Point-of-View
Holiness of God calls for surrender of preferences
By JOHN SULLIVAN
Executive Director-Treasurer,
Florida Baptist Convention
Published January 29, 2004
Any discussion of God must begin with His holiness. The
holiness of God is a demand! He did not say, "Be as holy as
I am," but he did say, "Be holy for I am holy."
Adrian Rogers in the book, Kingdom Authority, makes
an interesting observation: "We often speak of commitment
but the real issue is surrender!" With surrender you
relinquish control to the holiness of God. You give up all
personal preference at the cross.
The word "holy" is first used in Exodus 3:5 when
Moses encounters God. Let me share an outline on Gods
holiness:
I. HOLINESS DEFINED
- Holiness is the essential nature of God.
- Not so much an attribute, but the complete
foundation.
- Closely related to His majesty and mystery as it
separates Him from all creation.
- What is mystery? Mystery is holy. Mystery
is authoritative. God reveals Himself as
the great solution to all mystery.
- Interestingly our chief knowledge of Gods
holiness comes from our encounter with
unholiness. We know what sin is; God is
not that. We know what injustice is; God
is not that. We know what evil is; God is
not that. We know what hell is; God is
not that.
Holiness is closely related to His moral/ethical
dimension.
- Moral: what we are doing; daily we commit sins of
thought, deed, words, which we often stop
noticing. But Holy God does not wink at them.
- Ethical: what we ought to be doing; In the
pursuit of holiness these move closer together.
Holiness will protect my reputation and serve Gods
reputation; we must never get those turned around!
All holiness found in the world is Gods holiness.
Were it not for the holiness of God, the world would be a
dark black hole, "where all idealism would be drawn
into the storm of our arrogance and lust for power."
(Calvin Miller)
II. THE HOLINESS OF GOD BOTH ATTRACTS AND REPELS
- Moses was attracted, wanting to get as close as possible.
(v.3)
- The burning bush is a great fascination. The
flame is indicative of the actual presence of God.
(Ex. 19:17-18; Ezekiel 1:27; 1 Timothy 6:16)
- When we deny the miracle of the bush we
alter Gods holiness. His holiness
must be attached to His miracles.
Fascination with the event led to faith
encounter for Moses. He could now see
beyond the seeable and know beyond the
knowable.
- The voice of God becomes a great affirmation.
When vision begins to speak, the presence of
deity is affirmed. (Isaiah 6:3)
- Holiness comes to us as we immerse our
faith in unknown circumstances. "We
acquire maturity not in dingy lecture
halls but on crosses." (Calvin
Miller) We are made strong by experience
and inquiry.
- Rapid change is happening in our busy
world but the great affirmation is: In
Him there are no variables or "shadow
of turning."
- Moses trembled indicating a great hesitation. (Acts
7:32) "Saying, I am the God of thy fathers,
the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the
God of Jacob. Then Moses trembled."
- The holiness of God demands reverence (3:5)
- Moses took off his shoes in an
act of reverence to the lofty
mystery. Some essen tial elements
cannot be compromised in our
intellectual system and can only
be explained by symbolism.
- Moses would not look.
- Jesus is Gods final testimony of holiness;
a great emancipation. (Hebrews 10:19) "Having
there fore, brethren, boldness to enter into the
holiest by the blood of Jesus."
- Holiness cannot help but recoil from
guilt whether in the Garden of Eden or
the Garden of Gethsemene.
- Grace comes to us through Jesus
Christ.
- We enter the holiness of
God through the blood of
Christ.
- Jesus is the perfect Lamb
of God. He was slain from
the foundation of the
world. (Rev. 5 "Who
can open the book?")
"Holiness is not
holi- ness until it goes
out in love, seeks the
sinner in grace and
reacts on His sin by
judging it." (The
Creative Theology of P. T.
Forsyth: Samuel J.
Mikolaski)
- The New Testament is
concerned about the
holiness of God as it
reacts to mans sin
as grace and radiates to
the world as love.
- God sees us as perfect in
His son as He sees us
through the blood.
- Jesus does not conform to
a standard of holiness.
He is the standard.
A person of faith can never change the world unless the
holiness of God changes him or her. Our election is not a call to
favoritism but a call to holy living. The Gospel is Gods
passion for the clarity of our lives.
I cannot answer all of the tension between sovereignty and
free will, but I do know when my freedom is in sync with Gods
sovereignty, holiness is the product of my life. When this
happens the world does not need a microscope, telescope or
horoscope to know that I am a citizen of a holy nation!
This is the second in a
series called The Doctrine of God.