Introduction
We will be drawing from this song the understanding that there are two
main characters- king Solomon and the Shulamite. There are many multitudes of
commentators who make this book all
symbolism and allegory. But they are so contradictory and incoherent and
arbitrary in their explanations of the symbols and types until the whole
reading thereof becomes vanity and vexation of spirit. We should try to follow
a simple rule that ‘if it isn’t there then don’t find it’. There are no doubt
applications to our relationship with Jesus our Saviour as the husband of the
bride (Eph.5:22-33). Love points back to its source as one who follows a turbid
stream to its pure crystalline fount. For this cause God made male and female.
Some interpreters of the book see
three main characters, in addition to the king and the woman they see a
shepherd lover of the woman. This view sees Solomon as trying to take the woman
to be another of his many wives and seeking to entice her away from her beloved
shepherd. She endures the temptation and finally marries her shepherd lover at
the last. There are a few reasons we will list for rejecting this approach.
The title and first verse of the book tell us
that this is the Song of Songs and that it is Solomon’s. As explained in the
opening comments a song is from a heart of joy. What joy is there in Solomon’s
heart about playing the fool and being rejected by the most beautiful woman he
has ever encountered that would inspire a song? That he would call this the
song of all songs? The proponents of that view also claim Solomon was never a
shepherd and so he could not be spoken of as such in the song. Also alluded to
in the comments are how Solomon was well acquainted with husbandry and
shepherding (Ecc.1-2). And actually there was not much known at that time that
Solomon was not aware of and of great understanding in (Ecc.1:10-13, 16, 1
Ki.10:1-13, 2 Chr.9:1-12).
They also point out that he is a poor
representation of a good husband having had so many wives himself (1
Ki.11:1-6). This is true. And this is a tragedy in scripture as well as a
warning to us all. But Solomon also was a figure of Jesus Christ as the wise
king of Israel and builder of the temple and son of David (2 Sam.7:12-16, 1
Chr. 17:11-14, Heb.1:5). He was an
author of scripture and was greatly exalted by God.
The internal application of the view that
there are three main characters leads to incoherence. For example Solomon in
chapter 3 is espoused. From that point of introduction the word spouse is used
in reference to the woman (4:8-12, 5:1). Another difficulty is that he has very
intimate knowledge of her body (ch.4 & 7) after the day of his espousal.
The whole story becomes a bit silly where Solomon takes the woman against her
will; her being already espoused to the shepherd, and tried to entice her while
her shepherd lover sneaks around trying to see her secretly and finally Solomon
lets her go or returns her to her mother’s house. Why forcibly take her and not
keep her (1 Sam. 8:11-13)? Why not respect her commitment to her shepherd lover at first and
honor it at the end? This also creates confusion in chapter 8 where Solomon is
uttering a proverb (v6-7) and appears to be present with her at her mother’s
house (v12) while she comes from the wilderness leaning upon her beloved with
accompaniment by the daughters of Jerusalem- why is this scene even occurring?
Plus there are subtle themes in 8:3 with 2:6-7, 8:4-5 with 3:5-6, also 8:2 and
3:4, 8:13 with 1:7, 8:13-14 with 2:14, 17 that tie the cords more securely that
this is Solomon and the Shulamite.
The reality is that this book is about first
love. There are a lot of metaphors in this book that must be examined very
closely- this is by design (Prv.2:4-5, 25:2). The descriptions are mostly not visual in likeness but emotional and
inspiring in likeness. The lewd baser sort of fellow will not receive the glory
shrouded in the metaphors used here. The modern reader is stultified because of
the lust of the eyes through the media and the visual stimuli our culture is
intoxicated with. If we do not know ourselves in the light of God’s word and we
do not think beyond what appeals to our baser physical gratifications we will
fail in understanding. For the reader to receive a spiritual blessing from this book they must abandon their carnal
mind and have a reverence before the Holy One of Israel. Purge yourselves from
all filthiness of the flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of God.
Why does God devote the song of songs to the
subject of first love? The question goes much deeper and really begs to be
asked why he created male and female- why a mother
and father. The answer will bring the
Christian into a great mystery. It will involve seeing the intricate dance, a
tapestry woven between God’s mercy and truth, his
goodness and severity, his beauty and strength, his law and grace, his nurture
and admonition, his righteousness and peace
kissing each other (Ps.85:10). He also made every man and woman
with a soul and spirit. The crescendo of
this music; the climax of this dance is the death and resurrection of Jesus
Christ- in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge; in whom
dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily.
May we not through abundance of
iniquity fall from our first love (Rv.2:4-5, Mt.24:12).
The Song of Songs
1:1 The song of songs, which is
Solomon's.
Solomon wrote 3000 proverbs and 1005 songs (1Ki 4:32). But this was
his song of songs. This is the song
of songs according to the author of scripture – the Holy Ghost (2T 3:16, 2P
1:20-21), just as we have the heaven of heavens (Dt 10:14), the holy of holies
or more properly the holiest of all
(Heb 9:3) wherein dwellest the King of kings and Lord of Lords (Rv 19:16). This
greatest of songs is a song of Loves (Ps. 45:1), a song like unto the
well-beloved’s song touching his vineyard (Is 5:1), a song about a thing too
wonderful, a sublime mystery of the way of a man with a maid (Prv 30:19, Eph.
5:32), and his first love. A song is an expression of one’s joy and gladness
(Zeph.3:17, Jam.5:13). This is Solomon’s
song of songs; therefore he is her beloved and she is his spouse; this is his
song. Why would he sing (as some affirm) the song of all songs about another’s
love from which he was scornfully turned away?
2 Let
him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth: for thy love is better than wine.
Can there be anything stronger than love or
richer than love (Song 8:6-7)? Can there be anything more intoxicating or more
inflaming than love? Men who follow strong drink rise up early, they continue
until night til wine inflame them (Isa 5:11). But the young maid declares that
‘his love is better than wine’. It causes her to rise up early to seek him, to
go out at night to pursue her beloved (3:1-2, 5:6-8). Wine puts men into a
slumber from which they must awake (Gen. 9:24, 1Sam. 25:36-7), wine cheereth
the heart of man (Jdg. 9:13, 2Sam. 13:28, Est. 1:10), it maketh the mighty
shout (Zec. 10:7, Ps. 78:65), it numbs man to pain (Prv. 23:35), it drives man
to madness (Jer. 25:15-16), to nakedness (Gen.9:21, Hab. 2:15), it overcomes
(Isa 28:1, Jer. 23:9), it swallows up (Isa. 28:7), it seizes the heart (Hos.
4:11).
Love is a force, a mystery
sublime
And just a taste consumes all our
time
A force that doth ravish like the
mightiest streams
It filleth our hearts and
stealeth our dreams
And were one to tarry in its
torrents and flow
They’d be swept away where’er it
doth go
Man in his weakness cannot
control
His heart and his mind when love
takes his soul
But his love is better, more powerful, more
inflaming, more resistant to pain, more maddening. Oh for him to kiss me with
the kisses of his mouth. Not just his lips (Prv. 24:26), but his mouth, the
roof of his mouth, the smell of his breath, to inhale and breathe his breath
(Song 7:8-9). Let him kiss me. She is
not assertive of her demands or of her desires upon him, but receiving his
love, overtaken by him, of letting him kiss her. She wants him to desire her
(4:16), she wants to be filled with him; “until he please” (2:5).
Let me be his beloved.
To love is to seek to make one more equal to
yourself (Mt.19:5-6), so her desire towards him is to see eye to eye
(Isa.52:8), her mouth upon his, her heart pressed firmly against his, to be one
body, one heart, one mind, one spirit (covenant of marriage Mal.2:14-5) because
she loves him as her own soul (1 sam.18:1).
3 Because
of the savour of thy good ointments thy name is as ointment poured forth,
therefore do the virgins love thee.
Solomon is renowned for his wisdom (1Ki.
10:1), so much that “there came of all people to hear the wisdom of Solomon, from
all kings of the earth” and “his
fame was in all nations round about” (1
Ki.4:31, 34). Even the queen of the south (Mt. 12:42) came from the uttermost
parts of the earth to hear him and prove him with hard questions. But she was
so taken by his wisdom and glory that she declared “the half was not told me”
(1Ki. 10:7). Never was there such a king in Israel (1Ki. 3:13). The queen of Sheba noted of Solomon’s glory:
“happy are these thy servants, which stand continually before thee and that
hear thy wisdom” (1Ki. 10:8). So also was Solomon’s fame in Israel, so that
they feared him in judgment (1Ki. 3:28). His works were renowned, so noted the
Shulamite “thy name is as ointment poured forth”. To hear his name spoken was
as a beautiful fragrance, it thrilled the senses. The virgins loved him; no
doubt they desired to dwell in his courts to serve him, to be among those who
“stand continually before” him. No doubt the virgins desired to serve the king
(1Sam. 9:13), just to be near him, just to have him know you by name.
4 Draw me, we will run after thee: the king hath brought me into his
chambers: we will be glad and rejoice in thee, we will remember thy love more
than wine: the upright love thee.
“Draw me”, she beseeches him, as with cords of
a man, with bonds of love (Hos. 11:4) and allure her, speak comfortably to her
(Hos. 2:14). ‘We will run after thee, we will remember thy love more than
wine’. She and the virgins long to follow Solomon, to be near him, to hear his
wisdom and see his glory and works. Her heart is already taken by Solomon, but
she has not yet been given the things for purification (Est. 2:3, 9) to stand
in his courts as queen. But she has been brought into his chambers before his
table (v.12) from working in the fields with the flocks and in the vineyards.
Solomon had invested in great works, planting vineyards (8:12) and had great
possessions of great and small cattle (Eccl. 2:1-8) and it was likely as
Solomon involved himself in these ventures that their paths crossed. But his
glories were well thought of, well spoken of; not by sinners but by the
righteous; the upright love thee –v. 4.
5-6 I am black, but comely, O ye daughters of Jerusalem, as the tents of
Kedar, as the curtains of Solomon. Look not upon me, because I am black,
because the sun hath looked upon me: my mother's children were angry with me;
they made me the keeper of the vineyards; but mine own vineyard have I not
kept.
Black in scripture represents mourning
(Gen.37:34, Est.4:1), sadness (Psa.30:11) painful astonishment (Lam.5:10,
Jer.8:21, Joel 2:6). Those repenting are said to repent in sackcloth (Neh.9:1,
Matt.11:21) which is black (Rev.6:12, Isa.50:3) as coal (Lam.4:8). The tents of
Kedar would be associated with woe and blackness here (Psa.120:5). And so the
Shulamite declares she is black as the tents of Kedar. She is woeful and sad
from the severe treatment from her family; they are angry with her. She does
not appear to have a father (1:6, 3:4, 8:2) and probably is mistreated by her
older brothers (6:9- she doesn’t appear to have any sisters). Perhaps they were
envious of her beauty and attention (6:13) as Joseph of old (Gen.37:3-4)- she
was favored over them (6:9). She declares that she is comely as the curtains of
Solomon. But they force her to work in their vineyards to the neglect of her
own vineyard. She works in the heat of the sun as it beats upon her head adding
sorrow to her anguish and blackness. This shames her before the daughters of
Jerusalem who doubtless wore soft raiment (Matt.11:8), and so she compels them
not to look upon her for she perceives her appearance as unequal to theirs. But
she has adorned herself with what she could to appear before the king (1:10).
There is some pride here within her heart that she does not see as a little fox
that will need to be addressed in time (2:14-15).
7-8
Tell me, O thou whom my soul loveth, where thou feedest, where thou
makest thy flock to rest at noon: for why should I be as one that turneth aside
by the flocks of thy companions? If thou know not, O thou fairest among women,
go thy way forth by the footsteps of the flock, and feed thy kids beside the
shepherds' tents.
Solomon has brought her into his chambers
apparently to enter into a covenant with her of espousal or betrothal. For she
does not seem to be personally familiar with Solomon and his works at this point,
yet she seems to be anticipating marriage (v13 which is honorable in all and
the bed undefiled Heb.13:4) saying “our bed is green” (v 16). But with this in
view it doesn’t seem comely to her now not be with the one whom her soul
loveth. Why should she be turned aside by his companions as they tend to their
flocks? Why should she be caught up with his servants? She longs to be with
him; ‘tell me where thou art my beloved, where wilt thou be?’ ‘For whither thou goest, I will go’. Solomon smitten by her
tells her all his heart.
9 I have compared thee, O my love,
to a company of horses in Pharaoh's chariots.
God has embodied great strength (Ps.33:17) and
glory in the horse, declaring unto Job “Hast
thou given the horse strength?
hast thou clothed his neck with thunder?” (39:19). The
‘thunder of his power’ and strength made it highly valued for the day of battle
(Prv.21:31, Job 39:19-25). Men could not contend with horses (Jer.12:5) and
their great strength would strike through their hearts with awe and fear
(Dt.20:1). The horses bred for Pharaohs chariots would have been the standard
of the glory of strength. To see a company of 10 horses (1 Ki.4:26, 2 Chr.9:25)
pulling one of Pharaohs chariots would have demanded one’s full attention to
its awe inspiring glory. Seeing this beautiful maid affected Solomon in this
manner. Never had beauty ravished his heart in this way (Song 4:9) he could not
contend with her comeliness, he could not resist the power of her beauty.
Indeed his heart was weakened to behold her countenance.
10-11 Thy cheeks are comely with rows
of jewels, thy neck with chains of gold.
We will make thee borders of gold with studs of silver.
She having adorned herself to appear in his
presence with her humble jewels and gold would soon be decked with ornaments
and clothed with broidered works and clothing of wrought gold; with silver and
gold and raiment of fine linen fitting for those who freely reign in the palace
of the greatest of kings. “We will make thee”, her beauty would be perfected
through his comeliness which he would put upon her. (Ezk.16:10-14, Psa.45:13)
As Esther in the palace of Shushan (Ch.2) the Shulamite would accomplish the
days of purification with sweet odours, perfumed with all the powders of the
merchants.
12-14 While the king sitteth at his
table, my spikenard sendeth forth the smell thereof. A bundle
of myrrh is my well-beloved unto me; he shall lie all night betwixt my breasts. My
beloved is unto me as a cluster of camphire in the vineyards of Engedi.
She knew his heart was towards her now. For
even as he sat in the full provisions of his table (1 Ki.4:22), in the glories
of his chambers they were dimmed in her presence. The fragrance of her
beautiful countenance was all he could perceive, all he could sense, all that
mattered. She knew he would be all for her soon, “he shall lie all night
betwixt my breasts”; pressed as close to her heart as she could, to fill her
heart with his presence; her ‘well-beloved’,
as if she could absorb his very soul into her own, to be one soul, one spirit,
one body. He would be to her as a bundle
of the most principal spices (Ex.30:23) and perfumes; as pure myrrh, as a cluster of camphire, as though she were
in the pleasant vineyards of Engedi.
15 Behold, thou art fair, my love;
behold, thou art fair; thou hast doves' eyes.
From the abundance of her filling his heart
Solomon pours out his fascination for her.
His heart is full ‘as wine which hath no vent; it is ready to burst’. He is
entranced by her gaze, he is committed to have her; “my love”. The eye is the light of the body and the heart directs
the eyes to let into the body light or darkness (Mt.6:22-3, Job 31:1, Mk.7:22).
The LORD God, the Holy One is said to be of “purer eyes than to behold evil,
and canst not look on iniquity” (Hab.1:13). Doves are harmless and gentle birds
(Mt.10:16). Her eyes portray this innocence; that there is no harm, nothing
offensive or unseemly in her eyes. She is childlike in her humble and innocent
gaze. He knew he could tell her all his heart without shame or fear of
condemnation. His heart was safe with her.
16-17 Behold, thou art fair, my
beloved, yea, pleasant: also our bed is green. The beams of our house are
cedar, and our rafters of fir.
She is assured now of his
commitment to marry her; ‘my
beloved…our bed…our house…our rafters’. She sees him in the same manner as he
sees her, looking upon his countenance declaring ‘thou art fair’. He is
beautiful to her and she is overflowing with anticipation of being with him. Our bed is green. ‘Green’
speaks of flourishing (Psa.37:35, 52:8) newly budding with anticipation and
life (Song.2:13, Jer.11:16, Hos.14:8). The beams of our house are cedar. Cedar
was valuable and fragrant wood for building. It was exceedingly strong (Job
40:17, Psa.29:5, Zech.11:2). The rafters of choice fir trees, would beautify
the place of their dwelling; their lives together would be glorious
(Isa.60:13).
2:1 I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the
valleys.
Unlike Solomon we see the
Shulamite describing and referring to herself in various ways in the song
(1:5-6, 2:16, 6:3, 7:10, 8:10). She describes herself here as the rose of
Sharon and the lily of the valleys (she is the lily again in v2). It isn’t that
she is engaging in vanity, but describing the effect that his love and
affection have upon her. She is as a desert blossoming abundantly after streams
of water break out in dry places and pools fill up the parched ground. His love
for her has caused her heart to spring forth in glory; even the excellency of
Sharon.
2 As the lily among thorns, so is
my love among the daughters.
Solomon
compared her to a lily, a flower so admired for beauty that the temple of God
was adorned with its likeness (1 Ki. 7:19, 22, 26). But she was as a lily among
thorns. Thorns were always accursed from their beginning (Gen.3:18). They
choked the fruitful seed (Matt.13:22, Mk.4:7) neither were any fruits grown
therein (Lk.6:44). The wicked are compared to thorns all through scripture
(Heb.6:8, Num.33:55, Josh.23:13, Jdg.2:3) even the messenger of Satan (2
Cor.12:7). Solomon from the beginning of his reign was confronted with the
vilest of women (1 K.3:16-27), but the Shulamite's beauty and innocence was to
be contrasted as the glorious lily amidst wicked thorns. How good and how
pleasant was she in such stark contrast to so many women without any
discretion.
3 As the apple tree among the trees
of the wood, so is my beloved among the sons. I sat down under his shadow with
great delight, and his fruit was sweet to my taste.
Dt. 20:19-
“thou shalt not destroy the trees thereof by forcing an axe against them: for
thou mayest eat of them, and thou shalt not cut them down (for the tree of the
field is man's life)” The fruit tree is man’s life, it is valued above all
trees of the field or the wood. The apple tree compared to the trees of the
wood with its bright fruits was more pleasant to the eyes, and exceedingly
desirous for sweetness of taste. All of these trees of the forest everywhere
growing exceedingly yet here was only one yielding fruit that she longed for.
She was comforted from the heat of the sun from the harshness of all others in
the shadow (Ps.91:1) of his blessings fully delighted with his graces. Among
all others he was the apple of her eye and his pleasant fruits satisfied all
her desires. He was comforting and safe as the trees under which she was
brought up from a child (8:5).
4 He brought me to the banqueting
house, and his banner over me was love.
When love is
found it so rejoices the heart that the desire is strong to tell others so they
will rejoice with you (Lk.15:3-32). Solomon brought her to honor and to rejoice
with his friends at his banqueting house to celebrate. As one that hath found
great treasure Solomon has forgotten all of his riches because of her. His love
for her was lifted up and displayed as a banner for all to see (Psa.60:4); his
pearl of great price.
5 Stay me with flagons, comfort me
with apples: for I am sick of love.
This public
display and declaration of his love for her has overwhelmed her heart. She is
love sick- she has been so filled and overtaken with his love that she is faint
(Isa.1:5, Dan.8:27) and full of sighing (Jer.45:3, Lam.1:22) her heart is
melted (Isa.13:7). She is weakened physically as if from a lack of food,
(Gen.25:29-30, Mt.15:32) without strength, (Ezk.34:16) her knees as weak as
water (Ezk.21:7). She is in a maddened state, almost beside herself. Wanting to
be relieved from her vulnerable state; ‘stay me…comfort me’. But yet with
apples and flagons; with his fruit (v3) and flagons of his wine (1:2, Hos.3:1,
2 Sam.6:19). As though she wants to be relieved from his overwhelming adoration
which is weakening her physically, but yet she wants to continue tasting of his
precious fruits for they have captured her whole heart. How can she leave? There
is no where else but where he is.
6-7 His left hand is under my head,
and his right hand doth embrace me. I charge you, O ye
daughters of Jerusalem, by the roes, and by the hinds of the field, that ye
stir not up, nor awake my love, till he please.
Solomon
embraces the Shulamite with the hand of his strength (Ps.20:6) he pulls her
close to his heart and holds her head close. She charges the daughters as
exercising herself in his authority that they do not disturb her love but keep
silence. She is sick with love but does not want it to be stirred or awakened
(Psa.35:22-3) from this entrancement until Solomon is content, until he please (v5). The roebuck
(Dt.14:5) or deer and the hinds are loving and pleasant (Prv.5:19) but they are
also very swift (1 Chr.12:8) and hasty (8:14, Isa.35:6). When one sees a herd
of deer grazing it is very pleasant and appealing to watch, to draw close to.
Yet with any disturbance that startles them they quickly depart in haste and
are gone. Every second she is there is rich with love and pleasantness, and so
she charges them not to disturb this moment.
8-9 The voice of my beloved! behold,
he cometh leaping upon the mountains, skipping upon the hills. My beloved is
like a roe or a young hart: behold, he standeth behind our wall, he looketh forth
at the windows, shewing himself through the lattice.
We come to
another scene where the time of Solomon’s visitation with his love is set at
night (v17) at her chambers which he hath prepared for her (‘our’v9) during
their betrothal and her purification (as 1 Kin.7:8). The Shulamite is thrilled
to hear him calling to her. She can hear the excitement in his voice to meet
with her; he comes in great joy leaping and skipping (Jer.48:27, Lk.1:44, 6:23)
to meet with her alone. As though the mountains and hills break forth into
singing before him (Isa.55:12) as he rides upon the high places of the earth
(Dt.32:13). Solomon is visiting her at night as the dew when it falls
(Num.11:9), as the small
rain upon the tender herb (Dt.32:2) he desires to nurture their relationship;
to provide the dew of youth to the wife of his youth (Ps.110:3, Prv.5:18). His
coming at night takes her unawares.
10-13 My beloved spake, and said unto
me, Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away. For, lo, the
winter is past, the rain is over and gone;
The flowers appear on the earth; the time of the singing of
birds is come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in our land; The fig tree
putteth forth her green figs, and the vines with the tender grape give a good
smell. Arise, my love, my fair one, and come away.
His words
distill as the dew and drop as the rain upon her heart. He calls her to forsake
all cares and come away with him; to trust him, to follow him. The winter gives
way to the dawning of spring, and Solomon desires to take his love and
experience the beauties of their land with her. But there is hesitancy with
her. She is not prepared. Solomon in his wisdom recognizes some pride in her
heart that must be dealt with, for it will certainly erode their love over time
as the little foxes who steal all the fruit.
14-15 O my dove, that art in the clefts
of the rock, in the secret places of the stairs, let me see thy countenance,
let me hear thy voice; for sweet is thy voice, and thy countenance is comely.
Take us the foxes, the little foxes, that spoil the vines: for our vines have
tender grapes.
The
reference is clear from scripture; pride as a little leaven is in her heart.
Notice Obadiah “3 The pride of thine heart hath deceived
thee, thou that dwellest in the clefts
of the rock, whose habitation is high…4 Though
thou exalt thyself as the eagle, and
though thou set thy nest among the stars” and again Jeremiah (49:16) “…the
pride of thine heart, O thou that
dwellest in the clefts of the rock…” Exalted “on the
top of the stairs” (2 Ki.9:13) above the people
(Ac.21:35,40); a secret place where no others stands, known to no other.
Solomon desires greatly to see her and hear
her, but compare her speech - “Look
not upon me” 1:6 with
his: “let me see thy countenance” v14. Solomon implores her in v13 “Arise…and
come away”, and she
responds “turn, my beloved” v17. She does not rise now. She does not
recognize her pride as does he. She does not yet trust or desire him with the
same abandon that defines his intoxicating desire for her. She will not leave
perhaps the comforts of her dwelling (as in 5:3). The abundance of his blessing
which he has poured upon her seems to interfere with her desire for him. Solomon as the king would have
studied diligently the law (Deut.17:17-19) and was a keen observer of behavior
(Ecc.1:12-17, 7:25); and was familiar with the inclination of people to become
self willed when greatly blessed and exalted (Deut. 8:10-14, Ps.73:5-6).
He knows
that the riches of his blessings will take away her heart. He addresses this self will that limits their
relationship, but does not force her or coerce her. He seems to be aware that “Love is a will freely joining another-
a continual choice to be yours and no other- The wills must be equal in depth
and degree- In order to be love, which continually is free” Perhaps he chose
this way to expose the thoughts of her heart. He wants all her heart. He wants
her to say of her own heart- ‘I seek not yours
but you’ (2 Cor.12:14).
The wise husbandman
desiring the fruit of his labors sought to protect the tender buds of their
relationship. He must purge the vine that it may bring forth more fruit. He
must protect his vineyard with an hedge that the foxes although small and
seemingly powerless (Neh.4:3), spoil it not with every chance (Ps.63:10,
Lam.5:18).
16 My beloved is mine, and I am his:
he feedeth among the lilies.17 Until the day break, and the
shadows flee away, turn, my beloved, and be thou like a roe or a young hart
upon the mountains of Bether.
The young
woman appears unaware of her dilemma. She is comfortable in his riches and
lightly dismisses his invitation until the morning when the day breaks. She
rests firmly in his love for her; he “is mine”. Truly he ‘feedeth and maketh his flock to rest’ among the beauty and glory of the (perhaps gardens of- Ecc.2:5)
lilies. She has his heart as he has hers and she is content here for the
moment; but there is more love that she is unaware of. There is more glory for
her from Solomon. She has not yet felt the depths of love or the strength
thereof, nor the torrents of emotion. But her declining of his offer to rise up
and come out to him at night will soon change (3:1-2). Most commentators define
the word Bether as ‘division or separation’. No doubt she did not suggest he
depart with the intent of such division; rather she dismisses lightly his visit
until the morning when the shadows vex her not. She requests that he return
then, in the glory of his strength as a young hart upon the mountains. Perhaps
his separation makes her heart grow fonder; it seems as though he in his wisdom
anticipates this.
3:1 By night on my bed I sought him whom my soul
loveth: I sought him, but I found him not.2 I will rise now,
and go about the city in the streets, and in the broad ways I will seek him
whom my soul loveth: I sought him, but I found him not.
Some time has passed since
Solomon’s last visit at night. The young maiden appears distressed at his
absence. Surely the wise young king is drawing her with cords of love. Before
she was light with his invitation to arise and come away, now she is all too
anxious to do just that. She will not relent until she embraces fully this
night he whom her soul loveth; he
whom she strongly desires and longs for, he who is pleasant to her eyes, who
her soul cleaves to. Her soul followeth hard after him as the hart which
panteth after the water; her inward affection delights greatly in him. She
waits upon her bed for him but he does not come. She ventures out into the streets
of the city seeking him but he is not found.
3 The
watchmen that go about the city found me: to whom I said, Saw ye him whom my
soul loveth? 4 It was but a little that
I passed from them, but I found him whom my soul loveth: I held him, and would
not let him go, until I had brought him into my mother's house, and into the
chamber of her that conceived me. 5 I charge you, O ye
daughters of Jerusalem, by the roes, and by the hinds of the field, that ye
stir not up, nor awake my love, till he please.
The watchmen went about on their
watches through the city found her out at night in the streets. She immediately
inquired if they had seen, not the mighty king of Jerusalem rather “him
whom my soul loveth”. There
appears to be an element of desperate abandon in her search for him. The
darkness was not a deterrent this time, nor do the comforts of her room keep
her back. She pressed further diligently seeking him until she was rewarded
with his presence. This time she did not lightly dismiss his presence rather “I
held him, and would not let him go”; a
contrast to her previous request- “turn,
my beloved”. Her desperate search for him
ends in a desperate desire to not let go but always be in his presence.
6 Who is this that cometh out of
the wilderness like pillars of smoke, perfumed with myrrh and frankincense,
with all powders of the merchant? 7 Behold his bed, which is Solomon's; threescore
valiant men are about it, of the valiant of Israel. 8 They
all hold swords, being expert in war: every man hath his sword upon his thigh
because of fear in the night.9 King Solomon made himself a
chariot of the wood of Lebanon.10 He made the pillars thereof
of silver, the bottom thereof of gold, the covering of it of purple, the midst
thereof being paved with love, for the daughters of Jerusalem. 11 Go forth, O ye daughters of
Zion, and behold king Solomon with the crown wherewith his mother crowned him
in the day of his espousals, and in the day of the gladness of his heart.
We now come to the scene of the wedding, the “day of his espousals” (Behold his bed, which
is Solomon's v7, Heb.13:4) when he publically covenanted with the wife
of his youth. It is from this point here Solomon calls her his spouse (4:8-12,
5:1). The procession appears from the wilderness protected with the full might
of the king, the chief of the valiant of Israel. These are mighty men and
expert in war, bearing swords not in vain. As she dwells in his secret place
(v7) she abides under the shadow of his might. She shall not be afraid of the
terror by night (Ps.91:1,5). There is great symbolism here as the LORD took a
bride of the people of Israel who followed him with the same abandon of their
first love in the wilderness.
Jer. 2:2-3 “Thus
saith the Lord; I remember thee, the kindness of thy youth, the love of thine
espousals, when thou wentest after me in the wilderness, in a land that was not
sown. Israel was holiness unto the Lord, and the
firstfruits of his increase… ”
A virtuous woman is a crown to her husband
(Prv.12:4) and Solomon’s mother Bathsheba crowned him since David his father
had gone the way of all the earth (1 Ki.2:2). The great kings’ procession is
known as mighty pillars of smoke ascending to heaven seen by all that are afar
off. All the sweet powders of the merchants and principal spices, myrrh, aloes,
cinnamon, make glad all that are near.
Frankincense was a highly valued incense used in the holy anointing oil
(Ex.30:34) and used in offerings of memorial (Lv.2:2, 6:15, 24:7) but not used
in the offering of jealousy (Num.5:15). Perhaps the mighty men bear up and
carry his bed from the wilderness and Solomon ascends into the chariot of his
glory to rejoice with his people over his bride.
Solomon’s procession takes him through the
streets of Jerusalem in a chariot prepared for him and his bride. Made with the
mighty cedars of Lebanon and covered with gold and silver beautified and
adorned with purple to satisfy the daughters of Jerusalem whom he loves. His
display is to the daughters of Zion who go forth to behold his great love where
with he loved in the day of his hearts delight. Solomon in his love for them
includes them and rejoices with them- the midst thereof is paved with his love for them.
4:1 Behold, thou art fair, my love; behold, thou
art fair; thou hast doves' eyes within thy locks: thy hair is as a flock of
goats, that appear from mount Gilead.2 Thy teeth are like a
flock of sheep that are even shorn, which came up from the washing; whereof
every one bear twins, and none is barren among them.3 Thy lips
are like a thread of scarlet, and thy speech is comely: thy temples are like a
piece of a pomegranate within thy locks.4 Thy neck is like the
tower of David builded for an armoury, whereon there hang a thousand bucklers,
all shields of mighty men.5 Thy two breasts are like two young
roes that are twins, which feed among the lilies.6 Until the
day break, and the shadows flee away, I will get me to the mountain of myrrh,
and to the hill of frankincense.
Solomon is seized by the force of her beauty-
“Behold, thou art fair, my love; behold, thou art fair”. He is overtaken by
her; his heart pours out as streams while he beholds her without any
hindrances, without any delays, with the full benefits of their covenant. The
scriptures declare “The wife hath not power of her own body, but the husband:
and likewise also the husband hath not power of his own body, but the wife.” (1
Cor.7:4) He has never been exposed to such ravishing beauty as the Shulamite
bears. All he can do is to behold her and this is almost more than he can
withstand. Her beauty moves him and humbles him with emotion.
We must recognize in his words that he does
not exclusively speak of the equivalent of her beauty in terms of visual resemblance but more in terms of
resemblance of emotional effect and appeal. These similitudes are of an inward effect more than an outward
likeness. Solomon beholds the locks of her hair flow down over her face and
neck and shoulders and he is entranced by this, he cannot turn away. Even as
precious fruit excites the senses of taste so is her fair countenance to
delight the eyes. Her beautiful harmless eyes looking intently upon him clothed
by the glory of her hair (1 Cor.11:15) are as the pastures clothed with their
flocks (Ps.65:13); even as the flocks sweetly appear upon Mount Gilead; which mount commands
your attention and fills the sight of one’s gaze and cannot be looked past.
Beauty is not merely a subjective intuition;
there are objective standards of beauty- the scriptures declare some people are
fair and beautiful. There is symmetry, balance, there are no blemishes, nothing
superfluous (Gen.24:16, 1 Sam.16:12, 2 Sam.14:25, Lv.21:17-21). Her smile was
brilliant, immaculate, nothing lacking, framed by her lips as if by a deep
scarlet cord (Jos.2:15,18). The soft graceful voice of her words has a pleasing, entrancing
effect upon him. Her temples, the soft, vulnerable part of her head where the locks of her hair begin, are like the blessed and desirable fruit, even the rich pomegranate. Her neck invokes a feeling of complete safety, a shelter, as a
strong tower (Jdg.9:51) even the
tower of David (Prv.18:10, Ps.61:3). He can fall upon her neck with kisses or
even weeping and find a refuge and haven.
Were one to happen upon a deer or young fawn
feeding perhaps in the beauteous gardens of lilies as Solomon’s many gardens
and orchards (Ecc.2:5) they would no doubt still themselves and pause. They
would watch diligently and allow the scene of this beauty to fill all their
senses with pleasant and gentle effect. Such were her breasts to satisfy him at
all times (Prv.5:19). Her glories are as a mountain
of myrrh or a hill of frankincense filling all his senses, causing his sleep to
flee from him; and in the fullness of her glory he will delight himself until
the day break.
7 Thou art all fair, my love; there
is no spot in thee.8 Come with me from Lebanon, my spouse, with
me from Lebanon: look from the top of Amana, from the top of Shenir and Hermon,
from the lions' dens, from the mountains of the leopards.9 Thou
hast ravished my heart, my sister, my spouse; thou hast ravished my heart with
one of thine eyes, with one chain of thy neck.10 How fair is
thy love, my sister, my spouse! how much better is thy love than wine! and the
smell of thine ointments than all spices!11 Thy lips, O my
spouse, drop as the honeycomb: honey and milk are under thy tongue; and the
smell of thy garments is like the smell of Lebanon.
Solomon in all his experience with princes and queens and the glory of nations flowing unto him had never seen such glorious beauty as she concealed. She was a sister; of his own people and not a stranger. There was no spot, no blemish, she was perfect in beauty, more than the heavens more so than all the creation of God. Indeed he had obtained favor of the Lord (Prv.18:22). All the majesty he had seen from the mountains and all Lebanon he wanted to share with her, to have her by him everywhere; to have her beauty fill him from the tops of the mountains, to feel the same wind, to see what he has seen, to breath in the same breeze, inhale all the same smells, to hear all the same sounds- ‘come with me my spouse’. One look of her eyes smote him and left him defenseless, overpowered and subjected; ravished in heart. The sweet fragrance of Lebanon blossoming and the cedars (Isa.35:2, Ps.104:16) were like her garments. There was no wine richer than her taste, no fragrance more deeply pleasing than her garments, no sound sweeter than what falls from her lips. The land flowing with milk and honey, a garden of Eden is before him. Love transcends time and reaches into eternity.
If just in this moment I know you, it's as though there is no more time.
If only I could breathe you in with a kiss, this is such a moment sublime.
If just this brief second I taste you, it is more intoxicating than wine.
Your beauty hath humbled my soul and my heart will ever be thine.
12 A garden inclosed is my sister,
my spouse; a spring shut up, a fountain sealed.13 Thy plants
are an orchard of pomegranates, with pleasant fruits; camphire, with spikenard,14 Spikenard
and saffron; calamus and cinnamon, with all trees of frankincense; myrrh and
aloes, with all the chief spices:15 A fountain of gardens, a
well of living waters, and streams from Lebanon.16 Awake, O north
wind; and come, thou south; blow upon my garden, that the spices thereof may
flow out. Let my beloved come into his garden, and eat his pleasant fruits.
Indeed she is a garden as Eden, yet hidden
from all eyes save his own; a wellspring of pure water that is sealed to all
but his thirst. Her ravishing beauty is for him alone. She is his. All that he
could ever desire is in her. She is a garden of all precious fruit, of all
fragrant spices, a stream of living water. He desires her fragrant aromas to fill
all of his life. And she is fully pleased to be his one desire, to alone fill
his longings- “Let my beloved”. She
willingly offers herself to him to this end; to indulge in “his
garden… his pleasant fruits”. This
indeed is the nature of the ‘husband’. A husband is a steward of the house;
husbandry is stewardship of land in farming with beasts of burden. We find God
placing the first man in a garden to ‘dress it and keep it’ Gen. 2:15. We see
that Noah began to be an husbandman,
and he planted a vineyard- Gen.9:20. The husbandman would keep the cattle
(Zec.13:5), the wheat and barley (Joel 1:11), the vineyards (Mt.21:33,
Jn.15:1). The Lord shows himself a husbandman waiting for the precious fruit of
the earth (Ja.5:7). Indeed “The husbandman
that laboureth must be first partaker of the fruits.” (2 Tim.2:6). Solomon the
great husbandman who had come to great estate above all that were in Jerusalem
before him found himself enjoying the precious fruit of his most beloved
garden. The north wind drives away the rain (Prv.25:23) and the south wind
bringeth heat (Lk.12:55). The rains have caused the precious fruit to blossom
now she calls for the warm air to fill his senses with her sweet fragrance.
5:1 I am come into my garden, my sister, my
spouse: I have gathered my myrrh with my spice; I have eaten my honeycomb with
my honey; I have drunk my wine with my milk: eat, O friends; drink, yea, drink
abundantly, O beloved.
‘Till he please’ is the song of the Shulamite,
and he hath filled himself with the beauties of her holiness. He hath eaten and
drunken to the full and he lets her know that she satisfies the deep longings
of all his senses. Her sweetness is as the honey and the honeycomb. Her joy as
the rejoicing of wine and his heart melts as the hills with sweet wine
(Zec.10:7, Amos 9:13); he is fed as with milk. Now it doth appear that he has
prepared another banquet for his beloved (2:4) and also his friends and the
daughters of Jerusalem whom he loves (3:10) to share his rejoicing.
2 I sleep, but my heart waketh: it
is the voice of my beloved that knocketh, saying, Open to me, my sister, my
love, my dove, my undefiled: for my head is filled with dew, and my locks with
the drops of the night.3 I have put off my coat; how shall I
put it on? I have washed my feet; how shall I defile them? 4 My
beloved put in his hand by the hole of the door, and my bowels were moved for
him.
Solomon tries her heart for him again (2:14,
17) in the coolness of night. As she slumbers and sleeps she is awakened at his
voice; “it is the voice of my beloved”. Her heart breaks free from her sleep at
the sound of his voice. Her sleep has dissolved at his presence. He has humbled
himself and defiled his feet to come to her, his locks wet with the dew of
night. “Open to me, my sister”. He could verily enter her room and her dwelling
as he has every right. Yet he calls on her to forsake the comforts and
pleasures of the flesh and be with him. She again makes light of his coming to
her- but not as quickly as before, perhaps the memory of his calling her before
instructs her reins in the night seasons. But her motions are mingled with the
ease of Zion and she reasons of the difficulties he has presented her with. She
reaches for a strong reason; “how shall I” she questions. But he knows her heart
and reveals but a glimpse of his strong hand before withdrawing into the night.
Just a small vision of his presence moves her in her inward parts, soul and body (Gen.25:23, 15:4, 43:40,
Isa.16:11); her soul flooding her heart with emotion drives her to open to him
to receive him.
5 I rose up to open to my beloved;
and my hands dropped with myrrh, and my fingers with sweet smelling myrrh, upon
the handles of the lock.6 I opened to my beloved; but my
beloved had withdrawn himself, and was gone: my soul failed when he spake: I
sought him, but I could not find him; I called him, but he gave me no answer.
She arose as the pure fragrant myrrh of the
deep parts her soul carries her heart, moving her hands, dripping with sweet
odour as she opens the lock. But her comfort, her delay, her lack of urgency
has held her captive too long and her beloved had withdrawn himself into the
night. Her soul failed as she faintly heard his voice softly dissolve into the
darkness. She called but he gave her no answer. This time though she did not
dismiss his visitation lightly as before (2:17); yea she went after him as the
hart panteth after the water brooks. Her soul thirsting for him, her flesh
longing to be with him, but she could not find him.
7 The watchmen that went about the
city found me, they smote me, they wounded me; the keepers of the walls took
away my veil from me.8 I charge you, O daughters of Jerusalem,
if ye find my beloved, that ye tell him, that I am sick of love. 9 What
is thy beloved more than another beloved, O thou fairest among women? what is
thy beloved more than another beloved, that thou dost so charge us?
The watchmen found her and smote her and
removed her veil, for only certain types of woman would be out in the streets
in the night (Prv.7:8-10, 12). But she was driven by the deep emotion and
longing that had intoxicated her heart. She found the daughters of Jerusalem;
perhaps the sun had now arisen upon her. She implores them “if ye find my
beloved, that ye tell him, that I am sick of love”. They seem somewhat
perplexed at her; why is she so intent upon finding him now? Why must his
presence rest upon her straightway? What is ‘thy beloved more than another
beloved’?
10 My beloved is white and ruddy,
the chiefest among ten thousand.11 His head is as the most fine
gold, his locks are bushy, and black as a raven.12 His eyes are
as the eyes of doves by the rivers of waters, washed with milk, and fitly set.13 His
cheeks are as a bed of spices, as sweet flowers: his lips like lilies, dropping
sweet smelling myrrh.14 His hands are as gold rings set with
the beryl: his belly is as bright ivory overlaid with sapphires.15 His
legs are as pillars of marble, set upon sockets of fine gold: his countenance
is as Lebanon, excellent as the cedars.16 His mouth is most
sweet: yea, he is altogether lovely. This is my beloved, and this is my friend,
O daughters of Jerusalem.
As she early declared she was black (1:5) here
she states that he is white- “purer than snow… whiter than milk” (Lam.4:7). White as the light (Mt.17:2, 28:3)
clean and glistering with glory (Lk.9:29, Rev.19:8, 14). The hoary head is a
crown of glory (Prv.16:31). The hoar frost of heaven covereth the ground as the
manna (Job 38:29, Ex.16:14) and it watereth the earth (Isa.55:10). He is white
like wool as white as snow (Rev. 1:14, Isa.1:18). Solomon is white in his
brilliance, clean and glorious within. Without he was ruddy and of a fair and
beautiful countenance (1 Sam.16:12, 17:42). He was “more ruddy in body than
rubies” (Lam.4:7); he stood out amongst ten thousand as the very chiefest. His
head as the most fine gold; gold that has been purified seven times. Not the seeing only, but the hearing, tasting
and speaking are likewise expressed through the head of the body. And so the
head is the expressive authority of the man. A “wise man's eyes are in
his head” (Eccl.2:14) indicating that a
wise man is circumspect. All of Solomon’s actions were governed by the
principal thing- wisdom (Prv.4:7). His hair is black and bushy indicating his
youthfulness and health (Prov.20:29, Lv.13:31, 37).
She describes his eyes as he describes hers “the eyes of doves” (1:15). Love involves becoming one;
becoming like what you love, being
equal. Rivers of waters speak of abundance of life, dispersed abroad at will
(Psa.1:3, Prv.5:16, 21:1, Isa.41:18). How captivating and gentle a scene as
doves beside the flowing stream. Thus were his eyes, washed pure white with
flowing milk and fitted together in perfect balance- again beauty is
symmetrical, clean and pure (4:2-5).
In her heart to look upon his face was like
resting in a bed of sweet spices, gentle as the sweet flower blossoming in the
fullness of life. His lips, glorious as the lilies (Lk.12:27) drop words as the
dew of morning, sweet is the smell thereof; even words of the innermost parts
of his belly (5:4-5). The beryl, translucent, scintillating, set in gold rings
are striking as the work and the skilfulness of his hands; the touch of
his hands.
As she continues to describe her beloved
within and without to the daughters of Jerusalem (v8-9, 16) she speaks only
that which is comely and convenient for public discourse. The belly in
scripture is used in reference to the region of the physical body (Mt. 15:17,
Jdg.3:21) as well as the innermost
part of man (Job 32:19, Ps.31:9, Prv.20:27). It is associated with the soul-
Ps.31:9 “my soul and my belly”,
44:25 “For our soul is bowed down to the dust: our belly cleaveth unto the earth” Prv.13:25 “The righteous eateth to
the satisfying of his soul: but the belly
of the wicked shall want.”
Ivory was associated with gold and silver (1
Ki.10:18, 22); with lavish opulence. But also with authority as it was derived
from horns (Ezk.27:15, Dan.8:8-9) and used for Solomon’s very throne (2
Chr.9:17). Sapphire was a highly valued (Job 28:16) heavenly stone (Ezk.1:26,
Rv.21:19) with a rich blue color. Brilliant white ivory overlaid with deep blue
splendid sapphire was remarkable as the richness of the deep regions of his
soul; his innermost thoughts as masterfully crafted jewels set in ivory. The
legs are the strength of a man bearing all his burden (Ps.147:10), as pillars
are the load bearing structures of a building (Jdg.16:25-6,9, 1 Sam.2:8,
Prv.9:1). Marble was a grand stone used in stately buildings (Est.1:6). His
strength was as such a grand structure as pillars of marble seated in sockets
of pure gold; strength that was not indiscriminately wielded but tested and set
as fine gold. His countenance was captivating as the mighty cedars of Lebanon
renowned for their excellent strength (Ps.29:5, 92:12, Ezk.31:3). As when one
is confronted with a forest of mighty trees filling all they can see, such was
it to be in his presence for her. His mouth was sweeter than honey (Ps.19:10),
sweeter than cinnamon and calamus and cassia; fragrant like the holy oil of
anointing (Ex.30:23-5). He is altogether lovely. A friend loves at all times
(Prv.17:17). This is he whom her soul loveth and her inward friend, her very
friend who is as her own soul (Dt.13:6). She calls him not the greatest and
most glorious of kings but her lover
and her friend.
6:1 Whither
is thy beloved gone, O thou fairest among women? whither is thy beloved turned
aside? that we may seek him with thee.
The daughters of Jerusalem are already filled
with the renown of Solomon- but there in the Shulamite’s description of him is
something deeper than they knew of him; they are all the more intrigued by the
king. ‘Whither is thy beloved that we may seek him with thee’? Not only are
they struck by her portrayal of his person they are struck by her immense
beauty- “O thou fairest among women”. Surely she was now adored with the royal
apparel (1:1-11) and her stunning elegance was accentuated by the broidered
works and ornaments of gold and precious stones that he had girded her with
(1:11). She was indeed the fairest among women.
2 My beloved is gone down into his
garden, to the beds of spices, to feed in the gardens, and to gather lilies.3 I
am my beloved's, and my beloved is mine: he feedeth among the lilies.
It appears that she
was walking as she was describing him to the daughters still looking for him
whom her soul loved; for she finds him in his garden feeding his flocks among
the lilies (1:7-8). She breaks free from their company as she hurries into his
presence; ‘I am my beloved's, and my beloved is mine’! Finally she finds him,
her heart flooded with anticipation.
4 Thou art
beautiful, O my love, as Tirzah, comely as Jerusalem, terrible as an army with
banners.5 Turn away thine eyes from me, for they have overcome
me: thy hair is as a flock of goats that appear from Gilead.6 Thy
teeth are as a flock of sheep which go up from the washing, whereof every one
beareth twins, and there is not one barren among them.7 As a
piece of a pomegranate are thy temples within thy locks.
When Solomon sees her
approaching again he is taken by her terribly powerful beauty; overpowering as
when one is facing an army of soldiers holding high their banners. The desire
appearing in her eyes overwhelms his heart. Her beauty is as Tirzah a place
kings set their desire upon (1 Ki.15:33, 16:8, 15, 23). She is as Jerusalem the
city of the great king; comforting to all Israel with its walls and gates
(Ps.122:2, 51:18) the perfection of beauty (Ps.50:2) the joy of the whole earth
(Ps.48:2). Flooded with response his heart studies every part every detail of
her again (4:1-5); she is appealing in every way.
8 There
are threescore queens, and fourscore concubines, and virgins without number.9 My
dove, my undefiled is but one; she is the only one of her mother, she is the
choice one of her that bare her. The daughters saw her, and blessed her; yea,
the queens and the concubines, and they praised her.10 Who is
she that looketh forth as the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the sun, and
terrible as an army with banners?11 I went down into the garden
of nuts to see the fruits of the valley, and to see whether the vine flourished
and the pomegranates budded.12 Or ever I was aware, my soul
made me like the chariots of Amminadib.13 Return, return, O
Shulamite; return, return, that we may look upon thee. What will ye see in the
Shulamite? As it were the company of two armies.
Solomon openly recognizes her before the
daughters of Jerusalem who are still flocked together. He asks them as they
beckon unto her to return that they may be entranced again by her company, “What
will ye see in the Shulamite?” She
obtained favour in the sight of all that looked upon her; they praised and
blessed her. The great company of two armies was something that one could not
turn away their eyes from, something not often seen- they wanted to look upon
her continually; to admire her beauty, to be blessed just to be in her
presence.
It was common (although forbidden- Dt.17:17
and eventually snaring for Solomon- 1 Ki.11:1-6) for the kings to join affinity
with a king of another nation and marry their daughter as a league (1 Ki.3:1, 2
Chr.18:1). It was also the practice of kings to take the daughter of the land
to be his confectionaries and cooks and bakers (1 Sam.8:13). Solomon had
acquired many wives through these political unions and he had been surrounded
by the choicest of women for his servants, but she far exceeded them all. No
other even compared; no one had captured his whole heart as she had. “My
dove, my undefiled is but one”. She
apparently was the only daughter of her mother but the choice one; favored more
than her brothers (1:6). And now queens praise her, the daughters blessed her
and wanted to be in her presence to behold her beauty; “that
we may look upon thee”. She
filled the day as does the sun and her coming as the sunrise. In the fullness
of her glory she alone filled the night; she was fair as the moon, all other
lights dimmed before her.
Solomon’s absence (5:6) was timed according to
his wisdom (Ecc.8:5, 3:1-8) as before (3:1). Before, he could see the vines had
tender grapes (2:15); and here again he sought to know “whether
the vine flourished and the pomegranates budded”. He indeed went down to his garden in the
valley to see the fruits and nuts producing; to feed his flock among the lilies
“and
to see whether the vine flourished”. This is
what he wanted to know foremost as the husband of his well beloved vine, was if
she had flourished for him since earlier when their ‘vines
had tender grapes’ (2:15).
The phrase “chariots of Amminadib” has
generated much discussion as to its meaning. It has been pointed out that the
name itself could be interpreted "willing people" or also “Kindred of
the prince” or rendered as “noble people”. It appears Amminadib is Amminadab of
the line of Judah- Matt.1:3-4, Ruth 4:18-22. His son was called “prince of the
children of Judah” 1 Chr.2:10. They knew from ancient prophecies that the
prince would come through Judah (Gen.49:10). Nahshon the
son of Amminadab was prince of the children of Judah as the by the LORD’s
choice (Num.2:1-3) as they were to possess their inheritance.
“And on
the east side toward the rising of the sun shall they of the standard of the
camp of Judah pitch throughout their armies: and Nahshon the son of Amminadab
shall be captain of the children of Judah. Nu.2:3,
1:7”
The children of Judah had difficulty driving
out the inhabitants from their inheritance for they had chariots of iron (Jdg.1:19) It would seem that they became very
keen on warfare of this type. Perhaps this verse and this phrase “the
chariots of Amminadib” is
pointing us to the ‘kindred of the prince’, the descendents of Amminadab and Nahshon becoming expert in warfare
with chariots even skilled and renowned in crafting them. Kings were expected
to make instruments of war, and instruments of chariots (1 Sam.8:12) and Solomon was familiar with the masters of
this craft (1 Ki.9:19, 22, 10:26). In describing the effects and appeal she had
upon him he picked very carefully the most compelling metaphors and
similitudes. The chariot was synonymous with strength (2 Ki.13:14, Ps.20:7). The
chariots of Amminadib then would be among the greatest of chariots made; to be
driven hard and feverishly in battle.
The soul as a well, sources the love and
desire flowing within men:
Ge. 34:3, 8 And his soul clave unto Dinah the daughter
of Jacob, and he loved the
damsel, and spake kindly unto the damsel… The soul of my son Shechem longeth
for your daughter: I pray you give her him to wife.
Ps. 42:1-2 As the hart panteth
after the water brooks, so panteth my
soul after thee, O God. [2] My soul
thirsteth for God, for the living God: when shall I come and appear
before God?
Isa. 26:8-9 Yea, in the way of
thy judgments, O Lord, have we waited for thee; the desire of our soul is to thy name, and to the remembrance of thee.
[9] With my soul have I desired thee in
the night; yea, with my spirit within me will I seek thee early:
As Jehu drove furiously his
chariot (2 Ki.9:16, 20) Solomon’s soul would passionately drive him before he
was aware (or ever meaning before-
Dan.6:24, Prv.8:23, Ps.90:2)- singly in his desire towards her like the
chariots of Amminadib. His soul followeth hard after her (Psa.63:8); feverishly.
7:1 How
beautiful are thy feet with shoes, O prince's daughter! the joints of thy thighs
are like jewels, the work of the hands of a cunning workman.2 Thy
navel is like a round goblet, which wanteth not liquor: thy belly is like an
heap of wheat set about with lilies.
Although her family
was not rich in gold and silver he reminds her of her lineage- a daughter of
the princes of Israel (Nu.1:44) and every bit majestic. In all Israel there was none to be so much
praised as she for her beauty: from the sole
of her foot, where he begins (in contrast to 4:1 where he begins with her
eyes)- even to the crown of her
head there was no blemish in her. ‘Thy feet with
shoes’ speaks of her coming in and going out (Ex.12:11)- her coming is as a
royal procession in all sublimity and grandeur. Beautiful as the feet of those
bringing glad tidings of good things (Rom.10:15, Isa.52:7) whose feet are shod
with the preparation of the gospel of peace (Eph.6:15). Solomon is alone again
with his beloved and in the fervent desire of his soul (6:12) he indulges his
senses fully in her beauty. She is perfect in beauty like the workmanship of a
cunning craftsman; glorious. The joints of her thigh or her hips strike him as
would magnificent jewels cut and polished to scintillating radiance.
He, beginning at her feet then attentively her
hips, slowly to her midriff and waist, lets his soul drive him to fill his
senses with all of her glory. The navel and belly is the center point or middle
(Job 40:16, Prv.3:8). A goblet- round, marked out with the compass for perfection by the craftsman, filled
with liquor (perhaps of grapes Num.6:3- although liquor could refer to any
juice or broth) to consume and indulge sumptuously, such is her stomach or midriff and
waist to delight him.
Wheat was a principal crop nourishing all
Israel. Also which was celebrated in harvest as nourishment received from God
in his abundant blessing (Ex.34:22, Dt.8:8, 32:13-4). Her belly and her soul
(5:14) are to him as an heap of freshly reaped wheat after the harvest set
about with delicate and well pleasing lilies (2:2) abundant to satisfy; she
fills him with her company; she is a feast to all his senses.
3 Thy
two breasts are like two young roes that are twins.4 Thy neck
is as a tower of ivory; thine eyes like the fishpools in Heshbon, by the gate
of Bathrabbim:
Her breasts are as two beautiful young roes; gracefully
elegant; in symmetry, balance; equal in proportion and comeliness. Her neck as
a comforting shelter (4:4) lavished in brilliant ivory (5:14) a tower that
escapes no eye.
Heshbon was very important in Israel’s history
(Num.21:25-30, Dt.2:24-30, Neh.9:22, Jdg.11:19-22) as the place God began to
make a name for Israel in the land of promise, by defeating two great kings.
Solomon the great writer of proverbs who studied the law of God (Dt.17:18-9)
would be well aware of the proverb related to Heshbon (Num.21:27-30). This was
a proverb relating how Israel overcame their enemies and drove them out of the
land starting in Heshbon. The name Bathrabbim is usually interpreted as
‘daughter of many’ or sometimes ‘of mighty’. Perhaps as “Sihon gathered all his
people together, and went out against Israel” (Num.21:23) they exited through
the gate of Bathrabbim. It seems Solomon is making allusion to her eyes as how
he was first overcome by her (4:1, 9) how she took him for herself, even as the
children of Israel overpowered their foes and conquered their land. Pools are
still waters that are rarely troubled (Jn.5:4) but provide life to the dry
places (Isa.35:7). The fishpools of Heshbon by the gate are well known tranquil
places of serenity and beauty. It isn’t clear but perhaps this is also a
reference to the color of her eyes- brilliant clear blue or emerald.
thy nose is as the
tower of Lebanon which looketh toward Damascus.5 Thine head
upon thee is like Carmel, and the hair of thine head like purple; the king is
held in the galleries. 6 How fair and how pleasant art thou, O
love, for delights!
This portion presents some difficulty in discerning the
meaning. We can conclude that there is nothing superfluous with her based on
the standards of beauty already appealed to throughout the song; as well as the
remarks by all that beheld her. The nose and nostrils are used interchangeably
in scripture (Amos 4:10, Isa.65:5, Ps.115:6) in reference to smelling. We also
find a connection in scripture with the breath
of life being in the nostrils (Gen.2:7, 7:22, Job 27:3, Isa.2:22). Also
when we look in scripture regarding Lebanon, we see not only its mighty cedars
for which it is famous, but also the surrounding mountains and Mount Lebanon
(Jos.11:17, Jdg.3:3, Isa.37:24). Lebanon means ‘white one’ most likely
referencing the snow capped mountain tops. The tower of Lebanon was facing
Damascus head of Syria, (Isa.7:8, 1 Ki.15:18) frequent enemies of Israel (2
Sam.8:5, 1Ki.15:18, 2 Chr.24:23) and was probably to function as a tower for
the watchman (2 Ki.9:17, 17:92, 18:8, 2 Ch.20:24). The watchman upon the tower
gave quietness and assurance that Israel was free from harm. For Solomon to
hear her breathing and feel the breath of her life upon him and to breathe in
(v8) was as a strong confidence and assurance for his heart to dwell safely
with her.
She earlier described his head as most fine gold (5:11) now
he describes hers as Carmel, known to blossom in excellence, abundantly
(Isa.35:2). Purple was a deep rich color, highly sought after (Ac.16:14,
Ezk.27:7, 16, Rev.18:12) used in the tabernacle (Ex.26:36) as well as with
royalty (3:10, Est.1:6, 8:15, Mk.15:17) and was associated with luxury and
lavish wealth (Lk.16:19). This was how he perceived her glorious hair, as
curtains of royal splendor. Her riches have held the king in the galleries of
his house (1 Ki.7:6-8). The galleries are covered walkways around a building
that are opened (as a colonnade) intended for leisure viewing while covered by
the roof of the building. The head of the whole nation, the king was held there
beholding her entranced by her– “how fair and how pleasant art thou, O love,
for delights!” Now that the husbandman has looked upon the flourishing garden
he will partake of the precious fruit thereof.
7 This
thy stature is like to a palm tree, and thy breasts to clusters of grapes.8 I
said, I will go up to the palm tree, I will take hold of the boughs thereof:
now also thy breasts shall be as clusters of the vine, and the smell of thy
nose like apples;9 And the roof of thy mouth like the best wine
for my beloved, that goeth down sweetly, causing the lips of those that are
asleep to speak.
Palms were “goodly trees” (Lv.23:40) adorning the temple of
Solomon (1 Ki.6:29, 32, 35) and known for their flourishing (Ps.92:12) and tall
upright stature (Jer.10:5). New wine is found in the clusters of grapes
(Isa.65:8) a harvest of sweet summer fruits fully ripe (Mi.7:1) pleasing at all
times; so were her breasts. The smell of her breath as he inhales from her nose
and mouth- breathing her breath, is refreshing as the precious fruit of the
apple tree; her mouth sweet to his taste like the choicest of wines. Her lips
cause his sleep to brake from him, to rise again, until the day dawn upon them
and the shadows hide themselves.
10 I am
my beloved's, and his desire is toward me.11 Come, my beloved,
let us go forth into the field; let us lodge in the villages.12 Let
us get up early to the vineyards; let us see if the vine flourish, whether the
tender grape appear, and the pomegranates bud forth: there will I give thee my
loves.13 The mandrakes give a smell, and at our gates are all
manner of pleasant fruits, new and old, which I have laid up for thee, O my
beloved.
The young bride declares her
satisfaction that she pleases her beloved and that she is his alone. She
compels him to go with her to the villages to lodge and to take him to her
mother’s house to rejoice with her family (8:2, 5). She wanted to see the
vineyards in her village and her own vineyard. To see the fruit bud forth
and appear- there will she give him her loves; there where the mandrakes of the
field (Gen.30:14) perfume the air. She has prepared a feast for Solomon with
her kindred; she has laid up all manner of pleasant fruits at their gates. New
and old wine (Mt.9:17), clusters of the grape and raisins, parched corn, and
cakes of figs (1 Sam.25:18), she would bless him with all that was within her-
“O
my beloved”.
8:1 O
that thou wert as my brother, that sucked the breasts of my mother! when I
should find thee without, I would kiss thee; yea, I should not be despised.
The young bride is so
charged with excitement she wants to kiss Solomon at will regardless of where
they are or who they are before. But this affection is not seemly in public
save the holy kiss of greeting (1 Cor.16:20, 2 Cor.13:12) and between a man and
woman that only which is filial.
2 I
would lead thee, and bring thee into my mother's house, who would instruct me:
I would cause thee to drink of spiced wine of the juice of my pomegranate.
She is again
excited to bless Solomon with the fruit of her vineyard, the juice of her
pomegranate at the house of her mother (her father is never mentioned-3:4). She
cannot match the riches he has (8:12) but she wants to pour out all she has for
him. She desires instruction from her mother who no doubt would teach her as
the elder women teach “to love their husbands, to love their children, To
be discreet, chaste, keepers at home, good, obedient to their own husbands,
that the word of God be not blasphemed.” (Tit.2:4-5)
3 His
left hand should be under my head, and his right hand should embrace me.4 I
charge you, O daughters of Jerusalem, that ye stir not up, nor awake my love,
until he please.5 Who is this that cometh up from the
wilderness, leaning upon her beloved? I raised thee up under the apple tree:
there thy mother brought thee forth: there she brought thee forth that bare
thee.
In 2:6-7 she states that his “hand is under my head, and his
right hand doth embrace me”, here she states only that it should but this is a time to refrain from embracing (Ecc.3:5). As
the daughters of Jerusalem flock to them as they make their way into the
villages; the product of their fame, she charges them as in 2:7 not to hasten
or disturb their moments together. As they approach the village through the
fields from the wilderness she leans upon him unable to pull herself from him
still sick with love, excited to introduce him to her closest kindred. Her
mother remembers her as a child leaning upon her, holding onto her for comfort-
now she leans upon her beloved. ‘Under the apple tree’- it was common to have
trees for shade and safety (2:3, 1 Ki.4:25, 19:4-5, Job.40:21, Jn.1:48,
Gen.18:4, Jdg.4:5) around their dwellings; her beloved reminds her of the
comfort and joy the shade and pleasant fruit of the apple tree under which she
was raised offered (2:3). And here her mother recalls ‘I raised thee up… thy
mother brought thee forth’.
6 Set
me as a seal upon thine heart, as a seal upon thine arm: for love is strong as
death; jealousy is cruel as the grave: the coals thereof are coals of fire,
which hath a most vehement flame.7 Many waters cannot quench
love, neither can the floods drown it: if a man would give all the substance of
his house for love, it would utterly be contemned.
Solomon speaks to her
family in his wisdom as he exercised himself to study concerning all things
(Ecc.1:13). He charges his beloved to set him alone as the seal (Est.8:8,10)
upon her heart and her arm- within and without; to trust in him fully
(Jer.17:5, 2 Chr.32:8). That her strength and her works have his name upon it
(Isa.33:2); that he be continually upon her thoughts. Give me thine heart
(Prv.23:26). The love he has found for her satisfies more and is worth far more
than all the riches of his kingdom. He assures her mother that his love for her
daughter is more valuable than all his riches and fame. When we meditate upon
the force of love, the power of love, it will drive jealousy to kill or compel
to offer oneself to willingly die. There seems to be nothing that will stop the
will inflamed by love from joining itself to its familiar, as though there is
no other reason for it to exist.
He then utters a proverb, a dark saying not fully understood
until a greater than Solomon arrives (Mt.12:42) who opens the understanding,
uttering things kept secret from the foundation of the world (Matt.13:35). Even
the mystery of God’s will (Eph.1:9-10) held secret in the way of a man with a
maid (Prv.30:19) but unveiled in the great mystery concerning Christ and the
church (Eph.5:32). Even the angels desire to look into these mysteries and
understand (Eph.3:10, 1 Cor.11:10, 1 Pt.1:12). Love is as strong as death for
through his great love wherewith he loved us God redeemed us from death
(Hos.13:14) entering into death itself to retrieve us from it (Heb.2:9,14). He
bought us back from the most vehement flame of his jealousy and the coals of
fire thereof, and the cruel habitation of the grave. Many waters and floods
cannot quench the love of God even the very floods of death that washed over
the Lord Jesus (Rom.6:3-4, 1 Pt.3:20-21, Psa.69:1-2, 14-15). It was not
possible that he should be holden of it (Ac.2:24). All that a man hath yea even
if he had the whole world to give it up for this love is not a trade worthy of
compare to the praise of the glory of God’s free grace (Matt.13:46). To suffer
the loss of all things and even count them but dung to win Christ and be found
in him (Phil.3:8), to be his beloved.
As the poem and hymn declare-
Could we with ink the ocean fill,
And were the skies of parchment made,
Were every stalk on earth a quill,
And every man a scribe by trade,
To write the love of God above,
Would drain the ocean dry.
Nor could the scroll contain the whole,
Though stretched from sky to sky.
And were the skies of parchment made,
Were every stalk on earth a quill,
And every man a scribe by trade,
To write the love of God above,
Would drain the ocean dry.
Nor could the scroll contain the whole,
Though stretched from sky to sky.
8 We
have a little sister, and she hath no breasts: what shall we do for our sister
in the day when she shall be spoken for? 9 If she be a wall, we
will build upon her a palace of silver: and if she be a door, we will inclose
her with boards of cedar. 10 I am a wall, and my breasts like
towers: then was I in his eyes as one that found favour.
It isn’t clear who of her family is speaking; but we know
since the Shulamite has brothers (8:1, 1:6) and she is the only one (daughter)
of her mother (6:9) the little sister is not hers directly (possibly adopted).
So her family is requesting help in adorning her and presenting her in the day
of her espousals when she shall be spoken for. They are not a family of great
means and when the Shulamite returns in the splendid garments of the kings
palaces they realize (as did she 1:5-6) their poor and inadequate ability to
enhance and beautify their little sister. She hath no breasts or before her breasts
were fashioned (Ezk.16:7) meaning before she had passed the flower of her age
which was required before marriage- 1 Cor.7:36. The Shulamite declares that
they will assist in adorning the young girl in that day.
In discerning who is speaking it is helpful to review the
book itself for common phrases. “We will” (v9) is only used by the Shulamite
-1:4, and Solomon 1:11. The phrase “I am” (v10) is used almost exclusively of
the Shulamite- 1:6, 2:1, 5, 16, 5:8, 6:3, 7:10 (saving 5:1). Her breasts (v10) are spoken of- 1:13,
4:5, 7:3, 7-8, everywhere except 8:1 and 8. No doubt she is speaking starting
in verse 9 and finishes out the song.
Interestingly they will adorn the little sister based upon
her character (“if she
be”) but the adorning the Shulamite is concerned with is not
so much the
outward adorning stating
they would build a ‘palace of silver’ upon her ‘if she be a wall’. This would
be an inward adorning:
Whose adorning let it not be that outward
adorning of plaiting the hair, and of wearing of gold, or of putting on of
apparel; But let it be the hidden man of the heart, in that
which is not corruptible, even the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit, which
is in the sight of God of great price.
For after this manner in the old time the holy women also, who
trusted in God, adorned themselves, being in subjection unto their own
husbands: (1Pt.3:3-5)
A wall was used to
protect and defend (1 Sam.25:16, 2 Sam.11:24, Nu.13:28, 2 Chr.26:6, Isa.5:5,
Ezk.26:9) as is someone of a faithful spirit (Prv.25:28) that ruleth well their
spirit (Prv.16:32). A palace was a mansion or house for royalty (Ezr.4:14,
Est.1:5, Dan.4:29, Ps.45:15). Wisdom hath
builded her house, she hath hewn
out her seven pillars: (Prv.9:1). Every wise woman buildeth her house (Prv.14:1)
and the tongue of the just is as choice silver (Prv.10:20) containing the words
of the LORD (Ps.12:6) and used in meekness of wisdom (Ja.3:13). Through wisdom is an house builded; and by understanding it is established: (Prv.24:3).
Marriage was analogous with a house- 1:17. They would make her a wise master
builder of her palace with the mastery of a silversmith for adornment; even as
the aged women teach the younger- Tit.2:4-5.
A door is for discriminately
opening and closing (Prv.8:3,34), allowing and disallowing entrance (Jn.10:7,9,
Isa.26:20, Ac.16:27, 21:30, Rv.3:8, 20, Job 31:32). Jesus spoke of himself as a
door (Jn.10:7,9). A door is permitting unlike a wall and needs a watchman to be
set (Neh.7:3) “Set
a watch, O Lord, before my mouth; keep the door of my lips.”- Ps.141:3, Mic.7:5 “Blessed
is the man that heareth me, watching
daily at my gates, waiting at the posts of my doors.”- Prv.8:34 If she was a door they
would reinforce her with boards of the mighty cedars of Lebanon (1:17). They
would give her strength to shut the door so no man openeth and to open so that
no man shutteth. The bride declares to her family that she was a wall; of a
faithful and strong spirit- and her breasts were as a place of refuge and
safety (4:4- tower), a comfort whereby she found favour and grace in his sight.
11 Solomon
had a vineyard at Baalhamon; he let out the vineyard unto keepers; every one
for the fruit thereof was to bring a thousand pieces of silver.12 My
vineyard, which is mine, is before me: thou, O Solomon, must have a thousand,
and those that keep the fruit thereof two hundred.13 Thou that
dwellest in the gardens, the companions hearken to thy voice: cause me to hear
it.14 Make haste, my beloved, and be thou like to a roe or to a
young hart upon the mountains of spices.
Baalhamon means ‘lord or ruler of a multitude’ or ‘of abundance’- not
certain if it was so named from the large operation she describes here. The
expression “O” (v12) which is a strong utterance of emotion as in surprise or
desire is used by both Solomon and his love in their waves of affection all
through the song- 1:5,7-9, 2:7,14, 3:5,11, 4:11,16, 5:1,8-9,16, 6:1,13,
7:1,6,13, 8:1,4. She shows Solomon her humble vineyard (1:6) and knows it does
not compare with the glorious works he has invested in. But she is thankful for
it and wants to share all her riches with him as well. It would seem that they
first met keeping vineyards (1:6). She knows Solomon will be very busy involved
in so many great works (Ecc.2:1-9); but she knows him from the gardens (‘thou, O Solomon… Thou that dwellest in the gardens’). She knows his companions in
the gardens hear his voice- and she never wants to be turned aside by them
(1:7) when she can be with him. Solomon requested before of her “let me hear
thy voice; for sweet is thy voice” (2:14) now she says of his voice- “cause me
to hear it”. She beseeches him to return quickly (2:17) but this time she is
not light with his presence requesting he return at a convenient time when the
sun has risen. She is his hill and
mountain of spices (4:6), this time she wants him to ‘come quickly’ unto her.
Even so, come quickly (Rev.22:20).
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