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THE HEALTHY CHURCH: EMBODYING HOLINESS
[Editor’s Note: At the turn of this new millennium, Catalyst is
interested in assisting the seminarian in answering the question, “How might
the church be the church?” Samuel Powell contributes the ninth of eleven essays
that explore the characteristics of the Healthy Church.]
Holiness is not a word much in use today. A word like “piety” has fallen
into disuse because it now connotes a smugly self-righteous attitude. But
holiness does not seem to connote much at all today–hence our reluctance to
employ it. Whatever residual meaning it has in the aftermath of R. Otto’s
Idea of the Holy seems inapplicable to the church and the Christian
life. Yet, when we recite the ancient creeds we assert that we believe in
the holy church. So the word must mean something. But what?
If we look to the way in which holiness is portrayed in the Bible, then
a cluster of ideas attach themselves. One of these is that something is holy
when it has been placed in a relationship to God such that it belongs exclusively
to God. The OT abounds in examples of things devoted in this way to God, but
the chief example is Israel. In the words of Deut 7:6, “You are a people holy
to the Lord your God; the Lord your God has chosen you out of all the peoples
on earth to be his people, his treasured possession.” This important passage
links three ideas: 1) holiness, 2) election, and 3) possession. Israel was
holy because God had chosen it. This act of choosing established a relation
between Israel and God, a relationship of belonging. The holiness due to God’s
choosing and placing Israel in relationship was in a way independent of the
behavior of Israelites. Although the OT recognizes that, in one sense, Israel
could be defiled, it also affirms that in another sense Israel would always
be the people of God and would always stand in this relationship of belonging.
As a result, Israel was holy because of God’s choosing even if the behavior
of Israelites was anything but holy. What was true of Israel is true as well
of the church, which God chose “in Christ before the foundation of the world
to be holy and blameless” (Eph 1:4). As the chosen spouse of Christ, the
church stands in an everlasting relation to God, a relation by virtue of
which the church is holy. Holiness, then, is first of all standing in a relationship
of exclusive belonging to God.
But the Bible is adamant that, in response to God’s act of choosing, the
church must respond with an act of consecration. Consecration is a second
meaning of holiness and lies behind passages such as Rom 12:1: “Present your
bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God.” We are to devote
the totality of our lives to God and thus actualize through decision and practice
the holiness that belongs to the church by virtue of God’s choosing. If we
have truly been placed in a relationship of exclusive belonging to God, then
we should act as people whose lives are determined by this exclusive relationship.
Consecration implies a third meaning of holiness–separation or purity. In
the OT, Israel was to keep itself separated from the practices of the surrounding
nations because of its holiness. Likewise, priests and implements used in
the temple were segregated and kept in a state of heightened purity so that
they could minister in the sanctuary in the presence of the holy God. In the
NT, the whole people of God are expected to live lives of separation: “You
must no longer live as the Gentiles live. . . . You were taught to put away
your former way of life” (Eph 4:17, 22). Of course, the purity and separation
that the NT insists on is not a matter of physical distance, as though we
could maintain our holiness by never coming into contact with those outside
the church. On the contrary, we are to be pure and separate in the midst of
a fallen world.
Finally, holiness means righteous behavior. The connection between holiness
and righteousness receives classical expression in Lev 19, in which Israel’s
obedience to God’s commands is regarded as a direct implication of Israel’s
holiness and God’s holiness. “You shall be holy, for I the Lord your God am
holy. You shall each revere your mother and father, and you shall keep my
sabbaths: I am the Lord your God” (19:2-3).
But it is not enough to know that holiness is grounded in being placed in
a relationship of exclusive belonging to God and that it consists further
in consecration, in purity and separation, and in righteous obedience to God’s
commands. Regrettably, it is possible to know all this and fail to respond
to God in ways consistent with the church’s holiness. In light of this possibility,
we have seen in the last few years theologians using the language of embodiment
to indicate the importance of specific and distinctive practices in the Christian
life. In contrast to the persistent American tendency to emphasize the subjective
aspects of religion, the emphasis on embodiment reminds us that the Christian
life is not only a matter of disposition and intention but also a matter
of practice. It is to affirm, with John’s Gospel, that truth is something
that we do as well as believe, and with the letter of James that faith without
works is dead.
The recent emphasis on embodiment reminds us also that the holy life is
gained through specific and distinctive practices. Although preaching, teaching,
and catechesis are indispensable in the pursuit of holiness, becoming holy
requires more than cognitive knowledge. Becoming able to love our neighbors
requires more than knowing that we ought to love and knowing what love consists
in. Additionally, we must have examples of loving that we can emulate and
we must dwell in a nurturing community in which love is practiced. Since love
is, in part, a deed, we learn to love in the same ways in which we learn to
perform other deeds. A pastoral theology of holiness must take this fact into
account.
This last observation leads us to consider the role of the church in nurturing
the pursuit of holiness. What does or should the church and its leaders do
to bring its members to acts of consecration, separation, and righteousness?
One thing has already been mentioned—the didactic function expressed in
preaching, teaching, and catechism. This function is the attempt to convey
to the church’s members the “truth that is in accordance with godliness”
(Tit 1:1) through the instruction whose aim “is love that comes from a pure
heart, a good conscience, and sincere faith” (1 Tim 1:5). We can see from
these texts that preaching and teaching are not primarily the communication
of information. On the contrary, they exist to be God’s instruments in the
transformation of our character. They aim at godliness, love, and faith.
In other words, they aim at holiness. Of course, at some level preaching
and teaching require the conveying of information. But this is not their
primary purpose, because the knowledge that the church seeks is, ultimately,
the knowledge of the God who is love. This God cannot be known only by the
accumulation and analysis of information. This God can be known only by our
becoming “participants of the divine nature” (1 Pet 1:4). Only with this
sort of participatory knowledge can we be perfect as God is perfect (Matt
5:48). Accordingly, preaching, teaching, and catechism must be preoccupied
with encouraging the people of God to consecrate themselves to God, with
helping them understand how to be a separated people, and with urging them
to walk in the paths of righteousness.
In addition to these didactic and verbal ministries of the church, there
are other ministries that are instrumental in helping the church’s members
pursue holiness. One of these is administering the means of grace. As an example
of a formal means of grace, let us consider baptism. First, the act of baptism
is an act of consecration. In baptism the candidate and the community declare
jointly that the candidate is being drawn into the community that stands
in a relationship of exclusive belonging to God. In baptism the candidate
becomes, in the words of 1 Pet, a member of “a chosen race, a royal priesthood,
a holy nation, God’s own people” (2:9). Second, baptism signifies the beginning
of the life of purity and of separation from sin. As Paul put it, in baptism
we have been buried with Christ so that we might walk in newness of life (Rom
6:4). Although it takes wisdom and discernment to understand the full implications
of this separation, baptism is the decisive moment when we turn our backs
on the fallen world and orient ourselves to the kingdom of God. Third, baptism
implies the necessity of righteous behavior. Because in baptism we have died
to sin and begun to live to God in Jesus Christ (Rom 6:11), we are to present
ourselves to God as instruments of righteousness (6:13). As 1 Pet counsels,
“Like obedient children, do not be conformed to the desires that you formerly
had in ignorance. Instead, as he who called you is holy, be holy yourselves
in all your conduct” (1:15). To be holy in conduct is to act in obedience
to God’s commands, especially the command to love the neighbor.
Besides the formal means of grace—i.e., the sacraments—there are informal
means of grace. These are those Christian practices that are channels of God’s
grace to us but which do not require pastoral supervision. They include prayer,
the devotional study of the Bible, the practice of self-denial, and works
of mercy toward the neighbor. In these and other means of grace, we are brought
to continual decision about our consecration, about the strength of our purity
and separation, and about the necessity of righteous obedience. By them we
are strengthened in our resolve to continually consecrate ourselves, to live
lives of separation, and to obey God’s commands.
A third ministry of the church by which members are aided in the pursuit
of holiness is the most informal of all. It is the ministry of influence.
Both the living members of a congregation and its remembered dead exert a
formative influence on the church and its members. They constitute the nurturing
community that supports the pursuit of holiness. They also, in healthy congregations,
provide a collective image of the life of holiness. Since the physical presence
of Jesus is no longer with us, the only embodied image of the holy life that
we have is fellow members of Christ’s body. That is why the letter to the
Hebrews counseled us to remember our leaders in the faith and to “consider
the outcome of their way of life, and [to] imitate their faith” (13:7). We
may learn from the Bible that we ought to love our neighbors, but it is likely
that we will learn how to love by observing fellow-members.
Today, in what is becoming in some ways a post-Christian America, it is
more important than ever for the church to know what it is about and to be
faithful to its divine calling. This does not mean that we adopt a strident
and harsh attitude toward the world outside the church. It means only that
we should be resolute in our intention to be the people of God as this has
been revealed in Jesus Christ. To be the people of God is to be the holy
people of God—the people who embody holiness by practicing consecration,
separation, and righteous obedience.
By Samuel Powell, Dean of the School of Theology and Christian
Ministry, Point Loma Nazarene University, and author of Participating
in God (Fortress, 2003).
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