Unity of Holiness – John 17:11 (cont.)

by | The Upper Room

11 “I am no longer in the world; and yet they themselves are in the world, and I come to You. Holy Father, keep them in Your name, the name which You have given Me, that they may be one even as We are.”

“Holy Father”—this is the only time in Scripture God is referred to in this way. Certainly the Father is holy, but we usually read of the third member of the Trinity spoken about in this way—the Holy Spirit. “Holy Father” emphasizes God’s separateness from the world, and in light of His disciples being “in the world,” this seems appropriate The Holy Father is completely “other than,” as theologians would describe holiness. He is not tainted by worldliness. One writer puts it this way: He is infinitely high because He is holy, but He is infinitely “nigh” (or close) because He is Father. The disciples being left “in the world” needed God to be both: Holy and Father.

Together, the Father and Son desire that His followers would also live holy, separated lives—separate from the sinful desires of the flesh and the self-centered view of life. The disciples may have been encouraged to hear Jesus praying this way, for they really didn’t want Him to leave. How would they fend for themselves in a world that was hostile to their Master, and now would be hostile toward them? The Holy Father who is separate, higher than anything in this world, would keep them separate, higher than their circumstances. God draws us up to His level, that is what it means to become holy like He is holy (see 1 Peter 1:16).

Worldliness is to live at the world’s level, walking apart from God, rather than apart from the world, as though we are with Adam and Eve, eating from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil—apart from God. But holy living is to continue following Christ by following His teachings He left for us.

Jesus ties all this in with His request that His followers, “may be one even as We are.” This does not mean that Christians should all join in with the ecumenical movement to bring all churches together and ascribe to one set of doctrines. Such efforts are rooted in diminishing the core doctrines Christ taught, like His uniqueness and deity (John 8:58), His exclusivity (John 14:6, Acts 4:12), the nature of His sacrificial death on the cross—to name a few. The oneness Jesus prayed for was a unity among the true followers of Christ, a unity that comes through understanding and holding fast to the true teachings of Christ, not to every wind of doctrine that is labeled “Christian.” In the world, there will be many temptations to quit following Christ. Jesus asks that His followers continue together in living holy lives while still in this world.

Father, help me be holy today as You are holy always.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

A Blessed Celebration of Our Lord’s Birth!

May God bless you with a wonderful celebration of our Lord's birth. What an amazing thing to contemplate as we look on the nativity scene on the mantle or 'neath the decorated tree. Eternity intersected time and space; the Creator entered his creation. "For a child...

In Praise of Feminine Beauty: A Mother’s Day Message

With each passing decade of motherhood, we gradually exchange perishable beauty for the imperishable kind. It starts when we are young, our bellies expanding to grow and nourish children. Stretch marks and loose skin arrive, perhaps to stay, sometimes accompanied by...

Pure Praise – Psalm 150

1Praise the Lord … 6Let everything that has breath praise the Lord. Praise the Lord. This psalm concludes the inspired biblical collection of one hundred and fifty psalms (also called poems, songs, or chapters). The six verses of Psalm 150 are saturated with thirteen...

Priesthood for “Average” Believers

If you are a believer in Jesus Christ, redeemed by the blood of the Lamb, then you are a believer-priest. That’s amazing! What?? Let me explain. In the New Testament (NT), there is no special clergy class that is holier than the rest of us, a cut above the rank and...

Superlative Praise – Psalm 149

1Praise the Lord! Sing to the Lord a new song, and His praise in the congregation of the godly ones. Superlative praise, extolling God ‘to the max,’ is the theme of this psalm. There is nothing meager about this kind of praise. It is the antidote to an old and tired...