Boaz redeems Ruth and the Davidic line emerges
Boaz publicly and lawfully redeems Naomi’s family property and marries Ruth in order to preserve the deceased man’s name, and the Lord blesses that faithfulness with the birth of Obed. The chapter shows that God can turn Israel’s emptiness into fullness through ordinary covenant obedience, and it cl
Commentary
4:1 Now Boaz went up to the village gate and sat there. Then along came the guardian whom Boaz had mentioned to Ruth! Boaz said, “Come here and sit down, ‘John Doe’!” So he came and sat down.
4:2 Boaz chose ten of the village leaders and said, “Sit down here!” So they sat down.
4:3 Then Boaz said to the guardian, “Naomi, who has returned from the region of Moab, is selling the portion of land that belongs to our relative Elimelech.
4:4 So I am legally informing you: Acquire it before those sitting here and before the leaders of my people! If you want to exercise your right to redeem it, then do so. But if not, then tell me so I will know. For you possess the first option to redeem it; I am next in line after you.” He replied, “I will redeem it.”
4:5 Then Boaz said, “When you acquire the field from Naomi, you must also acquire Ruth the Moabite, the wife of our deceased relative, in order to preserve his family name by raising up a descendant who will inherit his property.”
4:6 The guardian said, “Then I am unable to redeem it, for I would ruin my own inheritance in that case. You may exercise my redemption option, for I am unable to redeem it.”
4:7 (Now this used to be the customary way to finalize a transaction involving redemption in Israel: A man would remove his sandal and give it to the other party. This was a legally binding act in Israel.)
4:8 So the guardian said to Boaz, “You may acquire it,” and he removed his sandal.
4:9 Then Boaz said to the leaders and all the people, “You are witnesses today that I have acquired from Naomi all that belonged to Elimelech, Kilion, and Mahlon.
4:10 I have also acquired Ruth the Moabite, the wife of Mahlon, as my wife to raise up a descendant who will inherit his property so the name of the deceased might not disappear from among his relatives and from his village. You are witnesses today.”
4:11 All the people who were at the gate and the elders replied, “We are witnesses. May the Lord make the woman who is entering your home like Rachel and Leah, both of whom built up the house of Israel! May you prosper in Ephrathah and become famous in Bethlehem.
4:12 May your family become like the family of Perez – whom Tamar bore to Judah – through the descendants the Lord gives you by this young woman.”
4:13 So Boaz married Ruth and had sexual relations with her. The Lord enabled her to conceive and she gave birth to a son.
4:14 The village women said to Naomi, “May the Lord be praised because he has not left you without a guardian today! May he become famous in Israel!
4:15 He will encourage you and provide for you when you are old, for your daughter-in-law, who loves you, has given him birth. She is better to you than seven sons!”
4:16 Naomi took the child and placed him on her lap; she became his caregiver.
4:17 The neighbor women named him, saying, “A son has been born to Naomi.” They named him Obed. Now he became the father of Jesse – David’s father! Epilogue: Obed in the Genealogy of David
4:18 These are the descendants of Perez: Perez was the father of Hezron,
4:19 Hezron was the father of Ram, Ram was the father of Amminadab,
4:20 Amminadab was the father of Nachshon, Nachshon was the father of Salmah,
4:21 Salmon was the father of Boaz, Boaz was the father of Obed,
4:22 Obed was the father of Jesse, and Jesse was the father of David.
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Historical setting and dynamics
The story is set in the period of the judges, when Israel had no king and family survival depended heavily on clan inheritance, land retention, and the public administration of justice at the town gate. The gate served as a recognized civic courtroom where elders witnessed binding transactions. Boaz’s proposal unites property redemption with the obligation to preserve Elimelech’s family line, and the nearer relative declines because accepting the duty would jeopardize his own inheritance. The narrative assumes Israel’s covenant structures for land, kinship responsibility, and public witness, while highlighting the ordinary social means by which the Lord advances his purposes.
Central idea
Boaz publicly and lawfully redeems Naomi’s family property and marries Ruth in order to preserve the deceased man’s name, and the Lord blesses that faithfulness with the birth of Obed. The chapter shows that God can turn Israel’s emptiness into fullness through ordinary covenant obedience, and it closes by revealing that this seemingly small event stands at the head of David’s line.
Context and flow
Ruth 4 resolves the tensions created by Naomi’s return in chapter 1, Ruth’s gleaning in chapter 2, and Boaz’s promise of protection and redemption in chapter 3. The first half of the chapter presents the legal transaction at the gate; the second half records the blessing, birth, and genealogy. The movement is from public settlement to private fulfillment to canonical significance, ending the book with David in view.
Exegetical analysis
The chapter is carefully structured around three scenes: legal negotiation (vv. 1-8), public confirmation and blessing (vv. 9-12), and fulfillment through birth and genealogy (vv. 13-22). Boaz first goes to the gate and assembles ten elders, showing procedural integrity and public accountability. The unnamed nearer relative initially agrees to redeem the land, but Boaz then adds the decisive detail: redeeming the land also entails taking Ruth so that the deceased man’s name may be raised up. The relative refuses, not from hostility but from concern that the obligation would disrupt his own inheritance. The narrator’s note about the sandal custom is descriptive, not a theological command, and it explains the legal finality of the transaction.
Boaz then publicly announces that he has acquired Naomi’s and Elimelech’s property and that he has taken Ruth as wife for the purpose of preserving the deceased’s line. This is important: the story does not present the marriage as a romantic private arrangement only, but as a covenantally accountable act tied to family continuity. The elders’ blessing invokes Rachel and Leah, who built up Israel, and Perez, whose line arose through Tamar. Those references place Ruth within the history of God’s providential use of women and surprising births to advance his covenant purposes, without flattening the differences between the cases. The blessing also looks forward to fertility, fame, and stability in Bethlehem/Ephrathah.
Verse 13 marks the theological climax: Boaz marries Ruth, the Lord enables conception, and a son is born. The narrator assigns ultimate causality to the Lord, even while preserving the reality of human marriage and union. The village women then interpret the birth for Naomi’s benefit: the child is a guardian/redeemer-like provision for her old age, and Ruth’s love is said to exceed the value of seven sons. Naomi’s taking the child into her lap and caring for him signals restored hope and the reversal of her emptiness. The women naming the child Obed and then identifying him as Jesse’s father, and Jesse as David’s father, makes the literary point explicit: this family event is not incidental but the humanly ordinary means by which God advances the Davidic line. The final genealogy reaches back to Perez and forward to David, anchoring the story in Judah’s line and Israel’s future kingship.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands in the Mosaic-era world of land inheritance, kin responsibility, and covenant faithfulness, but it also looks beyond the immediate crisis of Naomi’s family to the unfolding promise that God will preserve a people and a line through whom blessing will come. The preservation of land and seed echoes the Abrahamic promises of offspring and inheritance, while the closing genealogy connects the book to the Davidic covenant horizon. Ruth’s inclusion as a Moabite does not erase Israel’s distinct covenant identity; rather, it shows the Lord graciously incorporating a believing outsider into the redemptive line that leads to David and, ultimately, to the Messiah.
Theological significance
The passage displays God’s providence in ordinary legal and family life, showing that his redemptive purposes advance through public righteousness, covenant loyalty, and humble obedience. It highlights the seriousness of preserving family name, inheritance, and posterity within Israel’s covenant order. It also presents the Lord as the one who opens the womb and brings fruitfulness, reminding readers that human means are real but never ultimate. Ruth’s faithful love, Boaz’s integrity, and the elders’ blessing all testify that God delights to restore the afflicted and to weave unexpected people into his saving purposes.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
There is no direct prophecy in this unit, but the closing genealogy gives the passage clear canonical forward movement toward David and later messianic expectation. Boaz functions as a restrained providential pattern of a redeeming kinsman: he protects, purchases, and restores what another could not or would not redeem. That should be treated as typological patterning only in a limited sense, not as a free allegory. The sandal custom and the gate scene are legal-symbolic features of the narrative, not mysteries to be over-spiritualized.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The town gate reflects the ancient Near Eastern and Israelite setting of public adjudication and witnessed legal transactions. The concern for ‘name’ and inheritance is strongly clan-oriented: a man’s line and estate are socially inseparable. The blessing that Ruth may be like Rachel and Leah uses matriarchal memory to place her within Israel’s story, while the comparison to Perez recalls how God brought blessing through an unexpected and morally complicated family line. The statement that Naomi is better served by Ruth than by seven sons uses a conventional fullness formula to express complete restoration, not a literal arithmetic claim.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In its own context, the passage is about the preservation of Elimelech’s line and the emergence of David’s ancestry. Canonically, that makes the chapter a crucial bridge from the chaos of the judges to the hope of the monarchy. David becomes the benchmark for later messianic expectation, so the genealogy matters beyond Ruth itself. Boaz’s redeeming action prepares readers for the biblical theme of a redeeming king, but the text’s direct focus remains on God’s providential preservation of the Davidic line through Ruth and Boaz.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God’s people should pursue righteousness openly, not secretly, especially when property, family duty, and vulnerable persons are involved. The passage teaches that faithfulness in ordinary obligations can serve large redemptive ends that are not immediately visible. It also encourages hope for the barren and the emptied: the Lord is able to restore bitterness with joy. Pastors and teachers should resist sentimentalizing the story while still seeing that covenant love, public integrity, and divine providence belong together. The chapter also warns against treating redemption as merely a private spiritual idea; in Scripture it has concrete moral, social, and covenantal dimensions.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The main interpretive question is how to relate the redemption of land to the duty of raising up offspring for the deceased. The passage combines these concerns in a way that resembles, but is not identical to, levirate marriage; the text itself emphasizes custom, public witness, and family preservation without fully systematizing the legal mechanism. The sandal custom is also a point of explanation rather than theological weight.
Application boundary note
Readers should not flatten this passage into a direct template for all modern family or property arrangements. Its laws and customs belong to Israel’s covenant setting and should not be universalized without care. Nor should Boaz be turned into a simplistic allegory for Christ or every believer’s duty; the typology is real but restrained, and the passage’s first meaning is the lawful preservation of Naomi’s family line and the Davidic genealogy.
Key Hebrew terms
gaʾal
Gloss: redeem, act as kinsman-redeemer
This root governs the whole legal exchange. It shows that the issue is not merely a purchase but a family-duty act aimed at restoring property and protecting the deceased man’s name.
qanah
Gloss: acquire, obtain by purchase
The word frames the transaction as a lawful transfer of rights. It helps distinguish the economic side of redemption from the broader covenantal duty attached to it.
shem
Gloss: name, reputation, lineage
Here ‘name’ means more than reputation; it means continued family identity and posterity. Preserving the dead man’s name is a central concern of the passage.
shaʿar
Gloss: gate
The gate is the public legal setting where elders witness and ratify the transaction. It signals that Boaz acts openly, not privately or manipulatively.