First of all my response was to PrincetonGuy not you. He apparently advocates a perfectionism. Perfectionism is heretical and goes against both the Scriptures and experience.
If you want to know how you can be holy it is simple: believe on the Lord Jesus Christ. Rest in Him and His holiness. My holiness isn't worth mentioning but His is all that God requires of me and my only holiness. My whole hope is in Him.
(Isa 26:12) LORD, thou wilt ordain peace for us: for thou also hast wrought all our works in us.
(Jer 23:5) Behold, the days come, saith the LORD, that I will raise unto David a righteous Branch, and a King shall reign and prosper, and shall execute judgment and justice in the earth.
(Jer 23:6) In his days Judah shall be saved, and Israel shall dwell safely: and this is his name whereby he shall be called, THE LORD OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS.
(Jer 33:16) In those days shall Judah be saved, and Jerusalem shall dwell safely: and this is the name wherewith she shall be called, The LORD our righteousness.
That old man the flesh is not destroyed while we are in this body of death and sin taints all that we do in it. Rom. 7:15-25, Gal. 5:17 This stinking corpse we live in now does not need to be taken to the hospital of religion to be cured it must be taken to the cross to be crucified.
(Gal 2:20) I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me.
(Gal 2:21) I do not frustrate the grace of God: for if righteousness come by the law, then Christ is dead in vain.
To seek to be or think that you are holy by anything you do is to frustrate the grace of God and deny the death of Christ.
We cannot nor do we become progressively more holy. How can purity and perfection become more pure and perfect?
Now lets not confuse holiness and growth in grace and knowledge. We do grow and daily lean more on Him who is all in all. Sin does not have dominion over us, that is it no longer rules us and drives our passions. Rom. 6:14 But that is not holiness or sanctification.
You seem to want some complicated formula by which we can consecrate ourselves and separate ourselves from the world. That is what religion does. It gives you a system, a formula or a principle by which you can accomplish that which is already done for you and in you by Christ through faith.
By all means live as holy and righteously as it is possible in you but do nat claim that it is holiness or righteousness. That holiness without which no man shall see the Lord is Christ in you the hope of glory, Col. 1: 27
Oh, thought you were replying to me, but now I know you are so I can reply more accurately. I am not looking for a complicated formula by which we can consecrate ourselves, You seem to have a pretty good grip in the scriptures, and obviously applied some discipline to get it. Jesus told his disciples to make disciples, and that means discipline. I'm glad you are a disciple. You show an obvious actively moving mind which seeks to know God better and be closer to Him which I would call "the pursuit of holiness". Yes there is a rest for the children of God, but there is still a labor to enter into that rest because we will never fully know it while in these bodies of death over which sin holds dominion.
Again, I am not looking for a complicated formula, but it is obvious the Lord wants us to be disciplined to follow Him because it is easy to relax and take His salvation for granted. Daniel was old testament of course, but was he not an excellent example of a man committed to the pursuit of holiness as he prayed three times a day to the God of heaven and continued to do so even when the king was tricked into passing a law against it so Daniels enemies could have an excuse to get Daniel killed?
I'm not trying to promote a legalistic Pharasitic approach to being a good Christian. I'm talking about willful obedience even when it does not seem easy or rewarding in the short term view. Referring back to the OP again, Moses obeyed God when God called him up into the mountain and forbid the people from following him. The people were obedient to stay behind, but they rested knowing God had delivered them from the bondage of Egypt. They said something like "So much for holy Moses, looks like he's not coming back, let's make a golden calf for our new god and have a party for it?". They fell into complete disobedience. Holiness is always disciplined in obedience. The people were told to wait for Moses, but they were not disciplined to do it.
Like many, you have focused on holiness and done a pretty good job of presenting doctrine regarding the Lord's working of making us holy for Himself.
We are incapable of making ourselves holy, but it takes discipline and effort to put together a line upon line and precept upon precept dissertation as you have done for the Lord. That's holiness, serving the Lord. He owns us, He bought us with His blood for His own purpose, to glorify His own name, and He will do it. The problem is, the world is in our hearts and we have a tendency to be like the Jews who got tired of waiting for Moses to come down from the mountain. We tend to get tired of waiting for the Lord to complete His work of making us to be like Him, with Him, by Him and for Him forever and ever when we are like Him when we see Him face to face and are forever changed completely to be forever perfect with Him. We get tired of waiting, so our thoughts and desires tend to wander away from God, and in our pride we make excuses. The next thing you know, when a bunch of us get together (the ones who really went off the deep end from impatience, not you and I of course..."us" referring to all believers and the "bunch" here being the ones who are saved but sliding downstream with the world)
Now a final thing, let me be clear...I am not much of an example of holiness. I get in a bad way when things don't go the way I want, and I get that way far too often. And that's not the worst of me, but it's an honest jab in taking sides with God against my own sin. My desire is for more holiness, because I know God told me to be holy because He is holy, and the more holy I become, the more I will glow like Moses and the more my enemies will be afraid to look at me.
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