One of my favorite
books of God's Word is the Song of Solomon...a beautiful book full
of choice morsels for us to mediate upon and praise God for the
promises it offers in Christ. We are here at last at March and
I am looking forward to God's creation springing forth from the
earth in my garden and was reminded of the garden of God and us His
caretakers tilling until He comes again. Be blessed this month
to read the Song of Solomon in it entirety and mediate on the riches
of His abundant gifts to you.
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These seem to be the
words of the spouse, the church, in answer to the commendations
which Christ, the Bridegroom, had given of her as a pleasant
fruitful garden. Is she a garden?
I. She owns her
dependence upon Christ himself to make this garden fruitful. To him
she has an eye (Son_4:15) as the fountain of gardens, not only the
founder of them, by whom they are planted and to whom they owe their
being, but the fountain of them, by which they are watered and to
which they own their continuance and well-being, and without whose
constant supplies they would soon become like the dry and barren
wilderness. To him she gives all the glory of her fruitfulness, as
being nothing without him: O fountain of gardens! fountain of all
good, of all grace, do not thou fail me. Does a believer say to the
church, All my springs are in thee, in thee, O Zion? (Psa_87:7), the
church transmits the praise to Christ, and says to him, All my
springs are in thee; thou art the well of living waters (Jer_2:13),
out of which flow the streams of Lebanon, the river Jordan, which
had its rise at the foot of Mount Lebanon, and the waters of the
sanctuary, which issued out from under the threshold of the house,
Eze_47:1. Those that are gardens to Christ must acknowledge him a
fountain to them, from whose fulness they receive and to whom it is
owing that their souls are as a watered garden, Jer_31:12. The city
of God on earth is made glad with the river that flows from this
fountain (Psa_46:4), and the new Jerusalem has its pure river of
water of life proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb,
Rev_22:1.
II. She implores the
influences of the blessed Spirit to make this garden fragrant
(Son_4:16): Awake, O north wind! and come, thou south. This is a
prayer, 1. For the church in general, that there may be a plentiful
effusion of the Spirit upon it, in order to its flourishing estate.
Ministers' gifts are the spices; when the Spirit is poured out these
flow forth, and then the wilderness becomes a fruitful field,
Isa_32:15. This prayer was answered in the pouring out of the Spirit
on the day of pentecost (Act_2:1), ushered in by a mighty wind; then
the apostles, who were bound up before, flowed forth, and were a
sweet savour to God, 2Co_2:15. 2. For particular believers. Note,
(1.) Sanctified souls are as gardens, gardens of the Lord, enclosed
for him. (2.) Graces in the soul are as spices in these gardens,
that in them which is valuable and useful. (3.) It is very desirable
that the spices of grace should flow forth both in pious and devout
affections and in holy gracious actions, that with them we may
honour God, adorn our profession, and do that which will be grateful
to good men. (4.) The blessed Spirit, in his operations upon the
soul, is as the north and the south wind, which blows where it
listeth, and from several
points, Joh_3:8. There is the north wind of convictions, and the
south wind of comforts; but all, like the wind, brought out of God's
treasuries and fulfilling his word. (5.) The flowing forth of the
spices of grace depends upon the gales of the Spirit; he stirs up
good affections, and works in us both to will and to do that which
is good; it is he that makes manifest the savour of his knowledge by
us. (6.) We ought therefore to wait upon the Spirit of grace for his
quickening influences, to pray for them, and to lay our souls under
them. God has promised to give us his Spirit, but he will for this
be enquired of.
III. She invites
Christ to the best entertainment the garden affords: “Let my beloved
then come into his garden and eat his pleasant fruits; let him have
the honour of all the products of the garden (it is fit he should),
and let me have the comfort of his acceptance of them, for that is
the best account they can be made to turn to.” Observe, 1. She calls
it his garden; for those that are espoused to Christ call nothing
their own, but what they have devoted to him and desire to be used
for him. When the spices flow forth then it is fit to be called his
garden, and not till then. The fruits of the garden are his pleasant
fruits, for he planted them, watered them, and gave the increase.
What can we pretend to merit at Christ's hands when we can invite
him to nothing but what is his own already? 2. She begs he would
visit it, and accept of what it produced. The believer can take
little pleasure in his garden, unless Christ, the beloved of his
soul, come to him, nor have any joy of the fruits of it, unless they
redound some way or other to the glory of Christ, and he will think
all he has well bestowed upon him.
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