📜 “Mahmadim” in the Song of Solomon: Why a God-Silent Book Was Preserved in Scripture
🕊️ A Theological Reflection on Prophetic Foresight and Israel’s Rejection of Muhammad
🧭 Introduction
Among the books of the Hebrew Bible, the Song of Solomon (also called Song of Songs) stands out for an extraordinary reason: it does not mention God even once. This absence has puzzled scholars, theologians, and rabbis for centuries. Why would a book that makes no explicit reference to God, covenant, law, prophecy, or worship be preserved within a canon otherwise defined by divine speech?
Jewish tradition has offered various literary and allegorical justifications. Yet a deeper theological reflection—particularly from an Islamic perspective—reveals a provocative possibility:
The Song of Solomon was preserved because it contains a prophetic clue that later generations would need to confront, a clue embedded in the Hebrew expression “maḥmaddîm” (מַחְמַדִּים) in Song of Solomon 5:16.
This expression, meaning “most desirable” or “altogether lovely,” bears a striking morphological connection to the name Muhammad ﷺ. Its presence in a book otherwise devoid of theological content becomes theologically meaningful: God ensured this book remained in the canon so that the Israelites could never erase this prophetic sign pointing to the final messenger.
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📖 1. A Book Without God—Yet Protected by God
⚖️ The Content Paradox
The Song of Solomon contains:
• ❌ No mention of God
• ❌ No covenantal material
• ❌ No prophetic message
• ❌ No legal or ethical instruction
• ❌ No historical context tied to Israel’s religious identity
Under normal canonical criteria, it should have been excluded.
Ancient Jewish debates reflect this tension. The Mishnah (Yadaim 3:5) records disputes over its sacred status. Some rabbis argued it was too sensual; others said it lacked theological substance.
Yet, mysteriously, it remained—as though ✨ God ensured its preservation for the sake of a hidden prophetic sign that Israel would one day recognize yet dismiss.
🧑🏫 Rabbi Akiva and the Defense of the Song
Rabbi Akiva, one of the most authoritative sages of early Judaism, famously defended the sanctity of the Song of Solomon during these debates. He declared:
“All the writings are holy, but the Song of Songs is the Holy of Holies.”
(Mishnah, Yadaim 3:5)
🕍 This statement is remarkable precisely because the book contains no explicit reference to God. Why would a text of romantic poetry be elevated to the status of the “Holy of Holies”—a term otherwise reserved for the innermost sanctuary of the Temple?
🤲 From an Islamic theological perspective, Rabbi Akiva’s insistence appears less as an exegetical explanation and more as an unconscious submission to divine will. God moved the rabbis to preserve a book whose deeper prophetic significance they themselves did not perceive. The very sage who defended its holiness may have been safeguarding, unknowingly, a linguistic sign embedded within its Hebrew vocabulary—one that would later point toward the final messenger of God.
🧩 The Preservation Puzzle
If the rabbis excluded some texts that were far more “religious” in nature—such as certain wisdom literature, apocryphal writings, and early prophetic works—why protect a book that is silent about God?
The Islamic theological answer is clear:
☝️ God protected this book because it contains a linguistic sign about His final prophet—something Israel was destined to overlook or reject.
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🔤 2. “Mahmadim”: A Linguistic Window Toward Prophecy
📜 The Hebrew Word
Song of Solomon 5:16 reads:
“חִכּוֹ֙ מַֽמְתַקִּ֔ים וְכֻלֹּ֖ו מַחֲמַדִּ֑ים”
“His mouth is sweetness itself; he is altogether lovely/desirable.”
The word maḥmaddîm (מַחְמַדִּים) is the plural form of maḥmad, a Semitic root meaning:
• 🌸 “desirable,”
• ⭐ “praiseworthy,”
• 💎 “worthy of admiration,”
• ❤️ “one who is cherished.”
In Hebrew morphology, the -îm plural can function:
• as a true plural,
• as an intensive plural,
• or as a plural of majesty.
Thus, maḥmaddîm may signify “the great” or “the most praised one.”
🕌 The Connection to Muhammad
The consonantal root ḥ-m-d (ح م د) is the same Semitic root underlying:
• Muhammad (مُحَمَّد) ﷺ — “the praised one”
• Ahmad (أحمد) — “the most praised”
• Hamd (حمد) — “praise”
This creates a compelling intertextual thread:
🔗 The Hebrew Bible preserves forms of the root ḥ-m-d repeatedly in contexts of admiration, desire, and exaltation.
In Song of Solomon 5:16, the form maḥmaddîm functions as a linguistic parallel to “Muhammad,” forming a prophetic pointer that becomes meaningful only once the final prophet appears.
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📢 3. A Prophetic Indication of Israel’s Future Rejection
📖 Qur’anic Expectation of Jewish Rejection
The Qur’an states that the Children of Israel:
• 👁️ Recognized Muhammad ﷺ from their own scriptures (2:89, 2:101, 2:146, 7:157)
• ❌ Yet rejected him out of envy and national exclusivism
• 🧱 Altered or concealed aspects of revelation
”Those to whom We gave the Scripture (Jews and Christians) recognise him as they recongise their sons. But verily, a party of them conceal the truth while they know it.“
(Surah 2:146)
🕯️ Song of Solomon as a Divine Witness
By embedding the key term maḥmaddîm in a text lacking overt theological content, God ensures that the prophetic sign remains preserved:
• 🚫 There is no theological reason to remove it
• 🚫 There is no prophetic framework to provoke suspicion
• 📚 There are no divine references to trigger canonical objections
In other words, the sign is concealed in plain sight 👀.
It becomes a theological trapdoor:
• 🔒 preserved by God,
• ⏳ unnoticed for centuries,
• ✨ but recognizable once the prophetic figure named Muhammad ﷺ arises.
The Jews would encounter the Hebrew root, recognize the linguistic form, yet still reject the prophet—exactly as the Qur’an foretells 📖.
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🧠 4. The Underlying Theological Logic
🧩 God’s Foreknowledge and Scriptural Architecture
From an Islamic perspective, scripture is divinely arranged—not merely historically assembled. God places signs within texts that will only reveal their meaning at the appointed time ⏰.
Thus, the Song of Solomon functions as:
1. 📘 A literary vessel — outwardly romantic and secular
2. 🔐 A prophetic vault — housing a name-encoded indicator of the final messenger
3. ⚖️ A divine testimony — demonstrating that Israel was given sufficient signs yet rejected the truth
God does not require the book to teach theology; the book exists to contain a sign.
🌍 Why This Matters Theologically
This interpretation highlights:
• 🔄 The continuity of God’s prophetic plan
• 🌐 The interconnectedness of Semitic linguistic traditions
• 🕋 The divine preparation for the advent of Muhammad ﷺ
• ⚠️ The accountability of those who recognized yet rejected the foretold prophet
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🔔 5. Conclusion: A Silent Book That Speaks Loudly
Though the Song of Solomon contains no explicit mention of God, it speaks through language, etymology, and prophetic foresight 🗣️.
The presence of maḥmaddîm in Song of Solomon 5:16 becomes:
• 🔤 a linguistic echo of Muhammad’s name,
• 📜 a prophetic hint embedded within Israel’s own canon,
• ⚖️ and a divine reminder that the final prophet would be dismissed despite the sign being preserved.
Thus, the Song of Solomon’s inclusion in Scripture—despite its apparent secular nature—is not accidental.
✨ It is a deliberate act of divine providence, ensuring that no community could claim ignorance when the “Praised One” — Muhammad ﷺ — finally appeared.
— Azahari Hassim
Founder, The World of Abrahamic Theology