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  Song of Solomon 
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  -"Arise, 
	my love, my fair one, and come away. O my dove, in the clefts of the rock, 
	in the covert of the cliff, let me see your face, let me hear your voice; 
	for your voice is sweet, and your face is lovely. Catch us the foxes, the 
	little foxes, that ruin the vineyards—for our vineyards are in blossom.’ My 
	beloved is mine and I am his; he pastures his flock among the lilies. Until 
	the day breathes and the shadows flee turn, my beloved, be like a gazelle or 
	a young stag on the cleft mountains."-Song of Solomon 2: 13-17 | 
			
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						Alright, forgetting all the innuendo that is in this 
						passage (consider the vineyard imagery!), this is 
						actually one of the more tame passages from the Song of 
						Solomon.  Most of the book is dedicated to the poetic 
						interplay of two lovers, a male and female, who long and 
						pine for each other while detailing the finer points of 
						the others' body.   It is not the sort of thing most 
						people imagine to be in the Bible.  Yet there it is.  
						But why?  This is the primary question, and one for 
						which there is no obvious answer.  But one answer that 
						has persisted for millenia is that the Song of Solomon 
						is an allegory.  That means everything in it stands for 
						something else.  Thus for Christians, the male figure is 
						Christ, and the female is his Church, or the individual 
						believer.  
 What this means is that, for thousands of years Jewish 
						and Christian scholars alike have felt comfortable with 
						the idea that the Bible uses lurid erotic poetry to 
						point us toward the relationship between God and 
						people.  Consider that for a moment!  Consider also what 
						this means if it is true.  It means that every sexual 
						encounter, every sexual thought, every sexual idea has 
						the potential, the potential mind you, to orient us back 
						to God.  We often don't think of God and sex in a 
						positive relationship.  Most of the time we consider 
						that God doesn't really want us having or thinking about 
						sex, but the Song of Solomon takes a potentially 
						different position.  It infers that our sexual desires 
						can actually draw us closer to God.  Wouldn't that be 
						something!
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            Prayer:  Holy God, thank you for loving me, and for 
			calling me to love you.  Help me to love you with my whole being, 
			and guide me in my relationship with you, that our love for one 
			another might be obvious for all to see. I pray in Jesus' name.  
			Amen. 
            [Phil Blackburn, First Presbyterian Church] |