The Song of Songs or the Song of Solomon is one of the scrolls located in the last section of the Tanakh, known as the Ketuvim, in the Hebrew Bible. It is also found in the Old Testament of Christian bible. Rejoicing in intimacy, two lovers engage in an amorous dialogue expressing mutual desire, adoring description, and romantic bliss.. There are no theological themes present within the text, but over time have been given theological readings and accepted into both Christian and Jewish canon. The Song of Songs was accepted into the Jewish canon of scripture in the 2nd century CE because of its supposed authorship by Solomon. Its theological interpretation is based on an allegorical reading of the text in which the intimate desire between the lovers is not romantic but instead metaphorical representation for God's love of Israel. In Kabbalah, or Jewish Mysticism, the Song of Songs is one of the most mystical biblical texts, serving as an esoteric metaphor for the central unity of God and cosmic harmony of God's multiple attributes and emanations. Within Christianity, theologians have also resorted to allegory to locate meaning for this text, again treating the relationship as an analogy for the love between God and the his "bride", the Church. The Song of Songs has also served as a central text to Christian feminists researching non-patriarchal readings of biblical texts. Unlike several other biblical texts in which the relationship between humans and God is distinctly defined by a power imbalance, the Song of Songs presents us with a relationship of equals who are bound together, committed, and seeking the other in equal measure.
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