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What is Holiness?Mel Lawrenz is Teaching Pastor at Elmbrook Church. His most recent book is about dealing with loss, A Chronicle of Grief: Finding Life After Traumatic Loss. _____________________________________ The idea that we need someone else’s help to do what seems to be our responsibility is hard for many people to accept. Living a “clean” life is our responsibility, and we can’t pull it off on our own. Have you ever made a resolution to improve your life in some significant way, and been disappointed to find that your resolve lasted about thirty days (or thirty minutes), and then you were back to your old ways? I’m not talking about something as simple as changing your eating habits or exercise. I’m talking about change of the heart. “I’m going to start being a patient person—right now!” “I’m going to decide not to have this hot anger inside that keeps burning other people.” “I’m going to stop obsessing about the things I want and stop being jealous of others who have more than I do.” I, I, I. It's like asking a man standing in a barrel how far off the ground he thinks he can lift himself. The list could go on and on. Certainly there are people who would step forward and say, "I have made resolutions to change my basic attitude, and to behave better around other people, and I think I’ve improved, so don’t tell me I need God’s help." But that raises a couple of questions: Where, then, did you get the concept of how your life could be better? And where do you think you got the desire to clean up your act if not from God? And how complete and enduring do you want that purification to be? But the most important question is about the forward trajectory of our lives: What are we counting on to get us on the right track, keep us on the right track, and have the spiritual energy to move down that track? “Holiness” means distinctiveness or separateness. Over a thousand times in the Old Testament someone or something is called “holy.” Usually it is God, who is utterly distinct—not in the sense of being removed, uninvolved, or indifferent—but in the sense of being pure. Other times the word is used of teaching devices in the Old Testament to drive home the point that amid the commonness of this world's pollution , some things can be different. A holy priesthood, holy rites, even holy (consecrated) temple, altar, and temple furnishings. To seek purification is to seek differentness. Things can be better than they are. Human beings can be better than they typically are. We can do better than the vulgar (a word whose root means “common). Your experience in life can be higher and better than living like a breathing/eating/working machine with soft parts. Now here is where that differentness begins: God’s declaration. When the New Testament talks about those who are “saints” (literally, “holy ones"), it means all those who have a connection with God by believing in Christ. The apostle Paul begins many of his letters by addressing "the saints" in the churches he is writing to, by which he means all the believers, not just a separate super-holy class. Here is a simple but radical idea: because a believer belongs to God, he or she has been “set apart” by God even before he or she starts acting “set apart” or holy. You are a saint, in other words, even before you act like one. It is like a parent teaching a growing child to think bigger thoughts, use bigger words, act on bigger principles, by speaking that way. You teach a twelve-year-old a bigger vocabulary by using fifteen-year-old words. That’s the picture we get in the Bible of special priestly garments and temple furniture that were “set apart,” as were prophets, priests, and kings. All it takes is a declaration from God. He says, that table will be my altar, that man will be my prophet, that land will be a place of promise, that Abram will become Abraham. How did Abraham qualify to be the father of a nation, and the picture of faith to the whole world? God chose, Abram believed, and so he was set apart. Any who believe in Jesus Christ have been declared by God—holy!
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