Inspirational Bible Verses -- Ancient Love Poems


by Ben Mester

The Bible is filled with ancient poetry that's both interesting and inspirational. One book in particular, the Song of Solomon in the Old Testament is a book of love poems written by an ancient king and dedicated to the woman he was planning to wed. I find it absolutely fascinating because it's not at all the kind of subject matter that a person would expect to find in the Bible. I hope you enjoy it as well.

"For love is strong as death; jealousy is cruel as the grave: the coals thereof are coals of fire, which hath a most vehement flame.

Many waters cannot quench love, neither can the floods drown it: if a man would give all the substance of his house for love, it would utterly be contemned."

The passage comes from the 8th and final chapter of the book and is something like a conclusion to the poem. I really find it fascinating and even inspiring because the subject matter is so different than you would expect from the Bible, especially in the Old Testament.

I've really enjoyed having the chance to read a lot of ancient poetry. I've read the ancient Chinese book the Tao Te Ching many times and really connect with it. I've also read a lot of the poetry of the ancient Persian poet Rumi. Ancient poetry is so much different than the poetry found in the modern world. It isn't necessarily that the people living then were different than we are today, but the world and the way they saw the world was much more mysterious, dangerous, and unknown than the world that we live in today.

The Bible actually has more than one book of poetry in it, the book of Psalms, and at times I wish that the translators of it concentrated more on capturing the original poetic beauty than on strictly going for accuracy in the words. In ancient texts like the Tao Te Ching, modern English translations have spent much effort and diligence in trying to capture the poetic value of the poems, even trying to rhyme in English when it suits the text.

From my understanding, no one has yet tried to do something like this with the book of Psalms in the Bible. I really wish that a concerted effort would be made to do something like that because, as you saw in the passage I listed above, the Bible has a very poetic value to it at times, and that value is most often sacrificed in lieu of translational accuracy. But if a piece of text was meant to be read in a poetic fashion and that poetic value gets lost in the translation, then why does a person even bother translating the text in the first place?

Poetry is a vehicle generally used for eliciting an emotional response. The words themselves are important, but in the strictest sense, if the right emotional response wasn't elicited while the reader reads the poetry, then the actual message wasn't conveyed. If not, then why even bother to try and communicate poetically in the first place. But most of what I've seen from the book of Psalms has been from persons who don't seem to necessarily care about keeping the original poetic value of the words intact. I hope one day that someone endeavors to undertake that project.

About the Author

Thanks very much for reading my thoughts on poetic verses in the Bible. I hope you enjoyed! http://hubpages.com/hub/Inspirational-Bible-Verses

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