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GOD NAMES | DEVOTIONAL

El Qadosh - The Holy One

Government agencies are lenient regarding impurities in our food supply. For example, in peanut butter there may be thirty or more insect fragments and one or more rodent hairs per 100 grams. Shocking, isn’t it?

Government agencies are lenient regarding impurities in our food supply. For example, in peanut butter there may be thirty or more insect fragments and one or more rodent hairs per 100 grams. Shocking, isn’t it?

It’s even more shocking to realize that God has no leniency whatsoever for moral impurity. That’s the idea behind the divine name “the holy one.” The Hebrew word for holy means sinless and free from imperfection. God is without error or fault.

He is absolute purity and light. This attribute of holiness sets God apart and makes Him distinct from everything else in a fallen world.

Try as we might, we sinful creatures have a hard time comprehending God’s blinding holiness, which is referred to in some translations of Scripture as “terrible” or “dreadful” (Nehemiah 1:5; Psalm 68:35).

In the same way that an epidemiologist seeks to isolate those infected with a deadly disease, or a surgeon insists on a germ-free operating room, God demands that extreme, even harsh, measures be taken to quarantine and eradicate sin.


Consider the consequences of sin in contrast with a holy God.

• The payment for offending the holy God? Death. (Romans 6:23)
• The punishment for following another god? Death. (Leviticus 20:3)
• The consequence of getting too close to God’s presence? Death. (Exodus 19:12)

Such dire consequences for sin reveal the extent of God’s holiness. Like the north and south ends of a magnet, holiness and sin cannot coexist; in fact, they violently repulse each other.

Thankfully, Isaiah 57:15 expands the holiness of God to mean there’s not only an aversion to sin but also a desire to seek out, save, and revive the lost.

God’s holiness drives Him to seek and find us. In His perfection, God seeks to restore the world to its original holy and perfect state.

It is God’s purity that will not allow Him to discard us, though He has reason to. His holiness, rooted in love, compels Him to save. He sent His one and only Son to turn sinners into saints.

God’s holiness means that God hates sin enough to deliver sinners from it.

How would you describe God’s holiness?



Gospel joy, knowing how honored and loved we are in Christ (verse 5), makes us ready for this mission.

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

Poetry of Praise and Redemptive Mission

Timothy Keller
The praise of the redeemed. His people praise him because he has made them his people and because he honors and delights in them —though they don’t deserve it. Gospel joy, knowing how honored and loved we are in Christ, makes us ready for this mission.
Praise unites us also with one another. Here is “the only potential bond between the extremes of mankind: joyful preoccupation with God.” Praise the Lord!

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

The Praise that Unites All

Timothy Keller
Praise Those Unites. We see extremes brought together in praise: wild animals and kings, old and young. Young men and maids, old men and babes. How can humans be brought into the music? He has raised up for his people a horn, a strong deliverer.
All of nature sings God’s glory; we alone are out of tune. The question is this: How can we be brought back into the great music?

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

Praise Resounds Throughout Creation

Timothy Keller
The Praise Of Creation. Praise comes to God from all he has made. It begins in the highest heaven (verses 1–4). It comes from the sun and moon and stars (verse 3), from the clouds and rain (verse 4).
Christians are saved by faith, not by obeying the law, but the law shows us how to please, love, and resemble the one who saved us by grace.

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

True Worship that Pleases the Lord

Timothy Keller
A little boy left his toys out and went in to practice the piano, using hymns for his lesson. When his mother called him to pick up his toys, he said, “I ca n’t eat; “I’m singing praise to Jesus.” His mother responded: “There's no use singing God's praises when you're being disobedient.”
Psalm 19 tells us that, unless you repress it, you can still hear the stars singing about their maker.

DAILY DEVOTIONAL

From Heavenly Greatness to Inexhaustible Love

Timothy Keller
The number of stars is still uncountable by human science, yet God knows them by name (verse 4; cf. Isaiah 40:26). Job speaks of the creation, when “the morning stars sang together and all the angels shouted for joy” (Job 38:7).
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