I’m ashamed to admit that in my early years as a Christian I used to brag about my UN-answered very ‘selfless-sounding’ prayer when Mike and I were in a career bind. We were living in England and he was ‘stuck’ in a commission-only sales job and hated what the stress was doing to his body. Nurtured by a small group from our church, we began to learn about God from the Bible. Since we were in a bind about this job crisis, we crafted a spiritual request:
- Father, just show us your will and we will do it!
No matter how much we pleaded with God, we didn’t receive any nudges or clues from God about what to do job-wise. In the end, we stumbled our way through several dead ends and moved back to the States. Even after we were finally settled into a new career path for Mike, I often shared the story of this ‘failed’ prayer request.
It wasn’t until years later that I learned what God’s will for my life was. It’s the same as for your life, if you are a Christian. And it’s bigger than individual problems or unpleasant life circumstances.
It’s called RADICAL HOLINESS.
Before you flinch at either word, BREATHE! We’ll look at each word and find some good news.
Let’s take up first the term, ‘holy’. It should come as no surprise that God wants us to be holy. He started with Abraham and grew a separated people, the Hebrews, to BE holy. The OT is the story of how they, like us, kept failing at their calling. Take a look at a few verses:
- Be holy, as I am holy (found in the OT, for example in Lev 20:26 as well as in the NT, for example in 1 Peter 1:16)
- For it is God’s will that you should be holy (or sanctified) 1 Thess 4:3 holiness or sanctification is Hagiosmos in Greek (we get the word hagiography, referring to stories about the saints, aka believers)
What about the first concept of ‘radical’? Is that crazy-wild holiness like John the Baptist, complete with eating flying insects and getting stung gathering honey?
Not specifically. I don’t doubt that this forerunner committed his life to growing into God’s holiness. But the TRUE meaning of radical is ROOT. We are to be like God down to our very roots, not just LOOK holy to wow each other.
It’s the difference between eye-impressing pietistic outward behaviors and growing in godliness from the surface all the way to your core.
I have to admit that on the surface that might sound boring. If so, then the fault lies in me and how I think about holiness. There’s also the very real problem that God is committed to transforming me closer to the image of Jesus, whether I find his goal for me exciting or not! And he does this by…….
organizing one training exercise…… after another trial….. after some practice after.. every single day! (repeat until we graduate, aka go to be with him!)
I was reading a bit last night in John Piper’s book, Future Grace. His premise is that all of God’s promises in the Bible are units of grace that are future to us. AND they are as sure as God himself is the following:
- who he says he is (as written in His book, the Bible),
- and who he has demonstrated himself to be (evidence from the past – both in others’ lives and ours).
Piper connects actually relying and believing God’s promises with growth in holiness. Here’s his quote,
-
I pledge myself to a holy dissatisfaction until my thoughts and my words and my deeds express the radical holiness that comes from the wonderful, joyful freedom of living by faith in guaranteed future grace. (p. 108 of Chapter 7, original edition)
Piper takes as a key teaching about the assurance of God’s promises to us and for us these verses in Paul’s letter to the Corinthians as recorded in 2 Cor 1:20-22 20 For no matter how many promises God has made, they are “Yes” in Christ. And so through him the “Amen” is spoken by us to the glory of God. 21 Now it is God who makes both us and you stand firm in Christ. He anointed us, 22 set his seal of ownership on us, and put his Spirit in our hearts as a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come.
So how I summarized Piper’s thesis was this:
- God calls/commands me to be holy.
- I grow more holy as I soak in and move out, trusting the invisible but very real promised provision as detailed in his scripture promises.
- When I pray to God I ask him to help me trust what he says. I need his help to stake my every-day moments on his word. So in my prayer I say Amen, aka Yes!, to God’s promises which are grounded in Christ and shored up by the permanent deposit of the Holy Spirit in me.
So, do you see? Becoming more and more holy is actually a joy-producing adventure. God doesn’t want us to worry and carry the burden of life on our shoulders. But we won’t believe him that his way is the better and happier way. So he orchestrates these tests, EVERY day, forcing us to exercise our spiritual muscles.
For me these tests seem to center around my perception of having too many tasks today and too little time AND have some time left over for me to relax by reading.
I’ve been meditating on Piper’s teachings the past few days. This morning I woke up feeling anxious about ‘all I needed to get done’ today after church. Then I remembered that I don’t HAVE to worry. And in fact maybe, just maybe, God has piled all ‘all this stuff’ deliberately to crunch me and force me to take the practical exam of trusting his promised future grace. For that is how he is making me holy, right down to my core.
Question: What’s your holiness training plan like?
Aug 30, 2015 @ 21:05:23