Ruth Commentaries 2

 

 

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Ruth Commentaries 1
Ruth Commentary Links

 

RUTH RESOURCES
Part 2 of 2
Commentaries, Sermons, Illustrations, Devotionals
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Index to Resources

AUTHOR

TITLE

LINK

Barnes, Albert Commentary (Scroll Down) Click
Bell, Brian Sermons Click
Boone, Edward Commentary - Book in Pdf Click
Campbell, Iain Sermon Series Click
Carr, Alan Expositional Sermons Click
Cathers,  Rich Sermon Notes Click
Clarke, Adam Commentary (Click caveat) Click
Constable, Thomas Commentary Notes Click
Daniels, Ron Sermon Notes Click
Discovery Publishing Booklet - Ruth & Hannah: Learning To Walk By Faith Click
Dodd, Warren Commentary Notes Click
Fortner, Don Sermon Series Click
Frazier, Max Romance of Redemption - Devotional Commentary Click
Guzik, Dave Commentary Notes Click
Henry, Matthew Commentary Click
Hughes, Selwyn Devotional Commentary Click
Jamieson, Fausset, Brown Commentary, Critical and Explanatory Click
Maclaren, Alexander Exposition Click
Meyer, F B Devotionals from Our Daily Homily, Our Daily Bread Click
Middletown Bible Simple fill in blank study Click
Miscellaneous Resources Multiple resources indexed by Scripture Click
Morgan, G Campbell Brief Comments Click
Our Daily Bread Devotional Illustrations offsite Click
Our Daily Bread Devotional Illustrations Click
Pathlight Book Study Click
Precept Ministries Ruth Kinsman Redeemer - Download lesson 1 Click
Piper, John Sermon Series Click
Spurgeon, C. H. Sermons Click
Spurgeon, C. H. Morning & Evening Click
Temple, Joe Sermon Series Click
Today in the Word Devotional Illustrations Moody Bible Institute Click
Zeisler, Steve Sermon Series Click

Ruth Commentary
Verse by Verse

Commentary notes onsite

Ruth 1:1
Ruth 1:2
Ruth 1:3
Ruth 1:4
Ruth 1:5
Ruth 1:6
Ruth 1:7
Ruth 1:8
Ruth 1:9
Ruth 1:10
Ruth 1:11
Ruth 1:12
Ruth 1:13
Ruth 1:14

Ruth 1:15
Ruth 1:16
Ruth 1:17
Ruth 1:18
Ruth 1:19
Ruth 1:20
Ruth 1:21
Ruth 1:22
Ruth 2:1
Ruth 2:2
Ruth 2:3
Ruth 2:4
Ruth 2:5
Ruth 2:6
Ruth 2:7
Ruth 2:8
Ruth 2:9
Ruth 2:10
Ruth 2:11
Ruth 2:12
Ruth 2:13
Ruth 2:14
Ruth 2:15

Ruth 2:16
Ruth 2:17
Ruth 2:18
Ruth 2:19
Ruth 2:20
Ruth 2:21
Ruth 2:22
Ruth 2:23
Ruth 3:1
Ruth 3:2
Ruth 3:3
Ruth 3:4
Ruth 3:5
Ruth 3:6
Ruth 3:7
Ruth 3:8
Ruth 3:9
Ruth 3:10
Ruth 3:11
Ruth 3:12
Ruth 3:13

Ruth 3:14
Ruth 3:15
Ruth 3:16
Ruth 3:17
Ruth 3:18
Ruth 4:1
Ruth 4:2
Ruth 4:3
Ruth 4:4
Ruth 4:5
Ruth 4:6
Ruth 4:7
Ruth 4:8
Ruth 4:9
Ruth 4:10
Ruth 4:11

Ruth 4:12
Ruth 4:13
Ruth 4:14
Ruth 4:15
Ruth 4:16
Ruth 4:17

Ruth 4:18
Ruth 4:19
Ruth 4:20
Ruth 4:21
Ruth 4:22

Iain Campbell
Sermon Series

Introduction to the Book of Ruth

Ruth 1:1 The Story

Ruth 1:1 The Setting

Ruth 1:1 The Mistake

Ruth 1:14 The Test

Ruth 1:14-18 The Choice

Ruth 1:19-2:1 The Arrival

Ruth 2:19 The Gleaning

Ruth 2:22-23 The Light

Ruth 3:9,16 The Quest

Ruth 4:10 The Pledge

Ruth 4:13 The Blessing

Selwyn Hughes
Devotional Commentary

Ruth 1:1
Ruth 1:2
Ruth 1:3
Ruth 1:4
Ruth 1:5

Ruth 1:6

Ruth 1:7

Ruth 1:8

Ruth 1:9

Ruth 1:10

Ruth 1:11

Ruth 1:12

Ruth 1:13

Ruth 1:14

Ruth 1:15

Ruth 1:16

Ruth 1:17

Ruth 1:18

Ruth 1:19

Ruth 1:20

Ruth 1:21

Ruth 1:22

 

Ruth 2:1

Ruth 2:2

Ruth 2:3

Ruth 2:3

Ruth 2:4

Ruth 2:5

Ruth 2:6

Ruth 2:7

Ruth 2:8

Ruth 2:9

Ruth 2:10

Ruth 2:11

Ruth 2:12

Ruth 2:13

Ruth 2:14

Ruth 2:15

Ruth 2:16

Ruth 2:17

Ruth 2:18

Ruth 2:19

Ruth 2:20

Ruth 2:21

Ruth 2:22

Ruth 2:23

Ruth 3:1

Ruth 3:2

Ruth 3:3

Ruth 3:4

Ruth 3:5

Ruth 3:8

Ruth 3:9

Ruth 3:10

Ruth 3:11

Ruth 3:12

Ruth 3:13

Ruth 3:14

Ruth 3:15

Ruth 3:16

Ruth 3:17

Ruth 3:18

 

Ruth 4:1

Ruth 4:2

Ruth 4:3

Ruth 4:4

Ruth 4:5

Ruth 4:6

Ruth 4:7

Ruth 4:8

Ruth 4:9

Ruth 4:10

Ruth 4:11

Ruth 4:12

Ruth 4:12

Ruth 4:13

Ruth 4:13

Ruth 4:14

Ruth 4:15

Ruth 4:16

Ruth 4:17

Ruth 4:18

Ruth 4:19

Ruth 4:20

Ruth 4:21

Ruth 4:2

 

RUTH
Part 2 of 2

Devotional Illustrations
Our Daily Bread
F B Meyer
G Campbell Morgan
C H Spurgeon
Today in the Word
(Back to the Bible in following section)

Ruth 1

Ruth 1-2
Bodie Thoene, coauthor of bestselling Christian fiction Zion Chronicles, once worked for John Wayne as a scriptwriter. In Today’s Christian Woman Thoene tells how that opportunity came about. “I was commuting to Los Angeles and doing feature articles on different stunt men and other film personalities for magazines. An article I co-wrote with John Wayne’s stuntman won the attention of the Duke himself. One day he called and invited [my husband] Brock, and me to come to his house. He talked to us as if we were friends, showing keen interest in us as individuals. From that day on, I began writing for his film company, Batjac Productions. We were awestruck. Here was this man who had been in film for fifty years and he takes a young couple with small children under his wing! Once I asked him, 'Why are you doing this? You’re so good to us.’ He replied, 'Because somebody did it for me.’ ” It appears that John Wayne had something in common with Boaz from the book of Ruth--both understood that goodness doesn’t originate in us. We receive and then we give. God is good to us, that’s why we are able to be good to others. Today’s reading illustrates the implementation of God’s “welfare program”: (Today in the Word)

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Ruth 1:1-22
Bible teachers have used many favorable adjectives to describe Ruth, the faithful young woman from Moab who became the great-grandmother of David. This fact alone is enough to show why Ruth needs to be included as we discuss God’s preservation of His righteous line. One writer comments that meeting Ruth is like finding a rose growing in the middle of a garbage dump. Another says Ruth “gleams like a beautiful pearl against a jet-black background.” The reason for these and other comparisons becomes clear when we compare Judges 21:25 to Ruth 1:1. The era of Israel’s judges was a time of spiritual unfaithfulness and foreign domination interrupted only by a few brief victories. It was also a lawless time of Israel’s disobedience to the law of God. The last verse of Judges sums up the situation: “In those days Israel had no king; everyone did as he saw fit. (
Today in the Word)

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Ruth 1:1-18; 2:1-9; 3:1-11; 4:1-12
A book recently tackled one of life's minor puzzles--how do homing pigeons find their way home? The answer seems to be: we're not sure. One theory is that young pigeons develop an ""odor map"" by smelling odors that are carried to their homes on the winds from various directions. Another theory is that the birds use the earth's magnetic field to determine course and position. Whatever technique homing pigeons use, their instincts are uncanny. They always finish their journeys in the right place...The Bible is filled with stories of people who did and of those who did not finish well. They have much to teach us....The story of Ruth gets us off to a great start. This young woman from Moab definitely finished well. She became the great-grandmother of David. Ruth's name is on a short list of women singled out for special mention in the genealogy of Jesus. She was part of the Savior's royal bloodline and is therefore a background figure in the Christmas story. (
Today in the Word)

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Ruth 1:14 “Orpah kissed her mother in law; but Ruth clave unto her.”
Both of them had an affection for Naomi, and therefore set out with her upon her return to the land of Judah. But the hour of test came; Naomi most unselfishly set before each of them the trials which awaited them, and bade them if they cared for ease and comfort to return to their Moabitish friends. At first both of them declared that they would cast in their lot with the Lord’s people; but upon still further consideration Orpah with much grief and a respectful kiss left her mother in law, and her people, and her God, and went back to her idolatrous friends, while Ruth with all her heart gave herself up to the God of her mother in law. It is one thing to love the ways of the Lord when all is fair, and quite another to cleave to them under all discouragements and difficulties. The kiss of outward profession is very cheap and easy, but the practical cleaving to the Lord, which must show itself in holy decision for truth and holiness, is not so small a matter. How stands the case with us, is our heart fixed upon Jesus, is the sacrifice bound with cords to the horns of the altar? Have we counted the cost, and are we solemnly ready to suffer all worldly loss for the Master’s sake? The after gain will be an abundant recompense, for Egypt’s treasures are not to be compared with the glory to be revealed. Orpah is heard of no more; in glorious ease and idolatrous pleasure her life melts into the gloom of death; but Ruth lives in history and in heaven, for grace has placed her in the noble line whence sprung the King of kings. Blessed among women shall those be who for Christ’s sake can renounce all; but forgotten and worse than forgotten shall those be who in the hour of temptation do violence to conscience and turn back unto the world. O that this morning we may not be content with the form of devotion, which may be no better than Orpah’s kiss, but may the Holy Spirit work in us a cleaving of our whole heart to our Lord Jesus. (Spurgeon, C. H.  Morning and evening) (See also Surgeon's sermon on
Ruth 1:16: Deciding for God)

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Ruth 1:14a
THE first girl I ever kissed in public was named Ruth. Several hundred people watched as the Zeeland High School junior play reached the romantic moment between the leading man and woman. After the performance this comment filtered back to me from someone in the audience:

"That was rather a cool kiss."

The biblical book of Ruth, however, is anything but cool. The love and loyalty Ruth displayed for her mother-in-law, Naomi, bathes the story with warmth and tenderness. And the beauty of this Old Testament narrative is all the more striking set against the background of the time of the judges when moral debris clut­tered the landscape of Israel's early life in Canaan.

Ruth's love for her mother-in-law is only part of this love story, however. Boaz, Naomi's relative, exercises his right as kinsman-redeemer and takes Ruth to be his wife (chapters 3-4). He brings into focus our Redeemer, Jesus, who purchases us with His blood, takes us into His family, and surrounds us with His unfailing love.

As objects of Christ's redeeming love, we sinners should never be reserved about expressing our love to Him. May it never be said of us in our relationship to Jesus that our love is cold and mechanical.- D J De Haan (Our Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved)

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Ruth 1:16-17 - Poisoned Well
One of the most beautiful concessions of love in all of literature is the one Ruth made to Naomi. In vowing to return to Israel with her, Ruth pledged, "Wherever you go, I will go; and wherever you lodge, I will lodge; your people shall be my people, and your God, my God. Where you