Tag Archives: holiness

Holiness: A Lenten Devotional

Click here to download this free, electronic Lenten devotional on the topic of holiness.

Twenty Church of God ministers have combined their efforts to create “Holiness: A Lenten Devotional.” The purpose of this project is to provide the Church of God with a high-quality, easy-to-engage set of devotionals for the season of Lent. This project intends to remain focused on God and the scriptures while speaking words of life to the people of the Church of God.

This project explores the concept of holiness from a biblical perspective. Combining theology with practice, daily devotionals from Ash Wednesday (February 14) through Easter Sunday (April 1) cover four major themes:

  • God is Holy: theological foundations
  • Holy Ground: biblical instances of holiness
  • Holy People: our call to live holy lives
  • Holy Week: the journey to the cross and empty tomb

Each theme is introduced by additional reflections from professors at the Anderson University School of Theology and Christian Ministry and is accompanied by original artwork from one member of our team.

Unique to this project is a practical reflection on each Sunday during Lent. Instead of a regular devotional on Sundays, you will find pragmatic ideas of how to live out the concepts of holiness that you have considered through the week.

We hope that this resource will help you, your loved ones, and your congregation to draw closer to God, to be holy as God is holy, and to imitate the holiness of Jesus during this upcoming season of Lent.

These daily devotionals are available as a single PDF file (click here to download), and each will be posted daily on this site from February 14 through April 1.

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Moving Forward

In our latest series on this space, we have been attempting to form appropriate responses to three questions asked by the leaders of our movement. Jonathan started us off by framing an answer to the purpose of the Church of God movement. Joe and David each gave us a response to the Church of God’s unique contribution to the Kingdom. And Shannon began to help us think about what this would all mean as we move forward. In this entry, I will attempt to respond to Shannon’s thoughts:

Upon what should the Movement focus going forward?

In a world that is rapidly changing, we see Christ communities of various forms struggling to remain both relevant and counter-cultural. To try to form a few coherent thoughts about moving forward is a big task. But try we must, so we press on. Continue reading

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Our Contribution to the Kingdom

What is the unique contribution that the Movement makes to the
Kingdom in the world today?

In a recent post, Joe gave us an excellent starting point to the discussion of this second “Why” question, the second of three questions posed by our General Director Jim Lyon about the purpose and mission of the Church of God at this stage in our life together. In this space, I will identify a few strengths of Joe’s argument and then sum up, hopefully, a concise, one-sentence answer to the above question. Continue reading

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The Church of God and the Kingdom at Large

Why does the Church of God Movement exist today?

There’s no more important question for us to answer, and answer well, because how we answer this one question will define how we go forward from here. Jonathan began the process of putting together a purpose statement for the movement, and I appreciate his willingness to press into the fact that identifying a purpose will necessarily require us to speak about what makes us distinct from other church denominations or movements.

But nowadays distinctives scare us.

I don’t know if we’re afraid of offending people, or we’re afraid that by saying we are distinct from other groups in the church sounds like we’re dividing the body of Christ, but the idea makes a lot of people squeamish. Distinctives don’t have to divide us however. In fact, the body metaphor itself helps us see where distinctives are good. I want the parts of the various systems of my body to be distinct from one another. If they’re not then I have a serious problem. The key is that all the parts and systems must be working together for a singular goal, the overall health and growth of the body at large. To that end, its important for us to ask this second question as we seek to identify our purpose for the next chapter of the Church of God. Continue reading

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A Holiness Church: A Response

“I am continually struck by the idea that our understanding of holiness has become very worldly….” – Jen Carney

I love that line from Jen’s post about being a holiness church. I find the irony compelling; what was sacred and separated out has become profane and mixed in with everything else. How are we to understand holiness when our perception of holiness has been warped by the world? This ‘worldly holiness’ is an emphasis on purity, cleanliness, and sterilization against the dirty, tarnished, tainted parts of life. The more holy we become, the more we are required to remove ourselves from everyday life in our community. If we do not retreat from it, we will be risking our holiness. We could accidentally rub up against unholy things, activities or people and cause our fall from grace.

But isn’t this completely antithetical to the call of God? Continue reading

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A Holiness Church

Beloved how this perfect love unites us all in Jesus!
One heart, and soul, and mind we prove the union heaven gave us.

It seems there are a number of definitions of what it means to be “holy” or to live a “holy life.” Even in the Church of God, a holiness movement, there are a number of people who believe deeply in holiness living, but would define this differently from one another. Often, we hear holiness defined as what we don’t do. “I believe in living a holy life, therefore I do not …” You can fill in the blanks. What we find in the Scriptures, however, is that holiness has much more to do with our relationships with God, others, and ourselves. “What is the greatest commandment?” Jesus was asked. “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, mind, soul and strength. The second is like it: love your neighbor as yourself. All the law and prophets hang on these two commandments.” Continue reading

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A Born-Again Church

I can’t remember the first time I heard it, but I know I’ve heard it a lot since. 

“I’m a Christ-follower.”

I understand what people are doing when they say that. It’s an attempt to avoid the cultural baggage of the term “Christian,” a term that has come to mean all sort of things to people outside of the church which fall far short of the vision of the Kingdom of God we find in Christ. That being said, I’ve never been able to embrace “Christ-follower” as an alternative. It seems to me that it fails to communicate the reality that when a person puts his or her faith in Jesus as Lord, something radically different happens to their very being which changes them. Their identity, which does come from following Christ, is changed at the core of who they are. It’s as if in that moment, they are born all over again into someone new.

I see that hand!

This belief, that as Christians, we are born-again is woven deep into the history of the Church of God. Having grown out of the revival and camp-meeting background of the 19th century, the Church of God has been a people who have held up the importance of that moment of rebirth. We call people to remember the day when their life changed forever and they were reborn in the Spirit of God! Sure, some are more dramatic than others, but it’s a part of who we are to believe that there is a day in our past to which we can point as our “second-birthday.” Continue reading

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A Bible Church: A Response

As I finished David’s post about what it means to say that we are “a Bible Church” I realized I had my work cut out for me. His post was clear and spot-on really, and I wasn’t sure what I might have to say to add to his thoughts. But the task has been given to me to kick the can down the road so to speak, and so I needed to find some way to consider the Bible as a central component in the life of the church, while moving us forward.

The Challenges of a Bible Church

To say that the Church of God is “a Bible church” seems to point to the reality that in some way there must also be churches that exist that are something different. That’s not to say that they don’t read, teach, or believe the Bible, or that they are unChristian in their approach to scripture. Rather it is simply to highlight that various parts of the global body have been organized differently around this book, and if that’s the case then it seems logical to assume that there are certain challenges that arise from either decision. It would serve us well to consider these challenges.  Continue reading

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A Bible Church

Something in Common

God is pleased when his people read, study, teach, preach, and live by Bible. Who would disagree? Surely this is a no-brainer: God’s people, those who have experienced the transforming power of the gospel of Jesus Christ, are to center their lives around the Old and New Testaments. Emphasis on the priority of scripture is most certainly integral to the fabric of what it means to be God’s church. From weekly sermons to small group studies to the “B-I-B-L-E” children’s song, one thing is clear: We are people of the Book. This is a truth around which all Christians can rally.

Yet to say that this value finds unique expression in the Church of God (Anderson, Indiana) is to say something of a different order. Our understanding of and adherence to the Bible do not overshadow or replace the love of scripture that has marked the church since its founding and especially since the Reformation. We are not somehow more biblical than other Christians. However, our approach to Christian faith and practice influences our relationship with the Bible. And while that relationship is certainly not unique among all Christians, our perspective can influence broader conversations about what it means to be faithful students of the Bible.

Continue reading

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