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Holiness As Salt
December 9, 2005
It’s been said that we start the process of dying the moment we’re born. Though it would be difficult to pinpoint, it would probably be more accurate to say that we start the process of dying the moment we stop growing.
Generation is the antithesis of degeneration– the power of life is obviously stronger than the power of death, but we know too well that decay is always crouching at the door, waiting for its moment of opportunity. Angry at being denied its prey, the rot of death storms in with a vengeance the very second the generative power that is life starts to slow down– the minute we stop growing, there is no force to bar the inexorable push of death into our bones. There is no middle ground, no grace period– the moment life leaves our body, it starts to rot.
So then, it’s the growing that keeps us– and so it is with our spirit. The quest for holiness, at first glance, seems futile to our human minds– I mean, if the mark we are pressing toward is God’s perfect holiness, aren’t we setting ourselves up for failure? Obviously,we will never reach that mark until after we die, so what’s the point?
The point is that the rot of sin is crouching at our door, waiting for the opportunity to drag us into decadence. We can see so clearly how the frog has been boiled in our society when it comes to morality and our standards of holiness. It’s easy to set the bar of morality at what we think is an acceptable level, and then leave it there. But it doesn’t work that way, does it? The bar doesn’t ever stay where it is– it gets inched down, one compromise at a time, until we look around one day and realize we are wallowing in filth, and that our love has grown cold. You know– kind of like that corpse we were talking about. Rotting. Dirty. Cold.
The point is: it’s the growing that keeps us; that stops the decay from advancing into our spirits. We must not “grade ourselves on a curve”, fooling ourselves into thinking it’s just fine to stay where we are. We must set the bar at the only level of holiness that is acceptable to God: that is, His Holiness. His perfection must be the mark that we set for ourselves. You see, by setting our eyes on a standard that is ever above what we can attain, we are choosing a life of forward motion– a life of perpetual growth. The standard of love and holiness that I live by today is higher than the one I lived by a year ago– and yet, I dare not stop here, lest the sin in me grab its opportunity– next year, the standard must be higher still.
Paul said it like this: “Brothers, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 3:13,14) This is not the empty pursuit of the Pharisees– of creating more and more religious rules to disguise our deep rooted sin. It is the pursuit of a person madly in love with Jesus Christ– one who will be satisfied with nothing less than laying hold of Him, and becoming one with Him… in His death, and in His resurrected perfection ( Philippians 3:10-11). And just as salt preserves meat, so our constant pursuit of God’s holiness will preserve us, until the day our Lord Jesus is revealed, and we are made to be like Him:)
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