Separation and renewed seeking
Love is vulnerable to delay, but longing persists and renews pursuit; the poem moves from painful separation to public praise and the reaffirmation that the lovers belong to one another exclusively.
Commentary
5:2 I was asleep, but my mind was dreaming. Listen! My lover is knocking at the door! The Lover to His Beloved: “Open for me, my sister, my darling, my dove, my flawless one! My head is drenched with dew, my hair with the dampness of the night.” The Beloved to Her Lover:
5:3 “I have already taken off my robe – must I put it on again? I have already washed my feet – must I soil them again?”
5:4 My lover thrust his hand through the hole, and my feelings were stirred for him.
5:5 I arose to open for my beloved; my hands dripped with myrrh – my fingers flowed with myrrh on the handles of the lock.
5:6 I opened for my beloved, but my lover had already turned and gone away. I fell into despair when he departed. I looked for him but did not find him; I called him but he did not answer me.
5:7 The watchmen found me as they made their rounds in the city. They beat me, they bruised me; they took away my cloak, those watchmen on the walls! The Triumph of Love: The Beloved Praises Her Lover The Beloved to the Maidens:
5:8 O maidens of Jerusalem, I command you – If you find my beloved, what will you tell him? Tell him that I am lovesick! The Maidens to The Beloved:
5:9 Why is your beloved better than others, O most beautiful of women? Why is your beloved better than others, that you would command us in this manner? The Beloved to the Maidens:
5:10 My beloved is dazzling and ruddy; he stands out in comparison to all other men.
5:11 His head is like the most pure gold. His hair is curly – black like a raven.
5:12 His eyes are like doves by streams of water, washed in milk, mounted like jewels.
5:13 His cheeks are like garden beds full of balsam trees yielding perfume. His lips are like lilies dripping with drops of myrrh.
5:14 His arms are like rods of gold set with chrysolite. His abdomen is like polished ivory inlaid with sapphires.
5:15 His legs are like pillars of marble set on bases of pure gold. His appearance is like Lebanon, choice as its cedars.
5:16 His mouth is very sweet; he is totally desirable. This is my beloved! This is my companion, O maidens of Jerusalem! The Maidens to the Beloved:
6:1 Where has your beloved gone, O most beautiful among women? Where has your beloved turned? Tell us, that we may seek him with you. The Beloved to the Maidens:
6:2 My beloved has gone down to his garden, to the flowerbeds of balsam spices, to graze in the gardens, and to gather lilies. Poetic Refrain: Mutual Possession The Beloved about Her Lover:
6:3 I am my lover’s and my lover is mine; he grazes among the lilies. The Lover to His Beloved:
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Context notes
The unit follows the banquet and consummation imagery of 5:1 and turns into a nocturnal search, then into public praise and renewed mutual belonging.
Historical setting and dynamics
No major historical dynamic requires special comment beyond the normal setting of the passage. The poem assumes ordinary ancient household life, including a door or latch, night travel, city watchmen, and the vulnerability of a woman moving through the city after dark. Those concrete details intensify the emotional movement of the poem without requiring a detailed reconstruction beyond what the text itself presents.
Central idea
Love is vulnerable to delay, but longing persists and renews pursuit; the poem moves from painful separation to public praise and the reaffirmation that the lovers belong to one another exclusively.
Context and flow
This unit follows the banquet imagery of 5:1 and leads into the renewed praise of 6:4ff. It opens with a night visit that is delayed by the beloved, turns to searching and loss, shifts to the beloved’s public description of her lover before the maidens of Jerusalem, and closes with a refrain of mutual possession.
Exegetical analysis
The unit moves in three panels: nocturnal interruption and loss (5:2-7), the beloved’s public encomium (5:8-16), and renewed seeking with the refrain of belonging (6:1-3). The opening in 5:2 is intentionally compressed. The Hebrew can be read along the lines of “I was asleep, but my heart was awake/alert,” which leaves open whether the scene is a literal nighttime visit, a dream, or a dream-shaped recollection. The poem does not require a final decision on that point; its emphasis is on the contrast between the lover’s urgent initiative and her reluctant delay.
Her reply is not hostile, but it is self-protective and unresponsive at the wrong moment. The narrative consequence is that she misses him, and the repeated verbs of seeking and not finding underline the pain of separation. The actions in 5:4-5 heighten the emotional pressure: his hand at the opening and the myrrh on the latch suggest affectionate urgency, while her inward stirring shows desire awakening after hesitation. The watchmen’s violence in 5:7 is reported, not endorsed. It intensifies the vulnerability of a woman searching alone at night in the city and should not be turned into a fixed allegory.
From 5:8 onward the tone shifts from loss to testimony. Her request that the maidens tell her beloved that she is “lovesick” is not an invitation to another man, but a plea for his return. Their question in 5:9 introduces the poetic encomium that follows. The long description in 5:10-16 is stylized, idealized praise from head to foot. It is not anatomical realism; it is a total portrait of splendor, desirability, and uniqueness. Calling him “my beloved” and “my companion” highlights both exclusivity and fellowship.
In 6:1-3, the maidens ask where he has gone, and the woman answers that he has gone down to his garden, to the beds of spices, to graze among the gardens and gather lilies. The garden language most naturally continues the erotic-symbolic world of the Song and should not be pressed into allegory. The final refrain, “I am my beloved’s and my beloved is mine,” restores mutual possession after the pain of absence and closes the unit on renewed relational certainty.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage belongs to the wisdom-like celebration of creation order rather than to a direct covenant oracle or redemptive-historical crisis. It affirms the goodness of exclusive human love, the dignity of marital desire, and the pain that sin, delay, or distance can bring into the enjoyment of that gift. While it does not advance the Abrahamic, Mosaic, or Davidic covenants in a narrow sense, it contributes to the Bible’s broader theological vision of marriage as a creational good under God and stands behind later biblical uses of marital love as an analogy for covenant fidelity.
Theological significance
The passage presents human love as intensely personal, reciprocal, and vulnerable. It shows that desire is meant to be answered, not merely felt, and that hesitation can produce real loss. It also dignifies bodily beauty and affection without shame, while warning that love is not sustained by sentiment alone but by mutual pursuit, timely response, and public affirmation. The woman’s praise of her beloved shows that love strengthens by remembering and naming what is uniquely precious about the other.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No major prophecy, typology, or symbol requires special comment in this unit. The garden, lilies, spices, and precious materials are erotic and poetic images, not coded predictions. Any typological use should be restrained and secondary to the poem’s plain celebration of marital love.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The poem uses standard ancient love-poetry conventions: lavish body imagery, repeated address to "the most beautiful among women," and public dialogue with the maidens of Jerusalem. Night travel, city watchmen, doors, and latches supply realistic social texture and heighten the vulnerability of the beloved. The speech is highly concrete, as Hebrew poetry often is, and should not be flattened into abstract moralizing.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
In its own setting, the unit celebrates human love rather than directly foretelling Messiah. Canonically, it contributes to the Bible’s positive theology of marriage, intimacy, and faithful desire, themes later echoed in prophetic marital imagery and in the New Testament’s use of marriage to picture covenant love. Those later developments are legitimate trajectories, but they must not erase the Song’s original reference to the lovers themselves.
Practical and doctrinal implications
The passage commends timely responsiveness in love and warns against casual delay where relationship requires prompt attention. It affirms that faithful affection includes admiration, verbal praise, and exclusive commitment. It also reminds readers that vulnerable people can suffer when searching alone in unsafe places, so protection and wisdom matter. For doctrine, the text supports the goodness of marital love, the integrity of bodily desire within covenantal bounds, and the importance of mutual belonging in a healthy relationship.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
The principal crux is the opening of 5:2: whether the scene is best read as a literal nighttime encounter, a dream, or a dream-shaped memory. The strongest reading is that the text intentionally leaves the scene fluid, so the interpreter should not force a strict either/or. A secondary crux is 5:7, where the watchmen’s assault is best taken as reported danger in the city, not as a symbol requiring allegory. The garden and lily imagery in 6:2-3 remains poetic language of the lover’s sphere of delight.
Application boundary note
Do not reduce the passage either to a moral lesson about tardiness or to an elaborate allegory for Christ and the church. Do not turn the watchmen into a fixed symbol for church leaders or spiritual authorities. Also avoid wooden literalism with the erotic imagery; the poem uses stylized praise and compressed scene-setting to celebrate exclusive human love within creation.
Key Hebrew terms
yāshēn
Gloss: asleep
The opening sleep language creates the unit’s dreamlike ambiguity and shapes the question of whether the scene is a literal nocturnal visit, a remembered episode, or a poetic dream.
lēb
Gloss: heart
In Hebrew thought the heart is the center of thought and desire, so the line is not merely about physical sleep but about inward awareness and longing.
dāpaq
Gloss: to knock
The lover’s knocking is an urgent act of initiative and desire; it also drives the tension created by the beloved’s delay.
dōdî
Gloss: my beloved / lover
This repeated term anchors the poem’s mutual affection and makes the relationship’s exclusivity explicit.
rēaʿ
Gloss: friend, companion
Calling him her companion broadens the relationship beyond desire alone and highlights intimacy, mutuality, and fellowship.
Interpretive cautions
Read the passage as compressed poetic drama with intentional ambiguity, especially in 5:2 and 5:7, rather than as a rigidly literal narrative sequence.
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