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ReVision

Holiness

Holiness doesn't just happen, especially if you don't value it.

Keeper of Values (5)

Therefore, having these promises, beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God. 2 Corinthians 7.1

The logical corollary
The work of revival is that process by which we “cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit”, as Paul puts it. We won’t have much incentive to embrace revival as a value unless we’re actively seeking the Kingdom of righteousness, peace, and joy in the Spirit to which God is calling us. Hearing and seeking God’s calling are the top priorities in our conscience; revival follows day by day as a result of our journeying toward the Kingdom and overcoming obstacles along the way.

But revival must be undertaken against a backdrop and within a framework that allows us to know when our work of revival is on target. And that background is what Paul refers to as holiness, the holiness that comes from being immersed in the holy and righteous and good Law of God (Rom. 7.12). When revival is a working value in our conscience and life, and we are being cleansed in soul and body of all filthiness and every Kingdom-deterring thought, affection, word, or deed, then we’ll be in position to perfect holiness, as Paul instructs.

So we need to understand what holiness is, and what it should look like in our lives.

Understanding holiness
God is at work in everyone who believes in order to perfect holiness. We won’t achieve complete holiness in this life. That awaits the day when, as we see Jesus face to face, we are finally, fully, and uniquely made holy, made like Him (1 Jn. 3.1-3). If this is what we hope for, then we’ll want to add to the values that define our conscience and life by giving holiness a prominent place in the driver’s seat of the soul.

But what is holiness? Holiness is both the reflection of God and His character, and the refraction of that glorious image into the world through our lives. God is holy; but God shows His holiness to the world through those who are being cleansed of all filthiness of flesh and spirit, and who are working to perfect holiness in the fear of God. God is holy. Christ is holy. The Law of God is holy. The standards of holiness, in other words, are readily available.

The question is whether we will so value holiness as to embrace those standards and work toward achieving them in every aspect of our lives.

Begin here
Paul’s counsel is that the pursuit of holiness must take place within the proper framework, and that framework is the fear of God. If holiness is to be a working value in our conscience, then the fear of God must be a settled affection – as we have seen, the primary affection – in our heart.

Why should we fear God? Well, because He’s God – holy, good, true, righteous, loving, merciful, all-powerful, and hating evil, and we are none of these. We need to remember that, in a very real sense, we have no business seeking to be in the presence of God, or to know Him in His glory. Apart from Jesus Christ, that way is the way to complete annihilation.

Yet because of Jesus we can seek the Kingdom and glory of God, Who is calling us to these. Even so, along the way we may find ourselves remiss in the work of revival, of cleansing ourselves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit. God loves us more than we love ourselves, and to help us along the way toward His Kingdom and glory, He will from time to time lead us through some difficult places, and subject us to some unpleasant conditions which we’d just as soon avoid (Heb. 12.3-11).

So we should fear the Lord simply because of what He’s capable of doing when it comes to sinners like you and me. We do not want to know His discipline and displeasure, and so, in fear of being subjected to that, we work hard at perfecting holiness.

But that means we must have a clear vision of what holiness looks like in a human life, and here we can do no better than to study Jesus and follow Him in the path of obedience to God’s commandments (1 Jn. 2.1-6).

The more we read, meditate, and understand the Law of God, and all His holy Word, the more He will form us into the holiness or righteousness He desires for us (Ps. 1). And the more we study and meditate on Jesus, as we see Him in the gospels and contemplate Him risen and exalted in glory, the clearer will be our understanding of the standard of holiness which must inform our thoughts, shape our affections, and come to expression in our words and deeds.

Value holiness! Take seriously the apostle’s command to bring holiness to perfection. Let every work of revival which God accomplishes in your soul and life be but one more brick in the edifice of holiness God is building you to be. Every increase of holiness – God’s work in us toward which we earnestly strive and constantly labor – will bring us that much closer to realizing God’s calling for us.

For reflection
1.  Why is fearing God linked to growing in holiness? How can we nurture a healthy fear of God?

2.  Perfecting holiness suggest having certain kinds of goals for our walk with the Lord. Can you suggest some goals that might help you to grow in holiness?

3.  How can believers help one another in this value of perfecting holiness?

Next steps - Transformation: Do you agree that Christians should cultivate fear of the Lord? Why or why not? How would you counsel a new believer to “perfect holiness in the fear of God”? Talk with a church leader about these questions.

T. M. Moore

This is part 4 of an 8-part series on Purifying the Conscience. To download this week’s study as a free PDF, click here.

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Except as indicated, Scripture taken from the New King James Version. © Copyright 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

T.M. Moore

T. M. Moore is principal of The Fellowship of Ailbe, a spiritual fellowship in the Celtic Christian tradition. He and his wife, Susie, make their home in the Champlain Valley of Vermont.
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