Ruth Explained: No Bread in Bethlehem | Ruth 1 Bible Study on Naomi, Moab & Pentecost
Ruth Explained: No Bread in Bethlehem is a Ruth 1 Bible study about Naomi, Ruth, Moab, Bethlehem, famine, and the surprising way God brings provision through the outsider.
Most Bible studies on Ruth begin with the beautiful words, “Where you go, I will go.” And they are beautiful. But Ruth 1 begins somewhere else: with a famine in Bethlehem, the House of Bread.
Why does the House of Bread have no bread?
In this episode of Little Women, we look at Ruth not as a simple romance story, but as a deeply theological story about famine, exile, Naomi’s grief, Ruth’s loyalty, Moab, belonging, and the covenant line that leads to David and ultimately to Jesus.
Naomi leaves Bethlehem empty. Ruth returns with her. Orpah walks away. And on that road between Moab and Bethlehem, the Bible asks a question most of us miss: what happens when the people of God have to leave the place of provision to find the very person God will use to restore it?
This Ruth Bible study connects Ruth 1 with Genesis 38, Rahab, Tamar, Matthew 1, Deuteronomy 23, Deuteronomy 26, Shavuot, and Pentecost. Ruth is not a side character in redemption. Ruth the Moabite becomes part of the line of David. The foreigner is not a footnote. The foreigner is part of the promise.
In this episode, we explore:
• Why Bethlehem being called the “House of Bread” matters • Why the famine in Ruth 1 is more than background information • Why Naomi’s grief matters theologically • Why Ruth’s loyalty is bigger than a wedding verse • What Moab represents in the Old Testament • How Ruth connects to Tamar, Rahab, Boaz, David, and Jesus • Why Ruth is traditionally read during Shavuot • How Ruth prepares us for Pentecost and Acts 2 • Why the outsider keeps showing up at the center of God’s story
This is Week 4 of the Little Women Bible study series, following Hagar, Tamar, and Rahab. Each week traces the women Scripture places in the story of redemption, especially the women too often treated as background, scandal, or exception.
But Scripture does not treat them as disposable.
Hagar names God in the wilderness. Tamar forces Judah to tell the truth. Rahab gives Israel a sermon from inside Jericho. Ruth becomes bread for the House of Bread.
And when we arrive at Pentecost, we discover the Spirit was not starting something small and making it wide. God had been writing the outsider into the feast all along.
If this Bible study helped you see Ruth, Naomi, Bethlehem, Moab, Shavuot, Pentecost, or the genealogy of Jesus in a new way, throw that old like in the offering plate. And if you want to keep walking with us through Scripture, story, grace, and the gospel for weary people, tithe your subscribe so you’ll know when we’re meeting again.
Be blessed.
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