Is there any reason that some Bibles have the words of Christ printed in red other than to make the words distinctive?
You’ve fairly well covered it.
The “red-letter” Bibles were introduced by Dr. Louis Klopsch, the first editor of the Christian Herald, in 1901.
CITE.
Here’s one from the Urantia people:
Does it still count?
Does no Bible distinctly highlight the Word of God the Father as this Bible highlights the Word of God the Son?
How about God the Holy Spirit (…He has spoken through the Prophets…)?
Wasn’t this done in The Neverending Story, too? Or something like it, with coloured writing in some parts? Gosh it’s a great book- The Neverending Story, I mean.
The Rainbow Study Bible takes this concept to the extreme by color coding twelve different Biblical concepts. It uses bold underlining for all spoken Words of God (the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit).
In the original ancient hieroglyphic text of the Egyptian Book of the Dead, most of it was written in black, but certain passages were in red. This is not a new idea.
I have a first edition (American) of The Neverending Story, and the text is indeed printed in colors other than black. The “real world” parts of the story are printed in red, while the Fantastica portions of the story are printed in green. This reflects the description of the book Bastian is reading as having been printed in two colors.
Later American editions of this book dropped the two-color scheme–I suspect to save on the costs of printing. The two later editions I have are printed entirely in black text, but with italics representing the portions of the story set in the real world.
When I first saw this thread, it was near one about the Republican states in red and the Democratic states in Blue. The juxtaposition gave me the shudders, and I fled to the Ball State vs. Toledo ball game. The Cardinals upset the Rockets, so I came back to check on this thread. Red over Blue on the hardwood court, but I’m shaking off all that figure-of-speech stuff. The car art arrest in Indianapolis has no bearing on anything else, right?
;);):eek: