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Octavius Winslow

Colossians 3:10

Colossians 3:10
Octavius Winslow December, 5 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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December, 5 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about holiness?

The Bible defines holiness as the embodiment of purity and righteousness, exemplified perfectly in the life of Jesus.

In the Scriptures, holiness is primarily understood as a characteristic of God and, ultimately, of Christ. Jesus was the holiness of the law embodied, serving as a living commentary on the majesty and purity of the Divine law. Colossians 3:10 emphasizes the believer's transformation into a new man, renewed in knowledge after the image of Christ. This transformation reflects Christ's purity and power in the believer's life, highlighting the work of the Holy Spirit in making us more like Him.

Furthermore, holiness is not just an abstract concept but a practical reality that should manifest in the principles, temper, and daily walk of believers. Jesus lived a life untouched by the corruption around Him, illustrating the strength and beauty of holiness in a world that often opposes it. Believers are called to reflect this holiness through their actions, words, and lives, demonstrating the sanctifying influence of God's truth and the purifying effects of His commands.
How do we know the image of Christ is formed in believers?

The Holy Spirit actively works in believers to reflect the image of Christ through their thoughts and actions.

The assurance that the image of Christ is being formed in believers comes through the work of the Holy Spirit, who glorifies Christ within the believer. According to Colossians 3:10, when believers put on the new man, they are renewed in knowledge after the image of their Creator. This renewal signifies a transformation that evidences itself in holiness. The Spirit draws out His likeness on the souls of believers, making Christ's character increasingly apparent in their lives.

As this image is reflected in every faculty of the soul, it becomes a profound witness to the power of Christ's grace. Believers begin to exhibit the principles of holiness, reflecting Christ's love, humility, and zeal for God's glory. The journey of sanctification is unique to each believer, yet the consistent work of the Spirit assures us of our transformation and the visible manifestation of Christ's character in our lives.
Why is holiness important for Christians?

Holiness is essential for Christians as it reflects the character of Christ and the transformative work of the Holy Spirit.

Holiness holds paramount importance for Christians because it embodies the essence of God’s character, which they are called to emulate. The life and ministry of Jesus serves as the model for holiness, as He perfectly fulfilled the law and exhibited divine purity. Believers are called to reflect this holiness in their daily lives, demonstrating the work of the Holy Spirit. Colossians 3:10 illustrates that being renewed in the image of Christ is a part of the believer's identity.

Moreover, holiness is not merely a personal attribute but a collective witness to the world. When Christians live in a manner consistent with their calling, they testify to the sanctifying power of Christ's gospel. The call to holiness is both a privilege and a responsibility, urging believers to abandon their former ways and embody the transformative light of Christ in a world often marked by moral decay.

“And have put on the new man, which is renewed in knowledge after the image of him that created him.”

— Colossians 3:10

One important witness which the eternal Spirit bears for Christ is, when He impresses upon the believer the image of Christ. It is the peculiar work of the Spirit to glorify Christ; and this he does in various blessed ways, but none more strikingly than in drawing out the likeness of Christ upon the soul. He glorifies Christ in the believer. He witnesses to the power of the grace of Christ in its influence upon the principles, the temper, the daily walk, the whole life of a man of God. The image of Christ—what is it? In one word, it is Holiness. Jesus was the holiness of the law embodied. He was a living commentary on the majesty and purity of the Divine law. The life He lived, the doctrines He proclaimed, the precepts He enjoined, the announcements He made, the revelations He disclosed, all, all were the very inspiration of holiness. Holiness was the vital air He breathed. Although in a world of impurity, all whose influences were hostile to a life of holiness, He yet moved amid the mass of corruption, not only untouched and untainted, but reflecting so vividly the luster of His own purity, as compelled the forms of evil that everywhere thronged His path, either to acknowledge His holiness and submit to His authority, or to shrink away in their native darkness. And this is the image the Holy Spirit seems to draw, though it be but an outline of the lineaments upon the believing soul. What a testimony He bears for Christ when He causes the image of Jesus to be reflected from every faculty of the soul, to beam in every glance of the eye, to speak in every word of the tongue, and to invest with its beauty every action of the life!

Oh that every child of God did but more deeply and solemnly feel that he is to be a witness for Jesus!—a witness for a cross-bearing Savior—a witness to the spotless purity of His life, the lowliness of His mind, His deep humility, self-denial, self-annihilation, consuming zeal for God's glory, and yearning compassion for the salvation of souls—a witness to the sanctifying tendency of His truth, the holiness of His commands, the purifying influence of His precepts, the elevating power of His example. It may not be that all these Divine characteristics center in one person, or that all these lovely features are reflected in a single character. All believers are not alike eminent for the same peculiar and exalted graces of the Spirit. It was not so in the early and palmy days of the gospel, when Jesus Himself was known in the flesh, and the Holy Spirit descended in an extraordinary degree of sanctifying influence upon the church: it would therefore be wrong to expect it now.

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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