What does Song of Solomon 6:6 mean?
What is the meaning of Song of Solomon 6:6?

Your teeth

• The groom begins with “Your teeth,” zooming in on a part of his bride’s face that is normally overlooked yet crucial for nourishment and speech.

• Their healthy state signals vitality and readiness to “taste and see that the LORD is good” (Psalm 34:8).

• In the covenant picture of Christ and His church (Ephesians 5:31-32), believers are to show a joyous, wholehearted testimony, and a radiant, sincere smile is a vivid emblem of that.


Are like a flock of sheep

• Sheep convey innocence, gentleness, and approachability (Matthew 10:16).

• When Jesus calls Himself the Good Shepherd who knows His sheep (John 10:14), He reinforces the idea that His people are precious, well-tended, and secure.

• The comparison also highlights orderly alignment; just as a flock moves together under a shepherd’s care, the bride’s teeth line up neatly, presenting harmony rather than disorder.


Coming up from the washing

• Newly washed sheep gleam with a fresh, unmistakable whiteness. The picture instantly evokes the cleansing Christ provides: “that He might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word” (Ephesians 5:26).

• The bride’s purity is not self-made but bestowed, paralleling how believers are “washed” (1 Corinthians 6:11) and keep confessing sin to stay in close fellowship (1 John 1:9).

• The phrase also hints at resurrection imagery—coming up from water like emerging into new life (Romans 6:4).


Each has its twin

• Perfect pairing shows symmetry, balance, and completeness. God never creates haphazardly; He fashions order from the start (Genesis 1).

• Twin teeth picture believers laboring side by side. Jesus sent disciples out two by two (Mark 6:7), Paul always traveled with a partner (Acts 15:40), and local congregations thrive when gifts complement one another (1 Corinthians 12:12-27).

• In marriage, the phrase underlines mutuality and exclusivity—each belongs to another, echoing the one-flesh union (Genesis 2:24).


And not one of them is lost

• The groom delights that nothing is missing; the set is intact. In typology this celebrates Christ’s keeping power: “Of all those You have given Me I have lost not one” (John 18:9; cf. John 6:39).

• The image assures believers that their Shepherd guards every sheep (Luke 15:4-6).

• It also encourages the church to pursue wholeness, refusing to accept division or neglect of any member (Colossians 1:28).


summary

Song of Solomon 6:6 paints a lovingly detailed portrait of the bride’s smile—pure, orderly, complete. Literally, Solomon admires his beloved’s radiant teeth. Spiritually, the verse pictures Christ’s people: cleansed by His Word, walking in unity, preserved in His care, and displaying the joy of redemption for all to see.

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