I have never taught on Solomon’s Song of Songs. I am just not confident about how to interpret it
correctly, although I lean towards an allegorical interpretation. Allegory takes
historical events and even people and assigns to them deeper spiritual
meanings.
For example, Paul had taught that Ismael and his mother Hagar
represented bondage and Mt. Sinai, while Isaac, Abraham’s other son, represented
freedom and God’s promise (Galatians 4:21-32). Likewise, Jesus is properly understood
as the “lamb of God” and its ultimate fulfillment.
Can we understand the sexuality of the Song of Songs in terms of an allegory pointing to a higher
spiritual truth? Many have! Former professor of Biblical Studies at Wheaton
College, C. Hassell Bullock, had written:
·
Some scholars believe that Rabbi Akiva (martyred
A.D. 135) alluded to the interpretation of the Song as allegory when he called it “the holy of holies” among
Biblical books.
·
The Targum [a Jewish retelling] of the Song, the
first full allegorical treatment that has survived, interprets it as an
allegory on the history of Israel from the time of the Exodus to the coming of
the Messiah and the building of the third Temple, viewing the “beloved” as the
Lord and the maiden as Israel.
The Church had also adopted the allegorical interpretation
of the Song:
·
Athanasius (296-373), Archbishop of Alexandria,
found in the Song the doctrine of the deity of Christ, commenting, for example…that
it was the plea of ancient Israel to the Word that He become flesh.
According to Bullock, Matthew Henry also understood the Song as allegorical, “depicting God and
Israel in their mutual relationship.” However, even though I cannot understand
the Song as merely a description of
human love, I cannot find any evidence within the Song itself that it is essentially about God’s love for His people.
Admittedly, there are many metaphors in the Song – the maiden is compared to a
flower, the beloved shepherd to an apple tree, love is compared to fruit, and wine
as a vineyard (227). However, none of these metaphors take us to God.
However, there are Biblical metaphors that treat human love
as a type or representation of God’s love for us. Even our marriages are a mere
foretaste of our ultimate New Covenant marriage to our Redeemer:
·
And I will betroth you to me forever. I will
betroth you to me in righteousness and in justice, in steadfast love and in
mercy. I will betroth you to me in faithfulness. And you shall know the LORD. (Hosea
2:19-20 ESV)
After teaching about the marital responsibility of the
husband and of the wife, Paul claimed that this mirrored our eternal marriage:
·
This mystery [of marriage] is profound, and I am
saying that it refers to Christ and the church. (Ephesians 5:32; 2 Corinthians
11:2; Revelation 19:7-9)
However, does equating human love with God’s love and marriage
to His Church pertain also to the Song? Bullock insists:
·
To abandon the allegorical method altogether and
[to] rule it invalid might constitute one of the many exegetical manipulations
of the Western mind that superimposes our psychological and literary structures
upon the ancient oriental writer. Although our attitude toward the method may
legitimately be one of caution, modern biblical hermeneutics should give no
place to exegetical snobbery, nor are we in a position to look down upon the
absorbing and passionate love for God that has characterized the saints of
Israel and the church who have fed upon the allegorical meaning of the book.
(227-28)
Consequently, according the allegorical approach, the last
two verses of the Song are understood
“as the temporary parting of Christ and His church, He to heaven…and she to
remain in the earth. She pleads with Him to hasten His return” (254):
·
“O you who dwell in the gardens, with companions
listening for your voice; let me hear it. Make haste, my beloved, and be like a
gazelle or a young stag on the mountains of spices.” (8:13-14)
Although I sympathize with Bullock and the allegorical
interpretation, I remain skeptical and will not teach the Song unless I can be confident about its proper interpretation.
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