Originally posted by @josephwGod is different from everything that exists.
What makes God holy?
Does anyone know?
Nothing is like Him.
Your question is not that easy. But I think the holiness of God has to do with God's absolute uniqueness from all other persons, things, matters in reality.
God ALONE ... is holy:
" Who will not fear, O Lord, and glorify Your name? For You alone are holy ..." (Rev. 15:4a)
I think holiness also has something to do with a spiritual and moral purity. This I may comment on below.
Joseph, why did you call this thread "Casting a Pearl" ?
O well, I wrote that God alone is holy from Revelation 15:4.
Of course this means that He is the original Source of holiness.
There are the holy angels.
There are the saints made holy.
There is even in the Christian marriage the marriage bed described as holy.
We can conclude that some other things in the universe being set apart or set aside for God may be called holy.
But then there are people into whom God dispenses His life and nature to saturate them. They become holy. But the Source is the One Who ALONE ... is holy.
Originally posted by @josephwPretty much all gods and religious texts - as far as I am aware - are perceived as "holy" by whichever groups believe in them. And that's what being "holy" amounts to: it's a kind of aura or a significance generated by the perception and reverence of the various religions' adherents.
What makes God holy?
Does anyone know?
19 Jul 17
Originally posted by @rajk999You should listen to sonship.
Holy - clean and free from sin and corruption
Unholy - unclean, sinful, corrupted.
God is Holy and destroys whatever is unholy
While being "holy" does include being "free from sin", the main idea behind what makes God holy is the fact that there's no other being in existence like Him.
There is God, and there is everything else that God created.
God is holy in that He is the only one of His kind.
Originally posted by @fmfYou have the religious thing down. I think you must be expert about things religious.
Pretty much all gods and religious texts - as far as I am aware - are perceived as "holy" by whichever groups believe in them. And that's what being "holy" amounts to: it's a kind of aura or a significance generated by the perception and reverence of the various religions' adherents.
All there's left for you to do now is believe in Jesus, that He died for your sins and rose from the dead, then you can flush any notion of what you think religion is. It's useless.
You must be born again.
19 Jul 17
Originally posted by @josephwThanks for the advice.
You should listen to sonship.
While being "holy" does include being "free from sin", the main idea behind what makes God holy is the fact that there's no other being in existence like Him.
There is God, and there is everything else that God created.
God is holy in that He is the only one of His kind.
I listen to Jesus Christ.
Originally posted by @josephwThe explanation of "holy" I offered applies to your religion in the same way as it applies to any other religions that incorporate the notion.
You have the religious thing down. I think you must be expert about things religious.
All there's left for you to do now is believe in Jesus, that He died for your sins and rose from the dead, then you can flush any notion of what you think religion is. It's useless.
You must be born again.
Originally posted by @fmfAre you saying, then, that since there is only one singularly unique being in all creation, that that doesn't make Him holy?
The explanation of "holy" I offered applies to your religion in the same way as it applies to any other religions that incorporate the notion.
Or are you going to continue to obfuscate away from the topic of the OP?
Originally posted by @josephwThe thing that makes your god figure (and religious literature) "holy" is the same thing that makes the gods and texts of other religions "holy": the perception of the religionists who believe in them. This is crystal clear, answers your OP directly, and is therefore the opposite of obfuscation.
Are you saying, then, that since there is only one singularly unique being in all creation, that that doesn't make Him holy?
Or are you going to continue to obfuscate away from the topic of the OP?
20 Jul 17
Originally posted by @fmfOn the contrary, as has been stated, what makes my "god figure" holy is that He is the only being of His kind in existence.
The thing that makes your god figure (and religious literature) "holy" is the same thing that makes the gods and texts of other religions "holy": the perception of the religionists who believe in them. This is crystal clear, answers your OP directly, and is therefore the opposite of obfuscation.
All you can do is contradict that, and without reason or justification.
Originally posted by @josephwI haven't bothered to contradict or even address your assertion that your god figure "is the only being of its kind in existence". Indeed, I have basically ignored it because it has nothing to do with the definition of "holy" and you can swap your assertions with your fellow Christians to your heart's content.
On the contrary, as has been stated, what makes my "god figure" holy is that He is the only being of His kind in existence.
All you can do is contradict that, and without reason or justification.
"Holiness" is in the eye [and mind] of the religionist beholder. In fact I am happy to use the word "holy" to refer to anyone's god figure - and the scriptures attendant thereto - in recognition of the way those god figures and texts are perceived by those who subscribe to them.
20 Jul 17
Originally posted by @fmf"Holiness" is in the eye, and mind, of FMF, and/or any other, according to a relativistic and subjective interpretation.
I haven't bothered to contradict or even address your assertion that your god figure "is the only being of its kind in existence". Indeed, I have basically ignored it because it has nothing to do with the definition of "holy" and you can swap your assertions with your fellow Christians to your heart's content.
"Holiness" is in the eye [and mind] of the reli ...[text shortened]... recognition of the way those god figures and texts are perceived by those who subscribe to them.
If you were born again, or had ever been born again, you'd know how faulty that kind of reasoning is.
You are wrong. God exists absolutely and independently of whatever notion you may subscribe to, and He exists as the one and only one like Him, and that's what makes God holy.