7-3-2 The Song Of Solomon
The Song Of Solomon: Psychology Of Marriage Out Of The Faith
The Song of Solomon is the record of Solomon's
romance with Pharaoh's daughter. Of course, this was
an explicit breach of the crystal clear commandment not to
marry women from Egypt. He should have admired neither
the horses nor the women of Egypt (Song of Solomon 1:9); yet
he begins his Song with an unashamed breach of the command
not to desire either of these things.
The unashamedness of Solomon coupled with his spirituality indicates that
at this time he was genuinely convinced that what he was doing
was deeply spiritual; when in fact it was
completely carnal. He totally ignored his own advice about chosing a spiritual
woman as a wife. The girl he loved liked wine- unusual, perhaps, in that
culture; she loves him because of his ointment, and he loves her because
of her jewellery (Song of Solomon 1:2,3,10; 4:4). He says that deep kissing
with her gives the same after effect as drinking enough wine that you
talk in your sleep afterwards (Song of Solomon 7:9). It’s all very human
and carnal.
There is a sharp contrast throughout the Song between Solomon's
girlfriend and the " daughters of Jerusalem"
. She begins as a humble girl who recognizes her inferiority
to these Israelite girls; she comments upon the way her skin is
darker than theirs (Song 1:5,6), but she asks Solomon to overlook
this. She deeply wished that Solomon was her brother, i.e.
an Egyptian, because in that case their relationship
could be much more open, they would not be despised because
of their love, and Solomon could come and live in her mother's house
back in Egypt (Song of Solomon 8:1,2). Clearly she was attracted
to Solomon rather than to the God of Israel. In 8:2,3 she seems to be
saying ‘I’ll have sex with you, as you offered in 7:12, if you
agree to be an Egyptian’ (and 4:16; 5:1,4-6 could imply they did
have intercourse). But throughout the Song, Solomon describes her in Jewish
terms, he likens her to many well-known places
in Israel: the Heshbon fishpools, the tower of Lebanon etc.,
seeing the way her hair draped over her breasts as reminiscent of how
Mount Gilead looked (Song of Solomon 4:1,4). He wanted to see
her as an Israelite girl, and so that
was how she appeared to him. She even starts
to use similar language in praise of him (Song of Solomon 1:14). Solomon
takes her on a tour of Israel (Song of Solomon 4:8), enthusing about
the sights, speaking of them as the things of " our
land" (Song of Solomon 2:10-13). He wanted
her to be an Israelite, and he spoke to
her as if she was, assuming that he could psychologically
and spiritually dominate her so that he could have a
little of both- his own carnal fulfilment coupled with spiritual satisfaction.
How many times has this been worked out in the experience of a spiritual
brother enthusing about the beauty of the Truth and
spiritual Israel to an Egyptian girl, who only superficially
shares his enthusiasm, longing in her heart to have him with her
in Egypt.
Solomon saw her as a “paradise”, a garden with rivers and exotic fruits,
surrounded by a wall- exactly the language of Eden. And she was a fount
of “living waters” (Song 4:12,13,15 RVmg.), the language of Messiah. He
saw her as the Kingdom / Eden personified. And yet her response to being
described in this way is almost inappropriate- for she invites him to
come and eat the fruit of the garden (4:16), exactly after the pattern
of Eve destroying Adam. Yet Solomon didn’t want to see this connection;
she was the Kingdom to him, just as so many have felt that having their
new partner means that nothing, not even the Kingdom, is meaningful
any more.
Solomon comforted her with the thought that he saw
her as far more attractive than the daughters
of Jerusalem, the Jewish girls whom he should
have been marrying: " As the lily among thorns, so
is my love among the daughters" (Song of Solomon 2:2).
Thorns are invariably connected with spiritual weakness and
rejection; it was as if Solomon was saying
that he found the daughter of Pharaoh spiritually more attractive
than the Jewish girls. This is the basis for the sarcastic comments and
tensions between Solomon’s girl and the daughters of Jerusalem. And she
went along with how he wanted to see her: " I am the rose of Sharon,
and the lily of the valleys" (Song of Solomon
2:1); even though her heart was far away in Egypt,
she described herself in Jewish terms because that was how he saw her;
he calls her his " sister" (Song of Solomon 4:9), as if she
was actually Jewish- whereas she wanted him to be her Egyptian “brother”.
The relationship was doomed from the start. She walked the streets of
Jerusalem whilst he was confined in the palace (Song of Solomon 3:2).
Her mother moved to Jerusalem from Egypt, but it wasn’t possible for Solomon
and her to easily be together in that house (Song of Solomon 3:4; 8:2).
When Solomon describes her painted lips as being like a thread of scarlet
(Song of Solomon 4:3), he uses two Hebrew words which only occur together
in Josh. 2:18, describing how the Gentile harlot Rahab hung the scarlet
thread outside her home in order to bring about the salvation of her mother
and her family. Solomon wanted to justify his Egytpian girlfriend by comparing
her to Gentile Rahab. And such sophistry goes on at the beginning of every
relationship that leads to a marriage out of the Faith.
She sarcastically comments to the Jerusalem girls: “Go forth, O ye daughters
of Jerusalem, and behold king Solomon”, and goes on to mock the crown
his mother Bathsheba had made for him, wishing instead that he would be
under the influence of her mother (Song of Solomon 3:11,4). Her
sarcasm turns to angry defence at times, e.g. when she warns the Jerusalem
girls not to stir up “my love” (Song of Solomon 2:7)- i.e. ‘Hands off
my Solomon!’. In turn, they ask her where Solomon has “turned aside” so
that they can come and seek him with her (Song of Solomon 6:1), using
a word elsewhere associated with ‘turning aside’ in apostasy to other
gods. They in their turn sarcastically comment to her: “Whither is thy
beloved gone, O thou fairest among women…that we may seek him with thee?”
(Song of Solomon 6:1), quoting Solomon’s terms of endearment back to her.
Solomon boasts that he has many Jewish queens and concubines, but there
is only one woman, the Egyptian, that he truly loves (Song of Solomon
6:8,9); he even calls her his “sister”, associating himself thereby with
Egypt. Perhaps this tension between the two groups- the Jerusalem women
and the Egyptian girl and her family- is behind the enigmatic reference
to “the company of two armies” or “the dance of the two camps” (Song of
Solomon 6:13). Solomon went on to say that
the bed he had prepared for the daughters of Jerusalem he was now
giving to his Egyptian bride. The bed is described in the language
of the tabernacle; made of wood, but covered with gold and
surrounded by silver pillars, with a mercy seat of purple (Song
of Solomon 3:9,10 Heb.). He persuaded himself that his marriage
to this woman was some kind of expression of spirituality. The bed
was made from cedar brought from Lebanon- and yet the same wood was used
for the temple (Song of Solomon 3:9). Such was his dualism. The Song is
shot through with allusion to the Law and tabernacle rituals;
he speaks of making her borders on her clothes (Song of Solomon
1:11), probably alluding to the borders of blue to be worn
by the faithful Israelite. Solomon wanted
her to be a spiritual woman, and he was
going to make her one; many a preacher, teacher,
husband, wife, father, mother, child, boyfriend
has had to learn the impossibility of this. He wanted to see her
as a spiritual woman, and eventually he became persuaded that she was
just this. It seems likely that Solomon wrote down his inspired Proverbs
(a result of the wisdom God gave him) and the Song about the
same time. In Proverbs he uses the figure of a well of living water
to describe spiritual words and thinking (Prov.10:11; 13:14;
14:27; 16:22). Yet this is the very figure which he
uses concerning his worldly bride (Song of Solomon 4:15).
This typifies the massive imputation
of righteousness which the Lord Jesus grants to
us, his worldly Gentile bride.
There are a number of connections
between the behaviour of Solomon and his girlfriend
in the Song and Solomon's own warnings against
Gentile marriage in Proverbs.
Song of Solomon |
Proverbs |
| "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..into her chamber"
(3:4) |
"She caught him...come not
nigh the door of her house...her house...the chambers of
death" (7:13,27; 5:8) |
Yet Solomon was aware, at least theoretically, of the
foolish path he was going down. God had inspired him with the wisdom
of Prov. 2:16,17, which warned that wisdom would save a man from the Gentile
woman who made a covenant with the God of Israel in her youth (in order
to marry an Israelite, by implication), but soon forgot it. This was exactly,
exactly the case of Solomon; yet he just couldn't see
the personal relevance of his own wisdom to himself. Solomon could write
of the folly of the ruler who oppressed the poor (Prov. 22:16)- and yet
do just that very thing. The Proverbs so frequently refer to the dangers
of the house of the Gentile woman; yet the Song shows the Egyptian girl
dearly wishing that Solomon would come with her into her house. And
Solomon, just like the foolish young man he wrote about,
went right ahead down the road to spiritual disaster he so often warned
others about. He warns the young man of the dangers of the Egyptian woman
who perfumes her bed with myrrh (Prov. 7:16,17)- and then falls for just
such a woman (Ps. 45:8). This woman he warns of appears to want to serve
Yahweh, and presents herself in the very language of the tabernacle (Prov.
7:14,16,17). And yet Solomon goes and falls for just such a woman. One
can only conclude that the more true spiritual knowledge we have, the
more prone we are to do the very opposite. Such is our nature. |