Chapter 4:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Ecclesiastes Isaiah
Song of Solomon 4
Complete Concise
In this chapter, I. Jesus Christ, having espoused his church to
himself (ch. 3:11), highly commends her beauty in the several expressions of it,
concluding her fair, all fair (v. 1-5 and again, v. 7). II. He retires himself,
and invites her with him, from the mountains of terror to those of delight (v.
6, 8). III. He professes his love to her and his delight in her affection to him
(v. 9-14). IV. She ascribes all she had that was valuable in her to him, and
depends upon the continued influence of his grace to make her more and more
acceptable to him (v. 15, 16).
Verses 1-7
Here is, I. A large and particular account of the beauties of
the church, and of gracious souls on whom the image of God is renewed,
consisting
in the beauty of holiness. In general, he that is a competent
judge of beauty, whose
judgment, we are sure,
is according to truth,
and what all must subscribe to, he has said,
Behold, thou art fair. She
had commended him, and called all about her to take notice of his glories; and
hereby she recommends herself to him, gains his favour, and, in return for her
respects, he calls to all about him to take notice of her graces. Those that
honour Christ he will honour, 1 Sa. 2:30.
1. He does not flatter her, nor design hereby either to make her
proud of herself or to court her praises of him; but, (1.) It is to encourage
her under her present dejections. Whatever others thought of her, she was
amiable in his eyes. (2.) It is to teach her what to value herself upon, not any
external advantages (which would add nothing to her, and the want of which would
deprive her of nothing that was really excellent), but upon the comeliness of
grace which he had put upon her. (3.) It is to invite others to think well of
her too, and to join themselves to her: "Thou art
my love, thou
lovest me and art beloved of me, and therefore
thou art fair."
All
the beauty of the saints is derived from him, and they shine by reflecting his
light; it is
the beauty of the Lord our God that is
upon us, Ps.
90:17. She was espoused to him, and that made her beautiful.
Uxor fulget
radiis mariti
The spouse shines in her husband's rays. It it
repeated,
Thou art fair, and again,
Thou art fair, denoting not
only the certainty of it, but the pleasure he took in speaking of it.
2. As to the representation here made of the beauty of the
church, the images are certainly very bright, the shades are strong, and the
comparisons bold, not proper indeed to represent any external beauty, for they
were not designed to do so, but
the beauty of holiness, the new man, the
hidden man of the heart, in that which is not corruptible. Seven particulars
are specified, a number of perfection, for the church is enriched with manifold
graces by
the seven spirits that
are before the throne, Rev. 1:4;
1 Co. 1:5, 7.
(1.) Her
eyes. A good eye contributes much to a beauty:
Thou
hast doves' eyes, clear and chaste, and often cast up towards heaven. It
is not the eagle's eye, that can face the sun, but the
dove's eye, a
humble, modest, mournful eye, that is the praise of those whom Christ loves.
Ministers are the church's eyes (Isa. 52:8,
thy watchmen shall see eye to
eye); they must be like
doves' eyes, harmless and inoffensive (Mt.
10:16), having their
conversation in the world in simplicity and godly
sincerity. Wisdom and knowledge are the eyes of the new man; they must be
clear, but not haughty,
not exercised in things too high for us. When our
aims and intentions are sincere and honest, then we have
doves' eyes,
when we look not unto
idols (Eze. 18:6), but have
our eyes ever
towards the Lord, Ps. 25:15. The
doves' eyes are within the locks,
which area as a shade upon them, so that, [1.] They cannot fully see. As long as
we are here in this world we
know but in part, for a hair hangs in our
eyes;
we cannot order our speech by reason of darkness; death will
shortly cut those locks, and then we shall see all things clearly. [2.] They
cannot be fully seen, but as the stars through the thin clouds. Some make it to
intimate the bashfulness of her looks; she suffers not her eyes to wander, but
limits them with her locks.
(2.) Her
hair; it is compared to
a flock of goats,
which looked white, and were, on the top of the mountains, like a fine head of
hair; and the sight was more pleasant to the spectator because the goats have
not only gravity from their beards, but they are
comely in going (Prov.
30:29), but it was most pleasant of all to the owner, much of whose riches
consisted in his flocks. Christ puts a value upon that in the church, and in
believers, which others make no more account of than of their hair. He told his
disciples that
the very hairs of their head were all numbered, as
carefully as men number their flocks (Mt. 10:30), and that
not a hair of
their head should perish, Lu. 21:18. Some by the
hair here understand
the outward conversation of a believer, which ought to be comely, and decent,
and agreeable to the holiness of the heart. The apostle opposes good works, such
as become the professors of godliness, to
the plaiting of the hair, 1
Tim. 2:9, 10. Mary Magdalen's hair was beautiful when she wiped the feet of
Christ with it.
(3.) Her
teeth, v. 2. Ministers are the church's teeth;
like nurses, they chew the meat for the babes of Christ. The Chaldee paraphrase
applies it to the priests and Levites, who fed upon the sacrifices as the
representatives of the people. Faith, by which we feed upon Christ, meditation,
by which we ruminate on the word and chew the cud upon what we have heard, in
order to the digesting of it, are the teeth of the new man. These are here
compared to
a flock of sheep. Christ called his disciples and ministers a
little flock. It is the praise of teeth to be
even, to be white,
and kept clean,
like sheep from the washing, and to be firm and well
fixed in the gums, and not like sheep that cast their young; for so the word
signifies which we translate
barren. It is the praise of ministers to be
even in mutual love and concord, to be pure and clean from all moral pollutions,
and to be fruitful, bringing forth souls to Christ, and nursing his lambs.
(4.) Her
lips; these are compared to
a thread of
scarlet, v. 3. Red lips are comely, and a sign of health, as the paleness of
the lips is a sign of faintness and weakness; her
lips were the colour
of
scarlet, but thin
lips, like a thread of scarlet. The next words
explain it:
Thy speech is comely, always with grace,
good, and
to
the use of edifying, which adds much to the beauty of a Christian. When we
praise God with
our lips, and with the mouth make confession of him
to
salvation, then they are as a
thread of scarlet. All our good works
and good words must be
washed in the blood of Christ, dyed like the
scarlet
thread, and then, and not till then, they are acceptable to God. The Chaldee
applies it to the chief priest, and his prayers for Israel on the day of
atonement.
(5.) Her
temples, or cheeks, which are here compared to
a
piece of a pomegranate, a fruit which, when cut in two, has rich veins or
specks in it, like a blush in the face. Humility and modesty, blushing to lift
up our faces before God, blushing at the remembrance of sin and in a sense of
our unworthiness of the honour put upon us, will beautify us very much in the
eyes of Christ. The blushes of Christ's bride are
within her locks,
which intimates (says Mr. Durham) that she blushes when no other sees, and for
that which none sees but God and conscience; also that she seeks not to proclaim
her humility, but modestly covers that too; yet the evidences of all these, in a
tender walk, appear and are comely.
(6.) Her
neck; this is here compared to
the tower of
David, v. 4. This is generally applied to the grace of faith, by which we
are united to Christ, as the body is united to the head by the neck; this
is
like the tower of David, furnishing us with weapons of war, especially
bucklers
and
shields, as the soldiers were supplied with them out of that tower,
for
faith is our
shield (Eph. 6:16): those that have it never want
a
buckler, for God will compass them
with his favour as with a shield.
When this
neck is like a tower, straight, and stately, and strong, a
Christian goes on in his way, and works with courage and magnanimity, and does
not hang a drooping head, and he does when faith fails. Some make the
shields
of the mighty men, that are here said to hang up in
the tower of David,
to be the monuments of the valour of David's worthies. Their shields were
preserved, to keep in remembrance them and their heroic acts, intimating that it
is a great encouragement to the saints to hold up their heads, to see what great
things the saints in all ages have accomplished and won by faith. In Heb. 11 we
have the
shields of the
mighty men hung up, the exploits of
believers and the trophies of their victories.
(7.) Her
breasts; these are
like two young roes that
are twins, v. 5. The church's breasts are both for ornament (Eze. 16:7)
and for use; they are the
breasts of her consolation (Isa. 66:11), as she
is said to
suck the breasts of kings, Isa. 60:16. Some apply these to the
two Testaments; others to the two sacraments, the seals of the covenant of
grace; others to ministers, who are to be spiritual nurses to the children of
God and to give out to them the
sincere milk of the word, that they may grow
thereby, and, in order to that, are themselves to
feed among the lilies
where Christ feeds (ch. 2:16), that they may be to the babes of the church as
full breasts. Or the breasts of a believer are his love to Christ, which he is
pleased with, as a tender husband is with the affections of his wife, who is
therefore said to be to him
as the loving hind and the pleasant roe,
because
her breasts satisfy him at all times, Prov. 5:19. This includes
also his edifying others and communicating grace to them, which adds much to a
Christian's beauty.
II. The bridegroom's resolution hereupon to retire
to the
mountain of myrrh (v. 6) and there to make his residence. This
mountain
of myrrh is supposed to signify Mount Moriah, on which the temple was built,
where incense was daily burnt to the honour of God. Christ was so pleased with
the beauty of his church that he chose this to be his rest for ever; here he
will dwell
till the day break and the shadows flee away. Christ's
parting promise to his disciples, as the representatives of the church, answer
to this:
Lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the world. Where
the ordinances of God are duly administered there Christ will be, and there we
must meet him at the door of the tabernacle of meeting. Some make these to be
the words of the spouse, either modestly ashamed of the praises given her, and
willing to get out of the hearing of them, or desirous to be constant to the
holy hill, not doubting but there to find suitable and sufficient succour and
relief in all her straits, and there to cast anchor, and wish for the day,
which, at the time appointed, would
break and the shadows flee away. The
holy hill (as some observe) is here called both a
mountain of myrrh,
which is bitter, and a
hill of frankincense, which is sweet, for there we
have occasion both to mourn and rejoice; repentance is a bitter sweet. But in
heaven it will be all frankincense, and no myrrh. Prayer is compared to incense,
and Christ will meet his praying people and will bless them.
III. His repeated commendation of the beauty of the spouse (v.
7):
Thou art all fair, my love. He had said (v. 1),
Thou art fair;
but here he goes further, and, in review of the particulars, as of those of the
creation, he pronounces
all very good: "Thou art all fair, my
love; thou art all over beautiful, and there is nothing amiss in thee, and
thou hast all beauties in thee; thou art
sanctified wholly in every part;
all things have become new (2 Co. 5:17); there is not only a new face and
a new name, but a new man, a new nature;
there is no spot in thee, as far
as thou art renewed."
The spiritual sacrifices must be without blemish.
There
is no spot but such as is often the spot of God's children, none of the
leopard's spots. The church, when Christ shall present it to himself a
glorious church, will be altogether
without spot or wrinkle, Eph. 5:27.
Verses 8-14
These are still the words of Christ to his church, expressing
his great esteem of her and affection to her, the opinion he had of her beauty
and excellency, the desire he had of, and the delight he had in, her converse
and society. And so ought men to love their wives as Christ loves the church,
and takes pleasure in it as if it were spotless and had no fault, when yet it is
compassed with infirmity. Now, observe here,
I. The endearing names and titles by which he calls her, to
express his love to her, to assure her of it, and to engage and excite her love
to him. Twice here he calls her
My spouse (v. 8, 11) and three times
My
sister, my spouse, v. 9, 10, 12. Mention was made (ch. 3:11) of
the day
of his espousals, and, after that, she is called his
spouse, not
before. Note, There is a marriage-covenant between Christ and his church,
between Christ and every true believer. Christ calls his church his
spouse,
and his calling her so makes her so. "I have betrothed thee unto me for
ever; and, as the bridegroom rejoices over the bride, so shall thy God rejoice
over thee."
He is not ashamed to own the relation, but, as becomes a kind
and tender husband, he speaks affectionately to her, and calls her his
spouse,
which cannot but strongly engage her to be faithful to him. Nay, because no one
relation among men is sufficient to set forth Christ's love to his church, and
to show that all this must be understood spiritually, he owns her in two
relations, which among men are incompatible,
My sister, my spouse.
Abraham's saying of Sarah,
She is my sister, was interpreted as a
denying of her to be his wife; but Christ's church is to him both a
sister
and a
spouse, as Mt. 12:50, a
sister and mother. His calling her
sister
is grounded upon his taking our nature upon him in his incarnation, and his
making us partakers of his nature in our sanctification. He clothed himself with
a
body (Heb. 2:14), and he clothes believers with his
Spirit (1
Co. 6:17), and so they become his
sisters. They are children of God his
Father (2 Co. 6:18) and so they become his
sisters; he that sanctifies,
and those that are sanctified, are all of one (Heb. 2:11); and he owns them, and
loves them, as his sisters.
II. The gracious call he gives her to come along with him as a
faithful bride, that must forget her own people and her father's house, and
leave all to cleave to him.
Ubi tu Caius, ibi ego Caia
Where thou
Caius art, I Caia will be. Come with me from Lebanon, v. 8.
1. It is a precept; so we take it, like that (ch. 2:10, 13),
Rise
up, and come away. All that have by faith come to Christ must come with
Christ, in holy obedience to him and compliance with him. Being joined to him,
we must walk with him. This is his command to us daily:
"Come with me,
my spouse; come with me to God as a Father; come with me onward, heavenward;
come forward with me; come up with me;
come with me from Lebanon, from the
top of Amana, from the lions' dens."
These mountains are to be
considered, (1.) As seemingly delightful places. Lebanon is called
that
goodly mountain, Deu. 3:25. We read of the
glory of Lebanon (Isa.
35:2) and its goodly smell, Hos. 14:6. We read of the pleasant
dew of Hermon
(Ps. 133:3) and the
joy of Hermon (Ps. 89:12); and we may suppose the
other mountains here mentioned to be pleasant ones, and so this is Christ's
call to his spouse to come off from the world, all its products, all its
pleasures, to sit loose to all the delights of sense. All those must do so that
would come with Christ; they must take their affections off from all present
things; yea, though they be placed at the upper end of the world, on
the top
of Amana and
the top of Shenir, though they enjoy the highest
satisfactions the creature can propose to give, yet they must
come away
from them all, and live above the tops of the highest hills on earth, that they
may have
their conversation in heaven. Come from those mountains, to go
along with Christ to the holy mountain, the
mountain of myrrh, v. 6. Even
while we have our residence on these mountains, yet we must look for them, look
above them. Shall we
lift up our eyes to the hills? No;
our help comes
from the Lord, Ps. 121:1, 2. We must look beyond them, to
the things that
are not seen (as these high hills are), that
are eternal. From the
tops of Shenir and Hermon, which were on the other side Jordan, as from
Pisgah, they could see the land of Canaan; from this world we must look forward
to the better country. (2.) They are to be considered as really dangerous. These
hills indeed are pleasant enough, but there are in them
lions' dens;
they are
mountains of the leopards, mountains of prey, though they seem
glorious
and excellent, Ps. 76:4. Satan, that
roaring lion, in the
prince
of this world; in the things of it he lies in wait to devour. On the tops of
these mountains there are many dangerous temptations to those who would take up
their residence in them; and therefore
come with me from them; let us not
set our hearts upon the things of this world, and then they can do us no hurt.
Come
with me from the temples of idolaters, and the societies of wicked people
(so some understand it);
come out from among them, and be you separate. Come
from under the dominion of your own lusts, which are as
lions and
leopards,
fierce upon us, and making us fierce.
2. It may be taken as a promise: Thou shalt
come with me from
Lebanon, from the lions' dens; that is, (1.) "Many shall be brought
home to me, as living members of the church, from every point, from Lebanon in
the north, Amana in the west, Hermon in the east, Shenir in the south, from all
parts, to
sit down with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,"
Mt. 8:11. See
Isa. 49:11, 12. Some
from the tops of these mountains, some of the great
men of this world, shall give themselves to Christ. (2.) The church shall be
delivered from her persecutors, in due time; though now she
dwells among
lions (Ps. 57:4), Christ will take her with himself from among their dens.
III. The great delight Christ takes in his church and in all
believers. He delights in them,
1. As in an agreeable bride,
adorned for her husband
(Rev. 21:2), who
greatly desires her beauty, Ps. 45:11. No expressions of
love can be more passionate than these here, in which Christ manifests his
affection to his church; and yet that great proof of his love, his dying for it,
that he might present it to himself a glorious church, goes far beyond them all.
A spouse so dearly bought and paid for could not but be dearly loved. Such a
price being given for her, a high value must needs be put upon her accordingly;
and both together may well set us a wondering at
the height and depth, and
length and breadth, of the love of Christ, which surpasses knowledge, that
love in which he
gave himself for us and gives himself to us. Observe,
(1.) How he is affected towards his spouse:
Thou hast ravished my heart;
the word is used only here.
Thou hast hearted me, or
Thou has
unhearted me. New words are coined to express the inexpressibleness of
Christ's surprising love to his church; and the strength of that love is set
forth by that which is a weakness in men, the being so much in love with one
object as to be heartless to every thing else. This may refer to that love which
Christ had to the chosen remnant, before the worlds were, when
his delights
were with the sons of men (Prov. 8:31), that first love, which brought him
from heaven to earth, to
seek and save them at such vast expense, yet
including the complacency he takes in them when he has brought them to himself.
Note, Christ's heart is upon his church; so it has appeared all along. His
treasure is in it; it is his
peculiar treasure (Ex. 19:5); and therefore
there his heart is also. "Never was love like unto the love of Christ,
which made him even mindless of himself, when he emptied himself of his glory,
and despised all shame and pain, for our sakes. The wound of love towards us,
which he had from eternity in himself, made him neglect all the wounds and
reproaches of the cross;"
so Bishop Reynolds. Thus let us love him. (2.)
What it is that thus affects him with delight. [1.] The regard she has to him:
Thou
hast ravished my heart with one of thy eyes, those
doves' eyes,
clear and chaste (which were commended, v. 1), with one glance of those eyes.
Christ is wonderfully pleased with those that look unto him as their Saviour,
and through the eye of faith dart their affections to him, above any rival
whatsoever, and whose
eyes are ever towards him; he is soon aware of the
first look of a soul towards him and meets it with his favours. [2.] The
ornaments she has from him, that is, the obedience she yields to him, for that
is the
chain of her neck, the graces that enrich her soul, which are
connected as links in chain, the exercise of these graces in a conversation
which adorns both herself and the doctrine of Jesus Christ, which she professes
to believe (as a gold chain is an ornament to persons of quality), and an entire
submission to the commanding power of his love. Having shaken off the
bands
of our neck, by which we were tied to this world (Isa. 52:2), and
the
yoke of our transgressions, we are bound with the
cords of love, as
chains
of gold, to Jesus Christ, and our necks are brought under his sweet and easy
yoke, to drawn in it. This recommends us to Jesus Christ, for this is that true
wisdom which, in his account, is
an ornament of grace unto the head and
chains about the neck, Prov. 1:9. [3.] The affection she has for him:
How
fair is thy love! how beautiful is it! Not only thy love itself, but all the
fruits and products of it, its working in the heart, its works in the life. How
well does it become a believer thus to love Christ, and what a pleasure does
Christ take in it! Nothing recommends us to Christ as this does.
How much
better is thy love than wine, than all the wine that was poured out to the
Lord in the drink-offerings! Hence the fruit of the vine is said to
cheer God
and man, Judges 9:13. She had said of Christ's love,
It is better than
wine (ch. 1:2), and now Christ says so of hers; there is nothing lost by
praising Christ, nor will he be behindhand with his friends in kindness. [4.]
The ointments, the odours wherewith she is perfumed, the gifts and graces of the
Spirit, her good works, which are
an odour of a sweet smell, a sacrifice
acceptable, well-pleasing to God, Phil. 4:18.
The smell of thy ointment
is better
than all spices, such as the queen of Sheba presented to
Solomon, camel-loads of them (1 Ki. 10:2), or, rather, than all the spices that
were used in compounding the holy incense which was burned daily on the golden
altar. Love and obedience to God are more pleasing to Christ than sacrifice or
incense.
The smell of her garments too, the visible profession she makes
of religion, and relation to Christ, before men, and wherein she appears to the
world, this is very grateful to Christ, as
the smell of Lebanon. Christ
having put upon his spouse the
white raiment of his own righteousness
(Rev. 3:18), and
the righteousness of saints (Rev. 19:8), and this
perfumed with holy joy and comfort, he is well pleased with it. [5.] Her words,
both in her devotion to God and her discourses with men (v. 11):
Thy lips O
my spouse! drop as the honeycomb, drop that which is very sweet, and drop it
freely and plentifully. If what God speaks to us be
sweeter to us
than
the honey and the honeycomb (Ps. 19:10), what we say to him in prayer and
praise shall also be pleasing to him:
Sweet is thy voice. And if
out
of a good treasure in the
heart we
bring forth good things, if
our
speech be always with grace, if our
lips use knowledge aright,
if they
disperse knowledge, they then, in Christ's account, even
drop
the honeycomb, out-drop it.
Honey and milk (the two staple
commodities of Canaan)
are under thy tongue; that is, in thy heart, not
only reserved there for thy own use as a sweet morsel for thyself, but ready
there for the use of others. In the word of God there is sweet and wholesome
nourishment, milk for babes, honey for those that are grown up. Christ is
well-pleased with those that are full of his word.
2. As in a pleasant garden. And well may a very great delight be
compared to the delight taken in a garden, when the happiness of Adam in
innocency was represented by the putting of him into a garden, a garden of
pleasure. This comparison is pursued, v. 12-14. The church is fitly compared
to a
garden, to a garden which, as was usual, had
a fountain in
it. Where Solomon made himself
gardens and
orchards he made
himself
pools of water (Eccl. 2:5, 6), not only for curiosity and
diversion, in water-works, but for use, to
water the gardens. Eden was
well
watered, Gen. 2:10; 13:10. Observe, (1.) The peculiarity of this garden: It
is
a garden enclosed, a paradise separated from the common earth. It is
appropriated to God; he has
set it apart for himself; Israel is God's
portion, the lot of his inheritance. It is enclosed for secresy; the saints are
God's hidden ones, therefore
the world knows them not; Christ walks in
his garden unseen. It is enclosed for safety; a hedge of protection is made
about it, which all the powers of darkness cannot either find or make a gap in.
God's vineyard is
fenced (Isa. 5:2); there is a wall about it, a wall
of fire. It has a spring in it, and a fountain, but it is
a spring shut up
and
a fountain sealed, which sends its streams
abroad (Prov.
5:16), but is itself carefully locked up, that it may not by any injurious hand
be muddied or polluted. The souls of believers are as
gardens enclosed;
grace in them is as
a spring shut up there in
the hidden man of the
heart, where the water that Christ gives is
a well of living water,
Jn. 4:14; 7:38. The Old-Testament church was
a garden enclosed by the
partition wall of the ceremonial law. The Bible was then a
spring shut up
and
a fountain sealed; it was confined to one nation; but now the wall of
separation is removed, the gospel preached to every nation, and
in Jesus
Christ there is neither Greek nor Jew. (2.) The products of this garden. It
is as the garden of Eden, where
the Lord God made to grow every tree that is
pleasant to the sight and good for food, Gen. 2:9.
Thy plants, or
plantations,
are an orchard of pomegranates with pleasant fruits, v. 13.
It is not like
the vineyard of the man void of understanding, that was
all
grown over with thorns and nettles; but here are
fruits, pleasant fruits,
all trees of frankincense, and
all the chief spices, v. 14. Here is a
great plenty of fruits and great variety, nothing wanting which might either
beautify or enrich this garden, might make it either delightful or serviceable
to its great Lord. Every thing here is the best of the kind. Their
chief
spices were much more valuable, because much more durable, than the choicest
of our flowers. Solomon was a great master in botany as well as other parts of
natural philosophy; he treated largely of trees (1 Ki. 4:33), and perhaps had
reference to some specific qualities of the fruits here specified, which made
them very fit for the purpose for which he alludes to them; but we must be
content to observe, in general, the saints in the church, and graces in the
saints, are very fitly compared to these
fruits and spices; for, [1.]
They are planted, and do not grow of themselves;
the trees of righteousness
are the
planting of the Lord (Isa. 61:3); grace springs from an
incorruptible seed. [2.] They are precious and of high value; hence we read of
the
precious sons of Zion and their
precious faith; they are
plants
of renown. [3.] They are pleasant, and of a sweet savour to God and man,
and, as strong aromatics, diffuse their fragrancy. [4.] They are profitable and
of great use. Saints are the blessings of this earth, and their graces are their
riches, with which they trade as the merchants of the east with their spices.
[5.] They are permanent, and will be preserved to good purpose, when flowers are
withered and good for nothing. Grace, ripened into glory, will last for ever.
Verses 15-16
These seem to be the words of the spouse, the church, in answer
to the commendations which Christ, the bridegroom, had given of her as a
pleasant fruitful garden. Is she a garden?
I. She owns her dependence upon Christ himself to make this
garden fruitful. To him she has an eye (v. 15) as the
fountain of gardens,
not only the founder of them, by whom they are planted and to whom they owe
their being, but the fountain of them, by which they are watered and to which
they own their continuance and well-being, and without whose constant supplies
they would soon become like the dry and barren wilderness. To him she gives all
the glory of her fruitfulness, as being nothing without him:
O fountain of
gardens! fountain of all good, of all grace, do not thou fail me. Does a
believer say to the church,
All my springs are in thee, in thee, O Zion?
(Ps. 87:7), the church transmits the praise to Christ, and says to him,
All
my springs are in thee; thou art
the well of living waters (Jer.
2:13), out of which flow the
streams of Lebanon, the river Jordan, which
had its rise at the foot of Mount Lebanon, and the waters of the sanctuary,
which issued out
from under the threshold of the house, Eze. 47:1. Those
that are gardens to Christ must acknowledge him a fountain to them, from whose
fulness they receive and to whom it is owing that their souls are as
a
watered garden, Jer. 31:12.
The city of God on earth is made
glad
with the
river that flows from this fountain (Ps. 46:4), and the new
Jerusalem has its
pure river of water of life proceeding out of the throne of
God and of the Lamb, Rev. 22:1.
II. She implores the influences of the blessed Spirit to make
this garden fragrant (v. 16):
Awake, O north wind! and come, thou south.
This is a prayer, 1. For the church in general, that there may be a plentiful
effusion of the Spirit upon it, in order to its flourishing estate. Ministers'
gifts are
the spices; when the Spirit is poured out these flow forth, and
then
the wilderness becomes a fruitful field, Isa. 32:15. This prayer was
answered in the pouring out of the Spirit on
the day of pentecost (Acts
2:1), ushered in by a
mighty wind; then the apostles, who were bound up
before, flowed forth, and were
a sweet savour to God, 2 Co. 2:15. 2. For
particular believers. Note, (1.) Sanctified souls are as gardens, gardens of the
Lord, enclosed for him. (2.) Graces in the soul are as spices in these gardens,
that in them which is valuable and useful. (3.) It is very desirable that the
spices of grace should flow forth both in pious and devout affections and in
holy gracious actions, that with them we may honour God, adorn our profession,
and do that which will be grateful to good men. (4.) The blessed Spirit, in his
operations upon the soul, is as the
north and the south wind, which
blows
where it listeth, and from several points, Jn. 3:8. There is the north wind
of convictions, and the south wind of comforts; but all, like the wind, brought
out
of God's treasuries and
fulfilling his word. (5.) The flowing forth
of the spices of grace depends upon the gales of the Spirit; he stirs up good
affections, and works in us both to will and to do that which is good; it is he
that makes manifest the savour of his knowledge by us. (6.) We ought therefore
to wait upon the Spirit of grace for his quickening influences, to pray for
them, and to lay our souls under them. God has promised to give us his Spirit,
but he will for this be enquired of.
III. She invites Christ to the best entertainment the garden affords:
"Let
my beloved then
come into his garden and eat his pleasant fruits; let
him have the honour of all the products of the garden (it is fit he should), and
let me have the comfort of his acceptance of them, for that is the best account
they can be made to turn to."
Observe, 1. She calls it
his garden;
for those that are espoused to Christ call nothing their own, but what they have
devoted to him and desire to be used for him. When the spices flow forth then it
is fit to be called his garden, and not till then. The fruits of the garden are
his pleasant fruits, for he planted them, watered them, and gave the increase.
What can we pretend to merit at Christ's hands when we can invite him to
nothing but what is his own already? 2. She begs he would visit it, and accept
of what it produced. The believer can take little pleasure in his garden, unless
Christ, the beloved of his soul, come to him, nor have any joy of the fruits of
it, unless they redound some way or other to the glory of Christ, and he will
think all he has well bestowed upon him.
Chapter 4:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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1 Timothy
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Titus
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1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
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