her mother-in-law saw how much she had collected and how much had been given to her, she asked:
    ‘Where did you go today, and where did you get this? May this one that has so recognized you be blest!’

    19 Then Ruth told her mother-in-law where she did [the harvesting] and said,
    ‘The name of the man that allowed me to do this today is Boaz.’

    20 And NaOmi said,
    ‘Praise Jehovah, for He hasn’t forgotten to be merciful [to the widows] of those that have died.’
    Then she added:
    ‘This man is our next-of-kin… one of our closest relatives!’

    21 And Ruth said to her mother-in-law:
    ‘He also told me to [work alongside] his servants until I’ve finished harvesting all that I need!’

    22 Then NaOmi told Ruth:
    ‘My daughter; it’s good for you to work alongside his servants, for you likely wouldn’t have been able to meet his relatives in any other field.’

    23 So thereafter, Ruth worked along with the young women of Boaz’s family through both the barley harvest and the wheat harvest (about fifty days).

    Chapter 3

    1 Well, while she was staying there with her mother-in-law, NaOmi said to her:
    ‘My daughter; How else can I give you some rest and allow good things to happen to you?
    2 [Recognize that] Boaz (the one among whose young women you are working) is a close relative, and tonight he’ll be threshing barley in his barn.
    3 So, take a bath, [rub your body] with [fragrant] oils and dress up, then go to his barn.
    However, you must not show yourself to him until after he has finished eating and drinking.
    4 But then, when you see that he has fallen asleep, go uncover his feet and lie down there at his feet and go to sleep.
    Thereafter, he will tell you what to do.’

    5 And Ruth said:
    ‘I’ll do whatever you say.’

    6 So she went down to the barn and did just as her mother-in-law had instructed.
    7 [She saw] Boaz eating and drinking until his heart was quite satisfied, and then he went to sleep in the hay.
    So Ruth crept up quietly and uncovered his feet, then she got down to go to sleep.
    8 However, this woke Boaz; and when he saw the woman lying at his feet, 9 he asked,
    ‘Who are you?’

    9 And she replied:
    ‘I’m Ruth, your servant girl.
    Wrap me in your blanket, for you are my relative.’

    10 So Boaz said:
    ‘May Jehovah God bless you for your goodness and mercy, my daughter, because you’ve chosen the last over the first.
    You could have looked for a younger man, whether rich or poor.
    11 But daughter; don’t be afraid, for I’ll do whatever you ask, since my whole tribe knows what a mighty woman you are.
    12 However, there is someone that is a closer relative than me.
    13 You may spend the rest of the night here, but in the morning we will go and find out if he’s willing to do right by you, since he is your closest relative.
    Now, as Jehovah is living, you may just go to sleep until the morning.’

    14 So [Ruth] went back to sleep at his feet and she stayed there until the next morning.
    And when she awoke (while [it was still too dark] to be seen), Boaz said:
    ‘Don’t tell anyone that a woman spent the night in my barn.’

    15 Then he said to her:
    ‘Now, bring me the apron that you wore.’
    So she held it out, and he poured six quarts of barley into it for her; and thereafter, she returned to the city.

    16 Well, when she got back, her mother-in-law asked:
    ‘What happened, my daughter?’
    And she told her everything that the man had done, saying,
    ‘He also gave me six quarts of barley, 17 and he told me to carry this to my mother-in-law.’

    18 Then [NaOmi] said:
    ‘Now, let’s just sit here and wait, my daughter, to see how this thing works out.
    For the man won’t be satisfied until he has finished everything that has to be done.’

    Chapter 4

    1 Well, the [next morning], Boaz went and sat down at the [city] gate.
    Then {Look!} before long, he saw the man about whom he had spoken [to Ruth], so he asked him to come and sit in a secluded spot.
    2 He also found ten of the city’s elders and asked them to come and sit with them. So, they all sat down together.

    3 Then Boaz said to the relative:
    ‘This matter is regarding the portion of the field that belonged to our brother EliMelech, which he passed on to NaOmi.
    Since she has just returned from the land of Moab, 4 I thought that I should whisper in your ear and urge you to purchase the field before others in the city do so, or before the elders claim it, for you are [EliMelech’s] closest living relative.
    However, if you aren’t interested in buying it, let me do that, since I’m next in line as his relative.’

    And [the man] replied:
    ‘I’ll [claim it] as his next of kin!’

    5 And Boaz said:
    ‘Well, on the day that you buy the field from NaOmi, you must also take the Moabite woman, Ruth.
    For she was the [wife] of your dead relative, and you must keep his name alive to receive his inheritance.’

    6 Well at that, the relative said:
    ‘Oh, then I won’t be able to accept the responsibility of being his closest relative, for I’m afraid that it would ruin the rights of my own inheritors.
    So, you may go and claim the right.’

    7 Now, it was the custom in IsraEl at the time (when it came to establishing matters that have to do with inheritances and such) for the man that [was giving up his right], to untie his sandal and give it to the one that would be the acting next-of-kin, as proof that the right of inheritance was being given to him.
    For this is how they testified to such things in IsraEl back then.

    8 So when the relative told Boaz that he could buy it for himself and the right of inheritance would be his, he untied his sandal and gave it to Boaz.
    9 Then Boaz said to the elders and to everyone else that was sitting there:
    ‘You people are all witnesses today that I have acquired the right to buy everything that belonged to EliMelech, ChiLion, and MahLon from NaOmi… 10 including Ruth, the Moabite woman.
    So I have now acquired MahLon’s woman as mine, and I will raise a [son] in the name of the one that died, so that his inheritance won’t be lost.
    For I’m his brother, and you and all the people at this gate are my witnesses.’

    11 Well, all the elders all agreed, saying:
    ‘We are witnesses. And may Jehovah make the woman that is entering your home like RachaEl and LeAh who built the house of IsraEl.
    May they succeed in doing that in a powerful way in EphRatha, and in making a name in BethLehem.
    12 May your house become like the house of Perez, whom Thamar bore to Judah, and may this woman give birth to the seed of your children.’

    13 So Boaz took Ruth and she became his woman.
    Then he [slept with] her and she became pregnant and gave birth to a son.
    14 And thereafter, she said to NaOmi:
    ‘May Jehovah be praised, because He didn’t rest until He provided a son for you today.
    May [this son] speak of your name in IsraEl, 15 and may he restore life and nourishment to your grey hair; for your daughter-in-law has given birth to a good child that is better than seven sons.’

    16 Well after that, NaOmi took the boy and held him to her breasts, becoming his wet nurse.
    17 Then she called the neighbors in and named him… she said,
    ‘Since NaOmi has now given birth to a son, I will call him Obed (Servant).’

    This one became the father of JesSe and the grandfather of David.

    18 Now, these are the descendants of Perez:
    · Perez fathered HezRon
    · 19 HezRon fathered Aram
    · Aram fathered AmiNadab
    · 20 AmiNadab fathered NaShon
    · NaShon fathered SalMon
    · 21 SalMon fathered Boaz
    · Boaz fathered Obed
    · 22 Obed fathered JesSe
    · JesSe fathered David.

    Note that this is the legacy version of the translation last updated in December 2020. You can also see the latest version.