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Robert Hawker

Song of Solomon 6:4

Song of Solomon 6:4
Robert Hawker March, 11 2016 3 min read
730 Articles 1 Sermon 30 Books
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March, 11 2016
Robert Hawker
Robert Hawker 3 min read
730 articles 1 sermons 30 books
What does the Bible say about the beauty of the Church?

The Bible describes the Church as beautiful, likening it to Tirzah and Jerusalem in Song of Solomon 6:4.

In Song of Solomon 6:4, the beauty of the Church is beautifully compared to Tirzah and Jerusalem, signifying its favored status in God's eyes. God sees His Church, made up of individual believers, as a reflection of Christ's own righteousness and loveliness. As Psalm 48:1-2 states, Mount Zion is ‘beautiful for situation,’ indicating how the Lord views His people collectively. Every believer is part of the Church, one body in Christ, and Christ's righteousness imparts an undeniable beauty to His people.

This beauty is not based on our inherent qualities but solely on Christ’s righteousness. Those who belong to Christ should focus on their acceptance in Him and not on their unloveliness due to indwelling sin. While believers may struggle with sin, they must remember that in Christ, they are made ‘all fair’ and beautiful, accepted by God the Father. Ultimately, they are assured that they will one day be presented before God without blemish, expressing the fullness of beauty as intended by God.

Song of Solomon 6:4, Psalm 48:1-2, Isaiah 6:5

Why is understanding our identity in Christ important?

Understanding our identity in Christ helps believers to know they are accepted and beautiful in God's sight, despite their sins.

Recognizing our identity in Christ is crucial for believers, as it shapes our understanding of how God perceives us. Despite our awareness of our sinfulness and inherent unloveliness, the truth of Christ’s righteousness allows us to see ourselves as beautiful and accepted before God. The comparison in Song of Solomon 6:4 highlights that just as Tirzah and Jerusalem were considered beautiful, so too are believers viewed by God as lovely due to their union with Christ.

This understanding equips Christians to navigate struggles with sin and self-worth. The Apostle Paul expressed his own lamentation over sin, yet in Christ, we are assured of our perfection before God. As we look toward our future with hope, we can remember that we will be presented to God ‘not having spot or wrinkle,’ which further emphasizes the transformative beauty that comes from Christ. A life anchored in this identity fosters comfort, confidence, and perseverance through struggles.

Song of Solomon 6:4, Psalm 48:1-2, Isaiah 6:5

How do we know our acceptance in Christ is secure?

Our acceptance in Christ is secure through His righteousness, as we are justified and seen as beautiful in God's sight.

Our assurance of acceptance in Christ lies deeply rooted in the doctrine of justification and the righteousness of Christ that is imputed to believers. According to the biblical text, individuals who have faith in Christ are seen by God not as they are in themselves, marked by sin, but through the lens of Christ’s righteousness, which grants them beauty, as exemplified in Song of Solomon 6:4.

The assurance comes from recognizing that our standing before God does not depend on our works but entirely on Christ’s redemptive work. This concept of being ‘justified’ means that God declares us righteous on the basis of faith in Christ alone. Therefore, regardless of our struggles with sin and failures, we remain beautiful and accepted because we are covered by Christ’s sacrifice and righteousness. The hope for believers is that they await the final presentation before God, where there will be no blemish—this secures our confidence in our salvation and acceptance, promising that the work that began in us will be perfected.

Song of Solomon 6:4, Ephesians 1:4-5, Romans 5:1

"Thou art beautiful, O my love, as Tirzah; comely as Jerusalem."—Song vi. 4.

— Song of Solomon 6:4

And what was Tirzah? One of the cities in the lot of Manasseh, Joshua xii. 6, 24. and no doubt, as Judea was the glory of all lands, Tirzah, which was a part of it, was lovely. And the comeliness of that highly favoured spot, Jerusalem, is celebrated in the sacred Song; "In the mountain of his holiness, "saith the Psalmist, "beautiful for situation, and the joy of the whole earth, is Mount Zion, "Ps. xlviii. 1, 2. And is Christ's church, in her Lord's eye, thus beautiful? Yes! he himself saith she is: and, by consequence, every individual member of her is so, which constitutes her one body. Pause, my soul, over this account, and let thine everlasting meditation dwell upon the pleasing subject. Thou art mourning continually over thine infirmities; thou feelest what Paul felt, and thou groanest under the same burden as he groaned under: and, indeed, the consciousness of the remains of indwelling sin is enough to make the souls of the redeemed go softly all their days. But while thus conscious that thyself thou hast nothing that is lovely, do not overlook the loveliness which the righteousness of Christ, justifylng his people, imparts to all their persons. Zion is said to be the perfection of beauty; and so she is in the eyes of God our Father, being the body of Christ, and made so in his beauty. What Jesus is in God's sight, such must be his people. For Christ, as head of his church, is the fulness that filleth all in all. If, in my soul, thou wert looking for any thing in thyself that was amiable or beautiful to recommend thee to Jesus, or to justify thee before God; then, indeed, thou mightest exclaim with the prophet: "Woe is me, for I am undone, because I am a man of unclean lips, "Isa. vi. 5. But if Jesus hath touched thy lips, and taken away thine iniquity, and thy sin is purged; then art thou all fair in him, and accepted by God the Father in him, the beloved: and Jesus saith to thee, and of thee, "Thou art beautiful, O my love, as Tirzah, comely as Jerusalem." See to it henceforth, that thou art never losing sight of thy oneness with Christ, thy acceptance in Christ, and the loveliness that thou art deriving from Christ. And while thou art daily lamenting that a soul united to Jesus should still carry about such a body of sin and death as thou dost, which harrasseth and afflicteth thy soul; yet never, never forget that thou art now looking up to the throne of grace for acceptance as thou art in Jesus, and not as thou art in thyself; and comfort thyself with this pleasing consideration, that ere long thou wilt be openly presented before a throne of glory, "not having spot or wrinkle, or any such thing, but holy and without blemish before him in love."

From Poor Man's Evening Portions by Robert Hawker.
Robert Hawker
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