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You Are More Special Than You Know: H Is For Holy

All things as they move toward God are beautiful, and they are ugly as they move away from Him. ~ A.W. Tozer

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Few of us long to be holy, to be an ever-burning bush in desert places.

Special, yes, noticed, yes—we feel the pressure to be remarkable and amazing, but amazing is elusive.

And the competition is fierce. When every child on the team gets a trophy it doesn’t create confidence, but a deep-rooted angst. If I am one of a kind, why am I treated like one of many? If I’m special, why should I have to suffer this indignity or discomfort?

The unintended consequence of the self-esteem movement is a petulant population, chronically offended.

  • We feel like failures when our abilities are average.
  • We grind our teeth when others cut in line.
  • We despair when ignored, overlooked, or unappreciated.

In moments of clarity, we suspect we are not special, which makes us, in the language of religion, “profane.” To be “holy” is not possible—we are common, ordinary, and every-day. Only the oblivious—the holier-than-thou, the self-righteous, the kind of people best avoided—would claim to be saints.

The Bible presents a different view, with the repeated command, “Be holy because I am holy.”

Be holy because I am.

Holy Moses

Moses was a privileged child, a slave adopted into palatial splendor. But forty years spent in the wild, huddled with dull-witted sheep, cured Moses of all self-importance. One day a burning bush detoured him from his duties, and the voice of God resounded with the promise, not “you’re extraordinary,” but “take off your shoes, you’re in the presence of someone who is.”

Later, the sea miraculously parted, Egyptian power thwarted, Moses led his people in a hymn to God, “Who is like you, O LORD, among the gods? Who is like you, majestic in holiness, awesome in splendor, doing wonders?” (Exodus 15:11)

At the foot of a mountain, the former slaves washed their clothes, bracing themselves for a fire-earthquake-lightening-thunder encounter with holiness. They changed their diet and daily habits, reordered their relationships and reoriented their priorities, built a tabernacle and a new kind of nation all because they had been embraced by, you could say, infected by, a holiness not of their own.

There is no one on earth or in heaven like God. He is “holy.” But we learn from the Bible the unexpected truth:

  • A holy God is not repulsed by our failure; he invites us to be healed.
  • A holy God does not reject, he delivers us from our darkness.
  • A holy God is not indifferent, but he desires only our best.

According to Lev. 19:18, the holiness God demands of us is, in its essence, love. And love will make us holy where it matters. In Luke 6:36, Jesus changes the adjective. “Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful.”

Holy, merciful, love is what others will find in us when we hold tight to our holy God. We will flame, a brightly burning detour, for lonely desert wanderers.

Do you know you are special because God is?

In our series, An Alphabet Adagio, we are savoring the story of the Bible, our story, alphabetically. You can subscribe to e-mail above so you won’t miss a letter. Next: I is for Idols.

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10 replies on “You Are More Special Than You Know: H Is For Holy”

Hey there! I know this is kinda off topic however I’d fiuregd I’d ask. Would you be interested in exchanging links or maybe guest writing a blog article or vice-versa? My website goes over a lot of the same topics as yours and I feel we could greatly benefit from each other. If you are interested feel free to shoot me an e-mail. I look forward to hearing from you! Excellent blog by the way!

The Lord scooped me into His holy hug, exclaiming His love!
“I am so glad you are here!” He speaks over me, blessing me.
I am His.
May I be a new kind of nation, because He holds me close.

“But forty years in the wild, huddled with dull-witted sheep, cured him of his self-importance.” And, “They changed their diet and daily habits, reordered their relationships and reoriented their priorities…” A beautiful post, but these two lines in particular nearly resonated me out of my chair. There are days I war against the desert. I awoke this morning to clouds hanging above the surrounding mountains, the smell of newly dampened earth after a short rain shower last night and a parade of cattle being lead by cowboys, ambling right in front of our house. Remarkable, memorable, awe-inspiring and yet, it is the desert. I frequently ask why we are here. It is so much easier to measure our purpose when we check off a list of accomplishments. But what if being out here is about losing self-importance? How is that measured? Or what if being out here is about learning to change our daily habits, our relationships and our priorities? I needed that reminder. Thank you.

Rebecca,
So many parallels, no? The purpose for your wilderness will unfold, but I pray it turns out to involve a bit less confrontation than Moses faced! Ultimately, it will involve holiness…
Thanks so much for sharing!

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