the Week of Proper 14 / Ordinary 19
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Brenton's Septuagint
Song of Solomon 6:7
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
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- InternationalParallel Translations
Behind your veil,your brow is like a slice of pomegranate.
Your temples are like a piece of a pomegranate behind your veil.
As a piece of a pomegranate are thy temples within thy locks.
Your cheeks are like halves of a pomegranate behind your veil.
"Your temples are like a slice of a pomegranate Behind your veil.
Your cheeks behind your veil are like slices of a pomegranate.
"Your temples are like a slice of the pomegranate Behind your veil.
Your temples are like a piece of a pomegranate behind your veil.
Thy temples are within thy lockes as a piece of a pomegranate.
Your temples are like a slice of a pomegranateBehind your veil.
Your brow behind your veil is like a slice of pomegranate.
Behind your veil are hidden beautiful rosy cheeks.
Your cheeks are like a pomegranate split open behind your veil.
As a piece of a pomegranate are thy temples Behind thy veil.
Your cheeks under your veil are like slices of pomegranate.
Your cheeks, behind your veil, are like two pieces of pomegranate.
Your cheeks glow behind your veil.
Your cheeks behind your veil are like halves of a pomegranate.
Your temples behind your veil are like a piece of pomegranate.
Thy chekes are like a pece of a pomgranate, besydes yt which lyeth hid within.
Thy temples are like a piece of a pomegranate Behind thy veil.
Like pomegranate fruit are the sides of your head under your veil.
Thy temples are like a pomegranate split open behind thy veil.
As a piece of a pomegranat are thy temples within thy lockes.
Thy cheekes are like a peece of a pomegranate within thy lockes of heere.
Thy temples are like a piece of a pomegranate behind thy veil.
As the rynde of a pumgranate, so ben thi chekis, without thi priuytees.
Your temples are like a piece of a pomegranate Behind your veil.
As a piece of pomegranate [are] thy temples within thy locks.
Like a slice of pomegranate is your forehead behind your veil.
Like a piece of pomegranate Are your temples behind your veil.
Your cheeks are like rosy pomegranates behind your veil.
The sides of your forehead are like a piece of a pomegranate behind your face-covering.
Your cheeks are like halves of a pomegranate behind your veil.
Like a slice of pomegranate, are thy temples, from behind thy veil:
(6-6) Thy cheeks are as the bark of a pomegranate, beside what is hidden within thee.
Your cheeks are like halves of a pomegranate behind your veil.
As the work of the pomegranate [is] thy temple behind thy veil.
"Your temples are like a slice of a pomegranate Behind your veil.
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
Song of Solomon 4:3
Reciprocal: Exodus 28:34 - General Exodus 39:26 - pomegranate Song of Solomon 4:1 - thy hair
Cross-References
And Noe was five hundred years old, and he begot three sons, Sem, Cham, and Japheth.
And it came to pass when men began to be numerous upon the earth, and daughters were born to them,
that the sons of God having seen the daughters of men that they were beautiful, took to themselves wives of all whom they chose.
And the Lord God said, My Spirit shall certainly not remain among these men for ever, because they are flesh, but their days shall be an hundred and twenty years.
And of all cattle and of all reptiles and of all wild beasts, even of all flesh, thou shalt bring by pairs of all, into the ark, that thou mayest feed them with thyself: male and female they shall be.
And thou shalt take to thyself of all kinds of food which ye eat, and thou shalt gather them to thyself, and it shall be for thee and them to eat.
For the sinners shall perish; and the enemies of the Lord at the moment of their being honoured and exalted have utterly vanished like smoke.
The fear of the Lord adds length of days: but the years of the ungodly shall be shortened.
Therefore shall the land mourn, and shall be diminished with all that dwell in it, with the wild beasts of the field, and the reptiles of the earth, and with the birds of the sky, and the fish of the sea shall fail:
Let man and cattle be cut off; let the birds of the air and the fishes of the sea be cut off; and the ungodly shall fail, and I will take away the transgressors from the face of the land, saith the Lord.
Gill's Notes on the Bible
As a piece of a pomegranate [are] thy temples within thy locks. The same descriptions are given in Song of Solomon 4:3;
Song of Solomon 4:3- :; and these are repeated, to show the reality of the church's beauty, and for the sake of confirmation; and that it still continued the same, notwithstanding her failings and infirmities; and that Christ had the same esteem of her, and love to her, he ever had. That part of the description, respecting the church's lips and speech, in Song of Solomon 4:3; is here omitted, though added at the end of Song of Solomon 6:6; by the Septuagint; but is not in the Hebrew copies, nor taken notice of in the Targum; yea, the Masorah, on Song of Solomon 4:2, remarks some words as only used in that place, and therefore could not be repeated here in the copies then in use.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
The section might be entitled, “Renewed declaration of love after brief estrangement.”
Song of Solomon 6:4
Tirzah ... Jerusalem - Named together as the then two fairest cities of the land. For Jerusalem compare Psalms 48:2. “Tirzah” (i. e., “Grace” or “Beauty “)was an old Canaanite royal city Joshua 12:24. It became again a royal residence during the reigns of Baasha and his three successors in the kingdom of the ten tribes, and may well therefore have been famed for its beauty in the time of Solomon.
Terrible as ... - Awe-inspiring as the bannered (hosts). The warlike image, like others in the Song, serves to enhance the charm of its assured peace.
Song of Solomon 6:5
Even for the king the gentle eyes of the bride have an awe-striking majesty. Such is the condescension of love. Now follows Song of Solomon 6:5-7 the longest of the repetitions which abound in the Song, marking the continuance of the king’s affection as when first solemnly proclaimed Song of Solomon 4:1-6. The two descriptions belong, according to some (Christian) expositors, to the Church of different periods, e. g. to the primitive Church in the splendor of her first vocation, and to the Church under Constantine; other (Jewish) expositors apply them to “the congregation of Israel” under the first and second temples respectively.
Song of Solomon 6:9
The king contrasts the bride with the other claimants for her royal estate or favor Song of Solomon 6:8. She not only outshines them all for him, but herself has received from them disinterested blessing and praise.
This passage is invaluable as a divine witness to the principle of monogamy under the Old Testament and in the luxurious age of Solomon.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Song of Solomon 6:7. As a piece of a pomegranate — See on Song of Solomon 4:3.