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Thou wilt sin-cleanse me, or un-sin me: i.e. expiate by the blood of a sin offering.
~ E.W. Bullinger
The Rev. F. B. Meyer, in the course of his visitation, saw a woman hanging out clothes which impressed him as being unusually white, for which he commended her. After spending a short time with her in the house, and coming to the door, he found a flurry of snow had whitened the ground. “Ah,” said Mr. Meyer, “the clothes do not look so white as they did.” “Oh, sir,” cried the woman, “the clothes are right; but what can stand against God Almighty’s white?”
Biblical Illustrator
His soul was stained with the most horrid and revulsive sins
What could be blacker than this man [King David] as he lay in his sins? His soul was stained with the most horrid and revulsive sins. Yet he seeks to be washed and knows that, when washed, he will we clean, whiter than the driven snow. Ah, that virgin flake is very white, as it spreads its delicate network on the withered leaf: but there is one thing whiter still. Who are these in white robes, and whence came they? These are they that came out of great tribulation; out of dark pits of sin and death. Some were thieves, and some were murderers: and some were adulterers and murderers combined, as David was. Manasseh is there, who filled the streets of Jerusalem with innocent blood; and Mary Magdalene, out of whom Christ cast seven devils; and thousands more, once vile as they: but now there is not a stain on their garments; they have all been washed in the blood of the Lamb, and they are all whiter than snow, without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing. ~ T. Alexander
'Scarlet' Isaiah 1:18 | Coleen Pienaar
This is a prayer that is characterized by utter desperation, coupled with supremely confident hope. When the guilt-burdened penitent prays, “Wash me,” he is certain that he has reached a point at which he cannot wash himself. He lets go of all dependences he had previously tried to lean upon, precisely as Naaman did when he gave up his pleading for the rivers of Damascus, and started for the Jordan, commanded to bathe there and be clean. He accepts help on the helper’s terms. ~ C.S. Robinson
Hyssop: an emblem of Christ
The hyssop hath many things wherein it represents Christ very nigh.
It is obscure, humble and abject; so that Solomon is said to have written of all trees, from the cedar the highest tree, opposed to the hyssop springing out of the wall, that is to the basest and most common: growing amongst stones, not through man’s industry planted, as other trees are. So Christ in whom we believe was contemptible, in Him was no beauty, with Him no riches or earthly honors, which make men come in credit and account.
Hyssop is bitter and sour, not pleasant to the drinkers: so the cross of Christ, by which our affections are mortified, is very odious to the flesh, and agrees not with its taste. His cross is therefore a stumbling-block to the Jews, and folly to the Gentiles.
Albeit it be sour, yet it is most wholesome: so albeit the doctrine of repentance (wherein we are taught to run out of ourselves and to take hold on Christ) be irksome and unsavory to the flesh, yet it is wholesome to the soul. Natural men esteem this doctrine to be an enemy to them, which would slay their corruptions and lusts. Medicine, which at first seems bitter, afterwards becomes more comfortable: so the doctrine which is salted with salt and hyssop, is fitter for us than that which is sweetened with honey; for honey was never appointed to be used in the Lord’s sacrifices, but salt.
~ A. Symson
Do we quite believe it? That the hyssop is bound to the scarlet robe of the King, and tied to the cedar of the cross, and dipped in the blood and water, and bound up with the living bird—the Divine nature of Jesus Christ? Do we quite believe it, that we can have something more to help us, beyond the strong resolution, so often broken; more than the effort of our own will—the grace of the blood of Jesus Christ Himself, to help us to overcome the old sin.
Canon Newbolt