Rut 3:9

9 Ed egli le disse: Chi sei? Ed ella disse: Io sono Rut, tua servente; stendi il lembo della tua veste sopra la tua servente; perciocchè tu sei quel che per consanguinità hai la ragione del riscatto sopra me.

Rut 3:9 Meaning and Commentary

Ruth 3:9

And he said, who art thou?
&c.] He spoke quick and short, as one displeased, or however surprised and frightened, just coming out of sleep, and in the night:

and she answered, I am Ruth thine handmaid;
that had gleaned in his fields with his maidens, and with whom he had conversed there, and knew her by name:

spread therefore thy skirt over thy handmaid;
which seems to account for the reason of her uncovering his feet, or turning up the skirt of his garment that was upon them; not through wantonness and immodesty, but to direct him, when opportunity offered, to spread it over her as a token of his taking her in marriage, and of her being under his care and protection, and of her subjection to him; so the Targum,

``let thy name be called upon me to take me for a wife,''

Whether the custom now used with the Jews at marriage, for a man to cast the skirt of his "talith", or outward garment, over the head of his spouse, and cover it, was in use so early, is questionable; and yet something like it seems to have been done, as this phrase intimates, and to which there is an allusion in ( Ezekiel 16:8 ) . So Jarchi,

``spread the skirt of thy garments to cover me with thy talith, and this is expressive of marriage;''

and Aben Ezra says, it intimates taking her to him for wife; though as the word signifies a wing, the allusion may be to the wings of birds spread over their young, to cherish and protect them, which are acts to be done by a man to his wife:

for thou art a near kinsman;
as she had been informed by Naomi, to whom the right of redemption of her husband's estate belonged, and in whom it lay to marry her, and raise up seed to his kinsman, her former husband.

Rut 3:9 In-Context

7 E Booz mangiò, e bevve, ed ebbe il cuore allegro; e poi se ne venne a giacere da un capo della bica. E Rut venne pianamente, e lo scoperse da’ piedi, e vi si pose a giacere.
8 E in su la mezza notte quell’uomo si spaventò, e si riscosse tutto; ed ecco, una donna gli era coricata a’ piedi.
9 Ed egli le disse: Chi sei? Ed ella disse: Io sono Rut, tua servente; stendi il lembo della tua veste sopra la tua servente; perciocchè tu sei quel che per consanguinità hai la ragione del riscatto sopra me.
10 Ed egli le disse: Benedetta sii tu appo il Signore, figliuola mia; questa tua ultima benignità, la quale tu hai usata, è migliore della primiera, non essendo andata dietro a’ giovani, poveri o ricchi.
11 Ora dunque, figliuola mia, non temere; io ti farò tutto ciò che tu mi dici; perciocchè tutta la porta del mio popolo sa che tu sei donna di valore.
The Giovanni Diodati Bible is in the public domain.