1
By night on my bed,I sought him whom my soul loves.I sought him, but I didn't find him. +
2
I will get up now, and go about the city;in the streets and in the squares I will seek him whom my soul loves.I sought him, but I didn't find him. +
3
The watchmen who go about the city found me;"Have you seen him whom my soul loves?" +
4
I had scarcely passed from them,when I found him whom my soul loves.I held him, and would not let him go,until I had brought him into my mother's house,into the room of her who conceived me. +
5
I adjure you, daughters of Jerusalem,by the roes, or by the hinds of the field,that you not stir up, nor awaken love,until it so desires. +
6
Who is this who comes up from the
wilderness like pillars of smoke,perfumed with
myrrh and frankincense,with all
spices of the merchant?
+7
Behold, it is Solomon's carriage!Sixty mighty men are around it,of the mighty men of Israel. +
8
They all handle the sword, and are expert in war.Every man has his
sword on his thigh,because of fear in the night.
+9
King
Solomon made himself a carriageof the wood of Lebanon.
+10
He made its pillars of silver,its bottom of gold, its seat of purple,the middle of it being paved with love,from the daughters of Jerusalem. +
11
Go out, you daughters of Zion, and see king Solomon,with the
crown with which his mother has crowned him,in the day of his weddings,in the day of the gladness of his heart.
+
So 3:1-11.
1. By night--literally, "By nights." Continuation of the longing for the dawn of the Messiah (So 2:17; Ps 130:6; Mal 4:2). The spiritual desertion here (So 2:17; 3:5) is not due to indifference, as in So 5:2-8. "As nights and dews are better for flowers than a continual sun, so Christ's absence (at times) giveth sap to humility, and putteth an edge on hunger, and furnisheth a fair field to faith to put forth itself" [RUTHERFORD]. Contrast So 1:13; Ps 30:6, 7.
on . . . bed--the secret of her failure (Isa 64:7; Jer 29:13; Am 6:1, 4; Ho 7:14).
loveth--no want of sincerity, but of diligence, which she now makes up for by leaving her bed to seek Him (Ps 22:2; 63:8; Isa 26:9; Joh 20:17). Four times (So 3:1-4) she calls Jesus Christ, "Him whom my soul loveth," designating Him as absent; language of desire: "He loved me," would be language of present fruition (Re 1:5). In questioning the watchmen (So 3:3), she does not even name Him, so full is her heart of Him. Having found Him at dawn (for throughout He is the morning), she charges the daughters not to abridge by intrusion the period of His stay. Compare as to the thoughtful seeking for Jesus Christ in the time of John the Baptist, in vain at first, but presently after successful (Lu 3:15-22; Joh 1:19-34).
found him not--Oh, for such honest dealings with ourselves (Pr 25:14; Jude 12)!