Copyright © 2001 by The Voice of Prophecy
David B. Smith

P.O. Box 53055    
Los Angeles, CA 90053   

Listen to Real Audio Broadcast
January 22, 2002

 

THE HOLINESS OF GOD #7

UNPOLLUTED BY PRISON TALK

In some rough, despairing neighborhoods, it's nothing but "F-words" all day and all night. And God is there, listening. As men die on the battlefield — cries and curses. And God hears it all. How is the holiness of God not compromised by all the obscenity and pain He witnesses?

If there's ever a Voice of Prophecy day when it isn't hard to find current illustrations, this Tuesday has got to be that day. Because what we want to think about is this question: How many bad things does God know? Is He aware of cruel thoughts, obscene words, racial hatred, sexual degradation, mean-spirited books? Even though He dwells in heaven above, does He know the gutter words of the streets here below? And if so, how can that still be holiness?

Back in late October of 2001, an 18-year-old kid named Jason Anthony Hoffman was in prison for the crime of taking a pump-action 12-gauge shotgun and shooting five fellow students at Granite Hills High School in El Cajon, California. Prison officials had put him in a padded suicide-watch cell, but a doctor had cleared him to go back to regular incarceration. Bad mistake — because the Monday before he was to be sentenced, he hanged himself with strips of bedsheet looped around the grillwork on an air vent.

And he left a note. Just one page, but it was filled with profanity . . . a sad, despairing, X-rated farewell to a cruel world.

Did God read that note? As Jason penned those explicit expressions of anger, was the mind of God infected by the string of F-words? What does it do to the holiness of God when He hears us curse and swear and talk dirty? How does He continue to be, as A. W. Tozer put it, "absolutely holy with an infinite, incomprehensible fullness of purity"?

A recent radio news bulletin described the continuing legal battles that wage around the world over child pornography on the Internet. Law enforcement often takes the legal tack of prosecuting distributors of kiddie porn because the rights of underage children are violated. But now, in today's digital world, evil men and women are able to concoct absolutely lifelike child pornography where no humans at all are involved. There's nothing but anonymous pixels on your screen. So who is there to arrest? And yet — on multiplied hundreds of thousands of web sites — these destructive pictures are there in fleshly color. Does a holy God see them? Of course. Does He weep? Of course. Does He despair? Certainly. Does He continue to be holy and pure? Yes . . . but we don't see how that can be.

Here in our world, if a missionary goes into a bar and hears coarse, vulgar language, it leaves a stain. A dedicated Christian takes a job counseling troubled teenagers. Day after day, these kids pour our their anger, their jealousy, their lurid fantasies. She hears every imaginable kind of gutter remark. Do those words creep into her mind? Yes, they do. A Christian prays to remain pure in this fallen world, and yet the mud of Lucifer's playground sticks to the pale white stockings of our virtue. How can we have the experience of God, being holy on a planet that is decidedly and vehemently unholy?

One thing that should be patently obvious is this: holiness doesn't consist in having never heard an F-word, or seeing a seductive image. God has those experiences every day He rules and watches over this world, and so do His emissaries here. Your guardian angel sees and hears all sorts of base, sinful things . . . and yet is a holy, heavenly being.

We found a helpful quote on this very point, and it's by John Brown, the great 19th-century Scottish theologian. Notice:

"Holiness does not consist," he writes, "in mystic speculations, enthusiastic fervors of uncommanded austerities; it consists in thinking as God thinks and willing as God wills."

What do you think of that? And you know, immediately I think of the life of Jesus Christ. For the first thirty years of His life, He had a very common family life there in Nazareth. His childhood chums swore and told dirty jokes; no doubt they would have sneaked a smoke behind the barn if tobacco had been invented. And yet Christ, their everyday playmate, is described in the Bible, Luke 1:35, as "that holy thing."

And during Jesus' three-and-a-half years of ministry, don't forget that He lived — day and night — with 12 men. Most of them were fishermen . . . need I say more? Did it take time for the salt to work its way out of their vocabularies? I have no doubt that they said, "Uh, excuse me, Jesus," many, many times as a curse word slipped out. Peter, you remembered, denied Jesus three times, "calling down curses on himself, and [swearing] to them, ‘I don't know this man you're talking about.'"

Anglican writer and philosopher Evelyn Underhill captured the street-smart holiness of Jesus when she wrote:

"There is nothing high-minded about Christian holiness. It is most at home in the slum, the street, the hospital ward."

And just as the Great Physician waded into homes and hospitals where leprosy germs were everywhere, He unhesitatingly went into the bars and brothels and the elementary school playgrounds where children told dirty jokes . . . and he continued to be holy. He had a kind of "Immanuel Immunity" to the germs of sin. On the cross, He was assaulted by every vile word in Hebrew, Greek and all the languages of the then-known world . . . and He continued to be a holy sacrifice for you and me.

Speaking of Scottish theologian John Brown, an Internet search took us to the book, Loving God, by Chuck Colson, which contains the above quote about holiness "[consisting] of thinking as God thinks and willing as God wills." Ironically, the chapter we found it in has this title: "The Everyday Business of Holiness," and Colson takes us through several powerful but common vignettes, where people just like you and me walk the mean streets and work in real workplaces and go to ballgames and hear real vocabularies being expressed. And this gifted writer concludes each section with a summary: Holiness is obeying God — loving one another as He loved us. Holiness is obeying God — even when it's against our own interests. Holiness is obeying God — sharing His love, even when it is inconvenient. And Holiness is obeying God — finding ways to help those in need.

That sounds like Mother Teresa, doesn't it? She once had this to say:

"Holiness consists in doing the will of God with a smile."

These Mother Teresa-type stories, however, make it clear that it isn't just Mother Teresa who is called to do this. Friend, God invites you and me to do it too — be holy men and women in a sin-stained world. To hear F-words, but have a mind so filled with GOD'S Word that the profanity slips past, and we continue to love the profane person. To go into the red-light district, not as a consumer, but as a witness . . . seeing half-clad girls, not as playthings, but as lost daughters of Eve, needing agape love and rescue. Jesus had a hooker bathe his feet and hair in perfume, and, man that He was, He loved her with redemption instead of lust.

This doesn't mean that a Christian shouldn't be careful. Or wise as serpents. The eyes are still the avenue to the soul, and no believer should go out of their way to be needlessly on dangerous territory. Philippians 4:8 is the laundry list of protection for the believer: "Whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right" . . . and so on. So you don't go into the bar or the nightclub unless you know FOR SURE that you are there on a mission for God, that God actually has some person waiting there for you and not just the bartender.

I think it's also true that Philippians 4:8 isn't just a negative "hedge-blueprint" but a positive "castle-blueprint" as well. If our minds are filled weekly and daily and hourly with the positive, powerful truths of God's eternal kingdom, then the cheap profanities in our neighborhood will seem much more lightweight. The Teflon of God's truth can be our shield just as it was for Jesus.

The Bible almost describes God's followers as having a coat of Teflon, actually. Notice this wardrobe counsel from Colossians 3:

"Therefore, as God's chosen people, HOLY and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience."

Can the Christian down in the trenches be protected by a coat of compassion? Sure. Sealed by a cape of kindness? A heavenly hat of humility? Yes. When you really care about your fellow man – I mean, caring for him the way Jesus on the cross cared for those soldiers – the X-rated words they use are not going to have the same staining effect.

Here's what it boils down to . . . and we couldn't find a better expression of it than this challenge by Leonard Ravenhill, author of Why Revival Tarries. Listen to this:

"The greatest miracle that God can perform today is to take an unholy man out of an unholy world, and make that man holy and put him back into that unholy world and keep him holy in it."

Isn't that a fantastic challenge? "In the world, but not of the world." And of course, Jesus Himself prayed this marvelously powerful prayer for His disciples:

"Holy Father, protect them [while they're still in the world] by the power of Your name."

A guy named Paul said it just about the same way, and he writes this note, by the way, from prison, where a "Shawshank vocabulary" was certainly the order of the day. Here's Philippians 2:15, 16:

"Everything you do should be blameless, innocent and above reproach." In other words, holy. "You are God's children living in a corrupt world. You are lights in the darkness, like stars lighting up the night sky as you hold out the Word of Life."


 

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