God’s holy people
Series: Holy – Holy – Holy | Bible text: 1 Peter 2:9
God chose Israel to be his holy people. The overriding meaning of holy is set apart. Thus the people of Israel are also set apart from the other peoples because they are God’s own people whom he has chosen for his history with humanity. In this people there are priests whose main task is the service of God. Their lives are entirely dedicated to the service of God. Followers of Jesus Christ are also part of this holy people. They form a holy people of royal priesthood. The focus is on worship, but as a royal priesthood they also exercise power on earth. Followers of Jesus Christ are holy in that they are set apart and live their lives as living worship.
Israel – God’s Chosen Holy People
This morning we want to delve more into the theme of God’s holiness. Besides the holiness of God, another characteristic of God is that he is relational. Therefore, he chooses people who, through this election, become a holy people. The Old Testament deals with God’s history in this world in the context of one people – the Israelites. In order to be able to classify the special role and also many Bible passages in connection with this people, it is important to keep in mind what holy means. Holy has many meanings. Synonyms for it are, for example, divine, pious and pure. Nowadays there are statements such as «Nothing is sacred to you! However, such words are difficult to interpret in the context of the people of Israel. The overriding meaning of holy is set apart. This comes from the original meaning of the Hebrew word «kadosh» which means to cut or separate. If I cut or separate something, then it stands on its side, so it is set apart from the rest. The holiness of God and everything connected with him has this overriding meaning: holy = set apart.
Keeping this meaning in mind, it becomes clear why the people of Israel are God’s holy people. «For you are a holy nation to the Lord your God. Of all the peoples of the earth, you belong as a people to the LORD your God.» (Deut. 7:6 NLB). The people of Israel are not holy by their own merit, but because they are God’s property. He has ordained them as His own and thereby they are set apart from all other peoples. And the separation of the people of Israel is so special because this people is explicitly set apart for God. Thus, its holiness (separation) also radiates out to the people of Israel, that they are holy (set apart). This is also what our verse of the year says. » […] You shall be holy, for I am holy, the LORD your God.» (Exodus 19:2 LUT). But according to what criteria did God choose this people? Did he want to write his history with the strongest and most successful people? After all, at the time of the Old Testament stories, the well-being of a people was related to the strength of their God. A strong people necessarily had to have a strong God. But it was quite different with the Israelites. «The Lord did not choose you and keep you because you are greater or more important than the other peoples – you are even the least important of all peoples – but because he loves you and because he wanted to keep the promise he made to your ancestors with an oath. […]» (Deut. 7:7–8 NLB). God chose this people because it should become clear that all glory is due to God, because everything comes from him. Israel therefore also has a decisive task, which the prophet Isaiah formulates as follows. «It is the people I have created for myself to tell of my glory». (Isaiah 43:21 NLB). This is the raison d’être for this people, that they tell of God’s glory and this is true worship.
The separation from other peoples is particularly evident in worship and ethics. The five books of Moses in particular are full of commandments and laws that regulate worship and life. These regulations differ greatly from what was common practice in Israel’s environment. But because Israel, as a holy people, belongs to a holy God, this is the logical response. But compliance is linked to a promise. «Now if you obey me and keep the covenant I will make with you, you shall be my special possession above all other peoples of the earth, for the whole earth is mine. You shall be to me a kingdom of priests, a holy nation. […]» (Ex 19:5–6 NLB). By collectively observing and keeping the commandments, the people as a whole assume priestly functions. But this is not enough. They will also, like earthly kings, assume power on this earth. This is the promise if the people stand by God and keep his commandments.
Priest – Between the Holy and the People
Although the whole nation is supposed to be a kingdom of priests, there is a part of the people that has the main task of performing the service and contributing to its success. These are the Levites. It is from this group that the descendants of Aaron are destined to act as priests. Unlike all other religions, priests in Judaism are not intermediaries between God and man. Every Israelite is directly responsible. This also explains why, in part, the sin of one could mean disaster for all the others. The priests took over the service at the altar of sacrifice and especially also in the sanctuary. They supervised the correct observance of the daily prescribed sacrifices and the service.
The special nature of the tribe of Levi and the priests is shown by the fact that they are not granted land in the territory of Israel, but only cities and the pastures surrounding them. (Joshua 13:14). For through their task in the service of God, God Himself became their inheritance. «But to the tribe of Levi Moses had assigned no land as an inheritance, for the LORD God of Israel was himself his inheritance, as he had promised» (Joshua 13:33 NLB). Just as the people of Israel are to point to God, so do the Levites within the people of Israel. But only the priests are allowed to enter the sanctuary of God.
Two pairs of words are found in the context of Israelite worship. They are the distinction between holy and profane and clean and unclean. Except for the combination of holy and unclean, every combination is conceivable. Holy means set apart for God and profane means worldly, i.e. not different from the majority. Pure and impure refer to a ritual, not a hygienic purity. Clean means clean in a comprehensive, ritual sense and unclean means dirty, not spotless in ritual matters. But in the Israelites» worship, everything must necessarily be holy and pure, because holy does not go together with unclean. For the priests, therefore, a responsible approach is called for. For in addition to the fact that holy means set apart, divine is also a synonym for holy. Therefore, in dealing with the divine, reverence is always called for. Shortly after the designation of Aaron and his descendants as priests, the seriousness of this task and the consequences of too flippant a handling of the holy become apparent. «But Aaron’s sons Nadab and Abihu took their censers, put burning coals in them and sprinkled incense on them. They thus burned an arbitrary incense offering to the LORD, which he had not commanded them to do. Then fire came out from the LORD and killed the two men. Moses said to Aaron: «Now is done what the LORD has foretold: I will show myself holy to those who are near me. Before all the people I will show my glory.» But Aaron kept silent» (Exodus 10:1–3 NLB). This is a very drastic picture of the improper handling of the Holy One and shows the significant task of the priests. They are allowed to encounter God, but this must also be done with respect and adherence to the prescribed rules.
Followers of Jesus Christ – a holy people of royal priesthood
Through Jesus Christ, the entrance requirements for God’s holy people shift. Whereas in the Old Testament it was given through biological descent and the observance of commandments, these two conditions are no longer mandatory to the same extent as they used to be. In order to examine the question of who belongs to God’s holy people today, let us take a closer look at the 1st Letter of Peter. Just as here, too, very few people belong to the people of Israel, this is also the case with the addressees of this letter, and we could add our own towns to the list. «This letter is written by Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ, to all the people whom God has chosen and who live as strangers everywhere in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia and Bithynia in the midst of people who do not believe in Christ.» (1 Peter 1:1 HFA). Faith in Jesus Christ is the decisive difference. What then are the criteria for belonging to the holy (set apart) people of God? «You belong to God, our Father. He predestined you for this from the beginning. Yes, through the Holy Spirit you have become his own – people who obey Jesus Christ and are freed from all guilt through his blood. I wish you that God’s grace and peace fill you more and more». (1 Peter 1:2 HFA). To belong to this holy people, obedience to Jesus Christ is necessary. This is a conscious decision that must be made if one also wants to belong to this people.
Belonging to this people is also linked to a task. «And now let God incorporate you as living stones into his spiritual temple. You are to be God’s holy priests and bring spiritual sacrifices to him, which he accepts through your fellowship with Jesus Christ!» (1 Peter 2:4–5 NLB). All followers of him are holy priests. They are set apart for service to God. But this service is not static, it is as alive as you are. Spiritual sacrifices are praising God, doing good, being generous with possessions, serving others. But all this comes from being part of the holy people of God. You are set apart for such sacrifices – not the other way around. First is the belonging, only then comes the effect (sacrifice).
This statement by Peter finally leads to the description of the followers of Jesus Christ. «But you are different, for you are a chosen people. You are a royal priesthood, God’s holy people, his personal possession. So you are a living example of the goodness of God, for he has called you out of darkness into his marvellous light.» (1 Peter 2:9 NLB). Based on this verse, two things need to be emphasised. On the one hand, there is the priesthood of all saints. So all who are set apart – follow Jesus Christ, are addressed. On the other hand, there is the question of the relationship of the royal priesthood. Some Bible translations also write kings and priests. However, here, through the adjectival use of royal, there is a more detailed description of the priesthood and shows how it is to be understood. The priesthood described here is about worship, which also has an impact on this earth. But the focus is on worship and not on the earthly exercise of power.
In the following verse, Peter makes it clear that the followers of Jesus Christ without Jewish roots did not belong before. But Jesus made this possible. «Before you were not a people; now you are the people of God. In the past you did not receive God’s mercy, but now you have received His mercy». (1 Peter 2:10 NLB). But this new people includes people outside and from the first holy people of God. This was already predicted by the prophet Hosea. «[…]. I will love those whom I once called ’not-my-people». And to those I called ’not-my-people» I will say «You are my people». And they will answer, «And you are our God» ». (Hosea 2:25 NLB). This means that non-Jews also have a share in this very special mission of the people of Israel, namely to be God’s holy, i.e. separate, people and to tell of God’s glory (Isaiah 43:1). This in turn gives rise to a sacred ethic of its own, which is different from the secular one. From this holiness, i.e. the separation from God, all ethical considerations are to be understood which followers of Jesus Christ make.
Possible questions for the small group
Read the Bible text: 1 Peter 2:1–12
- How would you describe «holy» for you? What does it mean to you when holy has the main meaning of «set apart»?
- What might it look like if a people were a kingdom of priests? What could be the main task of such a people?
- Do you understand the function of the priests of Israel? What stands out to you in particular?
- When did you consciously decide for Jesus Christ? Did you realise that you now belong to a holy people?
- What living sacrifices do you make? If it feels like a colloquial sacrifice to you, what could that be? How could you get to this point that it is no longer perceived as a cut for you, but as a gain?
- As a follower of Jesus Christ, where do you live according to a different holy (set apart) ethic? Why does this make sense to you?