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The Song of Songs: it's a well known but not so well understood
book of the Bible
It's 8 chapters of love poetry
And while there is an introduction, and a conclusion,
the book doesn't have any kind of rigid literary design
And that's because it's a collection of poems.
They're not meant to be dissected, or taken apart.
They're meant to be read as a flowing whole and simply enjoyed.
The first line of the book tells us that it's "the Song of Songs,"
which is a Hebrew idiom like, "the Holy of Holies" or "the King of Kings,"
it's a Hebrew way of saying, "the greatest thing"!
So this is the greatest song of all songs.
Then we're told in the first line that this "Song of Songs" is of Solomon –
– which could mean that he's the author, his name does begin the book after all.
But as you read the poems, you discover that the main
voice is that of a woman, called "the Beloved."
And while there is also a male voice, it does not
seem to be Solomon.
Solomon is mentioned a couple times in the poem, but
he's never a speaker, and you do have to admit Solomon
is a very odd candidate as the author of this book, given
the fact that he had seven hundred wives...
For the lovers in the Song of Songs, they are the only ones in the world for each other.
So the "of Solomon" likely means "in the wisdom tradition of Solomon."
He was known for his wisdom, his poetry, his love of learning about every part of life.
And Solomon became the father of Wisdom Literature in Israel.
And so his legacy is here carried on, through a collection of love poems
that explore the human experience of love and sexual desire.
The opening poem introduces us to the basic theme of this book:
we hear the voice of the young woman, who delights in her man, a shepherd.
Now she's not married to him yet, but it becomes clear that they're engaged and they cannot wait
to be together.
From the introduction, the poems flow back and forth
from the woman's voice, to the man's, shifting from
scene to scene without any kind of clear, linear
sequence or storyline.
The poems move in the symphonic cycles
and key images and ideas get repeated and developed
So, one of the basic themes uniting the poems is the
intense desire this couple has for each other,
expressed through their constant seeking and finding.
So, after the opening poem, they're separated, but on
the hunt for one another.
So the woman calls out, or she'll wake up from a dream
and go looking for her lover, and more than once they'll
find each other, they'll embrace. And then right when
things start to get a bit racy, the scene will suddenly end.
And the new one will start: they're separated, looking for each other, and on it goes.
Another repeated theme is the joy of the couple's physical attraction for one another.
Multiple times they'll pause and describe each other
with these elaborate metaphors, and here it's very helpful to know
that these images and metaphors in Hebrew poetry
are not primarily visual.
If you try and paint a picture of these people, based on the metaphors
you will end up with something that looks very, very strange.
What you're supposed to do, is reflect on the meaning
of these images, as they relate to the man and the woman.
So you'll read through the poetic cycle, and the tension will keep building
and their desire and joy and attraction, and this spiraling
repetition is a poetic way of heightening and focusing
on the mystery and power of sexual love.
It all comes together in the conclusion, which
pauses to summarize what these poems are all about.
Love is as strong as death, its passions are as severe
as the grave, its flashes are of fire,
a divine flame. Many waters cannot extinguish love,
rivers cannot sweep it away. If one were to give all the
wealth of ones house for love, he would be utterly scorned.
The poem highlights the power and intensity of love –
how it's both beautiful, but also dangerous.
Like fire, love can destroy people if it's abused, or be
life-giving if it's protected.
Ultimately love expresses the insatiable human longing
to know and be fully known and desired by another.
Love is one of the most transcendent and mysterious
experiences in human life, and as part of the Bible's
wisdom tradition, this book says it's a gift from God.
After this, there's an odd poem about Solomon trying to do what the previous poem just said
was impossible: to buy love.
The woman rejects Solomon's offer and then the book
concludes with the man and the woman
– they're separate once more on the hunt for each other.
He calls to hear her voice, she begs him to run away
with her, and that's how the book ends.
Just totally open-ended.
But that's a lot like love!
Which never truly concludes, because there's always
more to discover and pursue in your beloved.
And so true love has no end.
And neither does this book.
Now, through history, the big question raised by the Song of Songs is,
"what on earth is love poetry doing in the Bible?"
There have been three main interpretations of this book
throughout history.
In Jewish tradition, it's been read as an allegory:
each character a symbol. So the woman is Israel, the
man is God, and their love is the symbol of covenant between God and Israel
made at Mount Sinai and the giving of the Torah.
This view flowed into the Christian tradition, but the characters were swapped.
So it's about Christ's love for His people
the Church. And this interpretation was inspired
by Paul's words in Ephesians 5:
– that a Christian husband's love for his wife is a symbol of Christ's love for the Church.
What's interesting is that in the last hundred years,
archaeological discoveries among Israel's ancient neighbors
and Egypt and Babylon, has turned up all kinds of ancient love poetry
that's very similar in language and imagery to the Song of Songs.
We see that love poetry was a meaningful part of Israel's
cultural environment, which has led most scholars
today to view the Song of Songs as what it presents itself to be:
an arrangement of Israelite love poetry reflecting on the divine gift of love.
But, that doesn't mean it's only ancient love poetry.
There's a key feature of these poems that sticks out when you
read them as a part of the Old Testament. And that's the
overwhelming use of garden imagery.
There are powerful echoes of the garden of Eden and
the idyllic scene between the married couple in the early chapters of Genesis.
So the image of the man and the woman naked
and vulnerable, but completely unified and safe with one another
– this resonates in the background of the Song of Songs.
It's as if in these poems, we are witnessing the love of a
couple whose relationship is untainted by selfishness and sin.
And so ultimately the Song holds out hope that even
though our own relationships are so often distorted by
selfishness, love is a transcendent gift.
And it's meant to point us to something greater, to the
gift of God's love that will one day permeate and transform
His beloved world. And that is what the Song
of Songs is all about.