Isaiah 6:1-13 · Isaiah’s Commission
The Call of Holiness
Isaiah 6:1-8 (9-13)
Sermon
by Derl G. Keefer
Loading...

These were not the best of times for Israel. Bleakness, despair, and frustration ruled the day. Israel's King Uzziah died. He started his career as king well. He was a sixteen-year-old boy who succeeded beyond expectation. He was powerful, famous, and rich. His religious reforms were vital to Israel's spiritual life.

Once he was king, Uzziah entered the temple to burn incense on the golden altar, which only the priests were allowed to do and was immediately stricken with leprosy as he lingered there. The Jewish historian, Josephus, tells us that Uzziah was smitten when he threatened to kill the eighty priests, who were already warning him to leave. But, after being stricken with leprosy, he left the temple and moved outside the city, while his son, Jotham, reigned as king. A year later Uzziah died and was "buried by himself in his own gardens." What a tragic ending to an illustrious and spiritually productive life and career!

Not only was that tragic, but Israel's eyes were focused on the mighty Assyrian King, Tiglath-Pileser, who was moving quickly south into Israel, gobbling up one city after another (2 Kings 15:29). Jerusalem was in disarray. The people were frightened and trembled before the bloodthirsty Assyrians. Who would protect them?

Isaiah's own visit to the temple was, quite possibly, associated with a national cry for God to intervene and save the city from destruction. The prayers of the day were for God's sovereignty, justice, and faithfulness.[1]

God's call to Israel was not to panic but to become holy. Not to live in a state of perpetual sin but a state of holy living. His call was not just for that specific time or nation or people; but rather, for all time, all nations, and all people. There is a call to holiness wrapped up in Isaiah's vision.

I. The Call To Holiness Is A Call To God

A call to God is to all people transcending nations, cultures, people groups, and denominations. God was not just the private property of Israel, but God was the God of all! Nor is God the private possession of America but the God of all nations.

Deneff observed that in contrast to the panic on earth in Isaiah's text, there was something else happening in heaven.

In the middle of the crisis, the angels were not throwing lightning to the earth. They were covering their faces and feet, worshiping God - not because nothing else mattered, but because nothing else mattered more. All of heaven was obsessed with the holiness of God.[2]

Holiness is not just one of God's attributes, it describes his entire being. His attributes would include:

* his eternality ... his timelessness. He exists outside the categories of time and space.

* his immutability or unchanging nature. God neither improves nor deteriorates.

* his omniscience. His knowledge is inclusive of all things and comprehensive. God knows all things as they actually come to pass: past, present, and future.

* his omnipotence.

God's perfect power means that by the exercise of his will he can realize whatever is present in his will.... God reveals his power in creation; in works of providence, and in the redemption of sinners. God's absolute power, however, may never be divorced from his perfections.[3]

* his truth. God has perfect knowledge of what we are and what we can be. He is never misleading in his word to us.

God's holiness is his moral and ethical character and that becomes a problem for us. His divine love on one hand, and his divine repudiation of sin that separates itself from the unholy on the other, is defined by his holiness. His holiness either saves us or judges us. We as moral beings have the freedom to determine which it will be for us. His holiness draws us to him, but if we reject him, we reject his holiness; we reject him, and we will be separated from him.

He is a holy God.

II. The Call Of Holiness Is A Call To Humility

There is a tendency in our era to over-familiarize and patronize God. It is true that God is our friend. We sing hymns extolling that friendship. I am excited to know that I am special to him. But we come to God in worship and in awe of who he is.

Our worship begins in his holy and glorious presence spotlighting him and not us. Each time we enter his presence through meditation or with the community of believers, we should be struck with his greatness and our unworthiness. Our worth lies in him. He reaches down and brings us up.

In his book, Reality In Worship, J. P. Allen likens our worship to entering a planetarium from a busy, noisy street.

Dimming lights hush the sounds and the universe opens up over our heads. Earth becomes one of the smallest of planets and we become one of its smallest creatures. In that awesome moment, we focus upon the greatness, the goodness, and the grace of God. Our worship should be like that. It should not begin with the focus upon ourselves and our own needs, but upon the character of God; we should not proceed without the expectation of the visitation of his Spirit, but wait in his holy presence until He comes; we should not assume there is nothing new under the sun that we have not seen, but come expecting a glimpse of his glory.[4]

It is in this humbling experience that we begin to realize that we can be imprinted by his holy mark on our lives. There is nothing in all the world that we can do to imprint ourselves when it comes to holiness. If we have been with God, we will bear his holy mark and people will observe his mark upon our lives. They will see his purity, compassion, joy, reverence, justice, and love stamped all over us.

III. A Call To Holiness Is A Call To All People

A quarter of a century ago, author Keith Drury, from the Wesleyan Church, wrote a book titled, Holiness For Ordinary People. What a great title! Often we think that holiness is dressed in long, flowing robes and left to the pious saints of the past. Sometimes we think of powerful communicating preachers, gray-haired grandmas, or dedicated missionaries, but the truth is God has called all of us into a lifestyle of holiness.

The work of entire sanctification and a walk in holiness is for every believer. Holiness must not be reserved for a select few of God's people who live above the ordinary humdrum of daily life. It must not be reserved for preachers, missionaries, and retired folk who "have enough time to pray all day." Holiness is for all of us. It is for ordinary people living an ordinary existence on this globe.[5]

Holiness transcends race, ethnicity, sex, denomination, or any other barrier or excuse that keeps us far away from God. Holiness draws us toward Jesus with a hungering and thirsting after righteousness ... right living. It is sold out obedience to God. Even in human "jars of clay" we are called to be pure, clean, and holy. Holiness is seeking Jesus because I understand I need him. After Pentecost the disciples were transformed from self-seekers to God-seekers. They were empowered by the Holy Spirit to live life to its fullest. Holiness is the fulfillment of fullest! It is not done in our own strength but in God's strength. Holiness unto the Lord truly becomes our watchword and song.

IV. A Call To Holiness Is A Call To Service

After we accept grace, forgiveness, and cleansing, we are ready to truly serve in God's name. God is not recruiting people to service. When they are spiritually ready God is ready to challenge them to serve as disciples. There are definite similarities between humanitarian effort and Christian service.

Each sees people in need. People on this earth have endured tsunamis, tornadoes, earthquakes, diseases, famine, floods, injustices, hatred, and war. Compassionate people care and see the incredible needs of fellow human beings.

Each cares about people in need. People have been touched to their very souls about people in need. This care is genuine and part of the divine residue in spite of the fall of humankind in the Garden of Eden.

Each reaches out to people in need. There are food pantries, compassionate centers, utilities subsidies, elderly or child care, and multitudes of other helpful organizations.

The difference is that one has a caring heart with limits because of its focus. The other has a God heart that sees no limitation. Christ demonstrated how to love, care, and give. Those who are his followers must be the same.

If we are truly Christian, if we are called by God, there will be no tasks too small or too large for us. There are no score sheets, no great lists, no tallies of what we have done in the name of Christ. It is simply doing for Jesus.

We must realize that the symbol of Christianity is not a beautifully polished cross, but a lopsided, crude, splintery cross over which is draped a towel - not the lush, plush kind of towel we buy for our guest bathroom, but a dirty old rag, wet with the sweat and dirt of men's feet. - Norman Schouten[6]

Just a year before the death of A.W. Tozer, he was asked to speak at a conference of ministers on any subject he chose. God's holiness was the subject and he is quoted as saying,

I believe we ought to have again the old biblical concept of God which makes God awful and makes men lie face down and cry, "Holy, holy, holy, Lord God almighty." That would do more for the church than everything or anything else.[7]

Tozer was right. Have you heard the call of God to the life of holiness, purity, and service? More importantly ... have you accepted his call? Amen.


1. Steve Deneff, Whatever Became of Holiness (Indianapolis: Wesleyan Publishing House, 1996), p. 24.

2. Ibid, p. 25.

3. Richard S. Taylor, editor, Beacon Dictionary of Theology (Kansas City: Beacon Hill Press of Kansas City, 1983), p. 57.

4. David McKenna, Communicator's Commentary Isaiah 1-39 (Dallas: Word Books, 1993), p. 110.

5. Keith Drury, Holiness for Ordinary People (Indianapolis: Wesleyan Publishing House, 2004).

6. Albert M. Wells Jr., Inspiring Quotations (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1988), p. 184.

7. Op cit, Deneff, p. 29.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons on the First Readings, by Derl G. Keefer