My Beloved is Mine and I am His – Song of Solomon 2 – 2026 Day 59

Read the Bible in 2 Years: Psalm 27, Song of Solomon 2

I’ll be using David Guzik’s commentary to better understand the book of “Song of Solomon.” Read it here or download the “Enduring Word Commentary” free from the Apple Store or the Google Store or read Mr. Guzik’s commentary in the Blue Letter Bible app, also available from the Apple Store or Google Store.

Additionally, he has sermons available for you to watch or listen to on his Enduring Word website here.

I’ve excerpted a few of my favorite parts.

I adjure you, O daughters of Jerusalem,
by the gazelles or the does of the field,
that you not stir up or awaken love
until it pleases.

Song of Songs 2:7 ESV

Guzik writes, “It is like letting a flower grow until it naturally blooms, instead of trying to force a flower to grow and blossom. This isn’t repression – the rejection and denial of the feelings, often in shame; this is suppression – the conscious restraint of natural impulses and desires.”

Catch the foxes for us, the little foxes
that spoil the vineyards, for our vineyards are in blossom.

Song of Songs 2:15 ESV

Guzik writes, “Clearly the maiden speaks poetically here, using the little foxes as emblems of that which would damage the love relationship she shares with her beloved. The idea is that their relationship is like a fruitful vineyard and the little foxes will damage the vineyard unless they are stopped and caught. Glickman lists several “little foxes” that may trouble couples:

· Uncontrolled desire that drives a wedge of guilt and mistrust between the couple.

· Mistrust and jealousy that strains or breaks the bond of love.

· Selfishness and pride that refuses to acknowledge wrong and fault to one another.

· An unforgiving attitude that will not accept an apology.

My beloved is mine, and I am his;

Song of Songs 2:16a ESV

Guzik writes, “Charles Spurgeon preached eight sermons on Song of Solomon 2:16-17, and in one of them titled The Interest of Christ and His People in Each Other, he meditated on the meaning of each aspect.

Ways that I belong to Jesus, ways that I am my beloved’s:

· I am His by the gift of His Father.

· I am His by purchase, paid for by His own life.

· I am His by conquest, He fought for me and won me.

· I am His by surrender, because I gave myself to Him.

Ways that Jesus belongs to me, ways that He is mine:

· He is mine by connection in the same body; He is the head and I am part of His body.

· He is mine by affectionate relationship; He has given me His love.

· He is mine by the connection of birth; I am born again of Him.

· He is mine by choice; He gave Himself for me.

· He is mine by indwelling; He has decided to live inside me.

· He is mine personally, He is mine eternally.

Which is the greater miracle — that he should be mine,
or that I should be his?

Charles Spurgeon

Heavenly Father, Thank you for making me Yours. What a miracle! I’m not worthy of that kind of love. Indeed, while I was yet a sinner, Christ died for me. Yet, You have made me worthy by Your love. And, You are mine. What a miracle! You dwell in me, and You live with me. Even death cannot separate us. Thank You. I pray Your blessings on my marriage. Make us one, wholly devoted to one another and to You, a three-fold cord that cannot be broken. Bless my children with godly marriages that reflect Christ and His bride. For Your glory and our good. Amen.

All I Have is Christ – Sovereign Grace Music

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Your Love is Better than Wine – Song of Solomon 1 – 2026 Day 58

Read the Bible in 2 Years: Psalm 26, Song of Solomon 1

I’ll be using David Guzik’s commentary to better understand the book of “Song of Solomon.” Read it here or download the “Enduring Word Commentary” free from the Apple Store or the Google Store or read Mr. Guzik’s commentary in the Blue Letter Bible app, also available from the Apple Store or Google Store.

Additionally, he has sermons available for you to watch or listen to on his Enduring Word website here.

I’ve excerpted a few of my favorite parts.

David Guzik writes, “The best way to see this book is as a literal, powerful description of the romantic and sensual love between a man and a woman, observing both their courtship and their marriage. It does not give us a smooth chronological story, beginning with the introduction of the couple to one another and ending with their married life together. Instead, it is a collection of “snapshots” of their courting and married life, with the pictures not necessarily in order. Yet, because God deliberately uses the marriage relationship as an illustration of the relationship that He has with His people, we find that this great song of songs illustrates the love, the intensity, and the beauty of relationship that should exist between God and the believer. This is clearly a secondary meaning, sublimated to the plain literal meaning, yet nevertheless valid and important.

“The fact that this “greatest of all songs” focuses on romance and marital love shows us what a high regard God has for the institution of marriage. We might expect that the songs of songs be a song that only praises God instead of one that celebrates love and sensuality within marriage. This idea is decidedly contrary to the negative view towards marriage that came early in the history of the church…. In 386 Pope Siricius commanded that all priests live as celibates, and later this order was extended to include deacons in the church. In this period, many people who were ordained as priests were already married. Leo the Great (440-461), out of concern for these wives, did not allow priests to put their wives away but commanded that the priest and his wife live together as brother and sister — that is, without any sexual relationship. This command led to the rule that a married man could not be ordained as a priest unless he and his wife took a vow that they would live as celibate, and then led further to the refusal to ordain anyone who was or had been married.

“This idea that the truly spiritual cannot or should not be married and enjoy sexual love is not based in the Old Testament. The Old Testament has no word for a bachelor; in Old Testament thinking, there were to be none. Every patriarch was married, all priests were married, and as far as we know every prophet was married except for Jeremiah, who was uniquely commanded by God not to marry (Jeremiah 16:2). Since the office of high priest was hereditary, the high priest had to marry…”

“Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth! For your love is better than wine;”

Song of Songs 1:2 ESV

Mr. Guzik comments, “Charles Spurgeon, the great preacher of Victorian England, followed the custom of his age and understood the Song of Solomon primarily as a poetic description of the love relationship between Jesus Christ and His people. In his sermon titled Better than Wine, he drew forth two main points:

Christ’s love is better than wine because of what it is not:

  • It is totally safe and may be taken without question — you can’t take too much.
  • It doesn’t cost anything.
  • Taking more of it does not diminish the taste of it.
  • It is totally without impurities and will never turn sour.
  • It produces no ill effects.

Christ’s love is better than wine because of what it is:

  • Like wine, the love of Christ has healing properties.
  • Like wine, the love of Christ is associated with giving strength.
  • Like wine, the love of Christ is a symbol of joy.
  • Like wine, the love of Christ exhilarates the soul.

Guzik continues, “Marriage-eligible women today should have the same perspective [“rightly do they love you”], considering that the Apostle Paul summarized the responsibility of a wife towards her husband in Ephesians 5:33 with one word: respect. Though it is common – in the words of a modern film – for women to select a man for who he almost is, or to choose him for the man she can make him to be, this is unwise. An unmarried woman should ask herself the serious question: “Can I genuinely respect this man as he is right now? Do I respect him enough to submit to him the way the Bible says a wife should submit?” The maiden of the Song of Solomon had already asked and answered this question.”

Like modern women, the Shulamite maiden worries that her appearance is not good enough but her beloved. Guzik writes, “There is an old story about a thief who broke into a department store and stole nothing; but he switched the price tags. The next day an expensive Swiss watch was marked as being worth $1.50; a fine leather handbag was marked for $1.75. A simple rubber ball for a child was marked for $150.00 and three pencils were marked for $175.00. If people bought or sold at those prices, you would think they were crazy. Yet all the time people value precious attributes and characteristics in other people very cheaply (especially when it comes to love and romance), and they assign high value to attributes and characteristics that are actually worth little.”

Heavenly Father, Thank you for the gift of marriage, for love that remains steadfast even when we’re no longer young fillies and handsome stallions. Thank you for men who faithfully study and teach your Word with honesty and integrity. We pray your blessings on David Guzik, his ministry, and his family. Keep his heart, mind, and life pure and devoted to You. Please teach us and transform us by Your Spirit at work in us. Help us to pursue You single-heartedly. Amen.

Love Never Ends – 1 Corinthians 13:4-10 – Corner Room Music

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