Revelation Chapter 1 verse 14 Holy Bible

ASV Revelation 1:14

And his head and his hair were white as white wool, `white' as snow; and his eyes were as a flame of fire;
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BBE Revelation 1:14

And his head and his hair were white like wool, as white as snow; and his eyes were as a flame of fire;
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DARBY Revelation 1:14

his head and hair white like white wool, as snow; and his eyes as a flame of fire;
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KJV Revelation 1:14

His head and his hairs were white like wool, as white as snow; and his eyes were as a flame of fire;
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WBT Revelation 1:14


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WEB Revelation 1:14

His head and his hair were white as white wool, like snow. His eyes were like a flame of fire.
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YLT Revelation 1:14

and his head and hairs white, as if white wool -- as snow, and his eyes as a flame of fire;
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 14. - His head. From the garments of the great High Priest, St. John passes on to himself. What he had seen as a momentary foretaste of glory at the Transfiguration, he sees now as the abiding condition of the Christ. In Daniel 7:9 "the Ancient of days" has "the hair of his head like pure wool." This snowy whiteness is partly the brightness of heavenly glory, partly the majesty of the hoary head. The Christ appears to St. John as a son of man, but also as a "Divine Person invested with the attributes of eternity." As a flame of fire. "The Lord thy God is a consuming fire" (Deuteronomy 4:24). "I the Lord search the heart, I try the reins" (Jeremiah 17:10). The flame purifies the conscience and kindles the affections.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(14) His head and his hairs were white like wool, as white as snow.--The whiteness here is thought by some to be the token of the transfiguration in light of the glorified person of the Redeemer. "It is the glorious white which is the colour and livery of heaven." This doubtless is true; but it appears to me a mistake to say that there is no hint here of age. It is argued that the white hair of age is a token of decay, and that no such token would have place here; but surely this is straining a point, and making a mere emblem an argument. Age and youth alike have their glories; the glory of young men is their strength; the hoary head, too, the token of experience, dignity, authority, is the glory of age. Physically, white hair may be a sign of decay; typically it never is, else the effort to produce the appearance of it in the persons of monarchs and judges would never have been made. The white head is never in public sentiment other than the venerable sign of ripe knowledge, mature judgment, and solid wisdom; and as such it well betokens that full wisdom and authority which is wielded by the Ancient of Days, who, though always the same in the fresh dew of youth, is yet from everlasting, the captain of salvation, perfect through suffering, radiant in the glorious youthhood of heaven, venerable in that eternal wisdom and glory which He had with the Father before the world. (Comp. Daniel 7:9.) "He was one," Saadias Gaon beautifully says, "with the appearance of an old man, and like an old man full of mercies. His white hair, His white garments, indicated the pure, kind intentions He had to purify His people from their sins."His eyes were as a flame of fire.--Comp. Revelation 19:12; Daniel 10:6. The eyes of the Lord, which are in every place, beholding the evil and the good, are here described as like unto fire, to express not merely indignation (He had looked once on the Jewish rulers in indignation) against evil, but determination to consume it; for our God is a consuming fire, purging away sin from those who forsake sin, and consuming in their sin those who refuse to be separated from it. (See Revelation 20:9; Daniel 7:9-10; Jude 1:7.) . . .