{
  "schema_version": "simple_bible_commentary_page_v1",
  "generated_at": "2026-05-22T01:36:44.318319+00:00",
  "custom_id": "SNG_006",
  "testament": "OT",
  "book": "Song of Songs",
  "passage_ref": "Song of Songs 8:5-14",
  "title": "Love is strong, lasting, and priceless",
  "canonical_url": "/commentary/old-testament-simple/song-of-songs/sng_006/",
  "json_path": "/data/commentary/old-testament-simple/song-of-songs/SNG_006.json",
  "simple_summary": "The Song ends by showing love as secure, exclusive, and beyond money. It cannot be quenched by trouble or bought by wealth. The passage also shows family concern for maturity and ends with mutual longing between the lovers.",
  "simple_explanation": "The closing lines picture the beloved leaning on her lover. This shows safety and support, not loneliness. The poem then says love is like a seal over the heart and arm. It is meant to be permanent and publicly known.\n\nLove is said to be strong as death and as hard to stop as Sheol. Floods cannot drown it. Wealth cannot buy it. The point is simple: true love is not a commodity.\n\nThe brothers then speak about their younger sister. They are concerned for her readiness for marriage. The wall and door images are figurative. They speak about maturity, honor, and protection.\n\nThe woman answers that she was a wall, and that her beloved found favor in her eyes. The vineyard sayings then stress that love and personal belonging are not for sale. Even royal wealth cannot control what rightly belongs to mutual affection.\n\nThe passage ends with the lover asking to hear her voice and the beloved calling him to come quickly. The Song does not end with full closure. It ends with desire, invitation, and delight.",
  "important_truths": [
    "Love is powerful and lasting.",
    "True love cannot be bought with money.",
    "Love is not meant to be quenched by trouble.",
    "Family concern for marriage readiness is treated seriously.",
    "The Song honors exclusive and mutual love.",
    "The poem ends with longing and invitation."
  ],
  "warnings_promises_commands": [
    "Warning: do not treat love as a commodity.",
    "Warning: do not reduce marriage to economics or control.",
    "Warning: do not read the poem as if desire were shameful.",
    "Command: honor maturity, readiness, and mutual approval in marriage.",
    "Promise: true love is portrayed as enduring and unquenchable."
  ],
  "gods_plan_connection": "This passage belongs to Israel’s wisdom book and celebrates the goodness of marital love in creation. It does not give prophecy or a direct church lesson. Later Bible teaching about marriage as a covenant image can echo it, but that must not replace the plain meaning of the Song.",
  "simple_application": "Marriage should be exclusive, enduring, and honorable. Love should not be forced, bought, or manipulated. Families and counselors should respect readiness and maturity. The Song also reminds us that bodily affection belongs within God’s good design and should not be treated as shameful.",
  "net_bible_attribution": "Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible®, copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved.",
  "source_status": {
    "stage3_status": "",
    "normalized_final_release_status": "",
    "final_release_status": "",
    "stage3_final_release_status": "",
    "operator_review_status": ""
  }
}