When Red Makes White

When Red Makes White

After thirty years in the moderate Pacific Northwest, the Lord was gentle with my wife and me early on in our first winter back in Michigan.  Temperatures have been unseasonably warm; the days remarkably pleasant for much of the past few months. 

In fact, I went fishing off our dock a day or two after Christmas!  The weather was almost balmy and the lake was ice-free – something that is nearly unheard of in central Michigan in the center of the winter season.

However, it seems the Lord has determined that it’s now time for us to experience true Midwestern winter weather.  As I write this, the wind is howling and the snowflakes are falling.  And both are supposed to continue for much of the night.  Then, if the forecasts are accurate, the temps will be plummeting like an icicle dislodged from a roofline.

The snow is certainly lovely!  I’ve always thought of it as God’s way of wrapping the world in white … covering over the flaws for just a little while with a gorgeous white coat.  The evergreens decked with God’s glimmering mantle of snow are especially eye-catching; I find them breathtakingly beautiful! 

Contemplating the heavy layer of white that is accumulating outside, I recall the striking words of Isaiah 1:18: “Come now, let us settle the matter,” says the LORD. “Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they are red as crimson, they shall be like wool.”

If one pauses to consider the Lord’s words, they seem to offer a strange contrast.  Red sins becoming white?  Why those choice of colors?  And how can that happen?

The comments in the verses preceding those thought-provoking words offer some clarification.  Through the prophet Isaiah, the Lord is sharing some harsh but crucial criticisms to his people. 

He informs his supposed followers that their many sacrifices to him hold “no pleasure” for him (Is. 1:11).  Their offerings to him are “meaningless,” their incense “detestable,” and their assemblies “worthless” (Is. 1:13).  In regard to the religious festivals they observed … (which God himself told them to celebrate!) … the Lord states, “I hate them with all my being” (Is. 1:14).

If that wasn’t severe enough, God goes on to state, “When you spread out your hands in prayer, I hide my eyes from you; even when you offer many prayers, I am not listening.  Your hands are full of blood!” (Is. 1:15).

Now the contrast between red and white becomes clearer.  God’s own were following God’s instructions on how to worship him, but “their hearts were far from him” (Isaiah 29:13).  Consequently, their hands were red with the blood of pointless sacrifices.  Furthermore, their hearts and lives full of iniquity … including the blood of fellow humans who suffered through their loveless actions … also stained their hands crimson.

It’s not a pretty picture.  Blood is messy.  It seeps everywhere.  And when on one’s hands, it gathers and congeals in the creases, sticks between the fingers, and creeps under the fingernails.  It takes some serious effort to clean it all off.

Even more so when the blood is a spiritual stain.  In fact, that crimson can’t be removed!

But then the Lord in love makes an incredible offer to these blood-stained people: “Turn to me and I’ll settle this matter – I’ll make your scarlet sins as white as snow!”

Of course, many (most even) of the people in Isaiah’s day disregarded the Lord’s merciful proposal and continued to simply go through meaningless motions in their worship and selfish, hurtful actions in their lives.  But some took God’s words to heart and rejoiced in his loving and graceful promise.

Yet the faithful couldn’t begin to understand how the Lord would bring it about.  They didn’t realize that all those countless lamb sacrifices God commanded weren’t the atoning factor.

Rather, they pointed ahead to God’s own ultimate Sacrifice of his Son – Jesus, the Lamb of God, who could and would “take away the sin of the world” (John 1:29).  In the most perfect example of love, Jesus would offer his holy life as the all-atoning Substitute for the sins of all sinners on the altar of the cross.

Jesus bloody birth in a barn was his first step to the bloody cross.  His life on earth began in blood, and it ended in holy blood … deliberately and specifically shed so that he could remove the unholy blood from our hands and our lives.  (For our hands are every bit as stained as the people in Isaiah’s day!)

What a concept!  The pure Jesus poured his blood over our blood-stained hands (and hearts), and instead of making them bloodier, it washed them clean!

That’s the affect Jesus’ blood has!  It is his blood that “purifies us from all sin” (1 John 1:7).  It is his blood that makes it possible for sinners like us to enter salvation.  The white robes worn in heaven gain their gleam from being washed in Jesus’ blood (Rev. 7:14).

Yes, the snow is lovely.  But not nearly as lovely as pure souls miraculously and wonderfully washed white in the red blood of our Savior!

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