We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
A book of the Old Testament that tells the story of Ruth who was not an Israelite but who married an Israelite and who stayed with her mother-in-law Naomi after her husband died.
But what is there necessary to our salvation in the BookofRuth?
2
But the BookofRuth was not written mainly to tell us that fact.
3
Read the BookofRuth, and see what field-work may be, and ought to be.
4
And so ends the BookofRuth.
5
The BookofRuth II.
6
See the BookofRuth.
7
The special verse in the BookofRuth was sought out by Bathsheba, and the sublime words met her eye.
8
You get a radio man all hopped up with vitamins, skimming through the BookofRuth's domestic disasters, and the result is another soap-opera.
9
Consider this great, romantic story in the Old Testament's BookofRuth: Ruth was an impoverished foreigner who had followed her mother-in-law Naomi to Israel.
10
The bookofRuth was probably at this time added to the other historical books.
11
I request Mr. Everett to have the goodness to turn to the bookofRuth ch i.
12
Why was the bookofRuth preserved?
13
Goethe has characterized the bookofRuth as the loveliest little idyll that tradition has transmitted to us.
14
I should like to see a translation of it in poetical prose like the bookofRuth or Job.'
15
The next earliest MS., containing the BooksofRuth, Kings, Esdras, Esther, and the Maccabees (1 D 2), is of the thirteenth century.