Divine Holiness
God is utterly pure, set apart, and morally perfect in His being and ways.
What is a doctrine?
Definition: A doctrine is what Scripture teaches about a specific truth: about God, humanity, salvation, or the future. It is drawn from the whole Bible, not just one passage.
How to read this page: Start with the definition, then read the key passage witnesses to see where this doctrine lives in Scripture.
Formation: The formation section shows how this doctrine shapes the believer's life and ministry.
This doctrine affirms that the Lord's holiness defines His character, exposes sin, grounds His judgments, and calls His people into reverent obedience.
Also known as Holiness of God · God's Holiness
1 John 1:5-10 God Is Light: Walking in the Light Through Confession and Cleansing Because God is light and in Him there is no darkness at all, true fellowship with Him requires walking in the light, which includes honest confession of sin and reliance on the cleansing blood of Jesus.
To establish that fellowship with God is inseparable from the incarnate Christ, apostolic truth, divine holiness, and cleansing through Jesus’ blood.
- 1 : The foundational message: God is light, and no darkness exists in Him (1:5).
- 2 : False claim exposed: professing fellowship while walking in darkness (1:6).
- 3 : True pattern described: walking in the light and cleansing through Jesus’ blood (1:7).
God’s holiness exposes every form of darkness in us, yet He has provided cleansing through the blood of Jesus Christ, His Son. Those who acknowledge their sin and trust in Christ’s finished work are forgiven and purified, not because of their merit, but because God is faithful and just to apply the saving work of His Son.
Acts 5:1-11 The Spirit's Holiness: Judgment on Hypocrisy in the Covenant Community The same Spirit who empowers and unifies the church also guards its purity; deceitful hypocrisy invites divine judgment.
Acts 5 teaches that the Spirit-formed church must be holy, truthful, obedient, and bold because it belongs to the risen and exalted Christ.
- A. Deceptive Generosity (vv. 1-2) : Ananias, with Sapphira’s knowledge, sells property but secretly withholds part of the proceeds while presenting it as the whole gift.
- B. Confrontation by Peter (vv. 3-4) : Peter exposes the deception, declaring that Ananias has lied to the Holy Spirit and to God.
- C. Immediate Judgment (vv. 5-6) : Ananias falls down and dies, and great fear comes upon those who hear.
Grace does not nullify holiness. The God who saves through the risen Christ is the same holy Lord who judges hypocrisy. True faith responds with integrity and reverent obedience.
Acts 6:8-15 Spirit-Empowered Witness: Grace and Power Meet Religious Opposition Faithful witness to Christ confronts entrenched religious assumptions, provoking resistance that seeks to distort and silence the truth.
Acts 6 teaches that Christ's church must be governed by the word, sustained by prayer, ordered through Spirit-filled service, and faithful in witness under opposition.
- A. Spirit-Filled Ministry (vv. 8-10) : Stephen, full of grace and power, performs signs and speaks with wisdom that opponents cannot refute.
- B. Escalation to False Accusation (vv. 11-14) : Opponents secretly instigate false witnesses who accuse Stephen of blasphemy against Moses, God, the temple, and the law.
- C. Divine Composure Before Trial (v. 15) : All who sit in the council see Stephen’s face like that of an angel, reflecting divine presence and peace.
The gospel proclaimed by Stephen centers on Jesus as the fulfillment of God’s redemptive plan. Opposition may distort the message, but Spirit-given wisdom sustains faithful witness.
All 141 Witnesses
8 canonical motifs share passages with this doctrine. Expand any motif to read its summary.
Holiness
Study holiness as divine character, covenant identity, and sanctified life across Scripture.
Trace this motif →Judgment
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
Trace this motif →Temple
Study temple presence, worship, corruption, judgment, and renewal across Scripture.
Trace this motif →Glory
Trace how divine glory, revealed majesty, and Christ-centered exaltation move across Scripture.
Trace this motif →Remnant
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Trace this motif →Servant
Trace servant identity, obedient mission, and suffering service across Scripture.
Trace this motif →Spirit
Trace the Spirit's presence, empowerment, renewal, and mission-bearing work across Scripture.
Trace this motif →Faith
Follow faith, believing response, trust, and persevering allegiance across Scripture.
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