Putting On a New Way of Life (Ephesians 4:17-32)
In the early church (2nd to 4th centuries), re-robing was a central symbolic ritual in which newly baptized adults, having stripped off their clothing before baptism, were clothed in new white garments upon emerging from the water; this action symbolized leaving behind the “old man” of sin and putting on Christ and a new life, with the white garments representing purification, innocence, and being clothed in the righteousness of Christ. The rite commonly followed a pattern of renunciation and immersion in which candidates stripped before baptism to signify death to the old life, were immersed, and then were given new white clothing, and the re-robing itself carried special significance that was often connected to Galatians 3:27 and Ephesians 4:24, emphasizing that those baptized into Christ have “put on” Christ. In his letter to the Ephesians, the apostle Paul invites us into this very transformation. He tells us that we are to put away our former way of life and be renewed in the sp...