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Jason Gaboury

How Holiness Brings Life

Shoots of green plant rising up among dead leaves

I distinctly remember one visit to a church youth event in my teens. In those days, I was a pack-and-a-half-a-day smoker, a punk/hardcore music enthusiast, and comfortable pressing the boundaries of social conformity. The conversation I had in the parking lot of the church has stuck with me for more than 25 years. 

鈥淵ou鈥檙e welcome to come to our group . . .鈥 Christine said, pulling me aside. 鈥淏ut you really can鈥檛 be serious about God if you smoke and . . . uh . . . stuff . . .鈥 

I had no idea what 鈥渟tuff鈥 meant, but the message was clear. There was a holiness test for this group and I didn鈥檛 pass it. Not only did that group of teens view me with suspicion, but they were sure God did too. 

I never went back.

Does Holiness = Judgment?

There鈥檚 an old joke that asks, 鈥淲hy are conservative/holiness Christians so negative about sex?鈥 Answer: 鈥淏ecause it might lead to dancing.鈥 The joke betrays our suspicions, judgments, and anxieties about forms of discipleship that take holiness seriously. Holiness is often associated, at a gut level, with 鈥渉olier than thou鈥 attitudes we鈥檝e experienced from religious people. And we project these attitudes onto God. If God is holy, and holiness is associated with being looked down upon, then we assume God鈥檚 holiness translates to a moral indignation toward us who fail to measure up. Even worse, we associate fun, pleasure, and excitement with sin, while holiness conjures associations of judgment, scrupulosity, and boredom.

Exhortations to 鈥渂e holy because I am holy鈥 (Leviticus 19:2) sound like bad news. Most of us are already investing considerable moral effort in the everyday business of life. The demands of holiness feel like a burden impossible to bear. Who has the energy? 

Two Views of Holiness

But what if this understanding of holiness misses the point? In his book Prayer: Our Deepest Longing, Ronald Rolheiser points out the difference between Hebraic and Greek notions of holiness. In the Greek tradition, says Rolheiser, holiness literally refers to God鈥檚 distinct and unique nature, and is interpreted to mean moral perfection, inscrutability, inexhaustible goodness, and undiminishing quality. 

St. Gregory of Nyssa captures this same idea in The Life of Moses, his book on the spiritual life, which holds up Moses as the ideal disciple. He describes how, motivated by loving desire, Moses climbs the mountain of God, overcoming obstacles and being purged of lesser desires along the way, and finally arrives in a cleft of rock to behold 鈥渁ll the goodness鈥 of God. The final image of Gregory鈥檚 book, taken from , is of Moses in the cleft beholding God鈥檚 back. Gregory sees this as a picture of the disciple鈥檚 ultimate and eternal future: God鈥檚 goodness ever leading onward and the loving disciple, held by grace, pursuing the inexhaustible goodness of God. 

Whether we鈥檙e familiar with the books mentioned above or not, their idea of holiness resonates. Our view of holiness has been shaped by this Greek tradition. And it鈥檚 not all bad. It keeps the bright vision of God鈥檚 character constantly out ahead of us. There is always more to learn, always further to go, an expanding depth of goodness and love.

But this perspective is also limited. For one thing, it can drain and demoralize as easily as it inspires. When Christians invest themselves in ministry and discipleship only to find that they still wrestle with bitterness, resentment, sexual preoccupation, or anxiety, this vision of holiness can be crushing. We may be tempted to give up the pursuit of holiness altogether. But what if there鈥檚 another way? 

The Hebraic concept of holiness is rooted in God鈥檚 uniqueness and power. The God of the Old Testament is the creator of heaven and earth. God has no equal, no successor, and no rival. God alone can create and sustain life in all its wondrous variety. God alone creates humans as image-bearing stewards within creation. If God鈥檚 word and being create life and existence, then God鈥檚 holiness is defined relationally with respect to creation. God鈥檚 holiness denotes distinction from creation in form, substance, and power, and connotes wholeness, life, and generativity. 

In addition, in the Hebraic tradition God鈥檚 holiness is acknowledged and honored in worship. Worship emphasizes God鈥檚 unique place as creator, sustainer, and redeemer. Worship illumines the mind through contemplation of God鈥檚 distinction from his creation. We ponder the holiness of God when we consider the vastness of creation or the scope of redemption. This contemplation quickly exceeds our categories of thought and language. We are led to praise God in the words of the Trisagion: holy, holy, holy. And as we worship, we鈥檙e participating in what holiness denotes: God鈥檚 unique, distinct, and powerful reality upon which we are totally dependent.    

The Hebraic concept of God鈥檚 holiness also includes the constraint of evil and death. Constraint is necessary in a world damaged by evil. If all people were trustworthy, we would have no locks, passwords, or prisons. But constraint is not about avoiding pleasure; rather it is about creating the conditions for life to abound and for death to be restrained. The reason for the moral and ritual law laid out in the Torah in the Old Testament was to enable God鈥檚 life and presence to be tangibly present in the world. Extortion, greed, licentiousness, and exploitation collude with death. The moral law names and constrains this collusion. Blood, corpses, or disease are not sinful in themselves, but they are associated with death, and so the ritual law places constraints around those too. Ultimately the law constrains how people are to relate to God鈥檚 presence. And these constraints connote holiness not by what they forbid, but for what they allow. When evil and death are restrained, life flourishes. 

Imagine my teenage parking lot conversation again. How different it would have been to hear Christine say, 鈥淵ou and I both know that smoking hurts your body. Is it okay to encourage you to quit? God loves your body.鈥 In the conversation that actually happened, smoking is offensive to God. In this reimagined conversation, smoking is offensive to God鈥檚 desire for life, health, and relationship. Perhaps I still wouldn鈥檛 have gone back, but I would have imagined God differently. 

An Invitation to Be Holy

How can we engage with holiness as a gift of life, health, and relationship with God?   

The beauty of God鈥檚 holiness is embodied most profoundly in Jesus. Like the burning coal in , Jesus had a profound ability to transfer holiness to others by touching them. In his ministry, Jesus often touched unholy/unclean people, including lepers, dead bodies, a woman with hemorrhages, and demonized men. His holiness seemed to pass to them, healing their bodies, freeing their minds, restoring them to community. In his death, Jesus offered to God the perfect holy and obedient life that we cannot. In his resurrection, Jesus breathed his Spirit into his people with the profound words, 鈥淎s the Father has sent me, I am sending you . . .鈥 (John 20:21).

The call to holiness is not a call to try harder, enjoy less, and judge more. It鈥檚 a call to contemplate the beauty and wonder of who God is and what God has done in Jesus. It鈥檚 an invitation to order our lives toward wholeness, life, and generativity. It鈥檚 a daring call to rub shoulders with people who, like my teenage self, presume that God is judgmental and angry through the grace and power of the Spirit. 

How are you growing in holiness during this season?


 

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Jason Gaboury serves as the National Director for Alumni Relations. He is the author of and has contributed to and "Drama Team Sketchbook," all published by . You can find articles from Jason Gaboury at and . He and his wife, Sophia, have two children and live in New York City. You can support his ministry .

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