The Song of Songs: A Series of Sermons

G. I. Williamson


Getting the Right Perspective

“The song of songs, which is Solomon’s” (Song of Solomon 1:1).

The text for tonight’s message is found in the Song of Songs, but it is only this short statement. Verse one reads: “The song of songs, which is Solomon’s.”

I can’t help but wonder how many of you have ever heard a series of sermons on the Song of Solomon. I know that I went to church all my life from the time I can remember anything, I remember going to church on the Lord’s day and I never heard any sermons on the Song of Solomon until I preached on the book myself. In my early ministry in the Orthodox Presbyterian Church in New England I said one time that the whole Bible is the Word of God, and we should not be afraid to preach on any part of it, and I’m willing to do it. And what do you think but right away somebody said, “Okay, the Song of Solomon.” And I can understand why a lot of preachers shy away from because it’s not easy to preach on a book about sex and marriage. It’s especially difficult when you face a whole congregation, people of different ages, and so on.

You know, in ancient times they had a saying that a man shouldn’t even read this book until he’s thirty years of age. Well, you laugh, but I think that they probably had things better under control in that culture than they do today. Like it or not, we live in an age when everybody knows so much about sex that it’s probably a wise thing to stop talking about it once in a while. We are living in a sex-saturated and sex-dominated culture. And you know the result of it hasn’t been very good. When half of the marriages end in tragic ruin, you can see that there’s something radically wrong. But that’s a very good reason for preaching on this book of the Bible because it would be sheer folly and stupidity to withhold the light of God’s holy Word on this sacred subject, if it would help us at all in our culture and day, and I believe that it most certainly will.

And so, God helping us, I want to take you on a journey through this wonderful book of the Bible as we seek to understand from it what God says about love, sex and the relationship of the sexes, and marriage which has his divine approval. And so by way of introduction let me point out to you first of all that this book, the one book of the Bible that is devoted wholly to this subject, is poetry. It is a song; it’s not a technical sex manual which is so very popular in American culture today. No, it’s poetry, and I think that is a very significant thing in itself. When I left New Zealand they were just bringing sex education into the schools, and many Christian parents were very much concerned because they saw this as another threat to their children. And I think rightly so. The parents realized that the whole approach to sex in the sex education being proposed to the high schools would have been quite different from the way in which it is presented in the Bible. You can present all of the facts of life, all of the details of the mechanism of sex in a very cold and clinical way, with disastrous results. But if you come to see it in the framework of poetry, the way God puts it, and integrate it with all of life, that is a very different thing.

Young people today know so much about sex anyway that I’d be the last person in the world to stand up here and try to tell them anything about it from the technical point of view. I was sitting one day in my study in New Zealand, and I was wishing I had a copy of the Encyclopedia Britannica, and I read in the local paper that there was one for sale, in all places, over at the high school. They had two, and they didn’t need two—they wanted the money to buy something else, so I made a bee-line over there and I got that whole Encyclopedia Britannica for sixty dollars. And I took it home and began to use it with profit, but one day I noticed that in that encyclopedia there were some transparencies that showed the whole physiology of male and female, and they were the most worn-out pages in the Encyclopedia Britannica. The young people in that high school knew everything they could find out about the mechanism of the human body and sex. And that’s what I’m talking about: we can’t really have any doubt that the young people know it all from that standpoint, but do they understand the poetry of love?

The very encyclopedia that I just mentioned in its article on “Man” had this to say: “The fragmentation of knowledge as it touches the subject of man appears to have gone very far. We have discarded eternal man [and by “eternal man” the encyclopedia means the old integrated, Christian view of what man is in the cosmos that has been discarded] and we’ve cut him into pieces.” Now that’s true. No generation knows any more about the human “I” as today, but the modern generation doesn’t know where the “I” came from. No generation knows as much about the fine details of the Creation of God, but it doesn’t know where the Creation came from. It doesn’t understand the reality of man as a divinely-created image-bearer of God. And that, also, is largely our problem when it comes to sex. And that is why the Bible uses poetry, not prose, to teach us about this holy subject because true love and sex and marriage are poetry more than they are prose. It’s more like a symphony than a factory—a factory is a production line; a symphony is something altogether different. And, you know, somehow I think all of us welcome that fact because down deep in our hearts we are the image of God, and God is the greatest artist and the greatest poet that there is. And He wants us to learn to think about love and sex and marriage in the context of something beautiful and poetic.

Now the second thing that we learn from this opening statement is that the author of this book is Solomon. That’s given a lot of people a lot of trouble. That’s why a lot of commentators, and even a lot of conservative commentators, try to get out of it and find a way to say that somebody else, pretending to be Solomon, wrote this book. After all, they say, how could a man who had seven-hundred wives and three-hundred concubines, how could that man write God’s book about sex and marriage when he himself was such a terrible model? Talk about mechanized sex, that guy had it! Could he be the author of this book of the Bible? Come on, they say. And if he was the author when did he write it? Was it when he was a young man, just starting out, before everything went bad?

Well, there’s an old proverb that says young men write poetry, and middle-aged men write proverbs, and old men write about vanity. While I haven’t started writing proverbs yet, when I was a young man I used to write a little bit of poetry. That’s a fact. I don’t write it any more and maybe that’s a bad sign, but it is, I think, true that generally speaking this is the rhythm of life. Probably some of you men here might have written a little love poetry long ago, but it’s also possible, it seems to me, that Solomon wrote this in his old age when he had learned what a fool he had been. You know the Bible says that this man was greatly loved of God even though foolish and outlandish women led him into sin—that’s what the Bible says, and it says that in a Bible written much, much later by the inspired Nehemiah. And Nehemiah speaks about Solomon in such a way that I at least have no doubt that the man was, in spite of his failures and sin, a child of God, and I don’t believe that he would be the writer of a book of the Bible if that wasn’t true.

And when you look at it that way, you know, it doesn’t really surprise you so much that God would use this man because, after all, who did God use to show us His own heart? The Bible says David was a man after God’s own heart. The one who really shows us the heart of God more than anyone else in the Bible as a poet was David, and David was an adulterer and a murderer. Now that’s a fact. And yet God chose that man’s heart, of course, after he repented and got right with God again to show us the depth of the emotions of a sanctified human heart. Well, why then should God not use a man who had seen it all, even from the wrong side, who when he was chastened of the Lord, repentant, and sanctified, could then write the greatest song in the world? There’s not a reason on earth why that could not be. God took the greatest enemy of the church, Saul of Tarsus, and made him the greatest missionary of the cross. Why couldn’t he then take the greatest sinner in the realm of sex that ever lived, if you like—Solomon, who had seven-hundred wives and three-hundred concubines—to write the greatest song that was ever written about love? Well, there’s no way that we can be sure which is true, but we do know that this was written by Solomon because it says so in the Bible, and I believe that also is something of great importance to us because it reminds us of the fact that the holiest part of God’s Holy Word is for sinners, and actually was written through sinners because there never was anyone that took up pen to write part of the Bible that was not like you and me, a sinner saved by grace. That’s a wonderful thing. And if God could turn this man’s heart right, and through His Spirit breathing through him write a poem like this, then God can take every one of us, whatever we may have done and however great our sin may have been in the realm of sex and marriage, and He can make us to sing this song, also, to the praise and glory of His name.

One of the great marriages that I’ve read about in the history of the Christian church was the marriage of John Newton. Do you know anything about John Newton? Well, in his earlier life he was a slave trader—went down around Africa to get slaves, took them all over the Western world, delivered them—and wherever he stopped he went to the prostitutes. Whatever city it was, off he went to the prostitutes and lived it up. And then God got a hold of that man, and he was great in his repentance, true in his life, wholly converted in his heart, and then he got married. And they say one of the beautiful Christian marriages of that day was the marriage of John Newton, and his faithfulness and fidelity and devotion to his wife was a model for all the people that he served for many years as a faithful pastor in the church of God. Why not? Because God’s Kingdom has only converted, justified, adopted, and sanctified sinners—that’s all there is in the Kingdom of God. And so it’s a wonderful thing to me to know that this book was written by a sinner like Solomon who did everything wrong until he got right with God and then wrote this wonderful book of the Bible. So that’s the second thing.

The third thing is that this is the greatest song in existence because the Hebrew phrase “song of songs” means that for sure. You know yourself whenever the Hebrew uses a phrase like that it’s talking about the ultimate. What was the “Holy of holies”? You know that the whole tabernacle was holy; everything in it was holy. But the holiest of the holy was that place where God’s presence was manifested—that’s why it was called the Holy of holies. It was the supremely holy place in the Tabernacle. Why is Jesus called the “King of kings”? Well, it is because there is none like him. He is the ruler of all of the rulers of the earth. All of the great and mighty and powerful of the earth are under the dominion of one, and only one, supreme king, and that’s the Lord Jesus Christ. And that’s why he’s called the King of kings. And that’s also why He’s called the Servant of servants because no one ever stooped down and humbled himself in the way Jesus did. We can try to imitate Him, but we will never equal Him because Christ is the Servant of servants, He is the One without compare.

Now what that means is that Jesus Christ is our supreme and only Lord, and I believe that this opening statement proves beyond any question of a doubt that this song has to be about Him in some way. You may know that back in the ancient synagogue and also in the early church and then again in the Puritan era they took the Song of Solomon and they made the whole thing allegorical. Everything in it was taken to be a symbol of something entirely different from the symbol itself. We’ll mention that as we go on through the book. But there was a tendency to try to interpret the book by making everything in it symbolic. The only trouble with that was that no two people had the same idea about the meaning of that book because all of the symbols were differently interpreted by different people.

Now the modern era in which we’re living the tendency has been rather to take all of the different parts of this book and see them only in a literal way, to look upon each and every one of these things only as something on the human level having to do with the relationship of man and woman. My own view is that neither of these does justice to this book of the Bible because God Himself, and we know this from the New Testament, made human marriage an image of the relationship of Christ to the church. Read Ephesians 5 where Paul says you have got to be subject to one another in the Lord. He says, “Wives, you have to be in subjection to your husbands.” He says, “Husbands, you got to loves your wives,” and he starts on down through that passage and it’s quite plain that he’s talking very plainly and bluntly to husbands and wives and their relationship to each other, and then all of a sudden he says, “This is a great mystery but I’m speaking about Christ and the church.” Was he speaking about Christ and the church? Well, not directly, no, but indirectly yes because of this analogy that God Himself has established between the relationship of Christ and the church and the relationship of marriage. The one is an analogy to the other.

You know, after all the Bible says all of the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are hidden in Christ, and when Christ rose from the dead He took His disciples right through the Bible and He showed them that every book of the Bible, in one way or another, was about Him. How, then, is this book about Jesus? Well, it’s about Jesus because the ideal marriage is the marriage of Christ and the church, and the only way that you can ever get a hold of the ideal for your marriage is to understand the relationship between Christ and the church. Sometimes people say, “Do I really need all of this doctrine in my daily life?” Well, friends, you certainly do. Nothing more basic than understanding the doctrine of the church, the doctrine of Christ, and the doctrine of the union between Christ and the church in order to understand your own marriage, and what it ought to be, and what it can be. Of course, the two go together because the whole system of biblical truth is interrelated. And that’s where so many go wrong when it comes to love and sex and to marriage. So many people today in our culture try to deal with marriage without God, without Christ, without the church, and they are doomed to failure because there is no way that you and I will ever begin to know anything about the beauty of love and marriage without that great and only perfect model which is Jesus in His love for the church.

You might put it this way: that the Song of Songs can only be sung by those who know the love of loves. And what is the love of loves? Here was a king, the greatest of all kings, sitting in his heavenly glory, and He looked down here on earth and He saw one that He would have as His bride. She wasn’t very beautiful, either, but He set his heart upon her, and He would have her and none other. And once He had fixed His love upon her, nothing could ever distract Him. And when you stop and think, you will see how many things there are that might have discouraged Him, and yet He was willing to go down, to suffer, to descend into hell, all because of His love for His bride, the church. And the reciprocal love, the response love, of the church for Christ brings us to the other side of the matter. You see, deep down in her heart the true church of Christ has a burning love for the Savior; nothing on earth, nothing on heaven or hell, will ever frustrate it or defeat it. And this, too, is the way it ought to be in our human love and marriage.

Now, where are you going to learn that? You got any other models that are that good? I’ve seen a lot of marriages—good, bad, and indifferent—but I’ve never seen any like that to perfection. But that’s our model, and that’s what really is, and you’ll see it as we go through this book—the model that comes to us through this great poem written by Solomon about his love for Shulamite maiden and her love for him. And you can’t learn it anywhere else but the Bible. You know, beloved in the Lord, there is no such thing among sinful men as the perfect or ideal marriage. It doesn’t exist—but there is such a thing in God’s holy Word. It is the marriage of Christ and the church as it was imaged in this great idealization of Solomon and the Shulamite maiden. Whether that actually happened in his early life or was a reminiscence of his old age doesn’t matter—it images the great love of Christ for the church, and what a wonderful thing it is to see what that image can do in the lives of people.

I remember years ago in our mission work I was going through a housing project talking to those who were willing to talk about the Lord, and I came across a girl with four children, two from each of her previous husbands from whom she was now divorced. And she wondered if there could be a future. You would have wondered, too, if you’d seen her. For the last, I guess, about twenty-five years, she has been happily and faithfully married to a Christian husband. The marriage has endured. The children have grown up and have gone to a Christian university. And you have seen in that life what a glimpse of that model can do in somebody’s life, because she became one of the people of God, and God gave her a new beginning. And she came to see from the model of Christ’s love for the church, and the church’s love for Christ, what her life ought to be. And I believe God can do that for all of us, however far we may be from that standard of perfection; our God through this part of His Word can lift us up again and enable us to strive for the great goal of likeness to Jesus who loved the church and gave Himself for it.

May God grant this to us as we study this book together. Amen.


The Beginning of True Love

Song of Solomon 1:2-2:7

[The Shulamite]

Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth for your love is better than wine.Because of the fragrance of your good ointments, your name is ointment poured forth; therefore the virgins love you. Lead me away!

[The Daughters of Jerusalem]

We will run after you.

[The Shulamite]

The king has brought me into his chambers.

[The Daughters of Jerusalem]

We will be glad and rejoice in you. We will remember your love more than wine.

[The Shulamite]

Rightly do they love you.I am dark, but lovely, O daughters of Jerusalem, like the tents of Kedar, like the curtains of Solomon. Do not look upon me, because I am dark, because the sun has tanned me. My mother’s sons were angry with me; they made me the keeper of the vineyards, but my own vineyard I have not kept.

(To Her Beloved)

Tell me, O you whom I love, where you feed your flock, where you make it rest at noon. For why should I be as one who veils herself by the flocks of your companions?

[The Beloved]

If you do not know, O fairest among women, follow in the footsteps of the flock, and feed your little goats beside the shepherds’ tents.I have compared you, my love, to my filly among Pharaoh’s chariots. Your cheeks are lovely with ornaments, your neck with chains of gold.

[The Daughters of Jerusalem]

We will make you ornaments of gold with studs of silver.

[The Shulamite]

While the king is at his table, my spikenard sends forth its fragrance. A bundle of myrrh is my beloved to me, that lies all night between my breasts. My beloved is to me a cluster of henna blooms in the vineyards of En Gedi.

[The Beloved]

Behold, you are fair, my love! Behold, you are fair! You have dove’s eyes.

[The Shulamite]

Behold, you are handsome, my beloved! Yes, pleasant! Also our bed is green.The beams of our houses are cedar, and our rafters of fir. I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys.

[The Beloved]

Like a lily among thorns, so is my love among the daughters.

[The Shulamite]

Like an apple tree among the trees of the woods, so is my beloved among the sons. I sat down in his shade with great delight, and his fruit was sweet to my taste.

[The Shulamite to the Daughters of Jerusalem]

He brought me to the banqueting house, and his banner over me was love. Sustain me with cakes of raisins, refresh me with apples, for I am lovesick. His left hand is under my head, and his right hand embraces me. 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.

You know, congregation, it’s never an easy thing to know what a poet is saying. You probably are aware of that. Sometimes you wonder: Just what does the poet mean here? When I was a university student many years ago, I majored in English literature. We studied all the English poets, including, of course, one of the very greatest of all the writers in the English language, William Shakespeare, and to this day big books are being written by scholars trying to decide exactly what Shakespeare meant in certain places. And I discovered that even the experts don’t agree, and that’s true in every area of life.

So you not only have in poetry the problem of language, but when we’re dealing with biblical poetry we have the problem of another language, for this poem was written in Hebrew, and when you add to that the great differences between that time and our time, and that culture and our culture, you can see why I want to begin by saying that I don’t pretend to have the last word on everything in the Song of Solomon. And I don’t claim that I can fully explain every expression in this book. And that’s one reason why I think it is wise to expound a book like this in larger blocks of material, so that we really get the drift of it and pick up the thread of what’s unfolding in it. If we approach the book in this way, I believe we can be certain as to its central theme. Some of the details may indeed remain obscure, but I believe the central ideas that are being expressed are perfectly clear and certain. So what I want to do first of all is to try to expound this section of God’s Word for you, and then in the concluding part of my message draw certain conclusions. So let me invite you to have your Bibles open as we look at this passage together. And as we do, I want to draw your attention to seven things that I believe are quite clear in this passage.

The first is that the poem begins with the words of this young woman who fell in love with the writer Solomon. This is evident from the gender of the pronouns in that passage: “Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth,” and so it goes on down to where she says, “My mother’s sons were angry with me.” And then in the eighth verse of this passage the first speaker is further identified when she is addressed by whomever—it’s a kind of rhetorical, dramatic question addressed to the speaker up to that point—“If you do not know, most beautiful of woman”—then do this, and so on. Now we don’t know who this girl was originally—what her name was, what family she came from, what tribe; it’s obvious, however, that she comes from a humble station in life because she even had to do a man’s work out in the vineyard. “Don’t stare at me,” she says, “because I am dark.” And why is she dark? “I’m darkened by the sun. My mother’s sons were angry with me and made me take care of the vineyard.” From his earliest days Solomon must have been surrounded by a bevy of beautiful women; at least, beautiful in terms of that day and that culture. They were probably pampered women who had milky white skin and all of the latest cosmetics. In contrast to this, this country girl feels herself to be at a great disadvantage. She’s dark, over exposed to the sun, and because of all of the hard work she’s had to do out in the family vineyard, her own vineyard which I take to be a figure of expression denoting her own beauty she has been forced to neglect. It is this girl who longs for the love of the exalted ruler of Israel. It is this girl who has set her heart on the king of Israel.

The second thing that is clear from the passage is that her greatest beauty is the beauty of her character which shines out in her virtues. For her, love is not a game; it is not a series of clever flirtations as it no doubt was for many in the court of the king. No, she has fixed her heart on the king and longs for his embraces. And you will notice that she does so not just because he is dashing and handsome, but because of the quality of his person for she says, “Your name is like perfumed poured out.” Now we do know that in biblical times a name was very significant. A name wasn’t just something you looked up in a book until you found something that sounded good and then gave that name to the child. In the Bible a name was a real revelation of the person, and in Solomon’s case his name was his fame. He was known throughout the world in that day as the wisest man in the world because God had given him, had endowed him with, true wisdom. And that word, “Your name is poured forth like ointment,” is the same as saying your reputation is truly wonderful and beautiful. It summarized what he is really was. “Solomon” means the “peace of God” and that’s what really did shine out of his character and person in the day that he was a young ruler over Israel because of God-given wisdom.

And this is just as important to her as his kisses. She wants his kisses, the kisses of his mouth, but she also greatly values the quality of his character. And you can see that in verse three and again in verse four when she says it is only right that they adore this man. “No wonder the maidens love you,” she says, right after saying, “Your name is like perfume poured out.” And again she says in verse four, “How right they are to adore you.” When a person is not only good to look at, but truly excellent in every respect, then you can appreciate the fact that many other people are also drawn to admire, respect, and even love that person.

The third thing that we see in this passage is that this girl has a respect for the God-given role of male and female. More and more today in our culture, more and more women are talking about being liberated as women. What does it mean“ ”women’s liberation? Well, it means that they don’t want to accept any more the role that God has given them. A lot of people think that if you have a role of subordination, that makes you unequal, but that’s not true. Christ subordinated Himself to the Father, but we know that He was equal with the Father. And so the idea that role-subordination means less glory and honor is not true. And this girl did not want something other than the God-given role appointed to her sex, but she heartily embraced it, for you’ll notice that she wants him to take the initiative. “Let him kiss me,” she says. “Take me away with you,” she says. “Let the king bring me into his chambers.” All the way through this passage we read little expressions which clearly reveal the fact that she desires this man to take the initiative and be her leader as well as her lover.

Right there, you see the fourth thing, namely, that she has a big problem. How can a country girl, with all these apparent disadvantages, hope to have a chance with a man sought by so many women? You women will probably appreciate that problem—you want a man, and he’s desired by a hundred other women, what chance do you have? I think she’s expressing this thought in verse seven: “Tell me, you whom I love, where you graze your flock and where you rest your sheep at midday. Why should I be like a veiled woman beside the flock of your friends?” It’s a way of expressing, How can I meet that man without doing something that is contrary to my own moral principles?

Some commentators say that in verse eight you have friends speaking. That’s the way the translators of the New International Version have put it down. But that word “friends” is entirely the work of modern translators. It’s not in the Hebrew. We aren’t sure this was said by friends. Maybe it was an editorial comment by Solomon himself, a kind of an aside in which he expresses beforehand a kind of foreknowledge he has of the situation. But in the last analysis it doesn’t make any difference; it’s really a divine rhetorical question. God is the one who says, ‘If you don’t know, most beautiful of women, then follow the tracks of the sheep; you stick to what you’re doing and you’ll be all right. And that is my view of the matter.’ It is a way of saying, “You don’t have to invent some artificial method of meeting this man. You just stick to what you’re doing. You just be content with your lowly status, and God will take care of the rest.” You see, she was wrong in thinking she would lose out because she was different, because she was in a lowly station. For the truth is that Solomon had already noticed her, and had noticed her precisely because she was not like all the rest.

He expresses that in a very unusual way when he says, “I likened you, my darling, to a mare harnessed to one of the chariots of Pharaoh.” Now I can’t prove it, but I think that what that means is this. Usually hitched up to the chariots of Pharaoh were stallions—and don’t forget that Solomon was a horse lover. Archeologists have dug up the remains of the stables of Solomon, and he had more horses than you could believe. And if that man saw a whole line of chariots with fifty stallions and one mare, you can depend on it: he would have noticed that fact. And he is saying that this woman stands out in contrast to all of those other women just as much as that mare would among the stallions of Pharaoh. And you know, I think there is a little of that in all of us. A modern poet has even expressed the same thing. When it comes to the natural and the artificial, which would you rather have?

Henceforth I will not set my love
On other than the country lass,
For in the court I see and prove
Fancy is brittle as the glass.
What though in silver and in gold
The bonny lass be not so brave
Yet are her looks fresh to behold
And that is it that love doth crave.
Fair fall the petticoat of red
That veils the skin as white as milk,
And such as would not so be sped
Let them go coy the gowns of silk.
Keep, ladies, keep for your own turns
The Spanish red to mend your looks,
For when the sun my Daphne burns
She seeks the water of the brooks,
And though the musk and amber fine
So ladylike she cannot get,
Yet will she wear the sweet woodbine,
The primrose and the violet.

Give me Daphne any day, you see! She’s got that natural beauty, that unadorned beauty that God gives a lovely woman.

So while she’s pining away for Solomon, constantly thinking about him, he’s already thinking about her, even before she knows it, already wanting her for his possession. Now in those days they didn’t have 24-hour deodorant that you use to smell good all day long. In those days the ladies wore a thing around their necks with some herbs inside—a little bag and that was nicely hidden away where it would always give off a fragrant smell. And that’s what she’s talking about in verses 12-14. She is saying that her thoughts of this man are with her like a sweet perfume twenty-four hours a day. Any of you ladies ever fall in love and find that to be true? Twenty-four hours a day you were thinking of that guy. Is that true? I think it is.

My lover is to me a sachet of myrrh
Resting between my breasts.
My lover is to me a cluster of henna blossoms
From the vineyard of Engedi.

The very nicest perfume that you can get comes from the vineyards of Engedi, and that’s what her thoughts all day long about this man really are. What a sweet aroma is the aroma of love.

Now the fifth thing is the fact that the language of love is the same in all generations. However many people speak there from verse 15 on, and wherever you make the divisions—and I’m not sure that all of them made by the NIV translators are right (yet we know that some, at least, are because of the gender of the verbs and nouns)—one thing is sure, and that is that in every culture, in every generation, and in every language the talk of love is pretty much the same. “How beautiful you are, my darling” (NKJ: “Behold, you are fair, my love!”). Ever heard that, you ladies? “How beautiful your eyes, they’re like doves” (NKJ: “Behold, you are fair! You have dove’s eyes”). “How handsome you are, my lover” (KJV: “Behold, you are handsome, my beloved!”). Ever heard that? That’s the language of love, and if you’ve never spoken like that at some time in your life, then Cupid has not hit the bull’s eye where you are concerned. But if you have spoken like that at some time in your life, you know exactly what is going on in this passage. You don’t have to be an expert in interpreting every Hebrew word to see that. She has become to him the most beautiful thing in the world, and he has become to her the world’s most handsome and eligible bachelor.

And you know something that always happens when this is going on? Suddenly the self-esteem and morale of that girl begins to zoom up higher and higher. At the beginning she was rather self-conscious for she said, “Don’t stare at me because I’m dark. I’m sunburned. You’ve got to make allowances for my appearance.” But after she’s heard him say a couple of times, “You’re beautiful, my darling. You’re eyes are like doves,” then she says, “I am a rose of Sharon, a lily of the valleys.” “I’m not so bad,” she says. Now she’s not claiming to be number one. Those flowers are rather modest, but they are beautiful, and she knows she’s beautiful now—he’s told her. Wouldn’t that convince her if he’s told her? And so she is now more self-conscious, but at the same time more confident, of her appearance. And I believe that that is always what happens in love, and it seems to me, by the way, that not only does she think she is more beautiful, but she really is. I’ve noticed that in my own children—when they fall in love and move toward marriage they seem to get more beautiful. It’s a fact, isn’t it? A fact of life something begins to radiate out of personality.

Well, the result of all this is, and this is my sixth point, that she’s already sure that she wants this man as her husband. And you can see that is in verse 2:6. She says,

Like and apple tree among the trees of the woods,
So is my beloved among the son.
I sat down in his shade with great delight,
And his fruit was sweet to my taste.
He brought me to the banqueting house,
And his banner over me was love.
Sustain me with cakes of raisins,
Refresh me with apples,
For I am lovesick.
His left hand is under my head,
And his right hand embraces me (2:3-6, KJV).

Already she is expressing mentally her desire for the most intimate relationship with this man. And let us say the Bible isn’t prudish about sex. It doesn’t see it as something strange, something evil, or something to be ashamed of. It’s a natural thing, when this is happening, to be sick with love. It doesn’t mean sick of love; it means sick with love. Have you ever seen a lovesick girl? Have you ever been a lovesick boy? Well, there is such a thing. And yet at the same time we must not overlook the fact that she feels this in the context of respect for his person. You can see this from two things in this passage. First of all, she honors his headship, and her love is not only sexual desire. It is also oriented to his character, for she says,

I delight to sit in his shade,
and his fruit is sweet to my taste (2:3b, NIV).

Like an apple tree among the trees of the woods,
So is my beloved among the sons.
I sat down in his shade with great delight,
And his fruit was sweet to my taste (2:3, KJV).

Now what does that mean? Well, it means this: a godly man has stability. His character is nourished by deep roots. And there’s something about him—a strength of character and so on that makes her willing to rest under his shadow. And every woman ought to be able to see that kind of character in the man she falls in love with. It’s very dangerous to fall in love with a man of whom you cannot say, girls, “I can sit under that man’s shade.” If you can’t say that, better stop and look again.

And the second thing is: “his banner over me is love.” Now what does that mean? If you were ever in the military service, you’ll know what a tremendously important thing a banner is. In some of the military units of the United States Army there are banners that have served since Civil War times, and it’s an honor to serve under that banner. When you go in to battle, and you go in to war, you are sometimes called upon for extraordinary feats of courage, and you would never in this world do it if you were just following your own inclinations, but you look at that banner and think of what it stands for and the honor of your nation, and you say, “Well, I’ll do it.” That banner calls out of me a response that otherwise wouldn’t be there. “Well,” she says, “his banner over me, his power to command me, his power to have headship over me, is love.” And it goes right through the Bible. A man’s headship has got to be based on love. It’s what we call loving leadership. And if a man loves his wife, he can lead her. Doesn’t mean it will be easy, but it can be done. And if a man loves his wife, and she’s like this girl, she can submit to it, too, because the banner will be love. She might not always want to do what he says to do, but if she knows he really loves her and there’s no question about that, she’ll say, “I don’t really feel like doing it, but I will. He loves me, and I’ll do it. His banner over me is love.”

The seventh thing that’s very clear in this passage is that she does not want to anticipate the blessing of complete union with this man, her lover, prior to the time of God’s approval. She says, “Daughters of Jerusalem [that is kind of a rhetorical address to all of the other women in Israel], I charge you by the gazelles and the does of the field, don’t arouse or awaken love until it pleases.” And that’s a way of saying, Don’t try to stir up the fires of sexual passion until God Himself gives His approval. You see, right here is where our whole generation has gone completely wrong. The sexual side of the relationship between a man and a woman has been drawn out of the context that God put it in. There’s so much sexual stimulation today, and even evangelical Christians and even whole denominations are tending to yield ground in this area and say, “Well, it’s all right. You don’t really have to wait till you get married.” But you do, because that’s what the Bible says. You don’t have a right to another person’s total love until God says so, and God says so in the bonds of marriage. And she knew that, and she knew that the divine way is the good way, that God’s way is the blessed way, and so she said, “Daughters of Jerusalem, I charge you, don’t do anything to tempt me or to spoil the progress of God-ordained love.” Wait until the right time ordained by Him.

Now as I say, there are other things in this passage perhaps I can’t explain, but those things, I believe, are perfectly certain. And I believe they teach us three very important principles that I would like to leave with you tonight. The first of which is that we always need to keep life in balance, and in this case that means we have to do justice to the physical side, but also the covenantal side of marriage. Sometimes in the Christian church in the past the physical side has been almost denied. I can’t remember as a young person growing up in the church that I ever heard anything worth hearing from the pulpit about sex and marriage. And that’s one of the reasons we are in the mess we are today. The previous generation was squeamish about sex in the ministry of the Word of God. That’s a fact, and it can’t be denied, and so there’s been a reaction against it, quite understandably. God made women beautiful, and that’s not an accident. God made sex, and that’s not an accident. And God gave this mighty power that draws people together in sexual attraction, and that’s not wrong. But it becomes wrong when, as in our culture today, it becomes all-important and is separated from the context in which God has put it, the context we’ve seen unfolding here in this beautiful account of the love of Solomon and this young woman.

And this means we must always do justice also to the aspect of character. Anyone who separates sex from character is asking for an awful lot of trouble. Physical attraction was there—she doesn’t deny it. She desires—let’s be honest—to be in bed with this man. That’s a fact. But not without the other things, not without being sure he’s the kind of man she can also live for a lifetime under the shadow of, whose headship and leadership she can always respect and abide by. She looked, in other words, also at the character, at the name, and God wants us to instruct our covenant young people that this is absolutely vital.

Now that’s why so many marriages are going down the drain today: people only look at sex, and then after their marriage they start to look at character. Look at the results. You can’t do it. You’ve got to look at both. Don’t marry somebody who isn’t sexually attracted to you—of course not; but don’t marry somebody until you’re absolutely sure they’ve got the character that you really want to be subject to—or if you’re a male, the character of a woman who really be subject to you in the Lord as she ought to be. Now that’s the first principle.

The second principle is what I would call the danger of things artificial, and what a danger this is today in our culture. The model that many young people have today is the movie star and the pop idol, an absolutely devastating and destructive model. There’s no character there; none of the foundational building blocks for a happy marriage. You can have sharp-looking clothes and a very dashing appearance, and that can lead you into one disaster after another. Don’t make as a model for anything in your life a person whose own life demonstrates disaster in the area of marriage. You remember this, young woman, and you remember the wise Solomon who out of all the women in the kingdom picked that girl who had character, for that’s exactly what he did. He wasn’t impressed by the latest style and hairdo; he was impressed by inner beauty of a tranquil and godly heart. I remember in one congregation of mine there were two young people who fell in love and wanted to get married. And their parents were absolutely against it, and they were hard as a rock about it. These kids are too young to get married. That was the end of the discussion for the parents. Well, they were young, maybe a little young to get married, but do you know something? They were like these too young people here in the Song of Solomon. She was a very simple, unadorned, naturally beautiful person, and he was a really godly young man. They were both real Christians. They met at one of the youth camps, and they wanted to get married. And the thing that really impressed me was that they were godly in it. And I began to say, “No sir, this is not right.”

The Larger Catechism says one of the sins against the Seventh Commandment is undue delay of marriage. Did you know that? Making young people wait too long is not right, provided the character is there. Well, they had it, so I went to those parents and began to oppose the parents. I said, “You better wake up or you’re going to be the cause of disaster with your own children. Now they’re both committed Christians, they’re both godly—you don’t have a biblical right to oppose their marriage because there isn’t any arbitrary age in the Bible. The Bible doesn’t say you have to have eight years of higher education before you get married.” Well, finally they saw the light, and they went along with it, and I heard just the other day from a fraternal delegate at the Eureka Classis that that young couple is going wonderfully today. They were married quite young, but they had the stuff, you see. We’ve got to be on our guard against going along with what everybody else does. We’ve got to get back to biblical principles. There’s no reason in the world why they shouldn’t have the right to marry, just because they weren’t somebody’s arbitrary idea of how old you have to be, not when they have the character. Now I don’t mean you young people should rush out and get married right away just to prove that you can do it young. That’s not my point. My point is we must avoid the artificial and going along with everything that everybody else does.

And finally, the third and last principle is to remember that we always see in these things the image of something higher, and to remember that the great model that we must always build our marriages on, and our love affairs too, is the model of Christ and the church. And there are two things I want to say about that. First of all, can you imagine Christ being attracted by anything artificial in the church? There He is up in glory with all the angels. Why in the world would he set His heart upon us down here in this world of sin? It’s not because of anything artificial, I can tell you that for sure. And that’s why the Reformed church was right when it set aside all of that artificial rubbish—the candles and the crosses and the robes and the ceremonies—and went back to plain, simple worship. They wanted to be the kind of wife that the Lord takes delight in His Bride. Anything artificial should always be banished from the church of Jesus Christ because the beauty of the church of Christ is in her humility and simplicity, and as soon as she starts putting on paint and all kind of artificial beauty aids, she becomes very displeasing to the Lord. That’s the difference between Rome and the Reformation right there. That’s the difference. And we ought to remember that.

The second thing under this point is that the church sometimes becomes impatient and tries to take the initiative away from her Lord, and that is always wrong. We must be patient. We must wait for the Lord to take initiative. We desire the day of the consummation, the great wedding feast of the Lamb and the Lord, but that will come when He is ready. We must respect His headship and pray like this girl did, “Come, Lord Jesus, come quickly,” but not try to anticipate the glorious day of His coming. The model for us is the way in which Christ deals with the church, and the way in which the church acknowledges His headship.

And now may God apply these lessons in our hearts. Amen.


Getting to Know You

Song of Solomon 2:8-3:5

[The Shulamite]

The voice of my beloved! Behold, he comes leaping upon the mountains, skipping upon the hills.My beloved is like a gazelle or a young stag. behold, he stands behind our wall; he is looking through the windows, gazing through the lattice. My beloved spoke, and said to 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 singing has come, and the voice of the turtledove is heard in our land. The fig tree puts forth her green figs, and the vines with the tender grapes give a good smell. Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away! “O my dove, in the clefts of the rock, in the secret places of the cliff, let me see your countenance, let me hear your voice; for your voice is sweet, and your countenance is lovely.

[Her Brothers]

Catch us the foxes, the little foxes that spoil the vines, for our vines have tender grapes.

[The Shulamite]

My beloved is mine, and I am his. He feeds his flock among the lilies.

(To Her Beloved)

Until the day breaks and the shadows flee away, turn, my beloved, and be like a gazelle or a young stag upon the mountains of Bether.

[The Shulamite]

By night on my bed I sought the one I love; I sought him, but I did not find him. “I will rise now,” I said, “And go about the city; in the streets and in the squares I will seek the one I love.” I sought him, but I did not find him. The watchmen who go about the city found me, to whom I said, “Have you seen the one I love?” 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. 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.

Congregation of the Lord Jesus, in the last sermon we saw how this young girl from the nation of Israel, lowly of origin, met the king. And she saw that he was not only handsome, but a man endowed with the wisdom of God, and she desired him—and he, because she was so different from all the rest, also desired her. You remember, too, that she accepted the God-ordained role that He has given the woman. She wanted him to take the initiative, and she wanted to sit under his shade and be under the banner of his love. It was precisely because of these qualities that the king noticed her and began to seek and desire her. And so there began this process of falling in love in which she began to feel that he was the kind of man she could gladly submit to, and he that she was the object of his desire. But then you’ll remember that she added that very significant statement, “I adjure you, daughters of Jerusalem,” which means, I call upon you to solemnly swear in faithfulness to your covenant God that you won’t do anything to arouse, to stimulate this love until its time has come. Well, tonight we’re going to look at the second phase of this relationship, something that we commonly call “courtship,” and I want to deal with it under two basic headings. The first is the seven certain things that we find in this passage, and then the simple lessons that we can learn from it.

What we see in this passage is the story of the beautiful courtship between Solomon and the Shulamite maiden. And the first thing that is quite obvious is a growing intensity in their love for one another, or, to put it in modern lingo, they really are stuck on one another. Now the language of every age is rather unique, but I think even today we can really sense what is being said in these first few verses. “Listen,” she says, “my lover, look, here he comes, leaping across the mountains, bounding over the hills.” Did you ever hear of anything like that today? Let me try to draw you a picture. I’ve notice that when young ladies fall in love, they suddenly have a very different attitude toward the telephone. Before my daughter fell in love, if the phone rang, well, you could answer it, thanks. She couldn’t be bothered. But my, how that changes when you fall in love. The phone rings, and like a bullet she’s down there to answer the phone. And does he really come leaping over the mountains? Well, we wouldn’t say that today, but he zooms over the mountains, either in his car or, as was common in New Zealand at least, on his motorcycle. And the extravagance of the language is really quite fitting when you realize what’s going on here, as there is an extravagance in the way they act, also. I remember a very wonderful man in the New Zealand church—he’s an elder there and at the present time he’s the stated clerk of their General Synod. He told me what it was like when he fell in love over there in Holland with his dear, departed wife.

He’s married a second time very happily today, but he was telling me how it was with her. He was a very young man, and he worked hard all day long, and then he said, “You know I didn’t think a thing about it, I walked several miles just to see her for a few minutes. And when I got there I was so bashful and embarrassed, I hardly knew what to say, and then I walked all those miles back and I didn’t even feel tired.”

Well, that’s the same sort of thing that’s really put before you here in this picture. This fellow, too, is zooming over the hills, you might say, but when he gets there he’s a bit bashful. He stands behind the wall, he gazes through the windows, and he peers through the lattice. You know what that’s like, don’t you? You don’t quite have the courage to show yourself, but there you are to get a sight of her. You see, the fundamentals of life haven’t changed very much in all these generations.

The second thing you see for sure in this passage is that they need to be alone with each other, because, then, the awkwardness fades away. Why are they so awkward and embarrassed? Well, it’s because there’s somebody else around, that’s why. So right away he says, “Arise my darling, my beautiful one, and come with me. Let’s get out of here; let’s go where we can be alone together, for that makes all the difference.” As soon as they do that, the birds begin to sing and it’s spring. See, the winter is past, the rains are over and gone, flowers appear on the earth, and so on. Well, you know, in the languages of all the nations of the earth this is the way that love is depicted. A modern English poet put it like this:

The spring comes in with all her hues and smells
In freshness breathing over hills and dells.
The happy time of singing birds has come,
And love in Nature’s beauty finds a home.
Among the mossy oaks now coos the dove,
And every sound that meets the ear is love.

Now that’s true, when you fall in love, there’s nothing wrong with this world—it’s beautiful, isn’t it? You don’t think about the things that aren’t pleasant in the world when you fall in love. As one commentator put, “Whenever any couple falls in love, it’s spring.” Doesn’t matter if it’s December—it’s spring when they fall in love, because their lives are fresh, and everything has a new perspective. John Milton, the great English poet, the blind poet that wrote the great epic Paradise Lost, described the relationship of Adam and Eve before the fall into sin like this: “With thee conversing I forget all time. All seasons, and their change, all please alike.” In the springtime of love there is an echo of the Paradise of God because that’s when man seems to be at one with nature. Milton is right—that’s the way it was in the beginning.

Now the third thing that is quite sure in this passage is that they have a great desire to know one another fully. And here it’s the man who talks about her shyness, for a very good reason. You can imagine why he’s the king of Israel and she is what we would call a peasant girl, and she is getting into this romance. My, that would be difficult for her. She would feel shy, and it would be very hard for her to completely reveal her personality to him, and so he compares her to a dove in the clefts of a rock. Now you all know that the Dead Sea Scrolls were found in a kind of cave way up on the side of the face of the rock. Well, in biblical times you might see a dove up there, but if that dove saw you, you know what he would do, don’t you? He’d hide. If that dove saw you, it would hide himself away so you could hardly get a glimpse of it. My sister is a confirmed bird watcher, and with her binoculars she tries to get to a spot where the birds won’t notice her, and then she zooms up on them and she can watch what they’re doing. But they didn’t have binoculars in those days, and when you tried to get close enough to see what the doves were doing, they would hide. Well, she’s a bit like that. Part of her personality and the reality of who she is is still hidden, but he wants that to come out. He wants her to show her face, and he wants to hear her voice, because her voice is sweet. He wants her to talk and smile and all of the rest of those things. And that was not easy for this country girl.

Now, girls, if you’re a little bit like that today, you’re going to be in a very small minority, aren’t you? I can even see a smile as soon as I said that, because I can just imagine what it’s like with the average high school girl right here where we live. It’s not like that at all, and what a pity it isn’t—really, what a pity. For to be a bit shy, not so fast that you’ve got it all on your sleeve, is a good thing; it’s a biblical, godly thing. Solomon could have had a hundred girls of the other kind—they called them concubines in those days—quite willing to have an affair that really didn’t get very deep and didn’t last very long, but that’s not what he wanted; at least at this point in his life he didn’t. He wanted something that was really beautiful and patterned after God’s ordinance, and for that you have to have a process of self-revelation until more and more you really do get to know one another, and that finally means complete knowledge of one another, body and soul, for a lifetime. That’s what marriage really is: the disclosure to another person of who and what you really are. And that wasn’t easy, and it takes time, and that’s exactly why, no matter how outmoded it may be in the minds of young people today, courtship is biblical. Courtship, a gradual process by which two young people really get to know one another before they get too far in the matters of love. Now that’s the third thing.

The fourth thing that is certainly clear here is this. When you are in the midst of a courtship, you’re going to have problems. Anybody here know of an exception to that? I don’t believe so. As soon as you’ve got a romance going, you’re going to have problems. Not big ones, like elephants, but little ones, like foxes. And so Solomon says, “Catch the little foxes for us, the ones who ruin the vineyards, for our vineyards are in bloom.” Now you remember back in chapter one, verse six, this maiden spoke of her vineyard. She’s speaking there about her love, which she has not yet given to a man, and here he’s talking about their love of each other as it’s beginning to develop and unfold in the process of courtship. And now he says these foxes come in and spoil the vineyard. Now what are those foxes? I believe they are irritations. She does something, and it really irritates you. Now how can that happen when you’re falling in love? But it does! And you say something, and it really burns her up. Now how can that happen when you’re having a courtship and you’re falling in love—but it does happen.

And I want to tell you something: it’s a good thing it does. Really it is, because then you are going to learn the fact that you’re falling in love with another member of the fallen human race. That’s the only kind you will ever find in this world. You can’t find a husband that isn’t part of Adam’s fallen race, and you can’t find a wife that isn’t part of Adam’s fallen race, and that means that they are going to have faults, for sure. And what you’ve got to learn is that you will have to understand those faults and learn to deal with them in a biblical way. And that’s another purpose of courtship: catch the foxes; learn how to deal with these irritations and problems; learn how to handle the situation without blowing up and doing sinful and wicked things.

When two young people would come to me wanting to get married, I would watch very carefully. I would observe them to see if they were always fighting and never able to solve their problems. If they were, I would say to them, “Well, I really don’t think it would be wise for you two to get married because you haven’t learned to handle your problems yet.” And if you can’t handle the little foxes, what are you going to do when the big ones come along, because they will in marriage? The big problems are later on; the little ones are while you’re just getting to know each other, and if you can’t handle the little problems and settle them in a biblical manner, with love and understanding, on the basis of biblical principles and discussion in which your Bible is your guide, then you’re not going to make it. That’s the fourth thing.

The fifth thing in this passage is that there is a growing desire for total possession.

My beloved is mine, and I am his.
He feeds his flock among the lilies.
Until the day breaks
And the shadows flee away,
Turn, my beloved,
And be like a gazelle
Or a young stag
Upon the mountains of Bether (NKJ).

What she is saying there is that she desires total possession of him and desires to be totally possessed by him. And you know that also is definitely part of God’s plan for the relationship we call love and marriage.

Today, there are those who talk about open marriage. They don’t want to make that complete and total commitment; they don’t want to say, “I, from now on, for better or for worse, I am the possession of that person, and that’s that. Nobody else has any rights to me any more. I belong to that person.” A lot of people today are afraid of that. They see so many ruined marriage, and so they think that maybe it would be better to just have an open marriage, so that if, a year from now, things aren’t going so well, we can walk right out of it. But you know God didn’t make us that way. I knew a young man who was a member of a covenant family down there in New Zealand, and he thought he knew better than the Bible, and so he went out and “shacked up” with a girl. He thought, “Well, we’ll have an open marriage. We won’t go through these vows. We’ll just live together and see how it goes.” And they loved each other—that’s the remarkable part of it—but, you know, they weren’t really happy. And do you know why they weren’t happy? Because down deep each of them was a little anxious about the other person. They wanted to have possession of that person. And so finally one day they said, “You know, we got to go get married.” And that’s what they did; they went and got married. And after they made that total commitment, they began to be happy. You see, psychologically even you can’t live with that idea of an open marriage. It’s contrary to human nature. God made you and God made me with an absolute need of total possession in marriage. So this whole modern idea of an open marriage is flagrantly in violation to the law of God.

But she doesn’t possess him yet, and that’s part of courtship, too. And so the sixth thing you see here is what I would call the anxiety of unfulfilled desire.

By night on my bed I sought the one I love;
I sought him, but I did not find him.

Now I’m not sure whether this is a dream or what. I tend to think it is, but that doesn’t matter with the main point. Whether it was dream or reality, she has anxiety. Why does she have anxiety? Because she’s afraid she might lose him. Now if any of you can remember back when you were courting, surely that happened to you. A moment came when you thought, Boy, wouldn’t it be terrible if I lost her—if, after all, she didn’t want me. So she gets up, either in fact or in dream, and goes around the city looking for him. And when the watchmen find her wandering around, she says, “Have you seen the one my heart loves,” and then hardly had she passed them when she found him. And when she found him, she thought, I’m not going to let this happen again, and so she says, inside of herself, “I’m going to get him down home to meet mother.” You see, that kind of solidifies the thing, that kind of ties it up. And so she brings him there, and has him meet the parents, and so she knows to that extent, he’s just that much more committed. Then here again this is something that’s supposed to be out of date today, but I find that psychologically it’s still very true.

Our youngest daughter for quite a while in her young life was not committed to Christ, and I noticed that she never liked to bring her boyfriends home. We had to keep asking, “Who is this fellow? Where does he live? What’s he like?”—and always from a distance—so we had to wonder what she was doing in that regard. But when she became a committed Christian, do you know what she did? She grabbed that guy and got him in a car and had him drive hundreds of miles to meet us. Now why? Because she wanted to sew the thing up, that’s why. She didn’t want to lose him, and she thought, if I can get him down there to meet Dad and Mother, that will show that he really is serious, and besides, I think they’ll like him. And we did. We think a lot of Dan; he’s a wonderful Christian man. It made all the difference in the world—family approval—and it’s also a biblical part of courtship. It should never be left out of a Christian view of courtship.

And then, finally, the seventh thing is that she remains firm in her mind: no sex until marriage—as you’ll notice that she repeats again the same statement, “Daughters of Jerusalem, I charge you: don’t arouse or awaken love until the proper time has arrived.” The modern view is “what difference will it make if we go ahead and have sex, we’re going to get married anyway.” But that’s not the way it really is because we don’t really have possession of another person until there is a public declaration of that fact. Now a man might think, I can go out and start preaching even though no one has yet officially declared that I have the authority to do it. Well, that’s not true; you can’t. And then some guy might say, “Well, I’m going to go out and be a traffic officer,” before they give him his uniform and his badge, but that’s not true; you can’t do that. And you don’t have a right to that other person until you’ve said before the whole world, and your partner has said before the whole world: “I belong to him, and she belongs to me; and everybody else is off limits.” That’s what marriage really is. It’s a covenant engagement. That’s why pre-marital sex is condemned in the Bible, punishable in the Bible under the Law of Moses, not by death as an unpardonable or capital crime, but a heinous sin nonetheless. There was a fine that had to be paid to the father, which shows that it’s really a violation of the honor of the family, which is at stake. And this woman didn’t want that; she wanted to do it God’s way—until the day that God Himself said they belong to each other. Now that’s the biblical pattern of courtship. What does it teach us?

The first thing it teaches us is that courtship, in the Bible, should gradually lead step by step to a place of total commitment and total, mutual possession. Do you remember the song from the well-known operetta, The King and I, called “Getting to Know You”?

Getting to know you,
Getting to know all about you.
Getting to like you,
Getting to hope you like me.
Getting to know you,
Putting it my way, but nicely,
You are precisely my cup of tea.
Getting to know you,
Getting to feel free and easy
When I am with you,
Getting to know what to say.
Haven’t you noticed,
Suddenly I’m bright and breezy,
Because of all the beautiful and new things
I’m learning about you day by day.

That’s a pretty good portrait of what courtship really is.

I remember when I was in New Zealand I saw an interesting documentary about the ascent of Mt. Everest. They had quite a group of men that made the ascent toward the peak, but only when they got to the highest camp before the summit did the one in charge decide which two men would make the final assault on the peak. Do you know why? He wanted to observe how they met all of the tests up to that point, and those who really met the tests up to that point, they were the ones to make the assault on the peak. If young people today understood what a tremendous challenge marriage is, they would also want to go through a time of testing themselves and that person they think they want to marry, so they can be real sure that together they can climb to the summit.

When I was a boy of eight or nine years of age, I was playing in a park one day, some place there in Des Moines, Iowa. I don’t remember why I went there, but I remember what happened. All of a sudden I heard these two young people quarreling, so I threw the ball in that direction and acted like I was chasing the ball, but really I was going over there so I could tune in to what they were saying. I listened for about three minutes, then turned away in disgust and said to myself, “Those two should never get married.” And I was right, because they really couldn’t handle their problems. Some silly little things they were yelling about at the top of their voices, and I thought, “They’ll never make it,” and hoped they wouldn’t get married. That, you see, is a reason why courtship is so very important, and it’s also a good reason why pre-marital sex is not only wrong but very unwise. You first need to know that the context of love and sex is something stable, firm, and solid. So you don’t wake up and realize you’re stuck with someone you don’t really want to be married to the rest of your life.

And right here you can see, again, the analogy that is so beautiful in this book—the analogy between our marriages and the marriage of Christ and the church. You know, the marriage feast of the Lamb of God and the church hasn’t taken place yet—it’s still in the future. The Bible tells us that’s going to be a great feast, the marriage of the Lamb and His bride. Now sometimes we get a little anxious and we’d like him to hurry up and speed things up a little, but that’s not God’s wise way. He knows we need this time—shall we call it a time of courtship—in which we get to know the Lord the way we should. Now if you want to be part of that marriage, you ought to be doing every thing you can to prepare for it. That’s why you ought to be in God’s house whenever you have the chance to hear the Word, and that’s why you ought to be preparing for the coming of Jesus, being faithful in the things of God, because the day is coming, you see, when there will be a complete revelation of Jesus Christ. That’s what the Bible says. And we will know Him even as He is, and we want to be sure that we’re ready when that great day comes. So in a sense our very meeting here tonight is part of that courtship process by which we get to know the Lord in anticipation of the glorious day when we will be with Him forever.

May God give us the wisdom to do so. Amen.


Lover’s Lib

Song of Solomon 3:8-5:2

[The Shulamite]

Who is this coming out of the wilderness like pillars of smoke, perfumed with myrrh and frankincense, with all the merchant’s fragrant powders? Behold, it is Solomon’s 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. 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 espousals, the day of the gladness of his heart.

[The Beloved]

Behold, you are fair, my love! Behold, you are fair! You have dove’s eyes behind your veil. Your hair is like a flock of goats, going down from Mount Gilead. Your teeth are like a flock of shorn sheep which have come up from the washing, every one of which bears twins, and none is barren among them. Your lips are like a strand of scarlet, and your mouth is lovely. Your temples behind your veil are like a piece of pomegranate. Your neck is like the tower of David, built for an armory, on which hang a thousand bucklers, all shields of mighty men. Your two breasts are like two fawns, twins of a gazelle, which feed among the lilies. Until the day breaks and the shadows flee away, I will go my way to the mountain of myrrh and to the hill of frankincense. You are all fair, my love, and there is no spot in you. Come with me from Lebanon, my spouse, with me from Lebanon. Look from the top of Amana, from the top of Senir and Hermon, from the lions’ dens, from the mountains of the leopards. You have ravished my heart, my sister, my spouse; you have ravished my heart with one look of your eyes, with one link of your necklace. How fair is your love, my sister, my spouse! How much better than wine is your love, and the scent of your perfumes than all spices! Your lips, O my spouse, drip as the honeycomb; honey and milk are under your tongue; and the fragrance of your garments is like the fragrance of Lebanon.

A garden enclosed is my sister, my spouse, a spring shut up, a fountain sealed. Your plants are an orchard of pomegranates with pleasant fruits, fragrant henna with spikenard, spikenard and saffron, calamus and cinnamon, with all trees of frankincense, myrrh and aloes, with all the chief spices, a fountain of gardens, a well of living waters, and streams from Lebanon.

[The Shulamite]

Awake, O north wind, and come, O south! Blow upon my garden, that its spices may flow out. Let my beloved come to his garden and eat its pleasant fruits. I have come to 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. (To his friends) Eat, O friends! Drink, yes, drink deeply, O beloved ones!

[The Shulamite]

I sleep, but my heart is awake; it is the voice of my beloved! He knocks, saying, “Open for me, my sister, my love, my dove, my perfect one; for my head is covered with dew, my locks with the drops of the night.

Congregation, it was our Lord Jesus Christ who said, “You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free,” and so it is the foundation of all freedom to know the truth of God. And I hope that this will become very clear as we look tonight at this portion of God’s holy Word. We have been looking at this song of love in the Bible, and we have seen in it the pattern of falling in love, courtship, and now marriage. And we have been learning in this that God has His way for these things to take place, and that is real freedom. Today in our society, as I hardly need to tell you, another view prevails. If you love one another, it is said today, then it’s all right go ahead. Don’t worry about a little thing like a marriage ordinance. But these young people that we are meeting in the Song of Solomon were really wise. They understood that God knows more than man does, and that God’s way is the good and right way.

And so, this wonderful young woman—this Shulamite maiden that married Solomon—over and over prior to her marriage makes this trememdous statement: “I adjure you, daughters of Jerusalem, that you not arouse or stimulate love until the appointed time.” And now she’s taken her man home to meet her parents, and they’re engaged to be married. And here at last in our text for tonight comes the consummation of her desires. And if you were listening closely as I read the text tonight, you will notice that there are really three major divisions in our text. The first, which comes in the last part of chapter three, is what I would call the official, or the public ceremony of marriage. The second, which follows after that, is what I would call the beautiful ritual of sexual intimacy in marriage. And the third, but by no means the least, is the benediction that God places upon these two young people. And when you have those three things which God has appointed, then you really have freedom.

We begin, then, in chapter three verses 6-11, with the wedding of Solomon and the Shulamite, and we know that that’s what it is because it says so in the eleventh verse. Now we have to admit, ladies, that it’s a bit of a put-down for you since in our culture it’s the bride who gets all of the attention, and here in this marriage it was Solomon, the man. Now why was that? Well, one reason could be because he was king. Even today in Great Britain if the titular head of the monarchy is a woman, and there is a marriage, she gets all of the attention. If on the other hand it’s a man, then he gets it. So it may simply be the fact that he is the inheritor of the throne of David that he gets all of the attention. On the other hand, it could be that in biblical times the headship of the man received more attention in these things than it does today. But whatever may be the explanation, one thing is quite certain, and that’s the important thing there was a public ceremony of marriage. And, by the way, that thing that his mother crowned him with was a wreath, a wedding wreath, not the crown which he wore as king. This was not a coronation ceremony, but a public ceremony of marriage.

I want to emphasize this because many today say that the ceremony doesn’t matter. If anything has really become quite prominent in our day and generation, it’s the idea that an official public ceremony of marriage, like a traditional one you have in the church, is really not very important. What really matters in marriage—it is said—is the private, intimate side where two people really do love one another. Well, of course, marriage does involve that side, and I will even acknowledge that the ceremony in and of itself does not a marriage make. I remember very well one of my seminary classmates who got married in a public ceremony, and I didn’t know anything of the sort had happened, but many years later I heard that marriage was annulled because for some reason, and I haven’t the slightest notion what it was, that marriage was never consummated in sexual union. And finally the wife, quite properly, went to the civil authorities and complained against her husband, and the wedding was annulled. You don’t really have a marriage in the biblical sense without physical intimacy. But on the other hand, you can’t say that the physical side alone is a marriage either, because you are not really married without the public ceremony.

It’s a little like baptism. Now, of course, the water of baptism by itself won’t save anybody. If you were baptized a hundred times you could still perish forever. But any one who says “I don’t need to bother with baptism” is very much mistaken, because it is a commanded ordinance of Christ. He said to go out into all the world, baptizing in the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost, and it just is not true that you can count on eternal life without water baptism because not having it is an act of disobedience. That’s God’s appointment, and faith is known by its works, and so the person who really has a proper place in the Kingdom of God, under ordinary circumstances, is a person who is outwardly baptized with water and inwardly regenerated by the Holy Spirit, and both of them are very important. And it’s the same when it comes to marriage. Of course, the intimate and private is very important, but it is not all-important. The Bible also teaches that the public side is important, and I can tell you why. When you enter into marriage the way God has planned it and the way God has ordained it, you are really making a declaration, not only to that person you love in private, but to the whole world in public, and you’re saying, in effect, “Listen, world, from now on I’m off limits to you, and I belong only to her.” And she is saying, “Listen world, from now on I’m off limits to everyone else; from now on I’m the exclusive possession of this man.” That’s what the Bible means when it says we are to leave father and mother, and cleave to a wife. It’s not a private matter only; it’s a public thing that involves the honor of the families as well as the delight and joy of the two people.

What would you think of a policeman who didn’t have a uniform and didn’t have a badge, and said, “Never mind about those outward things; they don’t count?” Of course they do! What would you say if your governor said, “Never mind about all those vows of office and that sort of thing, I’m just going to be governor?” Well, we would say “No way; we don’t want you for governor if you’re not willing to take those vows. You can stay home and we’ll have somebody else as governor.” These public things are very important, and we are not at liberty to ignore or deny them. What would you think if somebody got up here to preach who had never been ordained by the church? He might say, “Well, I don’t need ordination. I have the Holy Spirit, I have the knowledge, and a fluent tongue, so I can preach. Ordination doesn’t matter.” Of course it matters. What would you think if you went to the doctor and he said, “Well, I’ve never been to medical school, I don’t have a diploma, but I know about medicine and that’s all that counts.” It’s not all that counts. Of course it isn’t, and it’s the same when it comes to marriage. Of course you ought to have a public ceremony in which you declare to the world on the one hand, and to that person you marry on the other, your covenantal commitment. And so right here in the great song of love in chapter three, verses 6-11, you have this statement about a public ceremony. We don’t have to have everything of that day and generation, or imitate everything in that culture, but this is one of the important facts of God’s revelation in this book.

Now the second thing you have in this book is what I would call the tender ritual of sexual intimacy in marriage. It is to this that I now direct your attention.

When I was a young fellow I was a jazz musician, and a friend and I were once playing in a band in a Masonic lodge. And we were upstairs in this building and saw a beautiful set of chimes that we coveted. I said, “Bill, wouldn’t it be great if we could have those chimes.” And he said, “Yes, it sure would.” So I said, “Why don’t we take them.” He said, “All right, we’ll take them.” And I said, “You go downstairs during intermission, and I’ll throw them out the window to you. You put them in the car, and we’ll have a set of chimes.” And so, sure enough, when intermission came, he went outside and I tossed the chimes out of the window. He caught them and put them in the car and not a thing was damaged. And we thought, “Wow, are we going to have fun with those chimes.” But you know, when the job was over and we went home I said, “Why don’t you take them, Bill?” And he said, “No, you take them,” And I said, “No, I don’t want them either”. You see, I was afraid somebody might find out I had stolen them, and I thought it would be better if Bill had them, but Bill didn’t want them either, because he too was worried that somebody might find out that we stole them. So finally we said to each other, “Let’s go and put them back,” and that’s what we did. You see, you can’t be free if somebody’s looking over your shoulder, or if you’re looking over your shoulder to see if somebody’s looking over your shoulder. That’s not freedom. You think you’re really going to enjoy it a lot, but it’s not really freedom, and it’s not really a great pleasure. And if that’s true with a set of chimes, it’s a thousand times more true when it comes to one of God’s greatest gifts to us.

This young couple understood that, and so they waited until they had a right to each other, and the result was that they were really free. They had a license, you might say. When you get a driver’s license, you can go out and drive your car. Yesterday you couldn’t do it. Today you can. If you get a marriage license, and you have a wedding ceremony, you can go to bed with that person and it’s perfectly all right, though yesterday it was not right at all. That is God’s way, and when you do it that way you can be completely free—no bondage in it all.

And you can see that in the way Solomon praises his wife’s physical beauty. Now we don’t do it this way today, but if you were living in Solomon’s day and wanted to say that your wife is beautiful, you would say seven things—not eight, not six, just seven. In the Hebrew way of thought seven really meant terrific, and so if you go through that list you’ll notice that he mentions seven, and exactly seven, of her beautiful characteristics. And he must have really thought about it, because he gives such a poetic description of each one of them. You can’t do that when you’re on the run, in the back seat of a car someplace, hiding and looking over your shoulder. It just doesn’t work that way. And by the way, I think you’ll notice that even though this is poetry, it’s rather plainly sensual and sexual. Back in chapter two, verse seventeen, this girl expressed the desire that one day her fiancé would be like a young gazelle or a stag on the mountains of Bether. The word “Bether” means “separation,” and I rather agree with the commentators who say that what she’s really talking about there is what we today would call “cleavage,” and you’ll notice that in this passage when he describes the same thing, he’s rather rhapsodical about it, for he speaks of the mountains of myrrh and incense. Now my point is this: when the Christian church was too prudish to admit that God made the female of the species beautiful and that sex is very exciting, it made a big mistake, because it drove the whole thing underground where it didn’t belong, and it pretended that this was not what it really is: one of God’s good gifts which should be frankly acknowledged for what it is, but only within the bonds of marriage.

It is quite clear in this passage that this Shulamite girl was a virgin when she got married. And there are even those who argue today that that’s a liability. That’s argued today. It’s just possible that some of the young people in our congregation have heard that argument from some of their peers. And it’s true, is it not, that if you are completely inexperienced and you enter into marriage, it’s no easy thing, in one day, to completely reveal yourself to another person. I believe that is really what’s going on in that passage. Now please open your Bibles and notice what it says. He says there in the fourth chapter: “Come with me from Lebanon, my bride. Descend from the crest of Amana, from the lions den, and the mountain haunts of the leopards” (4:8, 9). He’s talking about the fact that this girl is rather hard to reach; she’s a little bit afraid, just as you would be afraid if you were near the dens of the lions or near the mountain haunts of the leopards. He’s aware of this, and he’s considerate about it, and he’s saying to her, “Now you’ve got to leave those fears behind, because this is the day that you gave yourself to me. And you’ve got to leave those fears behind, and you have to be willing to reveal yourself to me.”

You know the art of love isn’t something you can learn in ten easy lessons, and that’s because any two human beings are distinctively different from any other two. Every personality is distinctively different, and wise Solomon understood that. Because his approach was right and he understood and was patient, it wasn’t long before she was quite willing to reveal herself to him. She says, for the first time in the book, “May my beloved come into his garden, and eat its choice fruits.” Always before in the book it was her garden, which she was keeping locked, but now it was his garden.

I read the testimony of a preacher who preached on this passage of the Bible, and when he finished and all of the others had gone, there was a girl who came up to him, and she was crying and said, “Sir, I left my garden unlocked. Now, is there any hope for me? What can I do?” Well, he said, “Supposing you had a flower garden and somehow the gate was left open and the dogs came in and dug around and some of them walked over the flowers, what would you do?” She said, “I would lock the gate, then get the hoe and the rake and start cleaning up the garden.” And he said, “That’s exactly what you should do.” And that’s the really beautiful thing about our holy faith. God never lowers His standard and says wrong is right. Nobody will ever hear God say, “Fornication is all right; it’s OK, you haven’t sinned.” God will never say that. He has absolute standards, and sin is any want of conformity unto, or transgression of, the law of God, and that’s the way it will always be. But this same God is compassionate and He says, “Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow.” And you can be a new creature in Christ Jesus, and we know this because the Bride of Christ, and that is after all the great model upon which the whole book is based, is the church, and the church was not a garden locked. The church was an unworthy Bride whom Christ cleansed and renewed by His own precious blood and by the Word of His power.

And now, finally, please notice that last statement in chapter five, verse one. The NIV says—and it’s in italics—that it’s friends who say, “Eat, O friends, and drink your fill, O lovers.” Well, that’s possible, but there’s nothing in the Hebrew text that says this. It could be what we call an editorial comment. Maybe the one who speaks is the wind. That is the last antecedent noun. If you go back to verse sixteen of the preceding chapter it’s the wind that’s addressed. So maybe it’s the wind? But one thing is absolutely certain, whether it’s the friends or the wind or an editorial comment or the Lord God Himself who speaks directly, ultimately this comment comes from God at the end of this beautiful process of falling in love, courtship, a public ceremony of marriage, and a consummation of marriage in sexual intimacy. Yes, then God Himself says, “Eat, O friends, and drink. Drink your fill, O lovers.” Only in the benediction of God is there total and complete freedom.

In our New Zealand church we had a large young peoples group, and we met once a month after the evening service for discussion. And I noticed a young couple that came that didn’t look very happy, and by discreetly listening and asking a few questions I found out the reason. They were living together as man and wife on the sly, and I think what they were really after was some clue or indication that maybe the church didn’t mind too much. They weren’t happy because they weren’t free, not even free from their own conscience. And I began to talk to them about it. I said, “Do you know why you’re not happy? It’s because you’re not free. And do you know why you’re not free? Because you can’t be free without God’s approval. Do you want God’s approval?” “Oh yes,” they both said—just like that. “Oh yes, we’d like God’s approval.” I said, “All right, no problem.” I said to her, “You go home, tonight, to your mother’s house and stay there, and then you make plans for a marriage. And you get married, and then you’ll have it. Stop this right now and do what God says from here on, and you will have God’s blessing.” Now usually young people don’t pay much attention when somebody talks to them like that, but this time they did. She did go home, and they stopped it then and there. And not too long after they got married, and it was like turning lights on inside their faces because they knew now they had made a public commitment and they had God’s own approval and His benediction. And the last I heard they are still happily married out there in Australia; they moved across the Tasmanian Sea to Australia. Well, that’s what I could call freedom. Lover’s lib? There it is. You young people are interested in real freedom in the realm of sex? There it is right in God’s Word—a proper courtship and marriage with God’s approval.

And now let me say two things in conclusion from this portion of God’s Word, and here’s one of them that I think the church has to hear. Sex, sexual love, has its own value by God’s appointment. I emphasize this because there was a time in the church of God when this was denied. Sex was only supposed to exist for the purpose of begetting children. Now of course in our generation you have to say that is one of the purposes of marriage, because too many young people don’t even want to bother with the burden of children. Well, that is a duty. God says we have to be fruitful and multiply, but nevertheless there is what this passage teaches us, and it does teach us, that sexual love has its own value altogether apart from that. It’s wrong to treat this as though it were some evil. When God gives us a beautiful book like this in the Bible you can see that can’t be right. And when God Himself likens this sexual love between husband and wife to the love of Christ for the church, you can see that can’t be right. And it isn’t right, and it’s done a lot of harm in the church. Part of the problem today in our society and culture is the boomerang effect from that wrong denial and suppression of biblical truth. When the wedding between Christ and His bride comes, there isn’t going to be any purpose to multiply at all. The multiplication will all be ended, and the one and only thing that will exist in that eternal marriage between Christ and the church is their taking delight in each other. That never should have been suppressed.

And then, finally, I want to emphasize again the comfort and assurance that we have in this part of God’s Word. The Song of Solomon, the Song of Songs, is not for those who have a perfect track record. This book wasn’t just written for those who going down the road never made a misstep, and they can say, “Now I can sing this song.” Not at all. Christ’s Bride was a no-good to start with. You know that because you’re part of the Bride of Christ, and you’re no good by nature, but God has redeemed you. He’s given you a new heart, and a new nature. And that’s why you find people like Rahab the harlot who became ancestors of Jesus Christ; that’s why you find these things in the Bible. And that’s why you also find what Paul teaches in Ephesians 5 in that matter of fact passage when he discusses husband and wife, and their duty to each other, and then suddenly he says, “This is a great mystery, but I speak of Christ and the church.” The reason he speaks of Christ and the church is that in the ultimate sense you can’t speak of one without the other. You can’t really talk about God’s ideal of marriage without talking about Christ and the church. And you can’t talk about Christ and the church without setting before God’s people the model of marriage.

You know, sometimes people say to me, “Why do I need all of the doctrine? Why do I need to worry about the doctrine of the church, and of Christ?” Well, my dear friends, you can’t even begin to have a foundation for marriage until you know those doctrines—do you know that? It’s a fact. The one has its fall-out and benefit for the other, because the one is based upon the analogy of the other. And it’s only when we understand these things, and enter into the ordinances of God, and think and live His way, that He pronounces His benediction and says, “Now, enjoy yourself to the full.” Eat and drink, O lovers, and that is lovers’ liberation. Amen.


The Test of True Love - Part I

Song of Solomon 5:2-6:9

[The Shulamite]

I sleep, but my heart is awake; it is the voice of my beloved! He knocks, saying, “Open for me, my sister, my love, my dove, my perfect one; for my head is covered with dew, my locks with the drops of the night.” I have taken off my robe; how can I put it on again? I have washed my feet; How can I defile them? my beloved put his hand by the latch of the door, and my heart yearned for him. I arose to open for my beloved, and my hands dripped with myrrh, My fingers with liquid myrrh, on the handles of the lock. I opened for my beloved, but my beloved had turned away and was gone. My heart went out to him when he spoke. I sought him, but I could not find him; I called him, but he gave me no answer. The watchmen who went about the city found me. They struck me, they wounded me; the keepers of the walls took my veil away from me. I charge you, O daughters of Jerusalem, if you find my beloved, that you tell him I am lovesick!

[The Daughters of Jerusalem]

What is your beloved more than another beloved, O fairest among women? What is your beloved more than another beloved, that you so charge us?

[The Shulamite]

My beloved is white and ruddy, chief among ten thousand. His head is like the finest gold; his locks are wavy, and black as a raven. His eyes are like doves by the rivers of waters, washed with milk, and fitly set. His cheeks are like a bed of spices, like banks of scented herbs. His lips are lilies, dripping liquid myrrh. His hands are rods of gold set with beryl. His body is carved ivory inlaid with sapphires. His legs are pillars of marble set on bases of fine gold. His countenance is like Lebanon, excellent as the cedars. His mouth is most sweet, yes, he is altogether lovely. This is my beloved, and this is my friend, O daughters of Jerusalem!

[The Daughters of Jerusalem]

Where has your beloved gone, O fairest among women? Where has your beloved turned aside, that we may seek him with you?

[The Shulamite]

My beloved has gone to his garden, to the beds of spices, to feed his flock in the gardens, and to gather lilies. I am my beloved’s, and my beloved is mine. He feeds his flock among the lilies.

[The Beloved]

O my love, you are as beautiful as Tirzah, lovely as Jerusalem, awesome as an army with banners! Turn your eyes away from me, for they have overcome me. Your hair is like a flock of goats going down from Gilead. Your teeth are like a flock of sheep which have come up from the washing; every one bears twins, and none is barren among them. Like a piece of pomegranate are your temples behind your veil. There are sixty queens and eighty concubines, and virgins without number. My dove, my perfect one, is the only one, the only one of her mother, the favorite of the one who bore her. The daughters saw her and called her blessed, the queens and the concubines, and they praised her.

Over these past few weeks, congregation, we have been thinking of this great and ideal marriage, and the things that led up to it—how they met, the progress of their courtship, and, at last, the actual wedding ceremony itself and the consummation of their love. And I’ve pointed out to you several times that there is a very good reason why God chose this vehicle. I suppose it would have been unthinkable for a poem to have been written at that time that was critical of the king, and so all the problems in this song are in the wife and not the husband. Now that’s not so in actual fact—in everyday life, as you all know, any of you who are women. You have problems with the men just as we have problems with the women, and by the way in this world there is no such a thing as an ideal marriage. I used to think so when I was real young, but when I grew up and had one of my own, and then ministered to other people, I soon learned that that’s impossible. You can’t take a daughter of Eve and marry her to a son of Adam and have a perfect marriage—it’s not possible. Yet in this particular marriage what you have is Solomon set forth as the ideal husband, and the problems are found in his wife, the Shulamite. And this, I think, is for a very good reason in God’s providential purpose, because standing behind this marriage of Solomon and the Shulamite is the greater model of the love of Christ for the church, and I think you’ll agree that in the love between Christ and the church, all the problems are on the wife’s side. There’s no fault in Jesus; He is absolutely perfect—one-hundred percent without sin. But the church is not perfect. She’s not yet sanctified completely. Again and again she’s been unfaithful to her husband, the Lord Jesus Christ, and so in the very way in which this song was written we constantly are reminded of that higher and ultimate model of Christ and the church.

We begin, then, tonight by taking note of the fact that in this marriage of Solomon and the Shulamite there arose a bit of a crisis. You can see that when she says, “I slept, but my heart was awake.” She had a dream but she was also awake in her dream, and she was thinking about things in their relationship, the one with the other. Now the Bible says that dreams arise out of the multitudes of the vexations of life. If you have dreams very often, they tell you something about yourself. When I was a young minister I used to dream again and again about being late for the service. I rushed around looking for my shoes, and I couldn’t find them. And I would hear the congregation starting to sing. Next week I dreamed the same dream only this time I couldn’t find my sermon notes anywhere, and I was absolutely frantic, and just at the last moment as the hymn was about to end I would find them and then run for the church. Then the dream ended, and I never found out what happened. The dream happened over and over again, and it wouldn’t take somebody like Sigmund Freud to tell you my problem was anxiety; I didn’t feel confident enough, I didn’t feel well prepared enough. You see, dreams arise out of the vexations of life.

Well, this woman has a dream, and in it there’s a kind of replay of one of the problems that has vexed their marriage. Now what was that problem? The problem was this. She hears her lover knocking at the door, and he says, “Open to me, my sister, my darling, my dove.” My goodness, he uses enough loving terms, doesn’t he? But what does she say in reply? She says, “I’ve taken off my robe. Do I have to put it on again? I washed my feet. Do I have to get them dirty again?” In other words, “Really, do you have to put me to all of this trouble?” That’s what she’s really saying. You know that’s a common thing in marriage: a reluctance to put yourself out for that other person. I also notice that when two young people come to me to get married, they knock themselves out for each other. “What do you want, honey?” “Oh, I don’t know, what do you want?” “Whatever you say.” “No, whatever you say.” And so it goes, you see. They bend over backwards and knock themselves out for each other. But here, a few months, maybe a few years later, she says, “Do I have to get up and get my feet soiled for you, honey?”

A modern poet put it like this:

Oh, my petite, clearest of all God’s creatures,
Still all air and nerve.
You were in your twenties, and I once,
Hand on glass and heart on mouth,
Out drank the Rahva in the heat of Greenwich Village
Fainting at your feet.
Now, twelve years later, you turn your back.
This is human nature and human experience.

Now, the problem isn’t that she doesn’t love him any more; that’s quite clear. If she didn’t love him any more, she wouldn’t have the dream. She wouldn’t be anxious about it. She wouldn’t get up with her heart pounding and go looking for him through the town—almost a replay of that dream she had before they were married, only this time things are a lot worse than they were then. This time they start to beat her. Yes, that’s what it says. “The watchmen found me, and what did they do? They beat me, they bruised me, they took away my cloak, those watchmen of the walls.” Now they didn’t do that earlier when she was anxious about whether she would get this guy tied down in the first place, but now, you see, she is really anxious about their relationship, and that proves to you that she really loves him. And the way she speaks about him shows that, and the way she goes out looking desperately for him, and says, “O daughters of Jerusalem, if you find him, tell him I’m faint with love.” Now our text doesn’t tell us exactly what caused the problem. She’s having a dream, and she’s revealing this problem that has probably had a lot of different types of manifestations in their lives. And again I think we’ll have to compare to the little foxes that we met when they were in courtship. You remember how the little foxes were there? And Solomon in his wisdom said, “You’ve got to get the little foxes out of the vineyard.” And we interpreted and explained it to mean that you’ve got to learn to handle the little problems before they get too big. That’s one of the purposes of courtship, and if you can’t handle it in courtship, look out, because marriage is going to be even worse. Well, this problem here is not a big elephant yet. It’s still like one of these little foxes. And I would say it probably came out of a scenario like this. You get married, and you get into the humdrum existence of life: you have a few children, you have a house to look after and you begin to become vexed by the burden of daily cares and concerns. Now that’s natural. We all have an experience like that. One of my friends who was a professor at Westminster was having breakfast one day when he let his daughter run around under his feet, and accidentally she pulled on the electric cord and down came the hot coffee pot and spilled boiling coffee on her. And they had to drop everything and rush to the hospital, and for two or three days they were there at her side, not another thought in their mind but the way it would turn out for that little girl. Now that’s natural, that’s right, that’s good, but there is such a thing to let the routine duties of life crowd out what should always be number one in any marriage and that is the concern that the husband has for his wife and the wife has for her husband.

And here again the analogy is very clear, because you know what happens when the church lets something else crowd out the one thing that ought to characterize the church, which is the fervency of its devotion to Jesus Christ. One of the things that has been happening in some Reformed churches across the world in our generation is something we call a move from the vertical to the horizontal—less concern about God Almighty and the worship of the living God and faithfulness to Him and more concern about the social and political problems of the world. Now, of course, we should be concerned about the social and political problems. We all ought to have some concern about Apartheid in South Africa. But when the church becomes preoccupied with anything horizontal, and it loses the fervency of its devotion and love for Christ—the vertical—as number one, then you’re going to have all kinds of problems. Do you remember the woman who came and anointed Jesus’s feet and wept and wiped them with her hair? The disciples were horizontalists in their thinking. They said, “What a stupid, ridiculous thing. That could have been sold for a lot of money. And we could have taken that money, and we could have helped a lot of poor people.” Jesus Christ said, “You let her alone. She’s done the right thing. She’s put first things first. She has anointed me for my burial, and I’m more important than those people who are starving.” And that’s a fact, and if we ever forget that in the church, look out, because the same thing happens in the relationship between Christ and the church that happened here between this woman and her husband. She let something else become more important, for the time being, than her husband, and that is not right. And when you do that, I might point out, that other things tend to go wrong, too.

I think that’s the significance in the dream of the watchmen beating her. If you’re married and things aren’t right between you and your wife or you and your husband, isn’t true that everything else is lousy, too? You get mad at the world. You feel like kicking the toaster across the kitchen. Everything else is lousy, too, when things are not right between husband and wife. And that’s the significance in that dream. She let other things come first. She couldn’t be bothered. And now she realizes that life itself has become miserable, and everything else is lousy, too. Well, that’s psychologically true.

Now the second thing we deal with, then, is Solomon’s answer to this problem. For what does he do? Well, what do you do? Do you retaliate? I think that’s what we all tend to do by nature. “She’s not going to do it for me; I’m not going to do it for her. She won’t get up and do that for me. You just wait till the next time she asks for something—I won’t do it.” Some men respond that way. Give her a little of her own medicine. Now Solomon could have said to that woman, “Look, you get up and get in here and open that door. I’m the head of the house, and you better know it.” He can come down with a heavy foot, in other words. That’s another way you can handle the situation, and I’ve seen husbands do both. I’ve even seen a third. He can give the silent treatment and pout and not say anything at all. But Solomon didn’t do anything like that. When she couldn’t be bothered to get up and soil her feet, do you know what he did? He went off and got busy with other tasks that he had to do. That’s why she couldn’t find him.

Now of course this is in her dream, but this was also characteristic of the man; instead of retaliating, he got busy and involved in some other job and got it done. I think that has to be true, because otherwise in her dream there would have been some reflection of retaliation and there isn’t the slightest bit. It’s not for nothing that Solomon is called the wisest man in the Bible prior to our Lord Jesus Christ. And he knew, he was wise enough to know what a lot of husbands aren’t wise enough to know, and that is that retaliation only makes matters worse. I found that out the hard way a few times, and I suppose you have, too. That only makes matters worse. So he simply went out and got busy with other things. One commentator even suggests that he left a little perfume on the handle of the door. I don’t know if that’s a little fanciful. When she went to the door it says her hands dripped with myrrh and her fingers with flowing myrrh, so maybe that’s true, but anyway it is perfectly evident that he did not respond in kind but acted in love. And one act of love will do more than a hundred acts of retaliation. If you really want to get to that wife of yours or that husband, when he has been lousy, do something nice. That is the coup de grâce, as they say, because that is the power of love, and doesn’t that bring us right back to the way it was in the beginning?

What was it that won her heart to this man in the first place? Do you remember when she said, “His banner over me is love?” Do you remember how we traced that out in the Bible? When you go into battle, you have a banner. You don’t want to go into battle and meet the enemy and risk death, but because of that banner you’ll go. Because of your patriotic feeling, you’ll go. Well, she says, “His banner over me is love.” Not force, not unkindness, not being tough—but love. “That’s what made me willing to submit and sit under his shadow.” And now, here it is all over again, and she says, “What a guy he is.” And she saw that everything else in their marriage really rested upon the nobility of his love. And I think that’s why there is a parallel between this dream and the earlier one. Do you remember how she went out to look for her husband-to-be? Do you remember how she couldn’t find him? They tried to help her, but now they don’t help her, and she realizes in that very thing that all is lost if she doesn’t have his love.

And there is the parallel between Christ and the church. When anything goes wrong with our devotion to Jesus, everything else goes wrong, too. Do you know that when liberal churches deny the doctrines of grace and no longer preach faithfully the whole counsel of God found in the Bible, mission work also begins to wither and die, the sense of the church’s mission in the world begins to fade out. Some people in the history of the church woke up to that fact, and thought, Where is God? Where is our relationship to Christ? And then you have a reformation, and the church goes back to fervent devotion to the Lord. That’s what happened in the Reformation. The people filled the churches, and they poured out their hearts to the living God in fervent worship, and then God poured out His blessing and everything seemed to go right again.

That’s exactly what you have here in this chapter. For the first time, she describes his beauty. Now twice already he’s described her beauty, but now for the first time she describes his beauty. I reckon that’s about par for the course. Women are far more beautiful than we men are—everybody knows that. It’s only natural that she should be described several times before he is, but now he is described. You see it there in chapter five beginning at verse ten. She talks about how radiant he is. His head is purest gold, his eyes are like doves, his cheeks are like beds of fragrance, and so on. She really does think he’s beautiful, and that’s really because he’s so wonderful in his love. I don’t think he’s gotten any more handsome. I think it’s just that his love has really got to her far more than ever before in their relationship. And that is a beauty of the way it is also in our relationship with Christ. The Bible says we love Him because He first loved us, and the deeper your awareness of the love of Christ—what He did for you—the more out of your heart will rise praise and adoration, and you also will say, “He is the fairest among ten-thousand, the One who is altogether lovely.” It is His love that brings that response from the church.

We come, then, in the third place to a beautiful reconciliation, and here I would like to stress again the covenant aspect of marriage. In verse one of chapter six we again have one of these rhetorical questions, and to my mind it doesn’t really matter who asks it—the daughters of Jerusalem? Solomon himself in a kind of rhetorical aside? Really, it’s Almighty God Himself who asks it, isn’t it?

Where has your lover gone,
most beautiful of women?
Which way did your lover turn,
that we may look for him with you?
And she says, “My lover has gone down to his garden.”

Now if you were to ask that question to a lot of young people in this land, both in and not in marriage under vows, they couldn’t tell you. Where is he? I don’t know; I wish I did know where he is—that’s what a lot of them would say. I don’t have any strings on that guy. And a lot of guys would say, I don’t know where she is. I don’t have any strings on her. There are a lot of so-called open marriages today. A lot of churches have watered down the vows of marriage until they really don’t mean much. You’re not bound to anything. And if you want to walk in, you can walk in. And if you want to walk out, you can walk out. But covenantal marriage, as God ordained it, is not like that. You can’t walk out. No, you promised—for better or worse, for richer or poorer, in sorrow as well as in happiness—that you will not forsake her or him as long as you both will live. And where you have covenantal marriage, there is security, and you know where that other person is. They might be upset, they might be a little bit angry, but you know where they are. They’re where you can find them, because you can depend upon them. And so she says, “I know where he is.” And she says in verse three why she knows, for she says, “I am my lover’s, and my lover is mine.” And that’s what you can say in the context of covenantal, Christian marriage—she is mine, and I am hers. And there are no ifs, no ands, and no buts. That’s the way it really is, and that’s the way God intended it to be—in spite of the trials and problems.

And here again the great model is Christ and the church. For one of the things we know as God’s covenantal people—and how wonderful it is to know it, in spite of all of our failures and imperfections—He has promised, I will never leave you, and I will never forsake you. Christ Jesus was down here in this world to save His church. On the night in which He was betrayed He gathered with them for the last supper. They were arguing about who would be top man under Him in the Kingdom; they were bickering and fighting. And the Bible says, “Having loved His own that were in the world, He loved them to the end.” That’s why He took the towel and began to wash their feet. But the point I make is that His love never wavered in the least.

So when she comes down there looking for him, what does he say? “Well, it’s about time you got here?” No, he doesn’t say that. He is too smart, too wise for that. Aren’t we the kind who would likely say it—but not Solomon, a type of Jesus Christ. What does he say? He says right away, first words out of his mouth, “You really are beautiful, my darling. Turn your eyes away from me, they overwhelm me.” And he begins again to praise the beauty of this woman. Now I think you would agree as you read that passage that it is far less sensual, far less sexual in its overtone than was the earlier description. And for a very good reason. Right now is psychologically the time to tell her that he values her for who she is, not just what he can get out of her. You know, the Greeks had different words for love. They had the word eros, for erotic love, Playboy style. They had phileo for friendship love, the kind of love that binds two people together who really like one another. But they also had a word, and they didn’t use it much, and that’s exactly why the New Testament chose that word and filled it full of a great content—the great word agape love, the kind of love that is steadfast and immoveable, the kind of love that doesn’t depend on some loveliness in the object loved, but a steadfast character in the one who does the loving. And it was the agape love, the faithful love of Christ for His church, that again and again has won the church’s heart to Him. And it was the love of this wise Solomon that kindled in her more than ever before the love in response for her husband.

So here again you see the ultimate model—the absolutely faithful covenant love that conquers our hearts completely. For what is it that conquers our hearts to Christ in real commitment? Is it is His awesome authority—the fact that He has all authority in heaven and earth—is that why you are committed to Jesus? Is it because of your fear of His terrible wrath? Is it because you respect His almighty power that you are committed to Jesus? No, of course not—it’s because of His love, the fact that He loved us and gave Himself for us that He might cleanse us and that we might stand before Him holy and without blame; and never gives up on us, even though we are so unworthy. You know, when we realize this—this love of Christ for the church, beautifully set forth as in a model in Solomon and his bride—when we really understand that, and by the grace of God begin to enter into it, we begin to have the key to a beautiful marriage.

I began by saying there is no such thing as a perfect marriage, and that’s true. But you know it is true that in the church of Jesus Christ there is such a thing as a beautiful marriage because God’s people do grow up in all things into Christ, and it really is possible for people today, the more they enter into the love of Christ in an understanding of what Christ means to the church and what the church’s relationship is to Christ, who can also begin to manifest that same Christian love in a beautiful way in marriage, home and family. And I would say the greatest need in America today is for the beauty of Christian marriage and family. What a witness that will be when Almighty God begins to raise up so many again who display in their marriage something of the emblem of Christ and His love for the church, and the church in its love for Christ. And the great and wonderful thing is that you, by the grace of God, can have a part in that great secret.

May God grant it, for Christ’s sake. Amen.


The Test of True Love - Part II

Song of Solomon 6:10-8:4

[The Beloved]

Who is she who looks forth as the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the sun, Awesome as an army with banners?

[The Shulamite]

I went down to the garden of nuts to see the verdure of the valley, to see whether the vine had budded and the pomegranates had bloomed. Before I was even aware, my soul had made me as the chariots of my noble people.

[The Beloved and His Friends]

Return, return, O Shulamite; return, return, that we may look upon you!

[The Shulamite ]

What would you see in the Shulamite? As it were, the dance of the double camp?

[The Beloved]

How beautiful are your feet in sandals, O prince’s daughter! The curves of your thighs are like jewels, the work of the hands of a skillful workman. Your navel is a rounded goblet which lacks no blended beverage. Your waist is a heap of wheat set about with lilies. Your two breasts are like two fawns, twins of a gazelle. Your neck is like an ivory tower, your eyes like the pools in Heshbon by the gate of Bath Rabbim. Your nose is like the tower of Lebanon which looks toward Damascus. Your head crowns you like Mount Carmel, and the hair of your head is like purple; the king is held captive by its tresses. How fair and how pleasant you are, O love, with your deligh