• THE HOLINESS OF GOD

    From Carolyn Hoffman to All on Saturday, January 31, 2026 07:03:29


    THE HOLINESS OF GOD


    Holiness is an attribute of God which is so full that one
    wonders where to start. However, of all the attributes of God,
    this one is mentioned or referred to more than any other. "God
    is oftener styled Holy than Almighty, and set forth by this part
    of His dignity more than by any other. This is more fixed on as
    an epithet to His name than any other. You never find it ex-
    pressed 'His mighty name' or 'His wise name,' but His great name,
    and most of all, His holy name. This is the greatest title of
    honour; in this latter doth the majesty and venerableness of his
    name appear" (Stephen Charnock, taken from _The Attributes of
    God_ by A. W. Pink). To deny God of holiness is in essence to
    deny God. For if God be not holy, then, He would not be pure,
    and He could not create nor make laws nor judge righteously. In
    essence, He would be unholy which is a contradiction to the very
    nature of God.
    I. What is holiness? Simply stated it means to be holy or
    pure; to be without sin or any defilement from the heart. To say
    the word is almost enough to define it--it has a sound of purity.
    Also, the word carries the meaning of separation; to be set
    apart. And truly God is set apart from all other beings in every
    way.
    Holiness is one of those attributes of God which is com-
    municable. By this, we simply mean that God communicates or
    gives it, in a limited way, to man. Let us not think that we
    shall every be as holy as God.
    II. Wherein does God's holiness lie? God's holiness is in
    and of Himself originally; man's holiness can only be in and of
    God. There is no holinesss prior nor superior to God's. He is
    the source and fountain of all holiness. Even the holy angels
    derive their holiness from God and not from within themselves.
    For God to swear by His holiness is for Him to swear by Himself
    (Heb. 6:13; Ps. 89:35; Amos 4:2; 6:8).
    In Psalms 27:4, David said, "One thing have I desired of the
    Lord, that will I seek after; that I may dwell in the house of
    the Lord all the days of my life, to behold the beauty of the
    Lord, and to inquire in His temple." What is "the beauty of the
    Lord" but the beauty of His holiness (II Chron. 20:21). Not to
    see the beauty of holiness is not to see the beauty of God. In
    Exodus 15:11, God is declared "glorious in holiness." Listen
    again to Charnock: "Power is God's hand or arm, omniscience His
    eye, mercy His bowels, eternity His duration, but holiness is His
    beauty." Therefore, to see the beauty and glory of God is to see
    His holiness.
    While the majority of Christendom stresses and emphasizes
    the love of God, the Scriptures magnify His holiness. Therefore,
    we can see the importance of knowing more about God's holiness
    because to do so is to see His beauty and glory.
    III. How holy is God? When we think of something being
    pure, without spot, having no sin nor any such thing, we think of
    it as being holy. In fact, we who are the people of God look
    forward to the day when we will be with God in glory and not have
    any sin. But when this comes to pass, we will not be as holy as
    God is (I Sam. 2:2). Though the redeemed will be without sin and
    will stand before God "holy and without blame" (Eph. 1:4), yet,
    their holiness is not derived within themselves. And if they
    were to become inherently holy after the work of God in their
    lives, there would remain the time prior to this when they were
    not holy, but were living in darkness (Eph. 5:8). In God there
    is "no darkness at all" (I Jn. 1:5). God is so pure that ab-
    solutely considered, He cannot "look on iniquity" (Hab. 1:13).
    The idea that God can look at sin and iniquity and pass it by is
    false. God, who is omniscient, sees and knows all things, even
    sin and iniquity. He is so pure and holy that He will bring
    "every work into judgment" (Ecc. 12:14; 11:9; Pv. 24:9). It is a
    greater contrast to compare God's holiness to that of man's than
    to compare the sun to a cinder of coal.
    Those holy angels who have never sinned and have retained
    their purity from creation are holier than man. However, God's
    Word says that even they are not pure in the presence of God (Job
    4:17-18). Yes, even they have to cover their faces in heaven
    when singing of the Lord's glorious holiness (Isa. 6:2-3). This
    is not to say that the angels are impure in any way, but that
    their holiness cannot be compared to God's. And remember that
    God derives His holiness from Himself, but the angels, like man,
    receive their holinesss from God and not from within themselves.
    The only reason the angels remain sinless and unfallen is because
    of God upholding them.
    IV. How is God's holiness manifested? First, the holiness
    of God is seen in creation. When God created the heavens and the
    earth and all things therein, He said that "it was very good"
    (Gen. 1:31). When one drives across this earth and sees the
    towering mountains, luscious valleys, the green trees, and beau-
    tiful flowers, along with the various and sundry cattle, beast,
    and all creeping things, together with the stars, moons, suns and
    planets, with the mighty oceans, he is made to say that God cre-
    ated all things good. The creation as we know it has been under
    the influence of the curse of sin for about 6,000 years. There-
    fore, as we now view the creation it is vile, filthy, wicked and
    ugly compared to its original state. With all this, we can still
    say with the Psalmist, "The Lord is righteous in all His ways,
    and holy in all His works" (Ps. 145:17).
    Second, the holiness of God is seen in His works of provi-
    dence. God did not create and then withdraw Himself. No, He is
    continuing to keep the earth on its axis, the stars in their
    sockets, the sun and moon in their paths, and supplies man and
    beast with daily bread (Heb. 1:1-3; Mt. 6:26-32; job 26:7; 38:39-
    41). To see trials and wickedness on every hand, and, yet, know-
    ing that all these things work to the good of the people of God
    and His glory (Rom. 8:28; Eph. 1:11), one is made to know that
    only a holy God can do such things.
    Third, the holiness of God is seen in His law. This is that
    perfect standard which reveals God's character. Here we only
    need to look at Rom. 7:12 and Ps. 19:8-9.
    Fourth, the holiness of God is shown in its greatest
    strength in His hatred for sin. It was the holiness of God that
    drove Adam and Eve out of the garden; cursed Cain; destroyed the
    world in the days of Noah; took David's child and let not the
    sword depart from his house; and, destroyed Israel and Judah with
    the Assyrians and Babylonians. But the highest display of the
    holiness of God was when Jesus Christ died on the cross. Stephen
    Charnock said, "Not all the vials of judgment that have or shall
    be poured out upon the wicked world, nor the flaming furnace of a
    sinner's conscience, nor the irreversible sentence pronounced
    against the rebellious demons, nor the groans of the damned crea-
    tures, give such a demonstration of God's hatred of sin, as the
    wrath of God let loose upon His Son. Never did Divine holiness
    appear more beautiful and lovely than at the time our Saviour's
    countenance was most marred in the midst of His dying groans.
    This Himself acknowledges in Psa. 22. When God had turned His
    smiling face from Him, and thrust His sharp knife into His heart,
    which forced that terrible cry from Him, 'My God, My God, why
    hast Thou forsaken Me?' He adores this perfection--'Thou art
    holy,' v. 3."
    May we like the angels in heaven "rest not day and night,
    saying, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is,
    and is to come" (Rev. 4:8).

    Jimmy Barber
    February 26, 1991
    Copyright, 1991, Veritas Publications
    829 Angelina Place
    Memphis, TN 38122-5417



    Carol,
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