Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Holiness

Have you ever thought about the word "holy"? It's used in a lot of different ways. For example "Holy Cow!" Or, "my old jeans have holy (holey) knees." But I don't really care about those particular usages, because they're too silly and pointless even for this blog. I want to focus on a very different usage, which is the way it's used in church.
We say things like "God is holy" all the time. The word is used in tens of thousands of worship songs. But what does it mean to be holy?
There are several simple qualifications. First of all, you have to be sinless to be holy. Anyone who is holy never sins, and never has. Not once. One sin, no matter how small, destroys the holiness in the same way that a brick destroys glass. All you've got left are a bunch of little bits of holiness.
The next qualification is perfection. This one is a lot more harsh, and seems to be mentioned less than holiness. Well, "perfection" is mentioned quite often in relation to God, but no one really seems to expound upon the theme.
Perfection is one of the things that keeps the Bible from being politically correct. In the Old Testament, along with the rest of the Law, God gives instructions on what can and cannot be sacrificed. He basically saws that He will only accept a perfect lamb--meaning that it cannot be blind, deaf, lame, etc.
Any handicap makes a person imperfect, and therefore that person is not holy. If you are reading this and you're blind, deaf or lame, don't quit reading yet. There's yet another qualification.
To be holy, a person must be clean. This excludes a pretty big portion of all the people in the world. I'll just mention a few things about cleanliness. If you want the rest you can read the book of Leviticus.
Anyone with any kind of skin disease is unclean. Sorry, this doesn't just include leprosy. It also applies to simple little things like warts and sores.
Anyone who is sick is unclean.
Anyone who has eaten an unclean animal is unclean.
Anyone who has touched an unclean thing or person.
And so on.
Basically, the point is that holiness is not an easy thing to attain. In fact, it's impossible. But God is holy. God is sinless, perfect and clean. He is absolutely holy.
So, think about holiness for a while, and tomorrow I'll talk about infinity.
Goodbye, valiant reader,
Mitchell the unholy

2 comments:

Kevin said...

A question: Does one want to be holy? You give reasons for why someone isn't holy, even though the first one would be enough (for all have sinned and fall short.) Yes, God is holy but should someone (any human) try to attain that which they cannot?

Just some thoughts. Keep writing, I enjoy it.

Melissa Nelson said...

In response to Kevin's question: Interesting thought. Why even try to attain something we know we cannot attain--holiness in this case? But if we never try, we never even come close. If we know that holiness pleases God, shouldn't we at least do our best? Doesn't our love for Him mean we should give it our best shot? If nothing else, it helps us to appreciate how great and awesome His holiness is.

And I think God's standards are high, but they are good for us. I know in college I never figured I could get a 4.0, but I had a goal of doing my best and that at least kept my grades high. That was good for me. If I'd have given up because I couldn't do it, I wouldn't have even passed a single class.

So we first have to understand holiness, and then strive for it. Even if we never reach that goal, we grow by trying.

Well, those are my thoughts anyway.