Christian Holiness Journal

a record of struggle and victory to know the mind of Christ

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You are here: Home / Archives for Holiness

Just… Talk

September 8, 2016 by ChristianHolinessDaily Leave a Comment


Suppose you could sit down with one person, any person, currently alive (not a historical figure), for as long as you want to, and learn everything you always wished to know about him or her. Who would you choose? 

An actor? A politician? A businessman? A singer? A philosopher? 

Tough question. 

How much time would you spend with him or her? 

I might pick Billy Graham, and I imagine I could spend days or weeks before I would learn all I want to know. Several others come to mind. Yet, I can’t think of a one that I would be satisfied to simply meet. Sure, I would love to meet Ravi Zacharias, for example, but if I had an opportunity to learn from him for the next several years, then I would not be satisfied to simply meet him and then go my way. 

Yet, that is how many of us treat Christ. We met Him, and then don’t bother to stick around and learn from Him. Some of us have met Him only once. Some of us meet Him only on Sundays between the hours of 11 AM and noon. Some of us believe we are special because we meet with Him three or four hours a week. Each and everyone of us, though, have been invited to make Him our mentor, and learn from Him all day, every day, seven days a week, forever. 

How can we turn that down? 

How do we renew our minds, as Paul tells us in Romans? By asking Christ to rid our hearts and minds of the gross filth that now occupies them, and filling them with his wisdom. It is through Bible study, prayer, and worship that we renew our minds. 

Here is one of the great mysteries of Christian holiness. It is through God’s power and our self-discipline that we may ever rid ourselves of the carnal nature that so plagues us with evil desires. 

How to start? Just sit down with the Bible, and pray. Just… Talk to Him. 

And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God. 

– Romans 12:2

All Hail the Power of Jesus Name –
Sinners, whose love can ne’er forget 

the wormwood and the gall, 

go spread your trophies at his feet, 

and crown him Lord of all. 

Go spread your trophies at his feet, 

and crown him Lord of all. 

Filed Under: Daily Walk with Christ, Holiness Tagged With: heart, mind, pray, renting the mind, Romans 12:2, talk

The Beauty of God’s Holiness

September 1, 2016 by ChristianHolinessDaily Leave a Comment


The psalmist encourages us to worship God in beauty… In the beauty of holiness. I am so grateful that God led the writer to add that last part, because – take away His holiness – and there is nothing beautiful about me. 

Nothing on heaven or earth compares to the beauty of God’s holiness. No landscape, no face, no starfield can compare to the beauty of our holy God. 

If we seek after His holiness, and if He graciously imparts even an infinitesimal part of that holiness to us, then perhaps those who know us will see that spark of beauty and seek its source. 

Never forget, nothing you and I can do can earn God’s holiness. Our righteousness is as filthy rags. God’s righteousness is bestowed upon whom He wills. Surrender to Him. Seek after His holiness like one seeking buried treasures. 

Hymn by Isaac Watts, 1803

Let all the earth their voices raise

To sing the choicest psalm of praise,

To sing and bless Jehovah’s name:

His glory let the heathens know,

His wonders to the nations show,

And all his saving works proclaim.
The heathens know thy glory, Lord,

The wond’ring nations read thy word,

In Britain is Jehovah known:

Our worship shall no more be paid

To gods which mortal hands have made;

Our Maker is our God alone.
He framed the globe, he built the sky,

He made the shining worlds on high,

And reigns complete in glory there:

His beams are majesty and light;

His beauties, how divinely bright!

His temple, how divinely fair!
Come the great day, the glorious hour,

When earth shall feel his saving power,

And barb’rous nations fear his name;

Then shall the race of man confess

The beauty of his holiness,

And in his courts his grace proclaim.

Filed Under: Holiness Tagged With: beauty, holiness, Isaac watts, psalm

Six Ways Christian Families Can Try to Restore the Sabbath in Their Own Homes

August 31, 2016 by ChristianHolinessDaily Leave a Comment

  1. Christ is Lord of the SabbathPhilip Sopher published a piece in The Atlantic two years ago (Here) that traced the term “weekend” to 1879. While the concept existed prior to that date, he claims the term didn’t. He and countless others claim the concept of the seven week with six days of work and one day of rest can be traced back to ancient Babylon, and completely denies that the ancient Jews practiced a day of rest (a Sabbath day) prior to their captivity in Babylon. In all fairness, Mr. Sopher wrote his article to advance a shorter work-week, not to get bogged down in a biblical debate.

Ours is a nation with a Judeo-Christian heritage, which explains why the 5 or 6 day work week has been the norm (with few exceptions) for most of the last 400 years. The Jews practice a Sabbath that begins on Friday evening and lasts through Saturday. Christians worship on the Lord’s Day, Sunday. Generically, I use both the Sabbath and the Lord’s Day interchangeably.

The five-day work-week is vanishing; so is the six-day work-week. I know several young men who work seven days a week, and I did it myself for years. This is the result of both a changing economy and a disconnect with Judeo-Christian values.

Not honoring the Sabbath or the Lord’s Day does not make you a bad Christian. Mark 2:27 quotes Jesus:

The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath. Therefore the Son of Man is also Lord of the Sabbath.

Christ took time to rest. He stole away by Himself, or with His closest friends. Personal rest and corporate worship are vital to your life. If we want to grow close to God, we must try to rest and honor Him in spite of our work schedule and the economy. Not observing the Sabbath or Lord’s Day does not make you a bad Christian, but not finding time for rest and worshipping together with your family and brothers and sisters in Christ can cause you to lose that personal connection with our Lord Jesus. And if you lose that relationship, your family may follow your example.

I know that a great many may not be able to coordinate their schedules as I suggest here. I’m not wealthy; I’m a working stiff just like most of you. The point is to improve on our current habits.

How Christians may restore the Sabbath. Rest and worship are important and necessary. The point of this article is to encourage Christians to honor the Lord’s Day as a family. At least, try to take one day of rest and spend it physically idle, communing with God, and cherishing your family.

  • If you work Sundays, pray about it, and then ask your employer for Sundays off. Explain how important worship and rest has become to you. You may not get an immediate positive response, but you may. If not, be persistent. Ask again and again when the opportunity presents itself. See if anyone is willing to swap a shift with you and, if so, bring that news to your boss. As a last resort finds some time to rest and worship, no matter what day.
  • Get up early and begin your Sabbath with a family breakfast. When was the last time you did that? Prepare your Sunday meals and snacks before Sunday so that no one is cooking on the Lord’s Day.
  • Go to church as a family and stay in services as a family. Don’t always usher the kids off the children’s church or teen worship. Not always. Teach them to listen and absorb God’s Word in the adult service. Discuss the service with them later. Show them how the message that was preached is important to you and how you will apply it to your life. There are many who think segregating children and teenagers from the adult services is one of the primary reasons so many kids drop out of church once they are out of their parent’s home.
  • Go home and eat dinner together. Prepare  your Sunday meals ahead of time, so no one has to cook. Rest the remainder of the day.
  • Go to evening service if you wish, but do not go out to eat with friends from church. While socializing with brothers and sisters in Christ is integral to the body of believers, those relationships should not be built at the expense of your relationship with your Lord. Sundays are about resting and regenerating your strength, physically, emotionally, and spiritually. On Sunday, we rest in the arms of Christ.
  • Leave the TV off. Stay off the computer. Turn off your smart phone. Talk as a family, read the Bible as a family. Read Christian books. Discuss your reading, or simply rest. On Sunday we rest.

Try this for 60 days, and see how what happens. Will you grow closer to God? To your family? Let me know. I’ll let you know how it works for me.

Filed Under: Holiness Tagged With: Lords Day., rest, Sabbath, Saturday, Sunday

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