When you think about sanctification, the process by which we gradually become more holy (e.g. 1 Thess 5:24), what "colour" is that?
Simple answer: white. Correct.
But what is the colour of unholiness? Simple answer: black. Wrong.
I stumbled across this realisation a while ago, but, just today, found confirmation in an article I found online by an internet acquaintance of mine, Dr. Michael Haykin:
"It is noteworthy that Stennett [a Baptist hymn-writer] uses the colour crimson to describe sin, and not the colour black, as was common in certain quarters of the western Christian tradition. Sin is never described as “black” in the Scriptures, but “scarlet” or of a reddish hue—see Isaiah 1:18. The colour used to depict the devil is also red, not black (see Revelation 12:3)."
Simple answer: white. Correct.
But what is the colour of unholiness? Simple answer: black. Wrong.
I stumbled across this realisation a while ago, but, just today, found confirmation in an article I found online by an internet acquaintance of mine, Dr. Michael Haykin:
"It is noteworthy that Stennett [a Baptist hymn-writer] uses the colour crimson to describe sin, and not the colour black, as was common in certain quarters of the western Christian tradition. Sin is never described as “black” in the Scriptures, but “scarlet” or of a reddish hue—see Isaiah 1:18. The colour used to depict the devil is also red, not black (see Revelation 12:3)."
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