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Ruth 3:1–18

The Redemption Appeal at the Threshing Floor

The harvest is ending. Ruth has gleaned through the barley and wheat seasons under Boaz's protection, returning each evening to Naomi with food and faithfulness. But the harvest does not last forever, and when it ends, the provision it offered will end with it. Naomi sees this clearly. More than that, Naomi sees what Ruth, occupied with daily labor, may not have had time to consider: Boaz is a kinsman-redeemer, he has shown extraordinary kindness, and the harvest season is nearly over. If something is to happen, it needs to happen now.

What Naomi proposes is bold, and it requires understanding the cultural setting to read it correctly. A threshing floor in the ancient Near East was not only an agricultural workspace — it was a public, communal site where grain was threshed, winnowed, and stored, and where workers often slept overnight to guard the harvest. After the winnowing was done and the grain was stored, the men who had worked the field would sleep there. Naomi instructs Ruth to approach Boaz at night, when he lies down, uncover his feet, and lie there. When he wakes and asks who is there, she is to tell him who she is.

The passage has been read in different ways. The phrase "uncover his feet" may be a euphemism, or it may describe a literal, symbolic gesture — uncovering the feet of a sleeping person was a recognized form of appeal in some ancient contexts, signaling vulnerability and request. What is clear is that Naomi's plan is an appeal for redemption, not a proposal for immorality. Ruth will identify herself and ask Boaz to act as kinsman-redeemer. The entire chapter's resolution — Boaz's honorable response, his immediate concern for Ruth's reputation, his reference to the complications of legal procedure — all point to a scene that is serious, legal, and covenantal. We note this because the threshing floor scene is sometimes read with a kind of nervous embarrassment, as though readers need to look away from it. But the text does not treat it that way, and neither should we. What Ruth does here is risky — she is a Moabite woman making a bold nighttime appeal to a man of standing — but what she asks for is legitimate and the way she asks is deliberate.

Main Highlights

  • Naomi devises a bold plan for Ruth to appeal to Boaz at the threshing floor as a formal request for covenant redemption, not a romantic proposition.
  • Ruth asks Boaz to "spread his wings" over her — the same word (*kenap*) Boaz used when he prayed God's wings would cover her, holding him to his own prayer.
  • Boaz honors the request but reveals a legal complication: a closer kinsman-redeemer exists and must be given first right to act.
  • Boaz sends Ruth home with six measures of barley and a sworn oath — "As the LORD lives, I will redeem you" — that Naomi trusts completely.

Naomi's Plan and Ruth's Faithfulness

Naomi puts it plainly:

"Is not Boaz our relative, with whose young women you were? See, he is winnowing barley tonight at the threshing floor. Wash therefore and anoint yourself, and put on your cloak and go down to the threshing floor, but do not make yourself known to the man until he has finished eating and drinking. But when he lies down, observe the place where he lies. Then go and uncover his feet and lie down, and he will tell you what to do."Ruth 3:2–4 (ESV)

Ruth's answer is the same answer she has given since the road from Moab: "All that you say I will do."Ruth 3:5 (ESV). She has bound herself to Naomi, and she acts on that binding with consistent steadiness. She goes to the threshing floor, waits until Boaz has eaten and drunk and his heart is merry, and watches where he lies down. Then, at midnight, she comes quietly, uncovers his feet, and lies down.

At midnight Boaz startles awake and turns and sees a woman lying at his feet. "Who are you?"Ruth 3:9 (ESV). And Ruth answers in words that carry the legal weight Naomi intended:

"I am Ruth, your servant. Spread your wings over your servant, for you are a redeemer."Ruth 3:9 (ESV)

The word for "wings" here is kenap again — the same word Boaz used when he prayed that the LORD would cover Ruth under His wings. Ruth is now asking Boaz to do what he prayed for: to be the human instrument of the sheltering he invoked. And she uses the legal term plainly: you are a go'el, a kinsman-redeemer. This is not seduction — it is a formal appeal for covenant protection. What strikes us is the symmetry: Boaz blessed her and prayed that God's wings would cover her; now Ruth comes and asks Boaz to be those wings. She heard his prayer and she is holding him to it. There is something almost startling about that boldness.


Boaz's Response: Honor and Complication

What Boaz says in response is one of the more revealing speeches in the book:

"May you be blessed by the LORD, my daughter. You have made this last kindness greater than the first, in that you have not gone after young men, whether poor or rich."Ruth 3:10 (ESV)

Boaz is aware that Ruth could have pursued younger men — she is a young woman, a widow but still marriageable, and she could have sought her own interests rather than Naomi's. Instead she has come to him: the kinsman-redeemer, the man positioned by family and law to restore what Elimelech's family has lost. Her choice, Boaz says, is hesed — covenant faithfulness — greater than the hesed she showed in returning to Bethlehem with Naomi. She has chosen what is right for the family over what might have been easier or more immediately attractive. We find this worth sitting with: each act of faithfulness in this story is named as greater than the one before. Covenant loyalty keeps building on itself, each person giving more than the situation strictly required.

He reassures her: "And now, my daughter, do not fear. I will do for you all that you ask, for all my fellow townsmen know that you are a worthy woman."Ruth 3:11 (ESV). The word translated "worthy" — hayil in Hebrew — is the same word used to describe Boaz himself in Ruth 2:1. He is a man of hayil — valor, substance, integrity. She is a woman of hayil. The word forms a bond between them before any legal process begins.

But then Boaz reveals the complication: "And now it is true that I am a redeemer. Yet there is a redeemer nearer than I."Ruth 3:12 (ESV). There is a closer kinsman — a man with a stronger legal claim to the role of redeemer. If that man is willing to act, Boaz cannot step ahead of him. But if the nearer redeemer declines, Boaz pledges — with an oath — that he will act. "As the LORD lives, I will redeem you."Ruth 3:13 (ESV). The oath is serious. It binds him before God to follow through. He is not stalling or hedging — he is being scrupulous about the legal order, which is precisely what makes him trustworthy. A man who will not cut corners on legal process for his own benefit is exactly the kind of man whose oath you can rely on.


The Grain and the Return

Ruth lies at his feet until the morning, then rises before it is light enough for anyone to recognize anyone — Boaz is careful about her reputation. He tells her not to let it be known that a woman came to the threshing floor. Before she goes, he pours six measures of barley into her cloak. She returns to Naomi with grain again.

When she arrives, Naomi asks: "How did you fare, my daughter?"Ruth 3:16 (ESV). Ruth tells her everything. Naomi sees the grain and hears the story and draws a conclusion: "Wait, my daughter, until you learn how the matter turns out, for the man will not rest but will settle the matter today."Ruth 3:18 (ESV). Boaz is a man who does what he says. He swore an oath. He sent Ruth home with provision. He will act quickly.

The chapter closes on Naomi's confidence in Boaz's character. The plan was audacious; the outcome is in his hands. But Naomi knows something about the kind of man Boaz is. He will not let this sit. There is something in this ending that we find quietly moving — two women, one old and one foreign, waiting on the integrity of a man who has given them every reason to trust him. Faith, here, looks like waiting in the morning light with a cloak full of grain and a promise that has been sworn before God.


Last updated: March 3, 2026.

Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.