19 May, 2024

September 10 | Discovery

by | 4 September, 2023 | 0 comments

By Michael C. Mack

1. How did you do over the past week at seeing, listening to, noticing, and knowing others around you?   

2. What expression of love do you prefer to receive from others?  

Ask two people to read aloud Song of Songs 1:15; 4:1-15 one after the other, preferably from different Bible versions. Then ask a third person to briefly summarize the passages.  

3. What do the metaphors and similes in these passages tell you about how the man thought and felt about his wife? 

4. Note the senses (sight, touch, smell, taste) involved in the man’s descriptions and which ones are used more often. What do you learn about the man (and perhaps men in general) from these descriptions (especially as compared to the woman’s descriptions from the previous lesson)? 

5. What do his names for her tell you about his relationship with her? 

6. Some Bible commentators suggest the man’s words in this Song illustrate the love of Jesus, the Bridegroom (see Luke 5:34-35; John 3:27-30; Ephesians 5:25-33), for us. What can you learn about the Lord’s love from these passages? 

7. Look again at Song of Songs 4:12. What do the three phases—“a garden locked up,” “a spring enclosed,” and “a sealed fountain”—tell you about the man and woman’s exclusive commitment to each other—and to the sanctity of marriage between a man and woman?  

8. How will you seek to love others more like the husband in these passages (and like the Bridegroom Jesus)?   

9. Based on our study and discussion, complete the sentence: “I will . . .” 

10 . If God were to talk with you like the man speaks to and about his wife, what might he say to you?   

For Next Week: Read and reflect on Song of Songs 1:4b-8; 3:1-11. You can also read next week’s supplemental texts as well as the Study and Application sections as part of your personal study. 

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest News

Big Little Churches

“A church with only 12 members is barely a church, but almost every weekend I preach in small Missouri churches whose attendances range from 12 to 112,” Daniel Schantz writes. “When people hear that I am preaching at such small churches they often shake their heads and say, ‘That’s a shame. Why don’t they just close the doors and go to a bigger church that has more to offer them?’” . . .

Long-Tenured Pastors Say Love Is Key to Their Staying

What does it take to pastor a church for the long haul? Christian Standard posed this question to Bob Stevens who has served with Allensburg Church of Christ in Ohio for 40 years; Jerran Jackson, 44-year minister with Clarksburg (Indiana) Christian Church; and David Simpson, pastor with Lanier Christian Church in Georgia for 48 years. . . .

THROWBACK THURSDAY: ‘Barton W. Stone—Champion of the Word’ (1962)

Sam Stone wrote in 1962, “If the early leaders of the Restoration movement are like men engaged in a race, it might be said that Barton Warren Stone took an early lead, but was later passed by Alexander Campbell.” Sam Stone contended that Barton Stone was deserving of greater appreciation . . . and he did so by presenting this “survey of his life.” . . .

ICOM Announces Speakers (Plus News Briefs)

The lineup of speakers has been set for this fall’s International Conference On Missions, which will take place Nov. 14-16 in Lexington, Ky. The theme this year is “Entrusted.” . . . Plus briefs from Ozark Christian College, Exponential, and the Northwest Christian Convention.

Follow Us