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"But as He which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all
manner of conversation; because it is
written, Be ye holy; for I am holy." I Peter 1:15-16
In the past several pamphlets we have heard the Scriptures
speak to us on those attributes of God
which are revealed by that powerful and beautiful name of God, Jehovah.
As we understood somewhat the
meaning of the independence, spirituality, sovereignty, eternity,
omnipresence, immutability, omniscience,
and omnipotence of God, we stood amazed, did we not? In this
knowledge of God we rejoice; we will
boast in nothing else than the knowledge we have of Him through
Jesus Christ!
There is another group of divine attributes sometimes called
God's ethical perfections, sometimes
called His communicable attributes. In distinction from those
listed above, these are the virtues which God
shares with His redeemed people and works in them through the Spirit
of Christ. We have in mind God's
holiness, grace, mercy, love, righteousness, wisdom and long-suffering.
Scripture not only sets forth these
wonderful virtues of God, but also clearly indicates that holiness
is the chief or outstanding ethical virtue
that is in God. He is the Holy One of Israel! He is
called holy, or referred to as holy, more than any other
virtue.
That holiness is the greatest of God's virtues is revealed
in the opening verse of Isaiah 6. There,
Isaiah records a vision in which he sees the Lord upon a throne
in His temple, surrounded by seraphim
which cry out to each other, "Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of hosts;
the whole earth is filled with His glory."
These angels, which cover their faces with two of their wings before
the great glory of God, can only repeat
themselves, when they would express His great glory; it is
almost unutterable! And that astonishing glory
of God, a glory that fills the whole earth, is His holiness!
All kinds of gods are being preached in the
church nowdays, but it is not being preached according to Scripture,
and it is not being preached enough,
that our God is a holy God!
That which is holy is the opposite of that which is common
or profane. We find in Scripture many
things which were called holy because they were separated from common
usage and dedicated to God with
a special purpose. We read of the Holy City, Jerusalem; there
was the Holy Temple, with its Holy Place
and Most Holy Place. So too there were holy priests, holy
Sabbaths, holy water, a holy covenant, holy
angels, and the holy law. And even the words saints, sanctify,
and purify come from the root word which
means holy.
The word holy has the literal meaning of "to cut, to separate,"
and thus it contains the idea of
apartness or separation. Thus, two important truths are included
in the idea of holiness, and we must
certainly understand this today; that which is holy is separate
from all that is common, ordinary, sinful and
corrupt; and that which is holy is set apart and dedicated
to that which is good, namely God. When God
says, "I am holy," both these aspects stand out very clearly, for
God is absolutely separate from all sin,
darkness and the lie. His eyes are too pure to behold evil,
and He cannot even tempt a man with evil. In
God there is a total abhorrence and detestation of all sin.
At the same time, He is dedicated unto Himself as
the highest possible good! The thrice holy God, in all His
thoughts, speech, actions, covenant activity is
perfectly self-centered. God always seeks Himself and works
towards the glorification of Himself. And
when we consider God's dealings with the children of men, then also
He is spotlessly holy so that He can
only resist the proud and destroy the wicked. Over against
all that is evil our God is a consuming fire; His
jealousy burns against that which is not as holy as He!
It hardly needs saying that the Lord Jesus Christ, the eternal
Son of God in our flesh, is also holy.
When Gabriel announced His birth to the virgin Mary he said, "Therefore
also that holy thing which shall
be born of thee shall be called the Son of God," a reference to
the human nature of Christ. He shall be a
holy thing, a holy man! Later in His ministry Jesus was confronted
by a man with an unclean spirit (demon)
which cried out, "I know thee who thou art: the holy one of
God." The devil knew that Jesus and he had
nothing in common, that Jesus was perfectly consecrated to the cause
of God and therefore must destroy all
that is opposed to God and His kingdom. Oh, the holiness that
was always manifest in Jesus! He hated sin
in all its forms and He burned with zeal for His Father's house.
How that zeal consumed Him! Hear Him
cry out, "My Father worketh hereto, and I work." And that
work of Christ was not Christ-centered but
always God-centered; Jesus was perfectly holy!
Let us see a moment that holiness for man means that precise
same thing as it does for God. As
God is separate from sin and dedicated to Himself, so man must live
separately from all sin and dedicate
himself to God alone. The moment man becomes in any way self-centered,
he sins; he begins to serve
himself or some idol for he cannot serve God and mammon. Man
is not the highest good, God is. Man is
not the purpose of creation, God is. Man is not even the end
or goal of salvation, but the glory of God is.
That needs emphasis today. In the churches today there is
a rampant religious humanism that makes
salvation center about man and his happiness. Religion is
there for whatever a man can get out of it. I will
go to church, I will offer my gifts, for what I can get out of it
for myself! What a corruption of the purpose
of the holy God! We must view our church membership, our salvation,
our going to heaven, our living now
as God's holy people, all in the context of the glory of God!
Thus we must see nest that God is holy in salvation.
He maintain His holiness when He saves unto
Himself a church. The love of God does not operate at the
expense of holiness, but it reached us in the way
of His holiness. The first chapter of I Peter abounds in references
to our salvation. (Confer verses 1-14.)
Peter goes on to say that we have not been redeemed with corruptible
things such as silver and gold, for the
most precious things of this world would not do us a bit of good!
We have been redeemed with the
precious blood of Christ, Who is the Lamb without spot or blemish.
In order to be our head and
representative before God, Christ had to be spotlessly holy that
His holiness might be ours. For the holy
God cannot dwell with the sinners, and cannot live in the same covenant
household with sinners. To take
His people unto Himself in the friendship of the covenant, God makes
them righteous first of all, and then
He makes them holy as He is holy. In other words, God makes
His people saints!!
The purpose of Christ in taking our place in judgment is
that He might redeem us from all iniquity,
and purify unto Himself a people zealous of good works. Just
as with the Old Testament sin offering, the
blood of which was carried into the Holy of Holies, and the body
of which was burned without the camp, so
Jesus died outside Jerusalem, presenting His blood to God in the
heavens as the perfect blood of atonement.
In this way, He "presents to God a glorious church, not having spot
or wrinkle, or any such thing; but that it
should be holy and without blemish." And behind that justifying
and sanctifying work of Christ is the
holiness of God Who can have no fellowship with darkness, but Who
would surround Himself with a holy
people in Jesus Christ.
This mighty God of Salvation calls His people, "with a holy
calling." And He says to them, "Be ye
holy in all manner of conversation." the word conversation
has the meaning of all of life's relationships,
departments and aspects. We are to be separate from sin and
dedicated to God in all that we do! There
may be no question about it whatsoever that we are indeed saints!
Not simply that we are church-goers, but
holy children of God in word and in truth! The apostle says
in verse 14 that we are to do this as obedient
children; children must always be characterized by obedience.
And since we are adopted into the family of
God, our obedience must be unto Him. We are called to love
Him and seek Him. We are called to love
what God loves, and hate what God hates. And the apostle warns
us that we are not to conform ourselves to
former lusts, to the motions of our sinful natures, to carnal, unlawful
desires. God has called us out of that
and away from that so that we are not to walk in those lusts or
in that ignorance any longer.
Sadly it is very easy to be conformed to such things again,
for those lusts are in our flesh and sin is
appealing to our flesh. The things of which we read in the
newspapers, the thins that are promoted in the
movies and the television programs, the things that we know are
corrupt and displeasing, that appeal to the
old man of sin in us. And that means we are called to fight
valiantly against all sin. The saint wants to be
holy, because God is holy and because God calls us to be holy; but
he who would be holy must fight! And
there is nothing in all this world to support you or sustain you
in that fight. The only thing that will support
you is that which God has placed in your heart, and which God nourishes
with His Word and Spirit. We are
sanctified by obeying the truth through the Spirit (Verse 22).
Actually the Greek does not say "Be holy," but it states,
"Become holy." this makes clear that
sanctification is a process that continues throughout the Christian's
life. In Christ we are holy in principle so
that before God we are clothed in white robes of dazzling splendor.
But as long as we live on this earth we
still continue to sin and we stain our garments with the filth of
sin. Therefore God comes to us through the
Gospel trying us as by fire, chastening us with sore remedies, that
the impure may be burned away and the
rebellious may be driven out. As the all-wise, holy Father,
God knows how to warn, admonish, exhort, and
threaten us even as He preaches the sweet Gospel of Jesus Christ
to us.
Thus we finish our earthly pilgrimage as strangers on the
earth with our faces toward heavenly
Jerusalem, touching not the unclean thing. One day soon Jesus
will appear. We don't know just what we
will be at that time, but we know that when Jesus appears, "we shall
be like Him, for we shall see Him as He
is!" That is our hope. And every man that hath this
hope in him purifieth himself, even as He is pure!
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