Weird post title?
I agree.
No, I don’t really believe that God doesn’t like red. Quite the opposite,
actually.
But… if I am careless (and biased) in my approach to biblical interpretation,
I can make a pretty strong case from the Bible that God doesn’t like red.
He
might even hate it!
“Guilty-By-Association”?
Ask a preacher about what God thinks about nakedness, and you’ll almost
always hear, “Throughout the Bible, you’ll find nakedness
associated
with shame. Therefore, nakedness is shameful and wrong.” In other words,
Nakedness is
Guilty-by-Association.
To start with, it’s worth observing that they will not point you to any
Scripture passage which simply and clearly condemns nudity. In fact we can make
quite a list of “rules” about nudity that are not found in the bible.
There is…
- No verse that forbids you to see others naked.
- No verse that warns you against allowing anyone to see you naked.
The “exceptions” are missing, too.
- No verse that says you can see your spouse naked.
- No verse that says doctors are permitted to see their patients naked.
- No verse that says how young your child may be and still see you naked.
Why don’t they just point to such a verse that forbids public nudity?
Simply because there isn’t one.
So, they have to utilize the next best thing… the
Guilty-by-Association argument.
“Guilty-by-Association” on Trial
OK… let me say up front that I don’t believe “guilty by association” is any
proof of “guilt” at all.
Scripture interpretations based on
“Guilty-by-Association” are false. I know
of no teaching about moral standards—accepted among biblical Christians as
doctrinally sound—which is based solely on the “guilty by association”
argument.
Wait… I know of one…
the argument against social nudity. That’s the
only one.
But if “Guilty-by-Association” is not accepted for any other moral teaching,
why is it accepted for this one issue? Is “Guilty-by-Association” actually is a
sound interpretational means to discern God’s moral perspective on a matter?
If “Guilty-by-Association” is a valid way to interpret the Bible, then God
hates
RED. And I can prove it!
==================================================
God Hates RED!
A survey of the Bible shows how the color red is associated with sin or
sinfulness.
In the Old Testament:
- Isa. 1:18 - “Come now, and let us reason
together,” Says the Lord, “Though your sins are as scarlet, They will be as white as snow;
Though they are red like crimson, They will be like wool.
- Obviously, God wants us to know that sin is associated with the color red, for He repeats Himself, comparing sin
to scarlet AND crimson.
- Numbers 19:1-10 – This law calls for the slaughter of a Red Heifer for the sin of the Israelites.
The entire animal was to be burned (no eating any part of it) along with some
red cloth.
- The priest who performed the sacrifice was to be considered unclean. Being
unclean is obviously not a good thing.
- Likewise, the one who gathered up the ashes after it was burned was to be
considered unclean.
- Proverbs 23:31 – “Do not look on the wine when it is
red…”
- God’s disdain for the color even extends to what we drink.
- Genesis 25:25 - “Now the first came forth red, all over like a hairy garment; and
they named him Esau.”
- Later in his life, Esau sold his birthright for some “red stuff.” (Genesis 25:30)
- No wonder God says in Malachi 1:3, “I have hated Esau.”
In the New Testament:
- Matthew 6:13 – Jesus said, ‘There will be a storm today,
for the sky is red and
threatening.’
- Bad weather is associated with the color red.
- Rev. 6:4 – “And another, a red horse, went out; and to him who sat on
it, it was granted to take peace from the earth, and that men would
slay one another; and a great sword was given to him.”
- The Second Horseman of the Apocalypse, sitting on a red horse, bringing war, and death.
- Rev. 12:3 – “Then another sign appeared in
heaven: and behold, a great red
dragon having seven heads and ten horns, and on
his heads were seven diadems.”
- This perhaps the most damning verse of all, for red is the color of the
Dragon… Satan himself!
So, in the scriptures, we see a consistent pattern of the color
red being associated with sin, sinfulness,
Satan, or other bad things. This is how we can know that God hates
RED.
It’s Innate!
This is something that God has built into every person, too. Think of these
facts about how we respond to the color
red
in our lives:
- We naturally recoil at the sight of blood, which is red.
- When someone gets very angry, we describe them as “seeing red.”
- If our financial ledgers have a negative balance, we are “in the red.”
- We use red to tell people to
STOP!! And no one likes to be told to stop.
- Red is the sign for danger.
- Red is color of destructive
fire.
- Women painted with red lipstick
are a source of temptation to lust for men.
It’s easy to see why
red has a
negative meaning in human society; this is directly the result of the fact that
God hates
RED!
The Christian who wishes to live a life pleasing to God will judiciously
eliminate
red from his or her
life.
=======================================================================
STOP!!
Everything I’ve just written about how God hates the color red is utter
poppycock.
Pure rubbish.
Terrible, terrible interpretation.
And it’s because I’ve invoked the “Guilty-by-Association” argument.
“Guilty-By-Association” Fails the Test
Let’s look at how bad it is and why it’s so wrong.
- I was prooftexting. I searched for and cherry-picked verses that I could
somehow twist into supporting my pre-determined conclusion. If it didn’t support
my point, I skipped it.
- And that brings me to my next error… there were many references to
red in the Bible that are NOT associated with sin or anything bad. So if red is
not always associated with sin or bad things, the color itself
cannot be the issue!
- I lifted the passages completely out of context. I quoted only that portion
which I deemed to support my conclusion. Esau was not rejected by God because he
had red hair. The red sky at night (as opposed to the morning) indicated good
weather to come. There were four horsemen, each on a different color horse.
- I focused on the color to the exclusion of any other part of each passage,
making it sound like the color was THE reason the text indicated anything sinful
or bad.
- I paid no attention at all to the fact that there are multiple words that
are translated as “red” in the Bible. They are not all used the same way.
- I completely ignored the fact that red is a natural color found abundantly
in creation… utilized to great beauty in the natural (and very good!) world!
- Finally, NONE of the passage were in ANY way given to us to communicate
God’s attitude towards the color red!
This is how you make a point using the “Guilty-by-Association” argument.
And it is all wrong.
God knows how to declare His standards of conduct. His clear words of moral
absolutes are found throughout the Bible. When God doesn’t clearly call
something sin or forbid it, then we must not presume to “add it in” using a
spurious or false argument to support it.
Nakedness is not a new thing among humans. It is simply inconceivable that
God would have failed to clearly state his will regarding nakedness if He really
did wish to forbid it (see
Inconceivable Omission).
Let’s review how those who use “Guilty-by-Association” make the same sort of
errors that I made trying to prove that God hates red…
- They use prooftexting. I have seen many people simply list Scripture
references rather than present clear interpretation of those verses based on the
context. If they do quote a verse, they never present it in its context. When I
respond to such folks, I take the scripture reference they’ve given me and quote
it back to them in its full context (with an explanation of what it really
means), I simply get no reply back! Prooftexting always fails the test
of careful and honest exegesis.
- There ARE verses in the Bible that present nakedness without any shame or
sin associated! Sadly, many of them have been translated out of the English
language Bible (See Squeamish Translating) so that the references to nudity that remain in the English translations are mostly negative (Seriously...see Squeamish Translating)! Studying the matter by
consulting the original languages reveals this bias against nudity and deals a
blow to the “Guilty-by-Association” effort. The fact is, unless all occasions of
nudity are equally “shameful,” we cannot conclude that the nakedness is the de facto source of the shame.
- Passages about nudity are often lifted out of context. Most notably is the
teaching against incest in Leviticus 18… which uses the euphemism “uncover the
nakedness of…” for incest (since there is no Hebrew word for
“incest”). The phrase absolutely and unequivocally refers to having sexual
relations with a close (“blood”) relative (reiterated 4 times in the passage…
see Lev. 18:6, 12-13, 17) . Yet those who have pre-determined that
the Bible forbids social nudity do not hesitate to rip that phrase in Leviticus
18 right out of its context in their attempt to declare social nudity to be
immoral (see also The Meaning of Nakedness).
- Opponents of social nudity regularly quote passages of Scripture that deal
with nakedness and shame and they invariably assign the shame to the nakedness
rather than the behavior of the “shamed” person. The truth is this… every
time there’s shame associated with nakedness, there is ALSO a description of the
person’s shameful and sinful behavior! It is indefensible to focus on one
aspect of an account and presume that it alone is the source for the shame
related in the text.
- There are a number of words in the Old Testament that refer to a person
being without clothes. Here’s another very significant FACT about nakedness in
the Bible… of all the Hebrew words that reference nudity, only ONE
(ervah) is ever associated with sin and shame! That
observation by itself should tell us that simple nudity is not the
moral problem Bible people seem to want it to be (see The Meaning of Nakedness).
- Opponents of social nudity conveniently ignore the fact that God created
Adam and Eve (and all of the other creatures in the world) to live naked and
unashamed. It was so significant to His “very good” creation that it merited a
special mention in Genesis 2:25. This very positive attitude about His naked
creation—expressed by the One who cannot change—is completely ignored and/or
discounted. God didn’t change His attitude about the naked human form…
people did! (see Who Hates Nudity… God or Satan?)
- Finally, there’s not ONE passage in all the Bible expressly given
to us in order to inform us of God’s moral view of nakedness (with the possible
exception of Genesis 2:25, which affirms the goodness of nakedness).
Therefore, each and every passage cherry-picked to make a guilty-by-association
argument against nakedness is a passage that was not given to us for
that purpose! Again, if God wanted to tell us what His moral opinion is about
simple nudity, He could have, and He would have. But He didn’t.
We Must Not Be Hermeneutically Lazy
Yes, we can all see that there are passages where nakedness and shame are
closely associated. But
nothing is “Guilty-by-Association” when we
study the Bible to determine moral truth.
Not even for nakedness. It is
simply irresponsible and lazy if someone is willing to accept superficial
conclusions about nudity based solely on the
Guilty-by-Association
argument.
As it turns out, “Guilty-by-Association” is the
only argument that’s
ever been available for use against social nudity, so it’s the only one that
anyone has ever heard. It’s been repeated so frequently that no one ever pays
attention to the fact that very foundation of the argument is false. Nor do they
bother to examine its conclusions and put them under honest hermeneutical
scrutiny.
“Guilty-by-Association” is false. It is
always false. And it’s high
time that solid and trustworthy teachers of the Bible be honest enough about it
to lay it aside… even if it means giving up their opposition to nudity.
— Matthew Neal