Bible Commentary

Song of Solomon 5:6

The Pulpit Commentary on Song of Solomon 5:6

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

I opened to my beloved; but my beloved had withdrawn himself, and was gone. My soul had failed me when he spake: I sought him, but I could not find him; I called him, but he gave me no answer. The meaning is this—The voice of my beloved struck my heart; but in the consciousness that I had estranged myself from him I could not openly meet him, I could not offer him mere empty excuses.

Now I am made sensible of my own deficiency. I call after him. I long for his return, but it is in vain (cf. the two disciples going to Emmaus, ; "Did not our heart burn within us," etc.?).

Similar allusion to the effect of the voice of the beloved is found in Terence, 'And.,' , , "Oratio haec," etc. The failing or departing of the soul at the sound of the voice must refer to the lack of response at the time, therefore it was that she sought him and cried out after him.

When he spake; literally, in his speaking; i.e. when he said, "I will not now come because at first refused;" cf. , the solemn warning against the loss of opportunity. It is a coincidence between the two books of Solomon which cannot be disregarded.

If there is any spiritual meaning at all in Solomon's Song, it certainly is a book which he who wrote the first chapter of Proverbs is likely to have written.

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