Red
Why is red the color of
love?
The roses on my kitchen table are a fresh
reminder of yesterday’s celebration of Valentine’s Day, where red hearts and
flowers abounded. True, pink is in the
mix, but almost as a diluted option, fit for those reluctant to speak affection
in crimson boldness.
Red
is certainly bold. Strong. Shocking, even. We are wired to react at the highest level of
alarm at any sign of the deep scarlet of blood. Once, while on a hike down a tricky waterfall
trail, my young son cut his leg. It
wasn’t a serious wound, but it sent rivulets of blood down his calf as he and I
hiked back to the car. The people who
passed us turned pale as they caught sight of him. Finally, a young mother – no surprise --
stopped and offered us her bandana to stem the bleeding.
Red elicits compassion. At least, in moms.
There is a depth to red. The complexity of blood. The layers of
subtlety in wine. The voraciousness of
fire.
This morning, I was listening to the first
chapter of Isaiah and was surprised to find numerous red references. There are “bruises and sores and raw wounds.”
(vs. 6) Cities are “burned with fire.”
(vs.7) Sacrifices bleed (vs. 11). Wine
is diluted (vs. 22). In the most
visceral image, God pictures his people raising their hands in worship, but
those hands are full of blood. That’s
how offensive their sin is before Him.

Perhaps this is where red and love became
forever entwined. Jesus shed his blood
to accomplish for eternity what God promised in that verse. We have no more power to cleanse ourselves
from our crimson offense than did Lady Macbeth.
Only Christ has the power to say, “Out, damned spot.”
See from His head, His hands, His feet,
Sorrow and love flow mingled down!
Did e’er such love and sorrow meet,
Or thorns compose so rich a crown?
Sorrow and love flow mingled down!
Did e’er such love and sorrow meet,
Or thorns compose so rich a crown?
Jesus, for a love so amazing, so divine, I freely give my
soul, my life, my all. Today, let the
shocking extravagance of these red roses remind me of the extravagance of your
love for me. Thank you for making me
white as snow before the Father.
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