A. The maiden searches
for her beloved.
1.
(1-3) The restless maiden searches for her beloved.
By night on my bed I sought the one I love;
I sought him, but I did not find him.
ÒI will rise now,Ó I said,
ÒAnd go about the city;
In the streets and in the squares
I will seek the one I love.Ó
I sought him, but I did not find him.
The watchmen who go about the city found me;
I said,
ÒHave you seen the one I love?Ó
a. By night on my bed I
sought the one I love: The maiden woke in the middle of the night
and instantly felt alone, longing for her beloved. She sought
him but could not find him
anywhere in the house.
i. This snapshot probably records another dream or
daydream of the maiden, as in the previous chapter. With this section ending
with her addressing her companions, we donÕt imagine that they haunted or
stalked this loving couple with their actual presence at their intimacy.
ii. Since this is likely another dream or daydream of the
maiden, it doesnÕt matter if she recorded it as a married woman or
yet-to-be-married maiden. She had the longings of a married woman (that her
beloved would share her home and her bed),
but did not act upon those longings until married.
iii. These lines do record the sexual longing of the maiden, and this is indicated by the particular term used for bed: ÒThis is the common word for bed, distinct from the word for ÔcouchÕ in 1:16. In Ezekiel 23:17 the connotation is Ôlove bedÕ, and in Genesis 49:4 and Numbers 31:17ff is used with overt sexual meaning. This is its only use in the Song.Ó (Carr)
iv. This connotation of the word for bed reminds us of Hebrews 13:4: Marriage is honorable among all, and the bed
undefiled; but fornicators and adulterers God will judge. The Bible consistently condemns sex
outside of the marriage commitment (fornicators and adulterers God will
judge). But the Bible celebrates sexual
love within the commitment of marriage, as indicated in The Song of Solomon.
b. I sought him, but did not
find him: The maiden always longed for her beloved and wanted him
close. Yet now, in the middle of the night, she felt the longing more
intensely. She felt alone and longed for his presence, so she imagined herself
seeking after him.
i. Sought: ÒVery
common in the Old Testament, and is used both literally and figuratively. It is
always a conscious act, frequently requiring a great deal of effort (e.g. 1 Samuel 10:14; Proverbs 2:4) but with no guarantee
of success.Ó (Carr)
ii. ÒThis is very natural and very beautiful. Love creates
a perpetual dread lest the loved one should be lost.Ó (Morgan) ÒLove not only
brings a greater experience of joy, but a deeper capacity for pain as well. So
as the joy of the kingsÕ presence became greater, so the sorrow from his
absence became deeper.Ó (Glickman)
iii. The maiden allowed herself to feel needy without
feeling helpless. She felt that she needed her beloved, and did not have an
artificial sense self-sufficiency. The maiden did not feel it was a bad thing
for her to need her beloved.
iv. There is something good in the maidenÕs seeking of her
beloved; yet it came after their relationship was well established. The relationship
did not begin nor was it founded on her pursuit of him.
v. ÒWith what constancy she sought this communion. She
began at dead of night, as indeed it is never too late to seek renewed
fellowship. Yet she sought on. The streets were lonely, and it was a strange
place for a woman to be at such a strange time, but she was too earnest in
seeking to be abashed by such circumstances.Ó (Spurgeon)
c. I will rise . . . and go
about the city . . . I will seek the one I love: This emphasizes the
urgency and depth of her seeking. She was safe (even under the supervision of
the watchmen), but they could not help
her find her beloved, even at her request.
i. ÒShe did not sit down, and say to any one of them, ÒO
watchman of the night, thy company cheers me! The streets are lonely and
dangerous; but if thou art near, I feel perfectly safe, and I will be content
to stay awhile with thee.Ó Nay, but she leaves the watchmen, and still goes
along the streets until she finds him
whom her soul loveth.Ó (Spurgeon)
ii. ÒIt is probable that, lighting upon these watchmen,
she promised herself much counsel and comfort from them, but was disappointed.
It pleaseth God many times to cross our likeliest projects, that himself alone
may be leaned upon.Ó (Trapp)
2. (4) Finding her beloved.
Scarcely had I passed by them,
When I found the one I love.
I held him and would not let him go,
Until I had brought him to the house of my mother,
And into the chamber of her who conceived me.
a. I found the one I love:
She dreamt that her diligent search was rewarded. Though the watchmen mentioned
in the previous verse could not help her, she nevertheless found the one she loved.
i. It is repeated four times in these first four verses: the one I love. This how she thought of her
special man.
b. I held him and would not
let him go: It is easy to picture the relieved maiden clinging to
her beloved, feeling calmed and secure in his embrace.
i. Would not let him go:
It seems to have been the same kind of embrace that Mary Magdalene had upon
Jesus when she first saw her resurrected Lord (John 20:16-17).
ii. In either interpreting or applying Song of Solomon
3:1-4 to the relationship between Jesus and His people, many commentators have
noted that this is an example of how the believer, under some sense of
separation from Jesus, must seek after Him.
iii. ÒWhen, either in a dream, or in reality we lose our
sense of His presence, let us search for Him; and then in the finding, with new
devotion, let us hold Him, and refuse to let Him go.Ó (Morgan)
c. Until I had brought him
to the house of my mother: The maiden dreamed of bringing her
beloved home with her, to always be together with him – and to enjoy the
intimacy of the chamber of her
motherÕs home.
i. ÒStill clinging to him, she leads him gently but
forcefully to her motherÕs house and into the maternal bedroom.Ó (Carr)
ii. The fact that it is in the
house of her mother shows
that she expected it to be when they were in fact married, and not as a
pre-marital sexual rendezvous. ÒThat there I might entertain and embrace him,
and gain my motherÕs consent, and so proceed to the consummation of the
marriage.Ó (Poole)
iii. ÒShe is not looking for an illicit consummation of their love. Consummation she wants, but even in her dream she wants the consummation to be right. Where in human literature does one find a text so erotic and yet so moral as this?Ó (Kinlaw)
iv. ÒThis passage may also reflect ancient Israelite marital customs now unknown to us. Perhaps we should notice that Isaac brought Rebekah into the tent of his mother, even though Sarah was deceased, and there consummated their marriage (Genesis 24:67).Ó (Kinlaw)
v. Applying this symbolically, Charles Spurgeon noted the steps of the maidenÕs progress towards her beloved:
á She loved him.
á She sought him.
á She
found him not.
á She
found him.
á She held him.
á She
brought him.
vi. Spurgeon also made great application of the fact that
the maiden held him and would not let him go.
ÒMark, that according to the text, it is very apparent that Jesus will go away if
he is not held. ÔI held him and I would not let him go;Õ as if he would have
gone if he had not been firmly retained. When he met with Jacob that night at
the Jabbok, he said, ÔLet me go.Õ He would not go without JacobÕs letting him,
but he would have gone if Jacob had loosed his hold. The patriarch replied, ÔI
will not let thee go, except thou bless me.Õ This is one of ChristÕs ways and
manners; it is one of the peculiarities of his character. When he walked to
Emmaus with the two disciples, Ôhe made as if he would have gone further:Õ they
might have known it was none other than the Angel of the Covenant by that very
habit. He would have gone further, but they constrained him, saying, ÔAbide
with us for the day is far spent.Õ If you are willing to lose ChristÕs company
he is never intrusive, he will go away from you, and leave you till you know
his value and begin to pine for him. ÔI will go,Õ says he, Ôand return to my
place, till they acknowledge their offense, and seek my face: in their
affliction they will seek me early.Õ He will go unless you hold him.Ó (Spurgeon)
á Jesus must be held; He will go unless you hold Him.
á Jesus is willing to be held; He is not trying to escape us.
á Jesus
can be held; He we can grasp Him by
faith.
á
Jesus Himself
must be held; not merely a creed, tradition, or a ceremony.
3. (5) An exhortation to the maidenÕs companions.
I charge you, O daughters of Jerusalem,
By the gazelles or by the does of the field,
Do not stir up nor awaken love
Until it pleases.
a. I
charge you, O daughters of Jerusalem: This exhortation to the daughters of Jerusalem is another reminder
that this section is to be understood as a dream or daydream of the maiden. We
are not to imagine the couple together in the intimacy described in the
previous lines with the daughters of Jerusalem
observing.
b. By
the gazelles or by the does of the field: This poetic phrasing
(first found in Song of Solomon 2:7) surely sounded more natural and meaningful
to the first readers of the Song of Solomon than it does to us
c. Do
not stir up nor awaken love until it pleases: As in its previous
usage, this idea can be understood as a plea to leave her sweet romantic dream
uninterrupted. Or, it can be understood both in the context of relationship and in passion.
i. In terms of relationship it
means, ÒLet our love progress and grow until it is matured and fruitful, making
a genuinely pleasing relationship – donÕt let us go too fast.Ó In terms of passion it means, ÒLet our love making
continue without interruption until we are both fulfilled. DonÕt let us start
until we can go all the way.Ó
B. The spectacular
arrival of the wedding party.
1.
(6-8) SolomonÕs entourage brings the maiden to the wedding.
Who is this coming
out of the wilderness
Like pillars of smoke,
Perfumed with myrrh and frankincense,
With all the merchantÕs fragrant powders?
Behold, it is SolomonÕs
couch,
With sixty valiant
men around it,
Of the valiant of Israel.
They all hold swords,
Being expert in war.
Every man has his
sword on his thigh
Because of fear in the night.
a. Who is this coming out of the wilderness:
The immediate impression upon reading this is to think that this is the beloved
(Solomon) making a dramatic appearance. Yet the ancient Hebrew word translated this is in the feminine singular; the question
ÒWho is this?Ó is properly answered,
ÒIt is the maiden arriving in SolomonÕs palanquin, for the wedding described at the end of the chapter.Ó
i. Kinlaw explains that the word translated ÒthisÓ is in the feminine singular, and believes it refers to the maiden herself. ÒIt is obviously a wedding procession . . . our picture is of the groom and his men bringing his bride from her home to his city for the wedding.Ó (Kinlaw)
ii. The other times this question
is asked (Who is this?) in Song of Solomon, the answer is the Òthe maidenÓ (see
Song of Solomon 6:10 and 8:5). ÒIn either case it cannot be Solomon (or the
ÔkingÕ) who is described.Ó (Carr)
iii. Notably, she came out of the wilderness, ÒFrom whence we
little expected to see so beautiful and glorious bride to come, such persons
being usually bred in courts or noble cities.Ó (Poole)
iv. ÒAnd, doubtless, whenever God shall be pleased to bring forth his Church in power, and to make her mighty among the sons of men, the ignorance of men will be discovered breaking forth in yonder, for they will say, ÔWho is this?ÕÓ (Spurgeon)
b. Like
pillars of smoke, perfumed: This adds to the idea of the dignity and
impressive character of SolomonÕs entourage, which was then given to the maiden
to bring her to her wedding. She seems to rejoice in this, and happily
describes the group as they arrive, complete with the
valiant of Israel.
i. The apocryphal, inter-testament
book 1 Macabees described a similar wedding party: ÒWhere they lifted up their
eyes, and looked, and, behold, there was much ado and great carriage: and the
bridegroom came forth, and his friends and brethren, to meet them with drums,
and instruments of music, and many weapons.Ó (1 Macabees 9:39).
ii. This whole procession was very impressive. It even was filled with sacred and
sacrificial significance, indicated by the description Òperfumed with myrrh and frankincense.Ó ÒAlthough this
form occurs only here, the word occurs elsewhere about 115 times with the
meaning Ôgo up in smokeÕ or Ômake (a sacrifice) go up in smokeÕ.Ó (Carr) The
idea is that the smell of myrrh and frankincense
comes from their burning in a sacrificial sense, as an offering of incense.
iii. SolomonÕs
couch uses a different word than in Song of Solomon 3:1, and does
not have a sexual connotation.
iv. ÒThere is no reason though why
[this] should not be read as it
normally is and refer to the maiden. If so, we have the scene where the groom
has sent for his bride, and she comes properly perfumed in a magnificently
appropriate carriage and with an impressive array of protecting attendants.Ó
(Kinlaw)
c. Sixty
valiant men around it: We might say that SolomonÕs wedding party had
sixty groomsmen. They werenÕt there to
keep Solomon from backing out of the wedding; they were there to show that he
was a powerful man who could genuinely protect his maiden.
i. ÒOf course when travelling
through a wilderness, a royal procession was always in danger of attack. Arabs
prowled around; wandering Bedouins were always prepared to fall upon the
caravan; and more especially was this the case with a marriage procession,
because then the robbers might expect to obtain many jewels, or, if not, a
heavy ransom for the redemption of the bride or bridegroom by their friends.Ó (Spurgeon)
ii. Therefore the maiden had no
need to worry in the fear of the night;
because she was becoming one with her beloved, what belonged to him now also
belonged to her. This expresses the oneness of life and the shared life that
should exist between husband and wife. ÒShe and Solomon were so identified with
each other at this state that there was a perfect oneness between them. What
was his, was hers. What he enjoyed, she enjoyed. This is union.Ó (Nee)
iii. ÒThe very air is perfumed by the smoke of the incense that ascends pillar-like to the clouds; and all that safeguards the position of the Bridegroom Himself, and shows forth His dignity, safeguards also the accompanying bride, the sharer of His glory.Ó (Taylor)
iv. Spurgeon used this text to show that this answers fears people have about GodÕs church on this earth. ÒAll good men are dead; there are none left to guard the church as before.Ó Yet by symbolic application, the text shows us:
á There are enough guards for the church.
á There are valiant guards for the church.
á There
are guards in the right places, all about the church.
á The
good guards of the church are well-armed, well-trained, always ready, and
watchful.
2.
(9-11) Solomon enthroned and crowned.
Of the wood of Lebanon
Solomon the King
Made himself a palanquin:
He made its pillars of silver,
Its support of gold,
Its seat of purple,
Its interior paved with love
By the daughters of Jerusalem.
Go forth, O daughters of Zion,
And see King Solomon with the crown
With which his mother crowned him
On the day of his wedding,
The day of the gladness of his heart.
a. Solomon the King made himself a palanquin: The maiden saw (or imagined herself seeing) herself arriving for her wedding, coming upon the great entourage prepared for Solomon, carried by four or six strong men on a palanquin, sort of a portable, ornate couch for carrying an important person.
b. Pillars
of silver . . . support of gold . . . seat of purple: The maiden was
impressed not only with the opulence of this palanquin,
but especially that he shared all these
symbols of authority and prestige with her. Solomon shared his best with his maiden, and SolomonÕs best was pretty good.
i. It was clear from this that the
beloved (Solomon) could do the two essential things a man must be able to do
before he is ready to be married: he must be able to protect and provide for his maiden. The protection was shown in the armed men who surrounded this procession; the provision was shown in the opulence of SolomonÕs entourage. Of
course, he cannot protect or provide for his maiden (or bride) until he can
protect and provide for himself;
then they live a shared life, a oneness, with whatever belongs to him now also
belongs to her also.
ii. This is why a boy must grow up
and become a man before he can be a good husband, and why the process of
preparing to become a husband and being a husband is good for maturing men.
ÒLove and marriage frequently bring out the noblest qualities in a person. A
carefree and somewhat careless young man may become very responsible and
diligent. A childish boy may become steady and manly. Why? Because love is the
mother of virtue and the father of maturity . . . The one you love should bring
forth your best qualities and make you a better person.Ó (Glickman)
iii. It also shows that the maiden
respected and honored her beloved and saw his strength and authority as a good
thing, not a threatening thing – because now it was also, in a sense, her strength and authority, because she would be one
with him.
c. See
King Solomon with the crown with which
his mother crowned him: When Solomon was anointed and recognized as
king – even before the death of his father David – the high priest
presided over the ceremony, not his mother Bathsheba (1 Kings 1:38-40). This
may mean that the when his mother crowned him
was when his mother crowned him for his wedding day, in a time of relative
innocence when Solomon was captivated by and attached to only one woman.
i. ÒNot the royal crown used in
the coronation/consecration ceremony, but a ÔdiademÕ or ÔwreathÕ made either of
branches (like the laurel wreath of the Olympic games), or of precious metals
and stones (Psalm 21:3), that is a symbol of honour and joy (gladness).Ó (Carr) This connects well with the rabbinic
traditions that a bride and bridegroom were considered to be a Òroyal coupleÓ
on the day of their wedding.
ii. Considering that Solomon had
his heart drawn away to many women and
that these women drew his heart away from God, it is hard to see how this
amazing collection of love poems could have come from such a corrupt man. This
passage hints at one possible explanation. ÒCould it be that this is an
indication that, if the Song did come from Solomon, it originated before his
crowning in his most innocent period?Ó (Kinlaw)
iii. Yet the mention of his mother reminds us of Bathsheba, and the period when she helped Solomon take the throne of Israel (1 Kings 1:11-18; 1:28-31). The connection to 1 Kings 1 brings up the relation between the maiden of the Song of Solomon (called the Shulamite in Song of Solomon 6:13) and Abishag the Shunammite mentioned in 1 Kings 1:3-4, 1:15, From ancient times, many have wanted to associate the beautiful Abishag with the Shulamite. ÒAccording to the theory, as she ministered to David, she became romantically involved with his son Solomon and was later the subject of his love poem.Ó (Dilday in commentary on 1 Kings)
iv. Yet we must say that this
conjecture at best - and Shumen is not
the same as Shulam. ÒShunem, the modern Solem, lay eleven kilometers south-east
of Nazareth and five kilometers north of Jezreel in Issachar territory, and was
visited by Elijah (2 Kings 4:8). There is no need to identify Abishag with the
Shulammite of Song of Solomon 6:13.Ó (Wiseman in commentary on 1 Kings)
d. On the day of his wedding, the
day of the gladness of his heart: It was a glad wedding, because
their love was real, it was passionate, but it was also pure and restrained
into the proper channels. This made this a glad day not only for the maiden and
the beloved, but also for everyone.
i. ÒIt was not only the day of gladness for the king but also for
those who shared in his happiness . . . Their love had become a fountain from
which all could taste the sweetness of their joy.Ó (Glickman)
© 2008 David Guzik - No
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