Opening: Famine drives an Israelite family into Moab, where death strips Naomi of husband and sons, leaving her and her daughter-in-law Ruth bereft and foreign. Ruth chooses to return to Israel with Naomi, binding herself by covenant loyalty to a woman with nothing, establishing the central question: how does hesed survive when all visible provision has died?
Middle: Ruth enters the harvest fields of Boaz and finds favor through her faithful, humble labor; Naomi begins to see God's providence moving beneath the surface and recognizes Boaz as a kinsman-redeemer who could restore their family. The tension builds between what Ruth and Naomi need (redemption, security, family restoration) and whether Boaz will act on His growing affection and His legal obligation.
Pivot: Naomi strategically positions Ruth at Boaz's feet on the threshing floor, and Ruth makes a direct appeal for redemption, shifting from passive gleaning to active covenant claim. Boaz responds with honor and commitment, yet reveals a barrier: another kinsman stands ahead of Him in the line of redemption.
Climax: At the gate, Boaz publicly confronts the nearer kinsman with the full weight of the redemption: the right to buy Naomi's land comes inseparably bound to the obligation to marry Ruth and raise up a son for the dead. The nearer kinsman refuses, unable to reconcile the cost with His own interests, and Boaz steps forward to take both the land and the bride, declaring before all Israel His intention to preserve the family line.
Resolution: Ruth and Boaz marry and conceive a son; the women of Bethlehem celebrate Naomi's restoration, naming the child Obed and recognizing Him as her redeemer. The genealogy that follows reveals this ordinary act of hesed as the means by which God preserves the line of David and, ultimately, the line of Christ, proving that covenant loyalty in obscurity shapes the course of redemptive history.