Interpretation of Song of Solomon

// October 3rd, 2008 // bible


I am beginning to work my way through a leadership & counseling series done by Paul David Tripp (visit his blog), along with some other students here at the Bible Institute. One thing he said that I highlighted in my mind was about truth. He said something along the lines of “truth to each person is not based on facts, but is based on their interpretation of the facts”. I think he got it right….look how many viewpoints claim they know the truth? We all have the same facts…

The same is true when interpreting the Bible. It bugs me when I hear someone “exposit” scripture…then come up with some profound meaning hardly found within the text. The Bible is not a mysterious book full of allegories, hidden meanings, and secret truths. It is a book with a simple clear truth. I am convinced that we can interpret the bible literally taking into consideration the grammar & context. I think most “conservative” evangelicals would agree. But I also see many “conservatives” suddently take a slightly different approach when looking at Song of Solomon. Is it Christ & the Church? Marriage counselling? A graphic story? Michael Spencer @ internetmonk.com wrote an awesome article on this. See it here.

3 Responses to “Interpretation of Song of Solomon”

  1. joelenns says:

    Jonathan, do you think the Shulamite could have true love toward and receive true love from a practicing polygamist? The literal “implications” make people want to try to allegorize, but agape love is caring, responsible and respectful IN the situation of curse and sin we find ourselves in.

  2. Jonathan says:

    should these implications make us change our hermeneutic so that it is inconsistent? Many conservative literalists would use a different hermeneutic for SOS than the rest of the Bible.

    True love…can God have true love for rotten filthy sinners? Would God command us to do something (love) He cannot do?

    Was Solomon filled with true love or with a selfish love?

  3. joelenns says:

    no, yes, no, true love but it did not last because he did not abide in the vine that produced it in him

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