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THE MESSAGE

Song of Solomon 1:11

This verse is not available in the MSG!

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Silver;  

Dictionaries:

- Charles Buck Theological Dictionary - Holy Ghost;   Jews;   Popery;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Graving;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Ornament;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Minerals and Metals;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Jeshimon;   The Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary - Earring;   Gold;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - Zion;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Border;   Song of Songs;   Studs;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Punctuation;  

Parallel Translations

Christian Standard Bible®
We will make gold jewelry for you,accented with silver.
Hebrew Names Version
We will make you earrings of gold, With studs of silver. Beloved
King James Version
We will make thee borders of gold with studs of silver.
English Standard Version

Others

We will make for you ornaments of gold, studded with silver.
New American Standard Bible
"We will make for you jewelry of gold With beads of silver."
New Century Version
We will make for you gold earrings with silver hooks.
Amplified Bible
"We will make for you chains and ornaments of gold, [Studded] with beads of silver."
World English Bible
We will make you earrings of gold, With studs of silver. Beloved
Geneva Bible (1587)
We will make thee borders of golde with studdes of siluer.
Legacy Standard Bible
"We will make for you ornaments of goldWith beads of silver."
Berean Standard Bible
We will make you ornaments of gold, studded with beads of silver.
Contemporary English Version
Let's make you some jewelry of gold, woven with silver.
Complete Jewish Bible
we will make you ornaments of gold, studded with silver.
Darby Translation
We will make thee bead-rows of gold With studs of silver.
Easy-to-Read Version
Let's make you some more gold jewelry and decorate it with silver.
George Lamsa Translation
We will make for you golden chains with studs of silver.
Good News Translation
But we will make for you a chain of gold with ornaments of silver.
Lexham English Bible
We will make ornaments of gold for you with studs of silver.
Literal Translation
We will make you ornaments of gold with studs of silver.
Miles Coverdale Bible (1535)
a neck bande of golde wil we make ye wt syluer bottons.
American Standard Version
We will make thee plaits of gold With studs of silver.
Bible in Basic English
We will make you chains of gold with ornaments of silver.
JPS Old Testament (1917)
We will make thee circlets of gold with studs of silver.
King James Version (1611)
Wee will make thee borders of golde, with studdes of siluer.
Bishop's Bible (1568)
a neckband of golde wyll we make thee, with siluer buttons.
Brenton's Septuagint (LXX)
We will make thee figures of gold with studs of silver.
English Revised Version
We will make thee plaits of gold with studs of silver.
Wycliffe Bible (1395)
We schulen make to thee goldun ournementis, departid and maad dyuerse with silver.
Update Bible Version
We will make you plaits of gold With studs of silver.
Webster's Bible Translation
We will make for thee borders of gold with studs of silver.
New English Translation
We will make for you gold ornaments studded with silver.
New King James Version
The Daughters of JerusalemWe will make you [fn] ornaments of goldWith studs of silver.
New Living Translation
We will make for you earrings of gold and beads of silver.
New Life Bible
We will make objects of gold and silver for you."
New Revised Standard
We will make you ornaments of gold, studded with silver.
J.B. Rotherham Emphasized Bible
THEYRows of golden ornaments, will we make thee, with studs of silver.
Douay-Rheims Bible
(1-10) We will make thee chains of gold, inlaid with silver.
Revised Standard Version
We will make you ornaments of gold, studded with silver.
Young's Literal Translation
Garlands of gold we do make for thee, With studs of silver!
New American Standard Bible (1995)
"We will make for you ornaments of gold With beads of silver."

Contextual Overview

7 Tell me where you're working —I love you so much— Tell me where you're tending your flocks, where you let them rest at noontime. Why should I be the one left out, outside the orbit of your tender care? 8

The Man

If you can't find me, loveliest of all women, it's all right. Stay with your flocks. Lead your lambs to good pasture. Stay with your shepherd neighbors. 9You remind me of Pharaoh's well-groomed and satiny mares. Pendant earrings line the elegance of your cheeks; strands of jewels illumine the curve of your throat. I'm making jewelry for you, gold and silver jewelry that will mark and accent your beauty.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

Song of Solomon 8:9, Genesis 1:26, Psalms 149:4, Ephesians 5:25-27, Philippians 3:21

Cross-References

Genesis 1:9
God spoke: "Separate! Water-beneath-Heaven, gather into one place; Land, appear!" And there it was. God named the land Earth. He named the pooled water Ocean. God saw that it was good.
Genesis 1:14
God spoke: "Lights! Come out! Shine in Heaven's sky! Separate Day from Night. Mark seasons and days and years, Lights in Heaven's sky to give light to Earth." And there it was.
Genesis 1:16
God made two big lights, the larger to take charge of Day, The smaller to be in charge of Night; and he made the stars. God placed them in the heavenly sky to light up Earth And oversee Day and Night, to separate light and dark. God saw that it was good. It was evening, it was morning— Day Four.
Genesis 1:20
God spoke: "Swarm, Ocean, with fish and all sea life! Birds, fly through the sky over Earth!" God created the huge whales, all the swarm of life in the waters, And every kind and species of flying birds. God saw that it was good. God blessed them: "Prosper! Reproduce! Fill Ocean! Birds, reproduce on Earth!" It was evening, it was morning— Day Five.
Genesis 1:29
Then God said, "I've given you every sort of seed-bearing plant on Earth And every kind of fruit-bearing tree, given them to you for food. To all animals and all birds, everything that moves and breathes, I give whatever grows out of the ground for food." And there it was.
Genesis 2:5
At the time God made Earth and Heaven, before any grasses or shrubs had sprouted from the ground— God hadn't yet sent rain on Earth, nor was there anyone around to work the ground (the whole Earth was watered by underground springs)— God formed Man out of dirt from the ground and blew into his nostrils the breath of life. The Man came alive—a living soul!
Genesis 2:16
God commanded the Man, "You can eat from any tree in the garden, except from the Tree-of-Knowledge-of-Good-and-Evil. Don't eat from it. The moment you eat from that tree, you're dead."
Matthew 6:30
"If God gives such attention to the appearance of wildflowers—most of which are never even seen—don't you think he'll attend to you, take pride in you, do his best for you? What I'm trying to do here is to get you to relax, to not be so preoccupied with getting, so you can respond to God's giving. People who don't know God and the way he works fuss over these things, but you know both God and how he works. Steep your life in God-reality, God-initiative, God-provisions. Don't worry about missing out. You'll find all your everyday human concerns will be met.
James 3:12
When You Open Your Mouth Don't be in any rush to become a teacher, my friends. Teaching is highly responsible work. Teachers are held to the strictest standards. And none of us is perfectly qualified. We get it wrong nearly every time we open our mouths. If you could find someone whose speech was perfectly true, you'd have a perfect person, in perfect control of life. A bit in the mouth of a horse controls the whole horse. A small rudder on a huge ship in the hands of a skilled captain sets a course in the face of the strongest winds. A word out of your mouth may seem of no account, but it can accomplish nearly anything—or destroy it! It only takes a spark, remember, to set off a forest fire. A careless or wrongly placed word out of your mouth can do that. By our speech we can ruin the world, turn harmony to chaos, throw mud on a reputation, send the whole world up in smoke and go up in smoke with it, smoke right from the pit of hell. This is scary: You can tame a tiger, but you can't tame a tongue—it's never been done. The tongue runs wild, a wanton killer. With our tongues we bless God our Father; with the same tongues we curse the very men and women he made in his image. Curses and blessings out of the same mouth! My friends, this can't go on. A spring doesn't gush fresh water one day and brackish the next, does it? Apple trees don't bear strawberries, do they? Raspberry bushes don't bear apples, do they? You're not going to dip into a polluted mud hole and get a cup of clear, cool water, are you?

Gill's Notes on the Bible

We will make thee borders of gold with studs of silver. Christ here in his own name, and in the name of the other two divine Persons, promises to the church a greater glory than as yet she had enjoyed; and seems to have respect to the Gospel dispensation; for by "golden borders" studded with "silver" may be meant the ordinances of the Gospel, preferable to those under the law; and therefore said to be of "gold [and] silver", for their glory, splendour, and durableness: or else the doctrines of the Gospel, being of more worth than thousands of gold and silver; and being called "borders", or rather "rows" e, may denote their orderly disposition and connection, their harmony and agreement with and dependence on each other: and the Gospel is full of silver "specks" or "studs" of exceeding great and precious promises; a variety of them useful and pleasant; a greater measure of the grace of the Spirit may be here promised: or the "borders" may intend the groundwork of the church's faith and hope, the justifying righteousness of Christ, more clearly revealed; and the "studs of silver" the curious work of sanctification, more enlarged and increased; and so take in both Christ's righteousness imputed to her, and his grace implanted in her; but perhaps these phrases may be best of all understood of the New Jerusalem state, and of the ultimate glory of the saints in heaven, sometimes set forth by such similes, Isaiah 54:11. Both grace and glory are given by Christ, and in which all the three divine Persons are concerned; for not angels, nor the daughters of Jerusalem, are here the speakers, to whom such things promised cannot agree; nor God, speaking after the manner of men, and for honour's sake, is designed: but the trinity of Persons, Father, Son, and Spirit, are meant; the ordinances are of their institution, and administered in their name, Matthew 28:19; they have all a concern it, the Gospel and the doctrines of it, which is called the Gospel of God, and the Gospel, of Christ, and the ministering of the Spirit; the grace of God, in regeneration and conversion, is sometimes ascribed to one and sometimes to another; and an increase of it in the heart is wished for from all three, Revelation 1:4; and they have a hand in all the glory the saints shall enjoy hereafter: the Father has prepared the kingdom from the foundation of the world; the Son has made way for it by his obedience, sufferings, and death; and the Spirit is the earnest of it, makes meet for it, and introduces into it.

e תורי "ordines", Marckius, Michaelis.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

This and the next Song of Solomon 1:15-7 sections are regarded by ancient commentators (Jewish and Christian) as expressing “the love of espousals” Jeremiah 2:2 between the Holy One and His Church, first in the wilderness of the Exodus, and then in the wilderness of the world Ezekiel 20:35-36.

Song of Solomon 1:9

Or, to a mare of mine in the chariots of Pharaoh I liken thee, O my friend. (The last word is the feminine form of that rendered “friend” at Song of Solomon 5:16.) The comparison of the bride to a beautiful horse is singularly like one in Theocritus, and some have conjectured that the Greek poet, having read at Alexandria the Septuagint Version of the Song, may have borrowed these thoughts from it. If so, we have here the first instance of an influence of sacred on profane literature. The simile is especially appropriate on the lips, or from the pen, of Solomon, who first brought horses and chariots from Egypt 1 Kings 10:28-29. As applied to the bride it expresses the stately and imposing character of her beauty.

Song of Solomon 1:10, Song of Solomon 1:11

Rows ... borders - The same Hebrew word in both places; ornaments forming part of the bride’s head-dress, probably strings of beads or other ornaments descending on the cheeks. The introduction of “jewels” and “gold” in Song of Solomon 1:10 injures the sense and destroys the climax of Song of Solomon 1:11, which was spoken by a chorus (hence “we,” not “I,” as when the king speaks, Song of Solomon 1:9). They promise the bride ornaments more worthy and becoming than the rustic attire in which she has already such charms for the king: “Ornaments of gold will we make for thee with studs (or ‘points’) of silver.” The “studs” are little silver ornaments which it is proposed to affix to the golden (compare Proverbs 25:12), or substitute for the strung beads of the bride’s necklace.

Song of Solomon 1:12-14

The bride’s reply Song of Solomon 1:12 may mean, “While the king reclines at the banquet I anoint him with my costliest perfume, but he has for me a yet sweeter fragrance” Song of Solomon 1:13-14. According to Origen’s interpretation, the bride represents herself as anointing the king, like Mary John 12:3, with her most precious unguents.

Spikenard - An unguent of great esteem in the ancient world, retaining its Indian name in Hebrew, Greek and Latin. It is obtained from an Indian plant now called “jatamansi.”

Song of Solomon 1:13

Render: A bag of myrrh is my beloved to me, which lodgeth in my bosom.

Song of Solomon 1:14

Camphire - Rather, כפר kôpher,” from which “cyprus” is probably derived (in the margin misspelled “cypress “),the name by which the plant called by the Arabs “henna” was known to the Greeks and Romans. It is still much esteemed throughout the East for the fragrance of its flowers and the dye extracted from its leaves. Engedi was famous for its vines, and the henna may have been cultivated with the vines in the same enclosures.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse 11. Borders of gold — I have observed several of the handkerchiefs, shawls, and head attire of the Eastern women, curiously and expensively worked in the borders with gold and silver, and variously coloured silk, which has a splendid effect.


 
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