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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Song of Solomon 6:3

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Song of Solomon 6:3

I [am] my beloved’s, and my beloved [is] mine: he feedeth among the lilies.

3. Here she expresses her jealous feeling. They are not to search for him with her. That is her business alone, they have no claim to be even thus interested in him. She fears she has overshot the mark in the praises she has uttered concerning her beloved. She has held him up for their admiration, but seeing how great it is, she snatches him back as it were, lest she should lose him. ‘I alone am his and he is mine, he who is feeding his flock among the lilies.’

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Son 6:3

He feedeth among the lilies.

Feeding among the lilies

The literal reference is simple and obvious. The bride represents her husband as going down to the garden where the fruits grew among the flowers–where what was good for food was associated with what was fair to the eyes and pleasant to all the senses. The plain of Sharon, the lower slopes of Lebanon, the shores of Galilee, and even the bare craggy terraces of the hill country of Judaea are illumined with gorgeous gleams of white, and scarlet, and golden lilies, whose glory is the most peculiar of all the common aspects of the country. The bulbous roots of many of them, containing a reserve of nourishment for unfavourable times, and guarding as in a secure citadel the principle of life, specially adapt these lilies for growing in the most unpromising looking places. And not only are they enabled themselves to extract nourishment from the driest soil and atmosphere, but they also create around them, by the shadow of their leaves and blossoms, and by the moisture which they attract, conditions suitable for the growth of other plants less richly endowed; take species under their protection whose forms are tougher and whose constitution is hardier, but which have no reserved stores like them for times and spots of scarcity. Nowhere is the herbage so luxuriant as under the shadow of these beautiful and graceful flowers. Such spots are therefore the favourite feeding-places of flocks and herds. They seek them out as the traveller in the desert seeks out the oasis; and they are as sure to find sweet and tender grass where the lilies are growing, as the traveller is to find a well where the palm-grove flourishes. The idea the text conveys is that as the roedeer or the gazelle feeds on the grass which grows among the lilies on the mountains, so is the bridegroom satisfied with the sterling useful qualities that are betokened by the beauties of mind and heart of the bride. Her fair exterior, her beautiful face indicate the possession of solid and substantial endowments beneath. In the shadow of the lily-like charms of her person, he finds not only what pleases his eye, but also what satisfies his mind and heart. The believer says of Jesus, I am my Beloveds, and my Beloved is mine: He feedeth among the lilies,–eats of the fruits that grow among the flowers of the garden of my heart. I am filled with His fulness, and He sees in me of the travail of His soul and is satisfied. But separating the passage from its literal and symbolical reference in the text, it is susceptible of a wide signification. The Creator may be said to feed among the lilies, in the enjoyment which He receives from the beauties of creation. We can see no end in the existence of all this inaccessible beauty except to gratify the love of beauty in the heart of God Himself. And to this Divine feeling, He who was the express image of the Fathers person gave frequent expression on earth. The whole life of Jesus was a feeding among the lilies, which illuminated His thoughts of God and His lessons for man. They helped to develop the nature which grew in wisdom as in stature by the aid of the same influences which develop ours. His soul fed upon those visions of the beauty of holiness, and those high impulses and deep emotions which the beauty of nature produced. He saw the spiritual in them behind the physical; and their perishing beauty was to Him but the veil which concealed the holy of holies of a nobler and more enduring beauty, a shadow glassed in the unstable element of time, of the steadfast light of God in heaven. The Jews of old fed among the lilies, for their land was pre-eminently the Flowery Land. Dr. Tristram calls it the garden of Eden run wild. Every traveller is struck with the immense profusion, variety, and brilliancy of the flowers. And as with the Land, so with the Book. The Bible is the book of flowers: its language is the language of flowers: it is full of the highest poetry and truest philosophy of these fair creations. The sweetest and most satisfying promises of God come to us in the midst of the most beautiful poetry; the plainest and simplest precepts are set forth in glowing images; the highest revelations reach us in lessons of the lowly lilies that grow beside our door. The whole of human life is a feeding among lilies. All our food and clothing and fuel come to us through beautiful forms and colours. In this respect how different are the manufactories of nature from those of man! In human works beauty is often eliminated and only what is useful is preserved; but in nature the useful and the beautiful always keep pace with one another. In the most carefully weeded field the eye, wearied with the monotony of the green stalks and the shimmering of the freckled glumes in the sunshine, is refreshed here and there with the blaze of scarlet poppy, and the azure gleam of the corn-bluebottle, and the mimic sunshine of the yellow corn-marigold. The wild mint perfumes its roots, and the white corn-spurry and scarlet pimpernel lend to it all the tender grace of their hue and shape. The corn itself feeds among the lilies; it draws its nourishment from soil and atmosphere in the company of a bright sisterhood of flowers which crown its sober usefulness with a garland of beauty. And is not this feature common to all of nature that is associated with man? The green grass of the meadows and pastures is never allowed to grow in dull uniformity: nature spreads her golden buttercups and snow-white daisies and purple prunellas over it, so that the beasts of the field feed among the lilies. How beautiful are the white and crimson blossoms of the clover, and the slender scented spikes of the vernal grass, which feed the bee with honey and load the air with a delicious fragrance, ere they yield their succulent herbage to the browsing cattle, or fill the barns of the farmer with their tedded hay! God has ordained that in everything man should feed among the lilies; that the useful should be produced by or among the beautiful. The arms of our orchard trees are clasped with bracelets of emerald moss, and their trunks are adorned with brooches of golden lichens; and thus bedecked, they, Hebe-like, offer to us, year after year, the fruit they have produced,–the rich harvest of their life. And these mosses and lichens are to our fruit trees what the poppies and marigolds are to our corn,–the lilies among which we gather our food. This association of beauty with mans food is designed for a wise and gracious purpose. As flowers on a dinner-table east the shadow of their own loveliness upon all the viands around them, and change what is the mere gratification of a physical appetite into the fulfilment of a heaven-born longing, so the lilies among which we feed redeem that feeding from its grossness and link the man that feeds upon bread with the angels that feed upon every word of God. They show that eating is not an end, but a means to a higher, nobler end, and connect the means by which our lower nature is supported with the means by which our higher, spiritual nature is trained and educated. And what a purifying and refining influence have these lilies upon us! Their purity shames our impurity, their grace our ungraciousness, their meekness our pride, their lavish fragrance our thanklessness. How greatly, too, is our feeling of confidence in God increased as we feed among the lilies! If He has provided these superfluous things for us, it is a pledge and a guarantee that He will provide the things that are necessary. As the blossom on the individual plant is a prophecy that fruit will be produced, so the appearance of the lilies among the corn is an assurance that bread will be given to us, and we shall not want any good thing. If God so clothe the grass of the field, which to-day shines in the glow of the sun, and to-morrow shrivels in the flame of the oven, how much more will He clothe the creatures whom He has made in His own image! But more than all, the lilies among which we feed speak to us of our immortality. The corn is the meat that perisheth; but the beauty of the lilies and the lessons of Divine wisdom which they teach is the meat that endureth unto everlasting life. By the food of garden and field our decaying bodies are sustained; by the lilies our never-dying souls are nourished. While feeding among the lilies there is thus provision made for our twofold nature: we have in every feast a reminder that man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that cometh out of the mouth of God, and that is expressed on earth in every bright hue and beautiful form around us. Rightly viewed the corn exists for the sake of the lilies. They stand among the corn like the priests of old among the people, clothed in priestly garments of glory and beauty. They are the ministers of God serving at His altar, appealing to the higher faculties of man, and bearing their witness to the Divine love that formed them; and thus, though they themselves die in succession, like the sons of Aaron, their priesthood abideth for ever. The grass withereth, and the flower thereof fadeth; but the Word of the Lord, that speaks in and through them, endureth for ever. The lilies fade and pass away; but the truth which they teach and the character which they help to form are enduring as the soul itself, and shall be wrought into its very texture, and bloom in its beauty in the paradise above. (H. Macmillan, D. D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

3. In speaking of Jesus Christto others, she regains her own assurance. Literally, “I am formy beloved . . . for me.” Reverse order from So2:16. She now, after the season of darkness, grounds herconvictions on His love towards her, more than on hers towards Him(De 33:3). There, it wasthe young believer concluding that she was His, from the sensibleassurance that He was hers.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

I [am] my beloved’s, and my beloved [is] mine,…. Expressive of interest in Christ, and union to him, and of her faith therein; which still continued, notwithstanding her unbecoming behavior toward Christ, and her many infirmities, So 5:2. Aben Ezra connects the words with the preceding, “my beloved is gone”, c. but though he is, and I am left alone, I know I am his, and he is mine which throws a beauty upon the words, and declares the excellency and strength of her faith; for herein lies the glory and excellency of faith, to believe in an unseen Christ: though it may be the Shechinah was with her, as the Targum has it; or Christ had now appeared to her, and was found by her, and therefore, like Thomas, says, “my Lord and my God”;

he feedeth among the lilies; [See comments on So 2:16].

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

3 I am my beloved’s, and my beloved is mine,

Who feeds among the lilies,

Shulamith farther proceeds, followed by the daughters of Jerusalem, to seek her friend lost through her own fault. She always says, not , but and ; for love, although a passion common to mind and body, is in this Song of Songs viewed as much as possible apart from its basis in the animal nature. Also, that the description hovers between that of the clothed and the unclothed, gives to it an ideality favourable to the mystical interpretation. Nakedness is . But at the cross nakedness appears transported from the sphere of sense to that of the supersensuous.

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

RENEWED SELF-DEDICATION

Son. 6:3

SHULAMITE

I am my beloveds
And my beloved is mine:
He feedeth among the lilies.

Shulamite repeats in presence of the Daughters the declaration of her devotedness to and interest in her beloved which she had formerly made to himself (chap. Son. 2:16). The declaration possibly now also made in his presence, at the conclusion of her narrative. Perhaps the whole sung in his presence at the Feast, or he himself comes now in view. The language of exultation and joy, as well as of devotedness and love. Observe

(1) Faith and love in a believer never dead, though sometimes in a swoon. True faith like wood rather than ironif it sink, it will rise again. A believers falls not final. I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not (Luk. 22:32).

2. Withdrawals on the part of Christ no proof of abated love (Joh. 13:1; Isa. 54:8). The covenant of grace too firmly established to be broken by the infirmities of the flesh. That covenant steadfast, because of grace and not of works. Christ betroths believers to Himself in faithfulness for ever, because in righteousness and judgment, in loving kindness and in mercies (Hos. 2:19-20). The the way transgressors always hard; but transgression unable to cast out of the covenant of grace as it did out of the covenant of works. Gods faithfulness not affected by His peoples falls. The gifts and calling of God without repentance or change of mind on His part. He pardons His peoples sins though He takes vengeance on their inventions. Rebukes not only consistent with covenant love, but a necessary part of it. The Bridegroom bears with the Brides ill manners in the wilderness, though He wisely expresses His displeasure. Withdraws the joy of salvation for a time, though not the salvation itself.

3. The chastened and penitent believer restored to the full consciousness of his interest in Christ, and with that to joy and comfort. Joy unspeakable in a conscious interest in Christ and full surrender to Him.

4. Good for a believer frequently to recal his covenant relationship to Christ, his self-surrender to Him, and his interest in Him. Pauls comfort in prison,I know whom I have believed; and I am persuaded that He is able to keep that which I have committed unto Him against that day (2Ti. 1:12).

5. Surrender of ourselves to Christ, and acceptance of Him, the two sides of a saving faith. I am His, indissolubly connected with He is mine. The two confirmatory of each other. Interest in Christ necessarily follows surrender to Christ. The consciousness of the one bound up with the consciousness of the other. Those fleeing to Christ and closing with Him may safely conclude that Christ is theirs.

6. The order of the two first clauses of the text changed from what it was before. The brides declaration of self-surrender now first, as having been placed in suspicion by her recent coolness. So Peter, after his threefold denial, must make a threefold declaration of his love. Renewed and open declaration of our faith and love necessary to full restoration to former enjoyment.

7. Christs presence, both on earth and in heaven, among His lily-like people. He feedeth among the lilies. His presence promised to His Church till the end of the world, when faith is changed to sight. Christ both feeds others and has joy Himself in His Church and its ordinances. To enjoy His presence and His care we must be among the lilies. Not forsaking the assembling of yourselves together, as the manner of some is. No mark of Christs sheep to separate ourselves from the flock. The happiness of believers to find themselves among Christs people and in the enjoyment of His ordinances. All my springs are in thee.
8. The text historically verified in the disciples after Christs resurrection. Then were the disciples glad when they saw the Lord. The language of Shulamite that of Mary at Jesuss feetRaboonl,My Master! That of Thomas with his finger on the nail-prints,My Lord and my God! That of penitent Peter,Thou knowest all things: Thou knowest that I love Thee.

Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell

3. See Son 2:16. Supply, For all that. The connective though, is to be supplied: “ Though he feedeth his flock among the lilies.” This is now uttered for the king to hear, and his ear can catch it, as, “with condescension covering every kingly grace,” he approaches to see if he may win a new victory over a fresh young heart by blandishments that never yet have failed.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

I am my beloved’s, and my beloved is mine: he feedeth among the lilies.

I need not detain the Reader over this verse, having already noticed it, Son 2:16 . to which I refer; unless it be to remark once more, the delight the church takes in the conscious property she hath in Jesus, and Jesus in her. Here, indeed, the form of expression varies from the former; for in that she first calls Christ hers, and then she is his. But here she inverts the order, and declares herself first to be his, and then Christ is hers: but the alteration only serves to point out yet more strongly the mutual property in both.

Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

Son 6:3 I [am] my beloved’s, and my beloved [is] mine: he feedeth among the lilies.

Ver. 3. I am my beloved’s, &c.] Or, I am for my beloved, and he is for me; i.e., for me only. He resteth in his love, and I in mine. We will seek no further. And here her faith reviveth who in her late temptation and desertion was in a mist, and could not read her own graces, a See Trapp on “ Son 2:16 It reviveth, I say, and fetcheth out Christ, that had hid himself, as that brave woman did. Mar 7:24-25

a Flamma redardescit, quae modo nulla fuit. Ovid.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

he feedeth = he that feeds [his flock] as a shepherd.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

my beloved’s: Son 2:16, Son 7:10, Heb 8:10, Rev 21:2-4

he: Son 2:16

Reciprocal: Son 4:5 – feed Son 5:16 – my beloved Isa 5:1 – wellbeloved Eze 36:28 – be people Act 27:23 – whose

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge