Summary: When lovers cease to compliment one another, they are losing their admiration, and taking each other for granted. Healthy love never stops singing the praises of the lover.

A neurologist was flattered when a patient in a mental

hospital said to him, "We like you better than any other

doctor we have ever had." "But why?" asked the doctor,

with a smile, showing his delight. "Because," replied the

inmate, "You are more like one of us." Sometimes flattery

can be a flop. Even if it is sincere, it can come out wrong.

Like the woman who said to her pastor, "That message was

like water to a drowning man." He thought she meant it as

a compliment, but he could never be sure. Flattery can be

used to deceive people in so many ways that it usually has a

negative meaning. The Jewish Talmud says, "A community

where flattery prevails will end in exile."

Almost every reference to flattery in the Bible shows it to

be a tool of evil. Paul wrote in I Thess. 2:5, "We never used

words of flattery..." When Paul said he was all things to all

men, he did not mean he was even a flatterer. Paul

considered this to be deceitful and not an acceptable tool in

evangelism. It could be so used, however, for we all like to

think well of ourselves, and we are always delighted with

anyone else who can perceive our good points. So we are all

susceptible to flattery. Benjamin Franklin said,

A flatterer never seems absurd:

The flattered always takes his word.

In the realm of romance flattery is a dangerous weapon,

for it is possible to so love the nice things that are said that

one soon believes he, or she, loves the sayer of them. The

sayer is even himself deceived, and many people get married,

not because they love each other, but because they love

themselves, and enjoy being told how wonderful they are.

Flattery can be used to deliberately deceive for the sake of

immoral gratification as well, and many a foolish girl lets

sweet talk her life sour.

Shakespeare said, "You play the Spaniel and think with

waging of your tongue to win me." A dogs waging tail is an

honest expression of love, but a waging tongue of flattery is

more often a tool of deceit. David portraying a society which

is totally corrupt says in Psalms 12:2, "Everyone utters lies

to his neighbor with flattering lips and a double heart they

speak." Lying and flattery are like partners, as we see in

Prov. 26:28, "A lying tongue hates its victims, and a

flattering mouth works ruin."

Groucho Marx was an expert as using flattery in a

negative way. He was leaving a party he felt was exceedingly

dull. He said to the hostess, "I've had a wonderful evening,

but this wasn't it." Sometimes the truth does need to be told

subtly. Samuel Johnson said to an author, after reading his

book, "Your manuscript was both good and original, but the

part that is good is not original, and the part that is original

is not good." That is telling it like it is, and is not really a

negative use of flattery. The person to be wary of is the

person who agrees with everything you say and do. Such

flattery will hinder, rather than help.

How can we reconcile the negatives of flattery with the

positives of compliments and honest appreciation? If I tell a

person they look sharp, am I guilty of flattery, and using my

tongue for evil? If I see value, talents, and gifts in people,

must I keep silent because of the danger of flattery?

Definitely not. The Song of Solomon is filled with constant

compliments coming from the mouths of lovers. They flatter

each other, as most lovers do, as being the two most

beautiful people on the planet. The complimentary language

of lovers is essential to their love. Without beautiful words

they would have a hard time expressing their love. Yet, they

may use all the same words that are used by the flatterer.

What is the difference?

The difference between good and evil in so many areas of

life is in love. Love makes the difference. If I have the

tongue of men and of angels, but have not love,

I am sounding brass and a clanging symbol. All the evil of

flattery is a matter of nice words without love. When hate

and deceit speak, they may use the best words for their evil

ends. Evil needs good words to get anywhere. The evil of

flattery could not exist without the use of good words, and so

evil uses the very vocabulary of love.

When love speaks, it looks for the best in everyone. It

looks for a way of being constructive and encouraging. Jesus

was a master at the art of complimenting. Instead of

blasting sinners with words of condemnation, He said, "Go

and sin no more," expressing confidence in their ability to do

so. He even said to the Gentile Centurion, "A greater faith

have I not seen in Israel." Jesus even complimented His

enemies. He knew the Pharisees were good students of the

law. He taught that what they said was good, even if they

didn't follow it, so He said to do what they say, but not what

they do. He complimented sinners by eating with them, and

He did the same with the Pharisees. Jesus could find good

points in all people. Jesus was not opposed to any man, or

any group, but only to the falsehoods that corrupted them.

A legend is told about Jesus walking through the gates of

Jerusalem. He saw a crowd gathered around a dead dog.

The Scribes passing by kicked it with contempt, but Jesus

stopped and said, "Behold the pearly whiteness of its teeth."

Jesus could find something to compliment even in a dead

dog. The reason He could is because He loved all men, and

all creatures. Love makes the difference.

Lust, however, uses the same words. In Prov. 7:21-22 we

read of how the harlot ensnares a man. "With much

seductive speech she persuades him; with her smooth talk

she compels him. All at once he follows her, as an ox goes to

the slaughter..." We see that smooth talkers can be female

as well as male. When words are an expression of true

feeling, they are beautiful and positive. When they are used

as a method of getting our own way, they are negative and

ugly.

Someone said there is really nothing remarkable about

love at first sight. It is after people have looked at each other

for years that love is really remarkable. True love goes on

giving appreciation of the one loved. Therefore,

compliments and praise are a perpetual aspect of the lover's

language. When lovers cease to compliment one another,

they are losing their admiration, and taking each other for

granted. Healthy love never stops singing the praises of the

lover.

In the Song Of Solomon we have a song of lover's praise.

The Shepherd and Shepherdess are constantly

complimenting one another on their beauty. We also have

the flattery of King Solomon, however, who tries by sweet

talk to persuade the Shulemite girl to forsake her lover an

become his.

In verses 9-11, many feel we have an example of the kings

flattery. It does differ from the language of the Shepherd

lover. Solomon's flattery revolves around the externals and

deals with the man made adornments of beauty. Solomon

compares her to a mare of Pharaoh's chariots, and speaks

much of jewelry. The compliments of the Shepherd and the

Shepherdess to each other all revolve around natural beauty.

The contrast is between the beauty of the kings palace, and

all the man made objects, and the beauty of nature so

precious to these two country lovers.

These two have no love for the adornments of the city.

Their hearts are filled with the pleasant realities of God's

creation. In verse 12 she tells of the context she is in: The

king is on his couch. A couch of fancy gold embroidery, no

doubt, but she dreams only of the green grass of the field, so

precious to the sheep, and so beautiful for the Shepherd

lover, who rests on it under the shade of a tree. The couch is

green for them, and not gold, like that of the palace. It is

green and natural, and to them this is far superior. In verse

16 the Shulamite girl says to her lover, "Our couch is

green." In verse 17 she says, "The beams of our house are

cedar, and our rafters are pine." Again, she imagines

looking up from the grass at the trees around them, and she

longs for that kind of roof over her head, rather than the

fancy roof of Solomon's palace. God's natural roof was her

delight. The contrast in this song between the natural and the

manufactured is one that men struggle with constantly. It is

always a danger for men to become so enamored with the

products of their own cleverness that they live in an artificial

world, and love only the handiwork of their own creation

rather than that of the Author of all natural beauty. If we

truly love Jesus Christ, we will love His handiwork, and

enjoy with Him that which He has designed for our pleasure,

as well as His own. Those who get so involved with the

creations of man are allowing themselves to be flattered

away from full devotion to the Creator. If a Christian gets

so taken up with jewels, furs, clothes, and all of the externals

of man's inventions, he will tend to let the internal beauty of

the soul slide, and become a conformer to the world.

This was the temptation of the Shulamite girl, but she

had no ear for the flattery of the world. She longed only for

union with her true love. In 2:16 we see the theme of her

song:

"My beloved is mine and I am his, he pastures his

flocks among the lilies." The poet puts it:

Yes, He is mine! And nought of earthly things,

Not all the charms of pleasure, wealth, or power,

The fame of heroes, or the pomp of kings,

Could tempt me to forgo His love an hour.

Go, worthless world, I cry, with all that's Thine!

Go, I my Savior's am, and He is mine.

This is the theme running through the whole song as we

see love's compliments win out over enticing flattery. In verse 7

the Shulamite girl refers to her Shepherd as you

whom my soul loves. She loves him internally and intensely,

and her flame burns for Him alone, and that is why she so

desperately longs to be out of the palace, and in His

presence. To us it may not sound very romantic to forsake a

palace for the environment of a flock of sheep, but true love

desires the presence of the lover whatever the environment.

Our Shepherd lover is preparing a palace for His bride

that where He is we may be also, but it is the person and not

the place that is primary. The Shulamite girl dreamed of the

flocks, tents, grassy fields, and open forest, because that is

where her true love was. Where your treasure is there will

your heart be also. Most girls would feel obligated to yield to

the king in such a setting. He was offering her everything

that wealth could buy. He tells her in verse 11, he will make

her beautiful jewelry with gold studded with silver. It seems

almost rude to turn down such an offer. What good is the

grass and trees and flowers? They fade away, but jewels are

lasting, and diamonds are supposedly a girl's best friend.

The Shulamite, however, chooses to be rude and sings

nothing of the joys of jewelry. She has no praise for the

palace, but longs only for her true love, the Shepherd. She

does not indulge in any flattery of Solomon and his offer, but

rejects it by rude neglect. Andre Maurois, the French writer

who has much to say about love, says that a true lover must

often be rude to be wise. He tells of a young man who was

invited to an estate in Normandy, and the daughter of the

house showed an obvious liking for him. He could tell that

the parents hoped he would marry her, but he did not find

her beautiful, and had no desire to be tied to her for life.

One evening as the stars were shining, and the apple

blossoms were in bloom, he expressed a wish to take a

moonlight stroll. "What a lovely idea," said the hostess,

"Marie will go with you." He was half-trapped already, but

as they walked though the orchard she stumbled, and

instinctively he caught her. She was in his arms and their

lips were close. "Ah," she said, "I always knew you loved

me." To undeceive her he needed to be ruthlessly rude, but

he could not. Their lips closed in the fatal kiss. When they

went in they were engaged, and he spent the rest of his life

with a woman he did not really love. Maurios says, when it

comes to love, whenever you think it necessary, be savagely

rude.

It is folly to become enamored with one you do not love.

The Shulamite girl was too wise for that, and did not let the

wealth and flattery of Solomon sway her from her true love.

So the Christian must sometimes be rude to the appeals of

the world. All that offers to win our love and loyalty is

vanity of vanities. The world can be an enticing lover, but

those who really love the Lord Jesus, and have set their

affections on things above, will not be flattered into its arms.

What is the world with all its store?

'Tis but a bitter sweet;

When I attempt to pluck the rose,

A pricking thorn I meet.

Here perfect bliss can ne'er be found,

The honeys' mix'd with gall:

Midst changing scenes and dying friends,

Be Thou my all in all.

Author unknown

The Shulamite girl ignores the kings offer of precious

jewels, and she sings the praises of her Shepherd lover in

verse 13, and says, "A bundle of myrrh is my well beloved

unto me." Myrrh was carried by women of the East in little

bags on their bosom to perfume themselves. It made them

feel good and smell fragrant. Right below their own nose

they were ever conscious of its presence, and the Shulamite

girl says that her Shepherd lover was just like her bag of

myrrh to her. What a compliment: To be ever in the mind

of your lover. Myrrh was a very precious perfume. It was

one of the gifts given to Christ at His birth, and was

symbolic of His own preciousness.

In verse 14 the Shulamite says her beloved is to her a

cluster of camphire, or henna blossoms, as other versions

have it. These were clusters of beautiful white and yellow

flowers that women used to adorn their homes and their own

persons. This girl paid her lover the highest compliment she

could in the language of her culture. Her lover was

everything pleasant and precious to her. Whenever we sing

a song in which we praise God for what He is to us, we are

joining the Shulamite girl and turning her solo into a chorus

of spiritual flattery, which we call praise. Praise is positive

because it is flattery from a heart of love. It is an expression

of true feeling. Those who truly love Christ and feel loved by

Him will be people of praise. You cannot love Christ and

not praise Him.

C. C. Colton adds another perspective when he says,

"Imitation is the sincerest flattery." If we truly feel that our

Shepherd lover is the fairest of 10,000, we will strive to be

like him, and imitate him. We will want the beauty of Jesus

to be seen in us. It is only flattery if we sing of His glory, and

then continue to walk in darkness. It is like saying to

someone, "I just love your new suit," and then turning to

another and saying, "I wouldn't be caught dead in that."

What we really think is beautiful, we strive to imitate. True

love for Christ does not just praise Him for what He is, it

strives to become what He is. Lovers long to be alike.

William Kirkpatrick put the true lovers desire in poetry, and

it fits so well the conflict of the Shulamite girl.

Oh, to be like Thee! Blessed Redeemer,

This is my constant longing and prayer.

Gladly I'll forfeit all of earth's treasures,

Jesus, Thy perfect likeness to wear.

Oh, to be like Thee! Oh, to be like Thee!

Blessed Redeemer, pure as Thou art!

Come in Thy sweetness, come in Thy fullness,

Stamp Thine own image deep on my heart.

May God help each of us to resist the false, but subtle,

flattery of the world, and to offer up to our wonderful Lord

the true praise of love.