
Text -- The Song of Songs 7:1 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Sos 7:1
Wesley: Sos 7:1 - -- Were anciently evidences of a free and comfortable state, whereas slaves and mourners used to go bare - foot.
Were anciently evidences of a free and comfortable state, whereas slaves and mourners used to go bare - foot.
JFB: Sos 7:1 - -- Rather, "thy goings" (Psa 17:5). Evident allusion to Isa 52:7 : "How beautiful . . . are the feet of him . . . that publisheth peace" (Shulamite, Son ...

JFB: Sos 7:1 - -- Sandals are richly jewelled in the East (Luk 15:22; Eph 6:15). She is evidently "on the mountains," whither she was wafted (Son 6:12), above the daugh...

JFB: Sos 7:1 - -- Of God the Father, with whom Jesus Christ is one (Mat 5:9), "children of (the) God" (of peace), equivalent to Shulamite (Psa 45:10-15; 2Co 6:18), as w...
Of God the Father, with whom Jesus Christ is one (Mat 5:9), "children of (the) God" (of peace), equivalent to Shulamite (Psa 45:10-15; 2Co 6:18), as well as bride of Jesus Christ.

JFB: Sos 7:1 - -- Therefore princely herself, freely giving the word of life to others, not sparing her "feet," as in Son 5:3; Exo 12:11. To act on the offensive is def...

JFB: Sos 7:1 - -- Rather, "the rounding"; the full graceful curve of the hips in the female figure; like the rounding of a necklace (as the Hebrew for "jewels" means). ...
Rather, "the rounding"; the full graceful curve of the hips in the female figure; like the rounding of a necklace (as the Hebrew for "jewels" means). Compare with the English Version, Eph 4:13-16; Col 2:19. Or, applying it to the girdle binding together the robes round the hips (Eph 6:14).

Clarke: Sos 7:1 - -- How beautiful are thy feet with shoes - " How graceful is thy walking."In the sixth chapter the bridegroom praises the Shulamite, as we might expres...
How beautiful are thy feet with shoes - " How graceful is thy walking."In the sixth chapter the bridegroom praises the Shulamite, as we might express it, from head to foot. Here he begins a new description, taking her from foot to head
The shoes, sandals, or slippers of the Eastern ladies are most beautifully formed, and richly embroidered. The majestic walk of a beautiful woman in such shoes is peculiarly grand. And to show that such a walk is intended, he calls her a prince’ s daughter

Clarke: Sos 7:1 - -- The joints of thy thighs - Must refer to the ornaments on the beautiful drawers, which are in general use among ladies of quality in most parts of t...
The joints of thy thighs - Must refer to the ornaments on the beautiful drawers, which are in general use among ladies of quality in most parts of the East.
Defender -> Sos 7:1
TSK -> Sos 7:1
TSK: Sos 7:1 - -- thy feet : Luk 15:22; Eph 6:15; Phi 1:27
O prince’ s : Psa 45:13; 2Co 6:18
the joints : Dan 2:32; Eph 4:15, Eph 4:16; Col 2:19
the work : Exo 28:...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Sos 7:1
Barnes: Sos 7:1 - -- Thy feet with shoes - Or, thy steps in the sandals: the bride’ s feet are seen in motion in the dance. "Joints"might be rendered circling ...
Thy feet with shoes - Or, thy steps in the sandals: the bride’ s feet are seen in motion in the dance. "Joints"might be rendered circling movements.
Prince’ s daughter - Or, daughter of a noble; the bride is of honorable though not of kingly birth.
Like jewels - The image suggested is that of large well-formed pearls or other jewels skillfully strung or linked together.
Haydock: Sos 7:1 - -- Villages. She begs that he would come and remain with her. (Worthington) ---
She accompanies him into the country, on the morning after the fifth ...
Villages. She begs that he would come and remain with her. (Worthington) ---
She accompanies him into the country, on the morning after the fifth night. There Christ affords the purest delights, (ver. 12.; Calmet) and the Church (Menochius) becomes his mother, while she instructs and feeds others. (St. Gregory, hom.) (Menochius)

Haydock: Sos 7:1 - -- What? Christ commends the Jews, who shall at last embrace the faith with great fervour. (Worthington) ---
Thou. Hebrew and Septuagint, "ye." Th...
What? Christ commends the Jews, who shall at last embrace the faith with great fervour. (Worthington) ---
Thou. Hebrew and Septuagint, "ye." They join this sentence with the preceding chapter. (Haydock) ---
Companies. Hebrew, "as it were the choir (or dance) of Mahanaim," (Calmet) where Jacob saw the camps of angels, near the Jaboc. (Haydock) (Genesis xxxii.) ---
These dances might be proverbial.
Gill -> Sos 7:1
Gill: Sos 7:1 - -- How beautiful are thy feet with shoes,.... It is no unusual thing to describe the comeliness of women by their feet, and the ornaments of them; so Heb...
How beautiful are thy feet with shoes,.... It is no unusual thing to describe the comeliness of women by their feet, and the ornaments of them; so Hebe is described by Homer d as having beautiful feet, and Juno by her golden shoes: particular care was taken of, and provision made for, the shoes of queens and princesses in the eastern countries; Herodotus e tells us, that the city of Anthylla was given peculiarly to the wife of the king of Egypt, to provide her with shoes; which custom, he says, obtained when Egypt became subject to Persia; See Gill on Est 2:18. Shoes of a red, or scarlet, or purple colour, were in esteem with the Jews; and so the Targum here is,
"purple shoes:''
the word used is thought by some f to signify a colour between scarlet and purple; see Eze 16:10; and also with the Tyrian virgins g; and so with the Romans h; and with whom likewise white shoes i were much in use. That this is said of the church, is plain from the appellation of her,
O Prince's daughter! the same with the King's daughter, Psa 45:13; the daughter of the King of kings; for, being espoused to Christ, his Father is her Father, and his God her God: besides, she is born of him who is the Prince of the kings of the earth, 1Jo 2:28; she is both a Prince's wife and a Prince's daughter. It may be rendered, "O noble", or "princely daughter" k! being of a free princely spirit, in opposition to a servile one, Psa 51:12; of a bountiful and liberal spirit, as in, Isa 32:5; in distributing temporal things to the necessities of the poor; and in communicating spiritual things to the comfort and edification of others. Some take these to be the words of the daughters of Jerusalem, wondering at the church's beauty, on turning herself to them as they desired: but they are rather the words of Christ; who, observing the church speak so meanly of herself, in order to encourage her, gives a high commendation of her in this and some following verses, and begins with her "feet"; not her ministers, who are "shod with the preparation of the Gospel of peace", Eph 6:15, and who appear beautiful in the eyes of those who have any knowledge of the good things they publish and proclaim; for they are set in the highest place in the church: but here the lowest and meanest members of the church are meant; whose outward walk, the feet are the instruments of, may be said to be "beautiful with shoes", when they are ready to every good work; when their conversation is ordered aright, is agreeably to the word of God, and as becomes the Gospel of Christ; and which, like shoes, is a fence against the briers and thorns, the reproaches and calumnies, of the world; and when there is such a lustre upon it that it cannot but be seen and observed by spectators, by which they are excited to glorify God, it is so beautiful in the eyes of Christ, that to such he shows the salvation of God;
the joints of thy thighs are like jewels, the work of the hands of a cunning workman; a skilful artificer, a goldsmith or jeweller: the allusion seems to be to some ornaments about the knees or legs, wore by women in those times; see Isa 3:18; and this may serve to set off the lustre and beauty of the church's conversation. And since it seems not so decent to describe the parts themselves mentioned, the words may rather design the "femoralia", or garments, with which they were covered; and may signify the garments of salvations and robe of Christ's righteousness, whereby the church's members are covered, so that their nakedness is not seen; but with them are as richly adorned bridegroom and bride with their ornaments and which are not the bungling work of a creature, but of one that is God as well as man, and therefore called the righteousness of God. Some have thought that the girdle about the loins is meant, the thighs being put for the loins, Gen 46:26; and so may intend the girdle of truth, mentioned along with the preparation of the Gospel of peace the feet are said to be shod with, Eph 6:14; and the metaphor of girding is used when a Gospel conversation is directed to, Luk 12:35. But it seems best by these "joints", or "turnings of the thighs" l, by which they move more orderly and regularly, to understand the principles of the walk and conversation of saints, as one observes m; without which it cannot be ordered aright; for principles denominate actions, good and bad; and the principles of grace, by which believers move in their Christian walk, are as valuable and as precious as jewels, such as faith and love, and a regard to the glory of God; and which are curiously wrought by the finger of God, by his Holy Spirit, who "works in them both to will and to do of his good pleasure", Phi 2:13.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Sos 7:1 The term יָרֵךְ (yarekh, “thigh”) may refer to (1) the fleshy upper part of the thigh where the leg jo...
Geneva Bible -> Sos 7:1
Geneva Bible: Sos 7:1 How beautiful are thy ( a ) feet with shoes, O prince's daughter! the joints of thy thighs [are] like jewels, the work of the hands of a skilful workm...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Sos 7:1-13
TSK Synopsis: Sos 7:1-13 - --1 A further description of the church's graces.10 The church professes her faith and desire.
MHCC -> Sos 7:1-9
MHCC: Sos 7:1-9 - --The similitudes here are different from what they were before, and in the original refer to glorious and splendid clothing. Such honour have all his s...
Matthew Henry -> Sos 7:1-9
Matthew Henry: Sos 7:1-9 - -- The title which Jesus Christ here gives to the church is new: O prince's daughter! agreeing with Psa 45:13, where she is called the king's daught...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Sos 7:1
Keil-Delitzsch: Sos 7:1 - --
1 a How beautiful are thy steps in the shoes,
O prince's daughter!
The noun נדיב , which signifies noble in disposition, and then noble by bi...
Constable: Sos 5:2--8:5 - --IV. THE MATURING PROCESS 5:2--8:4
In this last major section of the book the married love of Solomon and the Shu...

Constable: Sos 5:2--7:1 - --A. The Problem of Apathy 5:2-6:13
Sometime after the wedding the Shulammite failed to respond encouragin...

Constable: Sos 7:1-10 - --B. Communicating Affection 7:1-10
This section that provides a window into the intimate relationship of ...
